Tuesday, March 26, 2024

California Today: The best books about California

We've updated our ever-growing Golden State reading list.
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California Today

March 26, 2024

Author Headshot

By Soumya Karlamangla

California Today, Writer

It's Tuesday. We're updating our California reading list. Plus, people are dying in custody at record rates in California.

Farm workers look over a crate of oranges.
The Central Valley is the setting for numerous books, including a few on our reading list.  Mark Abramson for The New York Times

For some much-needed midweek fun, today I'm updating our California Reading List, a collection of great books that are especially adept at illuminating life in the Golden State.

You can peruse the full list of nonfiction books and novels here. I've been assembling it for months based on your excellent recommendations. The latest additions are in boldface.

The most suggested pick this round was "Rabbit Boss," Thomas Sanchez's 1973 tale of four generations of Washo Indians in the Lake Tahoe region — what The New York Times has called "a lavishly praised novel of epic dimensions about the tragic experience of the American Indian."

You can keep emailing me your suggestions at CAtoday@nytimes.com. Please include your full name, the city where you live, and a few sentences about why your pick deserves to make the list.

Here are the other books I've just added, along with what you shared about them, lightly edited:

"Jesse's Ghost" by Frank Bergon (2011)

"I think it is one of the best 21st-century novels about U.S. ranching and farming, set in California's Great Central Valley. John Steinbeck visited the Valley only briefly, and 'Grapes of Wrath' has no scenes of field work. Bergon grew up in the Valley, and his novel is rich with workers in the fields. As The Los Angeles Times wrote: 'Frank Bergon finds beauty in the valley, and not through artifice.'" — Aleksandra Mendive, Belmont

"Daughter of Fortune" by Isabel Allende (1998)

"It tells a gold rush story told not from the typical perspective of the 49ers who traveled from east to west, but from the point of view of a young, pregnant woman from Chile searching for her lover, who sailed to California after the discovery of gold. The characters she meets represent the myriad people of all origins who created California. And while she searches for her lover, Eliza finds something else: herself." — Susan Champlin, New York City

"Alta California" by Nick Neely (2019)

"In the book, Neely follows the route Spanish explorer Gaspar de Portolá took in 1769, walking from San Diego to San Francisco. His narrative uses a dual lens, contrasting what we know of Portola's trip from diaries and journals with his own observations of modern California along the way. As someone who has always wondered what California was like before it was bisected by freeways and filled with mini-malls and parking lots, it was fascinating to trace Portola's route in such a tangible way. I had no idea that his party walked right through my neighborhood almost 250 years ago!" — Stace Dumoski, Placentia

"The Valley of the Moon" by Jack London (1913)

"At the age of 12, in the river bottoms of Western Kentucky, I found a shabby old book, a novel, called 'Valley of the Moon,' by Jack London. Loosely based on Jack's own peripatetic life, it traces the odyssey of Billy and Saxon Roberts from the labor strife of Oakland at the turn of the century through Central and Northern California in search of beautiful land they can farm independently. His stories of the trees, the land, the sky, the water — they all gave me a window into a totally different world. Now I live in Santa Rosa and often visit Jack London State Park, in the actual Valley of the Moon. The winding roads and tall trees, the cerulean sky and dancing leaves, the massive redwood trunks, and the insect quiet of the afternoons — it's even more than my 12-year-old self imagined. I love it here." — Cheryl King, Santa Rosa

"Imperial San Francisco" by Gray Brechin (1999)

"This nonfiction book, first published in 1999 by the University of California Press, just came out as an audiobook. Tells a surprising saga of San Francisco's early years, not the usual hearty tale of 49ers and Baghdad-by-the-Bay." — Laurie Kretchmar, San Mateo

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The rest of the news

Southern California

  • Federal agents from the Department of Homeland Security raided a Los Angeles home connected to Sean Combs, the hip-hop mogul who has been accused of sexual assault and sex trafficking in multiple civil lawsuits. Homeland Security Investigations said the search was part of "an ongoing investigation."
  • More than a year into her term, the L.A. mayor, Karen Bass, has cleared encampments and moved thousands of people into motels. What happens next is unclear.
  • Thousands of Southern California hospitality workers ratified a new contract with 34 hotels after repeated strikes since last summer, The Associated Press reports.

Northern California

  • A federal judge in California dismissed the lawsuit filed by X, formerly known as Twitter, against a nonprofit that studies hate speech online, ruling that the case was intended to punish researchers for speaking freely about the social media platform.

WHAT YOU GET

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After a lush winter, flowers are in bloom across California. Send us your best photos of the glorious springtime display to CAtoday@nytimes.com, and we may publish them in the newsletter. Please include your full name and the city in which you live.

And before you go, some good news

A 77-year-old woman in Oceanside has earned a reputation in her community for doing random acts of kindness, CBS News reports.

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The woman, Gayle Noble, delivers baked goods to workers at stores in her community most days of the week, focusing especially on those with challenging or overlooked jobs, like cashiers and postal workers.

Noble, who is rarely seen out of her trademark Grateful Dead T-shirt and plush animal-shaped hat, has been doling out acts of good will since she retired. She was a chief engineer at a Los Angeles radio station throughout the 1970s, a rare position for a woman at the time, and went on to design a piece of computer technology that is now named after her. She also wrote code for the United States military.

She is also known for being endearingly gruff. Her daughter Nisse describes Noble's demeanor as one of "aggressive kindness" and recently set up an Instagram page called Gayle Tales to showcase her work.

Thanks for reading. I'll be back tomorrow. — Soumya

P.S. Here's today's Mini Crossword.

Maia Coleman and Briana Scalia contributed to California Today. You can reach the team at CAtoday@nytimes.com.

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