Saturday, June 25, 2011

A Southern California Classic -- "And Island on the Land."

Even if you were born in and spent your entire life (so far) in Southern California, you probably don't appreciate this amazing place. Why is it that we capitalize the "S" in Southern California? It's because in so many ways, it's a distinct and unique region --- like very few other places in the world. But not every place in the southern part of California qualifies as Southern California. Bakersfield, El Centro, Victorville, Palm Springs and Santa Maria cannot use the term. Santa Barbara can. Ventura can. Newhall and Escondido can as well.
So what defines this "Island on the Land" and how who drew the lines? It turns out that the boundaries are natural and distinct. Southern California is bounded on the west by the Pacific (as in "peaceful") Ocean, by the Tehachapi Mountains on the north, the Mexican border on the south and the San Gabriel Mountains and other ranges that protect the area from the Mojave Desert.
Nobody better tells the story of this paradise than Carey McWilliams did clear back in the 1940s.

If you've ever entertained visitors from "back East" or "down south" or "up north" or "across the pond," you should have read this book first. And if you live in the rest of the world and you've visited Southern California, you should have read this book first. And if your idea of Southern California is defined by pop culture or Disneyland or Universal Studios or even Venice Beach, you're misinformed. You've been cheated.
If you've read it --- or when you read it --- please add your comments to this review.




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