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Chip Jacobs, author of the novel "Arroyo," in conversation with noted southern California historian Paul Ayers

  • Flintridge Bookstore & Coffeehouse 1010 Foothill Boulevard La Cañada Flintridge United States (map)

Bestselling author of Smogtown and The People’s Republic of Chemicals

Set against two distinct epochs in the history of Pasadena, California, Arroyo (a Rare Bird publication) tells the parallel stories of a young inventor and his clairvoyant dog in 1913 and 1993. In both lives, they are drawn to the landmark Colorado Street Bridge, or "Suicide Bridge," as the locals call it, which suffered a lethal collapse during construction but still opened to fanfare in the early twentieth century automobile age. When the refurbished structure commemorates its 80th birthday, one of the planet's best known small towns is virtually unrecognizable from its romanticized, and somewhat invented, past.

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Wrought with warmth and wit, Jacobs' debut novel digs into Pasadena's most mysterious structure and the city itself. In their exploits around what was then America's highest, longest roadway, Nick Chance and his impish mutt interact with some of the big personalities from the Progressive Age, including Teddy Roosevelt, Upton Sinclair, Charles Fletcher Lummis, and Lilly and Adolphus Busch, whose gardens were once tabbed the "eighth wonder of the world." They cavort and often sow chaos at Cawston Ostrich Farm, the Mount Lowe Railway, the Hotel Green and even the Doo Dah Parade. But it's the secrets and turmoil around the concrete arches over the Arroyo Seco, and what it means for Nick's destiny, that propels this story of fable versus fact.

While unearthing the truth about the Colorado Street Bridge, in all its eye-catching grandeur and unavoidable darkness, the characters of Arroyo paint a vivid picture of how the home of the Rose Bowl got its dramatic start.

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Chip Jacobs is an award-winning author and journalist. His books include the biography Strange As It Seems: the Impossible Life of Gordon Zahler; the environmental social histories The People's Republic of Chemicals and the international bestselling Smogtown: the Lung-Burning History of Pollution in Los Angeles; the dark-humor true crime caper The Ascension of Jerry; and the stories collection The Vicodin Thieves. He also has contributed pieces to anthologies, most recently for Los Angeles in the 1970s: "Weird Scenes Inside the Goldmine" about the attack on an idealist lawyer by a depraved cult. His reporting has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, L.A. Daily News, CNN, The New York Times, Bloomberg, and LA Weekly, among others.

Paul Ayers (photo credit: altadena-now.com)

Paul Ayers (photo credit: altadena-now.com)

Paul Ayers is a retired attorney with a passion for Southern California history. He majored in history at University of California, Berkeley, and eventually went to law school. He has always pursued his interest in Southern California history and is an expert on Los Angeles’s Red Car railway system. He has also researched silent movie locations and 19th century roads and trails.

Earlier Event: November 6
Brown Bag Book Club
Later Event: November 8
Adults Who Read YA Book Club