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402 pages, Hardcover
First published May 15, 2018
“Single individuals do not build cities, but three L.A. icons—an engineer, an artist, and an evangelist—both embodied, and, to a unique extent, drove the three major engines of the city’s rise from provincial player to world-class star. William Mulholland (the engineer) was L.A.’s fabled water czar, whose wildly ambitious vision of a 233-mile aqueduct brought water to the desert and allowed the city to grow far beyond its natural capacity to support urban life. David Wark Griffith (the artist) was the seminal film director of the silent era, the man who almost single-handedly transformed the motion picture from a vaudeville-house novelty into a major creative (and fabulously lucrative) industry, important enough to help build a city. And Aimee Simple McPherson (the evangelist) was the charismatic faith healer and pioneering radio preacher, who, courting both scandal and fantastical devotion, founded her own religion and cemented southern California’s reputation as a national hub for seekers of unorthodox spirituality and self-realization.”
“The images they conjured up—of a blossoming city in the desert, of a thriving factory of celluloid dreamworks, of a community of seekers finding personal salvation under God’s good sunshine—all had elements of the swindle about them, like mirages whose heady promises could evaporate on closer inspection. . . . More important, they succeeded in bringing Los Angeles we know into being: people were enticed by the images; they came to live and work here; the city grew.”