BOOKPACKING LOS ANGELES
USC student Bookpackers explore Greystone Mansion in Beverly Hills, the inspiration for the Sternwood Mansion in ‘The Big Sleep’
This class offers students a unique opportunity to dive deep into USC’s vibrant and extraordinary home city. It’s an immersive class - meaning that we travel beyond the classroom. Every Saturday for 10 weeks, we meet for a seminar in the morning, and then, in the afternoon, we head out and ‘bookpack’ a different facet of the city.
Over the semester, we read a variety of classic and contemporary L.A. novels - from Raymond Chandler to Joan Didion - and we exploring these fictional worlds both conceptually, and on the ground. We walk the same streets as the characters in the stories, we dig into context and history - and we reflect on the intersection between literary landscapes, and the contemporary culture of L.A..
what we read where…

Filled with biting humor and insight, Nathanael West’s savage satire of Hollywood wannabes builds to an angry and apocalyptic climax. It’s the ultimate L.A. novel.
It’s always raining in Chandler’s L.A., a moody counterpoint to the cheap glamour and surface glitz of the city. This is the first Philip Marlowe mystery - a masterpiece of hardboiled fiction.
Kate Braverman’s boho grunge classic is set in Venice, CA, in the latter days of the counterculture. The novel paints a dystopian portrait of Los Angeles as a place of dysfunction, addiction and loss.
Héctor Tobar’s story of worlds in collision follows a Latina maid in a quixotic journey from the O.C. to Eastside L.A.; it offers an unflinching portrait of the racial fault lines within our city.
Set in locations across the city from Crenshaw to Little Tokyo, Nina Revoyr’s brilliant novel tells a multi-generational story that weaves together African-American and Japanese-American L.A.
Chester Himes’ WW2 classic is set in Southside L.A. and in the shipyards of Long Beach. It’s a coruscating exposé of the Black experience, as relevant today as ever.
Two couples in Topanga Canyon - one White, one Mexican - move from misunderstanding to overt conflict. T.C. Boyle’s brilliant mid-90s novel illustrates L.A.’s racial and environmental fragility.

Venice Beach, February 2020
““Los Angeles, give me some of you! Los Angeles come to me the way I came to you, my feet over your streets, you pretty town I loved you so much…”. ”
Featured STUDENT BLOGS
Daniela Magaña traces the trajectories of two characters in two countries across two time periods in Héctor Tobar’s ‘The Tattooed Soldier’.
Tina Per-Akopyan tests the limits of the L.A. Dream as she follows in the footsteps of James M. Cain’s eponymous heroine.
Tinna Flores searches for the art behind the artifice in Nathanael West’s classic LA novel, ‘The Day of the Locust’.
Claudia Ellis (no relation) stalks the Los Angeles of Bret Easton Ellis’ ‘Less Than Zero’…
In isolation in a time of Coronovirus, Rachel Cope revisits Didion’s Los Angeles - the ‘dead still center of the world’.