High Spirits: The Legacy Bars of San Francisco

Community, heritage, architecture—oh yes, and stiff pours: these are the hallmarks of San Francisco’s Legacy Bars. High Spirits leads readers on a neighborhood-by-neighborhood pub crawl in search of the city’s most remarkable nightspots. Atmospheric photographs accompany descriptions of each bar’s colorful history, unique architectural features, idiosyncratic owners, and quirky clientele. As we dip into one […]
Postcards and the Baja California Border Towns

Postcards have a magical pull. They allow us to see the past through charming relics that allow us to travel back in time. Daniel D. Arreola’s Postcards from the Baja California Border offers a window into the historical and geographical past of storied Mexican border communities. Once-popular tourist destinations from the 1900s through the 1950s, […]
Cruising J-Town

Cruising J-Town: Japanese American Car Culture in Los Angeles explores how generations of Japanese Americans in Southern California shaped, and were shaped by, local automobile cultures and industries, from desert lakebeds to concrete speedways, gas stations to design centers, souped-up import tuners to humble gardening trucks. Along the way, cars and trucks became literal and […]
Citizen-Collectors in the Cultural Artifacts Ecosystem

Where do significant collections come from? They start when ordinary people develop a passion for a subject or object. They begin to add more items, filling in gaps and improving examples they have. They become subject matter experts in a narrow field. Small collections grow into larger ones until eventually dealers and institutions get involved. […]
Tribute to Truman Capote / Breakfast at Tiffany’s Bookplate Competition

2024 marked the centenary celebration of Truman Capote (1924-1984) — the famed American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and actor. Several of his short stories, novels, and plays have become literary classics, including his 1958 novella Breakfast at Tiffany’s. Selections from the American Society of Bookplate Collectors & Designers’ International Bookplate Competition to honor Truman Capote and […]
Unholy Sensations: A Story of Sex, Scandal, and California’s First Cult Scare

In 1891, a suffragist and social reformer named Alzire Chevaillier launched a moral crusade to destroy Fountaingrove, a utopian spiritualist community in northern California. Chevaillier accused the colony’s leader, the poet and prophet Thomas Lake Harris, of perverting the teachings of the Bible to promote a “new sexology” that was “worse than Mormonism.” Media reports […]
On Collecting the Imaginary

Curator Reid Byers will give a talk, “Collecting the Imaginary (in which all will be revealed),” in conjunction with his Book Club exhibition, “Imaginary Books: Lost, Unfinished, and Fictive Books Found Only in Other Books.” The talk will deal with the curious issues surrounding the acquisition of immaterial and imaginary items for collections. On view […]
Freedom to Discriminate: How Realtors Conspired to Segregate Housing and Divide America

Freedom to Discriminate shows the connection between two defining features of modern America that are rarely thought of together: the creation of residential segregation in every city in the country, and of a conservative counter-idea of American freedom in the 1960s – of freedom without regard to the rights of others — that has shifted […]
Art Deco Los Angeles

Art Deco Los Angeles is a stunning photographic tour through one of the most glamorous architectural eras of the City of Angels. From the iconic Hollywood Bowl, where the world’s biggest acts dazzle under the evening sky, to the majestic Wiltern Theater, a timeless beacon of architectural grandeur, each image encapsulates the essence of Art […]
Writing about San Francisco in the 1930s

Author and historian Robert Cherny is the author of seven monographs, co-author of two monographs and of college-level textbooks in US history and California history, co-editor of two anthologies, and author of some forty articles in journals or anthologies. Nearly all of his published work deals in some way with the post-Civil War history of […]