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Land of Orange Groves and Jails: Upton Sinclair's California

By Lauren Coodley

Napa Valley Farming cover image

E-book will be available January 2025

Novelist and muckraker Sinclair, best known for his exposT The Jungle; however, he deserves equal accolades for his entertaining critiques of Southern California’s oil industry, movie studios, and urban sprawl–most of which still apply today. This book spans fifty years of his funny and fiery writings, showing how his personal life inspired his political activism. When neighbors in Long Beach struck oil, he wrote about the oil industry. His father’s addiction inspired an analysis of alcohol distributors. In 1934, he responded to the Great Depression by running for governor under the EPIC slogan: “End Poverty in California.” The hard-fought campaign has parallels to our current political world of attack ads and allegations of voter fraud. Here also was apolitical figure who understood popular culture, using movies and the power of Hollywood to give voice to his ideas.

REVIEWS

”Entertaining and instructive, like the demonstrated facts of Sinclair’s equally implausible but real life, so effectively rendered in Coodley’s imaginative anthology.”

Los Angeles Times

”A must-read for students of literature, history, and political science.”

Metroactive Books

”Thanks to this brilliant anthology, we can now realize that Upton Sinclair deserves to be considered in the company of Carey McWilliams as an astute and pivotal observer of Southern California in the first half of the twentieth century.”

Kevin Starr

Professor of History, University of Southern California and State Librarian Emeritus