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TALES OF SANTA BARBARA
THE RICH DIVERSITY OF
A LITERARY TOWN
Santa Barbara, the elegant, historic seaside resort of Southern
California, is known to many as the home of celebrities, the
scenery of a soap opera, the backdrop for beach parties and Spanish-style
fiestas. Tourists come here from all over the globe, and they
take home with them photographs, guidebooks, and postcard souvenirs.
But Santa Barbara is more than a picturesque resort, as those
who live there know. As Dean Stewart points out in his foreword
to Tales of Santa Barbara, it is both a "universal
and particular place. An American small town of class and race
and neighborhood divisions a Chinese box full of hidden parts,
little compartments and surprises."
The way to know Santa Barbara is to spend time there, to experience
all the different ways the city can be. And for those far afield
or just passing through, the way to learn more about Santa Barbara
than the tourist literature will ever show is to read what real
Santa Barbarans have written. This is-and always has been-a town
of writers. The perceptions of its resident writers are a lively
record of what has made Santa Barbara different from all other
places. And each writer has a different idea about what that
difference is.
Tales of Santa Barbara, edited by Steven Gilbar and
Dean Stewart, was literally hundreds of years in the writing.
It is also a gathering of some of the best travel-writing in
the business, because Santa Barbara attracts good writers and
gives them a feast to write about.
In this cornucopia we read how the native Chumash, who lived
on this coast for centuries before they greeted the first European
visitors, defined creation, life, death, and reincarnation in
terms of the geography we can still see around us in Santa Barbara.
We read the accounts of Richard Henry Dana's and Alfred Robinson's
nineteenth-century visits to what was then a Spanish-speaking
port, and we ride with Edwin Bryant as he crossed San Marcos
Pass in 1846 as a member of John C. Fremont's battalion.
Here is an account of popular novelist Gertrude Atherton's
visit to Santa Barbara to meet the De la Guerra family as part
of research for a novel-in-progress. Edward Seldon Spaulding
describes ranch life at the turn of the century, and Marshall
Bond, Jr. tells of boyhood on the Upper East Side. Here are the
mountain trails described by Stewart Edward White, perhaps Santa
Barbara's first celebrity. Robert Hyde describes the bohemian
subculture of Mountain Drive.
The book contains important moments in the city's history.
The famous Coyote Fire of 1964 is described by mystery writers
Ross Macdonald and Margaret Millar, and the oil spill of 1969
is described by Robert Easton. The wide variety of social life
is here too: Michael Collins gives us a look at class structure
and struggle among the modern captains of agriculture, while
Christopher Buckley describes a moment of truth on a Santa Barbara
tennis court.
There's even a sample here of Sue Grafton's vision of Santa
Barbara, which she calls Santa Teresa in her Kinsey Milhone mystery
novels. Throw in poems and impressions by many more: Claire Rabe,
Pico Iyer, Sara Teasdale, Randall Jarrell, Edgar Bowers-and many
more-each a different, unique vision of a unique city.
Tales of Santa Barbara is a comprehensive collection
of many Santa Barbaras. Anyone who has lived here will recognize
some of these views. Anyone who wants to know what Santa Barbara
is really like should read this book. Finally, anyone who reads
this book will have a rewarding read, because this book is, first
and foremost, a collection of good writing by good writers.
About the Editors. Steven Gilbar is a well-known
lawyer in Santa Barbara, but beyond the city limits he's best
known as a bibliophile. He is the editor of many books about
books, including The Open Door: When Writers First Learned
to Read and Reading in Bed: Familiar Essays on the Pleasures
of Reading. Dean Stewart, a native Santa Barbaran,
is a former journalist who contributes literary essays to the
Los Angeles Times Book Review and other regional publications.
Gilbar and Stewart are the authors of the forthcoming Literary
Santa Barbara: a History of Santa Barbara Literature.
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