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WEST OF THE WEST by Mark Arax

WEST OF THE WEST

Dreamers, Believers, Builders, and Killers in the Golden State

by Mark Arax

Pub Date: April 20th, 2009
ISBN: 978-1-58648-390-6
Publisher: PublicAffairs

A lucid, warts-and-all portrait of California by a native son.

Arax (Nonfiction Writing/Claremont McKenna Coll.; The King of California: J.G. Boswell and the Making of a Secret American Empire, 2003, etc.) embarks on a sometimes ominous tour that, he warns, is on a “road trenched by 9/11 and the War on Terror and the anomie of the digital age and the greatest financial collapse since the Great Depression.” He finds stories to tell about all those things, beginning with his grandfather, who was “a migrant fruit picker, a farmer, a grocer, a communist, a capitalist, an atheist, a believer—in other words, a consummate Californian.” Arax is less admiring of another agriculturist, the classicist and neoconservative Victor Davis Hanson, “a raisin farmer whose family had worked the same piece of dirt since 1872 [and who] had become the hawk of the month for the Bush administration.” Another character whom Arax mentions in passing drove his tractor into the Pacific Ocean by way of protesting tax policies—and who had five wives, white, black and Latina. The author explores the Okie migration and its latter-day reflection in the influx of fieldworkers from Mexico, such as one Oaxacan who worked hard for nine years and had accumulated a couple of beat-up vehicles to park “in the dirt path that led from the vineyard to the three-room shack that cost him $400 a month to rent.” That shack is within sight of gleaming palaces, to say nothing of INS databases—yet more parts of the California story.

In the library of Californiana, worthy of a place alongside the works of Bill Barich, Carey McWilliams and even Joan Didion.