I loved this book. Reading Imperial Metropolis: Los Angeles, Mexico, and the Borderlands of American Empire, 1865-1941 gave me a clear understanding of how people like Doheny and the Otis/Chandler clan exported to Mexico our imperialist recipe for appropriating and profiting from land. While providing improvements and infrastructure for the stated purpose of modernizing and enriching Mexico, they ultimately extract an outsized quantity of wealth, labor, and suffering.
Communally held land -or commons- existed long before communism did. Land and their labor were the only means of production for agrarian people, and much land had been communally owned by the people. The "improvements" and infrastructure capitalists created on appropriated Mexican land did generate great financial wealth for themselves, but these improvements do so over and over again at the expense of those whose land they must take in order to extract said wealth. Ultimately, they also called upon the resources of the United States military to protect what was primarily their own interests, which, had the U.S. followed through, would have cost people on this side of the border much in money and blood. This book provides a close look at the precise methods used by the actors in Los Angeles with respect to their attempt to build and then ensure the defense of an empire in Mexico.
It did suffer from repetition that should have been edited out (which might have knocked it down to four stars, but I do really value the contribution the book makes). At times, I didn't mind the repetition and understood the purpose of it. The last couple of chapters suffered from the most unnecessary repetition. However the syntax is otherwise extremely strong and beautifully spare, and the arguments are organized well around information. I look forward to seeing what this author does next. As a high school teacher and a librarian, I would strongly recommend it to any teacher who wants to learn more about the topic. You could build a lot of curriculum, role plays, etc. around this book. Any interested high school student would enjoy it, and reading it would support their research.