Preface
Part One: Suburban Assumptions
1: San Fernando: Homes and Happiness in Residential
Subdivisions
2: Designs for the Good Life: Modernism, Tiki, Ranch
Part Two: Urban Perspectives
3: Urban Expectations: San Diego Leverages Itself into Big City
Status
4: Baghdad by the Bay: Herb Caen's San Francisco
5: The Cardinal, the Chief, Buff, and Walter O'Malley: Upgrading
the City of Angels
6: Downsides and Dividends: Los Angeles as Super City
Part Three: Politics and Public Works
7: Common Ground and the Party of California: The Reluctant
Retirement of Goodwin J. Knight
8: Cold War Campus: The University of California and Other Secret
Places
9: Freeways to the Future: An Epic Construction on Behalf of the
Automobile
10: Mare Nostrum: Achieving the California Water Project
Part Four: Art and Life
11: Provincials, Baghdader, and Beats: Literary San Francisco in
the 1950s
12: Big Sur: The Search for Alternative Value
13: The Silent Generation: Coming of Age on the Coast of Dreams
14: Brubeck! Jazz Goes to College
Part Five: Growth and the Environment
15: Ahwahnee and the John Muir Trail: Variations on an Outdoor
Theme
16: Largest State in the Nation: A Rebellion against Growth and the
Destruction of the Environment
Part Six: Changing Times
17: Dissenting Opinions: California Enters the Nineteen Sixties
18: Cool, Not Cool: Epilogues and Transitions
Notes
Bibliographic Essay
Kevin Starr is University Professor and Professor of History,
University of Southern California, and State Librarian of
California Emeritus. His Americans and the California Dream series
has earned him the National Medal for the Humanities, the
Centennial Medal of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of
Harvard University, the Gold Medal of the Commonwealth Club of
California, a Guggenheim fellowship, and election to the Society
of
American Historians.
"With the publication of Golden Dreams: California in an Age of
Abundance, 1950-1963, Kevin Starr has completed his transformation
from the state's greatest historian to its indispensable one....
His eight-volume series, published under the umbrella title
Americans and the California Dream, constitutes as comprehensive a
social, political, ethnographic, cultural and philosophical history
as any state is ever likely to achieve. It was conceived
in dazzling ambition and masterfully executed. The author's
scholarship and erudition animate each volume without once falling
into the trap of self-regard. It is, in sum, an achievement made
even more remarkable by
the fact that it is wonderfully readable."--Tim Rutten, Los Angeles
Times
"This final volume is of the same high quality as the previous
ones: spirited in style... [a] wonderfully readable descriptive
history...."--Publishers Weekly
"Monumental."--Benjamin Schwarz, The Atlantic
"Starr's masterly accounts of Los Angeles, San Diego and San
Francisco."--The Economist
"Who besides Kevin Starr could cover the entire social, economic,
political and artistic history of California during the era and
somehow extrapolate it into an engaging, dazzling account of the
emerging American Century."--Phyllis Filiberti Butler, San
Francisco Chronicle
"Starr's magnum opus-eight volumes to date, and still not complete-
will endure the test of years, not least for its heft and its
dogged ambition. Students of California history-of the history of
the American West generally-have no choice but to confront this
impressive oeuvre penned over decades by the State Librarian of
California Emeritus, now a professor at the University of Southern
California."--Books & Culture
"Kevin Starr's Golden Dreams...is marvellously cohesive and
concise, and Starr's engaging style makes it a pleasure to read."
--Times Literary Supplement Online
"Without parallel. Each volume in the series demonstrates again
that this is one of the commanding achievements of American
letters, and of the state he celebrates." --Western American
Literature
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