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Hardcover Water to the Angels: William Mulholland, His Monumental Aqueduct, and the Rise of Los Angeles Book

ISBN: 0062251422

ISBN13: 9780062251428

Water to the Angels: William Mulholland, His Monumental Aqueduct, and the Rise of Los Angeles

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

The author of Last Train to Paradise tells the story of the largest public water project ever created--William Mulholland's Los Angeles aqueduct--a story of Gilded Age ambition, hubris, greed, and one determined man who's vision shaped the future and continues to impact us today.

In 1907, Irish immigrant William Mulholland conceived and built one of the greatest civil engineering feats in history: the aqueduct that carried water 223 miles from the Sierra Nevada mountains to Los Angeles--allowing this small, resource-challenged desert city to grow into a modern global metropolis. Drawing on new research, Les Standiford vividly captures the larger-then-life engineer and the breathtaking scope of his six-year, $23 million project that would transform a region, a state, and a nation at the dawn of its greatest century.

With energy and colorful detail, Water to the Angels brings to life the personalities, politics, and power--including bribery, deception, force, and bicoastal financial warfare--behind this dramatic event. At a time when the importance of water is being recognized as never before--considered by many experts to be the essential resource of the twenty-first century--Water to the Angels brings into focus the vigor of a fabled era, the might of a larger than life individual, and the scale of a priceless construction project, and sheds critical light on a past that offers insights for our future.

Water to the Angels includes 8 pages of photographs.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

Engaging writing, but an uncritical examination of a flawed man's legacy.

Standiford spins a yarn that is engaging and keeps the reader turning pages, and if one is looking for a breathless fan letter to Mulholland, this is it. While acknowledging Mulholland's greatest failure right off the bat (a dam failure that resulted in the deaths of more than 400 people), the author spends considerably more ink polishing Mulholland's legacy. Of course, that legacy includes the desertification of vast tracts of land, the creation of one of California's largest sources of air pollution, and a presidential decree that Los Angeles faucets are more entitled to Owens Valley water than is the Owens Valley, but these issues appear to pale - from the author's perspective - in comparison to Mulholland's civil engineering feat. Containing little to challenge the reader, less to embarrass the Los Angeles Metropolitan Water District, and next to nothing to offend Mulholland or his heirs, 'Water To The Angels' comes across as a public relations piece. To paraphrase the "Chief" himself, 'There it is, take it - but with a grain of salt.'
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