Jean Stein was the longtime editor of Grand Street magazine and a former editor at The Paris Review. She was the author of American Journey: The Times of Robert Kennedy, an oral history with interviews by Stein and edited by George Plimpton; Edie: American Girl, which was edited with Plimpton; and West of Eden: An American Place, an oral history of Hollywood and Los Angeles.
“West of Eden is compulsively readable, capturing not just a
vibrant part of the history of Los Angeles—that uniquely ‘American
Place’ [Jean] Stein refers to in her subtitle—but also the real
drama of this town, as reflected in the lives of some of its most
powerful players. . . . It’s like being at an insider’s cocktail
party where the most delicious gossip about the rich and powerful
is being dished by smart people, such as Gore Vidal, Joan Didion,
Arthur Miller and Dennis Hopper. The result is a mesmerizing
book.”—Los Angeles Times
“Perhaps the most surprising thing that emerges from this riveting
book is a glimpse of what seems like deep truth. It’s possible that
oral history as Stein practices it . . . is as close as we’re going
to come to the real story of anything. . . . In a book that’s a
study of the fleeting nature of worldly power, Stein, now
eight-two, has grabbed for herself the only kind that lasts: She’s
the one left standing, who gets to tell the story.”—The New York
Times Book Review
“Jean Stein’s enthralling new oral history, West of Eden: An
American Place, brings some of [Los Angeles’s] biggest
personalities to life. . . . As she did for Edie Sedgwick in Edie:
American Girl, the former Grand Street editor harnesses a gossipy
chorus of voices.”—Vogue
“Even if you’re a connoisseur of Hollywood tales, you’ve probably
never heard these. . . . As ever, gaudy, debauched, merciless
Hollywood has the power to enthrall its audience.”—The Wall Street
Journal
“Stein expertly orchestrates a chorus of voices—rich and famous and
not-so—to create a picture of Hollywood through the lives of five
of its most powerful families, drawn to the promise of unmined
riches in the oil fields and the fool’s-gold sparkle of stardom.
The tales of jaw-dropping excess, cruelty, and betrayal are the
stuff of movies, and the pleasures are immense.”—Vanity Fair
“This riveting oral history chronicles the development of Los
Angeles, from oil boomtown to Tinseltown, told through the stories
of five prominent families.”—Entertainment Weekly (“Must List”)
“If there is anyone still laboring under the delusion that great
wealth and a couple of palm trees bring happiness, Jean Stein’s
long-awaited oral history of Los Angeles, West of Eden, should put
that notion to rest. . . . It is probably not an exaggeration to
say that West of Eden is the most intelligent, painstakingly
researched work of schadenfreude yet produced.”—Katie Roiphe, Town
& Country
“In a masterfully conducted symphony of voices, Stein tells the
story of a coterie of families—including her own—in Malibu and
Beverly Hills, each profile centered on someone who ‘came with a
burst of energy from nowhere’ to invent a life of riches and fame.
Stein’s polyvalent oral narrative documents the indelible beauty
and giddy decadence of Hollywood’s twentieth-century golden age,
complete with a parade of glamorous personalities and intrigues
worthy of Henry James.”—Interview
“Spellbinding.”—New Statesman
“By far one of the best books ever written about Hollywood.”—Gaby
Wood, The Telegraph
“Jean Stein’s West of Eden is a stunning exploration of five
families who made Los Angeles what it is. Gossipy, dark, rich,
mesmerizing.”—Joan Didion
“In times past, in an effort to capture the edge and feel of
Hollywood during its golden age of glamour and noir, Nathanael
West, Raymond Chandler, Carey McWilliams, and Joan Didion stretched
language and genre to their limits. Jean Stein and West of Eden
belong in this company.”—Kevin Starr, former California State
Librarian and author of California: A History
“[A] compelling, occasionally gossipy, informative chronicle of the
flamboyant personalities from a storybook Hollywood era . . . [West
of Eden] rivets.”—Kirkus Reviews
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