California
17 best coffee-table books for Angelenos
The City of Angels, La La Land, Tinseltown, the Big Orange — whatever you call this city and however you’ve made a life in it, you probably have an obsession or three about Los Angeles and our great state. We’ve put together a lush array of coffee-table books covering at least some of those interests, making your year-end gifting as easy as a trip to your favorite bookstore. And hey, books are easy to wrap!
In these 2024 selections, you can consider the lemon and its versatility. Celebrate Pride and its Hollywood community. Cook with the flavors and techniques of Mexico, Africa, Latin America and Vietnam, homages to the melting pot that Southern California has long been. Visit laid-back mansions or an icon’s personal gallery, or marvel at the region’s natural landscapes and glamorous history.
A word of caution: If you head out to buy one or more of these titles for people on your list, you might just wind up buying some for yourself. After all, there’s a lot to love.
If you make a purchase using some of our links, the L.A. Times may be compensated.
The Gourmand’s Lemon: A Collection of Stories and Recipes
Pucker up, buttercup: The team behind the London journal the Gourmand has partnered with uber-luxe Taschen on a 272-page book about the humble yet versatile lemon, offering history, design, anecdotes and even recipes, all with citrus vibes. Try your hand at a tart sorbet, a creamy (and surprisingly easy) curd or a rich tagine garnished with preserved fruit; you’ll come away with a renewed appreciation for the lemons languishing in your fridge. The Gourmand also has a Taschen tome on the egg. Watch for others soon.
$50 from Taschen
Barbie: The World Tour
When the movie “Barbie” was released last year, not even the doll’s creator Ruth Handler could have predicted the subsequent fashion fervor. Star Margot Robbie collaborated with her stylist Andrew Mukamal to recreate some of the Barbie doll’s best looks over the decades for last summer’s hit film. Spreads in their 160-page book show some outfits knolled from hat to scarf to shoes to handbag, alongside sketches from the Mattel archives and drawings by the film’s costume designers. Don’t miss the Hervé Léger “bandage dress” version of Barbie’s first black-and-white-striped dress from 1959.
$55 from Rizzoli
City of Dreams: Los Angeles Interiors
If, after flipping through this gorgeous tome you find yourself ready to sell everything you own and start from scratch as a high-end minimalist, who could blame you? Author Annie Kelly and photographer Tim Street-Porter have chosen homes featuring both high design and high livability. In this 256-page book, you’ll find an abalone-shell chandelier, an all-orange bedroom, and Art Deco and Arts & Crafts elements. You’ll also peek into Sir Elton John’s apartment and Ellen DeGeneres and Portia de Rossi’s Brody House in Holmby Hills and travel from Laguna Beach to Silver Lake.
$65 from Rizzoli
Hollywood Pride: A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Representation and Perseverance in Film
Esteemed film critic Alonso Duralde’s cover has Tab Hunter, Divine, Marlene Dietrich, Anna May Wong and Laverne Cox ablaze with a rainbow spotlight that emphasizes the importance of LGBTQ+ actors from different eras — but in this 336-page book, the author also includes stories and photos of queer writers, directors, producers, choreographers and more. Their work, expertise and talents so often led to box-office brilliance while personal lives were forced into the shadows, often at great cost. They blazed trails for new generations that now, we hope, can hold their heads — and Pride flags — high.
$40 from Running Press
Santa Monica Pier: America’s Last Great Pleasure Pier
While shooting the 1973 movie “The Sting,” Robert Redford and Paul Newman would toss a football around on the Santa Monica Pier, which led Redford to write an introduction to this 176-page tribute by James Harris, the official pier historian; there’s also an afterword from Arnold Schwarzenegger, whose affinity for the pier dates back to his strongman days at Muscle Beach. With more than 100 images of everything from the carousel to the coaster to cafes, this book will charm any Angeleno who has ever walked, surfed, swam, eaten, flirted or gazed at the pier. As Redford writes: “The pier reminds me of our youth, our innocence. Such places are hard to find.”
$30 from Angel City Press
The Making of Modern Los Angeles
This is a personal take on the city’s zoning and infrastructure from Nick Patsaouras, a Greek immigrant who gave years of service to Los Angeles institutions in various capacities, including board president of the Southern California Rapid Transit District and president of the Board of Water and Power. His 624-page book, full of stunning photographs, documents five decades of urban change that included the restoration of the Angels Flight Railway, the construction of the Frank Gehry-designed Walt Disney Concert Hall and the establishment of the Museum of Contemporary Art.
$30 from Oro Editions
A Year in the Vineyard
Recently the movie “Widow Clicquot” included cinematography of Champagne vines to illustrate how climate affects each year’s output. Authors Sophie Menin and Bob Chaplin go further, showing that vintners’ observation of annual and seasonal weather shifts can teach everyone to pay more attention. Chaplin’s vivid yet restrained photos (from vineyards in Napa Valley, France’s Burgundy region, Lebanon and elsewhere) pair with Menin’s clear explanations about how and why wine grapes respond to climate changes. Even if this book doesn’t inspire a trip north to California wine country or get you to attend the next Veuve Clicquot Polo Classic, its 160 pages will definitely up your game when it comes to small talk over wine.
$60 from Cultureshock
Life: Hollywood
This sumptuous two-volume set, totaling 708 pages, from Taschen (with an introduction from photography critic Lucy Sante and captions from film historian Justin Humphreys) has an Old Hollywood look and feel, given its heft and cover-image wrap of a packed drive-in movie — but that’s just the Life magazine flavor, appropriate given the publication’s mid-20th-century heyday. The first book, covering 1936 to 1950 or so, showcases glamorous stars as well as the work that went into keeping their glamour mysterious; the second book focuses on the 1950s through 1972, when cultural shifts heralded more independence and diversity. Can we hope for another two-volume set to follow?
$250 from Taschen
Di An: The Salty, Sour, Sweet and Spicy Flavors of Vietnamese Cooking With TwayDaBae
Tue Nguyen, a.k.a. TwayDaBae, learned English by watching “SpongeBob SquarePants” and Anthony Bourdain’s “No Reservations” and learned how to cook because she missed her mother’s food. Now her social-media videos garner hundreds of thousands of views as she prepares Vietnamese egg coffee, pandan-flavored desserts and spicy clam curry. Eat before reading this 256-page book, as your mouth will start watering the minute you see the glorious photos of this chef’s work, which you can make at home — because that’s where she makes them, too.
$35 from Simon Element
AfriCali: Recipes From My Jikoni
Kenyan-Nigerian American chef Kiano Moju uses the Swahili word jikoni, or kitchen, to celebrate her origins in Oakland and Africa. But while she has plenty of recipes in this 272-page book that are purely African, such as Kenyan chapatis (flatbread) and sukuma wiki (sautéed collard greens), Moju includes lots of fusion ideas, too, such as jollof risotto with suya-spiced shrimp or coriander katsu with cherry tomato kachumbari (tomato and onion salad). The irrepressible chef even offers Buffalo chicken totchos (tater tot nachos).
$35 from Simon Element
Convivir: Modern Mexican Cuisine in California’s Wine Country
Chef Rogelio Garcia runs the Michelin-starred Auro restaurant in Napa Valley; he’s been shortlisted for a James Beard Award. This cookbook’s title means “to live together,” and it refers not just to a melding of cuisines but also to a melding of ingredients. Garcia takes Mexican standards including tacos, carnitas and sopes and reinvents them with local produce as well as flavors from other cultures, such as pesto, pate sucrée and hazelnuts. Experienced cooks will delight in the new combinations in Garcia and Andréa Lawson Gray’s 288-page book, which was beautifully photographed by John Troxell.
$50 from Abrams Books
Barbra
The one-time Funny Girl whose golden voice has made standards of songs like “Woman in Love” and “Don’t Rain on My Parade” takes her proper center stage in this collection of photographs by Lawrence Schiller and Steve Schapiro, who have had her in their sights since the 1960s. Some images are as beloved as Barbra Streisand’s song catalog, but half of the photos in this 336-page book haven’t been widely seen before, documenting Streisand’s importance as an actor, singer, director, writer and dancer who has worked with the best in the business while maintaining her own sensibility and standards. (The book is co-authored by Lawrence Grobel and Patt Morrison, a journalist at The Times.)
$70 from Taschen
Accidentally Wes Anderson: Adventures
The idea behind the 2020 book “Accidentally Wes Anderson” was to highlight places around the world that look as if they could appear in one of the iconic movies by the acclaimed director, even though he hasn’t used any of those places in his films. The 2024 follow-up by Wally and Amanda Koval (with a forward by Anderson) continues this eccentric endeavor in its 368 pages, sharing scores of buildings, rooms, vehicles, walls, gardens, shops, lighthouses, museums, libraries, restaurants, vistas and festivals that capture Anderson’s whimsical, colorful, retro aesthetic. Even Anderson himself wants to visit a few.
$45 from Voracious
The Wall of Life: Pictures and Stories from This Marvelous Lifetime
She’s held hands with the Dalai Lama, won a Kennedy Center Honor and adores her brother, Warren Beatty. Elizabeth Taylor was her best friend. Shirley MacLaine, a longtime star in the movie-world firmament, opens up her personal photo gallery to the world. Many of these pictures in this 272-page book have graced her “Wall of Life” arrangements in her various homes, including snapshots with Frank Sinatra, Bill Clinton (with whom she took a “long, long beach walk”), Indira Gandhi and her beloveds: daughter Sachi, Sachi’s husband and their children.
$35 from Crown
Moxie: The Daring Women of Classic Hollywood
Ira M. Resnick, founder of the Motion Picture Arts Gallery, and Raissa Bretaña, a historian specializing in film fashion, take close-up looks at a few dozen of the dames whose self-possession and hard work helped them develop the “moxie” to succeed in an industry dominated by men and iron-clad contracts that seldom allowed for individuality and artistic growth. But as the authors show in this 240-page book, women like Louise Brooks, Ida Lupino and Katharine Hepburn blew through the celluloid ceiling and lifted up generations of women in the movies.
$49.95 from Abbeville Press
The Official Bridgerton Cookbook
When it comes to “Bridgerton,” the immensely popular Netflix series, you know that the Bridgertons are named in alphabetical order. You know that gadfly Lady Whistledown’s voice is none other than that of Dame Julie Andrews. But you might not know the recipe for the perfect citrus libation to keep you sated as you cue up the next episode — and that’s where this 256-page official recipe guide by Regula Ysewijn comes in. Savory or sweet, spicy or safe, these delicious and terribly tempting treats will give you delicious ideas … just like the show does.
$35 from Random House Worlds
My Mexican Kitchen: 100 Recipes Rich With Tradition, Flavor, and Spice
Actor, director and entrepreneur Eva Longoria has pursued cookbook writing for nearly 15 years, and along the way also earned a master’s degree in Chicano studies and political science. Her latest compilation derives from her CNN show “Searching for Mexico,” so although it’s about the dishes she still cooks at home, the recipes in this 256-page book reflect Mexico’s many regions and specialties. Tacos and taquitos and tamales, yes; but also Yucatán-based fish and seafood, urban cocktails and snacks, and longtime family favorites.
$35 from Clarkson Potter
Prices and availability of experiences in the Gift Guide and on latimes.com are subject to change.
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California
Trump administration will defer $1.3B in Medicaid funds for CA
Vance says Trump cares about Americans finances amid Iran debate
Vance pushes back on claims about Trump and says Americans finances matter as the administration weighs Iran and nuclear diplomacy.
Vice President JD Vance announced on Wednesday, May 13 that the Trump administration will be deferring $1.3 billion in Medicaid reimbursements from the state of California, as part of a new initiative to root out fraud in federal health programs.
The topic of California’s hospice care fraud has been a major focus of scrutiny by state leadership, members of President Donald Trump’s administration, and Gov. Gavin Newsom’s critics. In his announcement, Vance claimed that the administration was set on deferring these funds “because the state of California has not taken fraud very seriously.”
“There are California taxpayers and American taxpayers who are being defrauded because California isn’t taking its program seriously,” Vance said during a press conference.
Notably, this decision was part of Vance’s Anti-Fraud Task Force’s plan to implement a six-month nationwide, data-driven moratorium on new Medicare enrollment for hospices and home health agencies.
The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, which is led by Dr. Mehmet Oz, is set to use this six-month moratorium to conduct investigations and review data on Medicare programs, with the hopes of removing hospice and home health agencies that are suspected of committing fraud.
“Today we’re shutting the door on fraud — preventing new bad actors from entering Medicare while we aggressively identify, investigate, and remove those already exploiting them,” Oz said. “This is about protecting patients, restoring integrity, and safeguarding taxpayer dollars.”
California Attorney General Rob Bonta called the administration’s action “unlawful” and noted that his office would be “carefully reviewing all available information” and may challenge the administration’s decision to threaten “Californians’ rights or access to critical services.”
“Once again, California appears to be targeted solely for political reasons,” Bonta said on X.
“The Trump Administration is planning to defer over $1 billion in Medicaid funding for vital programs that help seniors and people with disabilities remain safely in their homes.”
Bonta and his office have attempted to counteract criticism that the state does not take action against hospice fraud.
In April, Bonta announced that the California Department of Justice had arrested five people in connection with a major health care scheme in Southern California that defrauded taxpayers of nearly a quarter of a billion dollars.
“For years, California has led the charge to protect public programs from fraud and abuse,” Newsom said in the press release on April 10. “We hold accountable to the fullest extent of the law anyone who tries to rip off taxpayers and take advantage of public programs, particularly those as sensitive as hospice care.”
Newsom has yet to publicly respond to the administration’s decision to defer California’s Medicaid reimbursement.
However, shortly after Vance made the announcement, Newsom’s press office blasted the decision on X.
“We hate fraud. But that’s NOT what this is,” Newsom’s press office posted on X. “Vance and Oz are attacking programs that keep seniors and people with disabilities OUT of nursing homes. Pretty sick.”
Noe Padilla is a Northern California Reporter for USA Today. Contact him at npadilla@usatodayco.com, follow him on X @1NoePadilla or on Bluesky @noepadilla.bsky.social. Sign up for the TODAY Californian newsletter or follow us on Facebook at TODAY Californian.
California
California girls’ track and field stars speak out as Gavin Newsom’s Title IX crisis grows
Reese Hogan would have a very different set of medals if the rules were different in California.
It’s her third straight year competing against a trans athlete in the California girls’ track and field state tournament. She would have taken first place in the high jump all to herself in the sectional preliminaries last Saturday, if only biological females were allowed to compete.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Now she’ll compete against a trans athlete in the sectional finals this weekend, representing her Christian high school, Crean Lutheran. It will mark one year since she went viral on social media for stepping up from the second-place spot on a medal podium up to first place, after a trans athlete who took first place stepped off.
“This is my third year competing against a transgender athlete, and last year I was stripped away of a CIF Title, and I basically worked my whole career to get to that point,” Hogan said on “Fox News at Night” on Tuesday. “It’s just really dissapointing to go into a competition knowing you already lost.”
CALIFORNIA TRACK ATHLETE BRIEFLY POSES ON 1ST-PLACE PODIUM AFTER LOSING TO TRANS ATHLETE, RECEIVES PRAISE
Her Crean Lutheran teammate, Olivia Viola, has been right there with Hogan throughout the three years of competition against trans athletes.
“I haven’t heard nearly enough adults come out and say anything. A lot of them like to say that they agree with you, that they’re proud of you for speaking up now, but they won’t do it themselves,” Viola said. “Just because it doesn’t affect every adult out there doesn’t mean it’s not worth standing up for.”
California has legally allowed biological males to compete in girls’ sports since a state law was enacted in 2013. The state’s education agencies are engaged in a federal Title IX lawsuit with President Donald Trump’s administration for commitment to upholding that state law.
A source at Governor Gavin Newsom’s office previously provided a statement to Fox News Digital in response to news that a “Save Girls Sports” rally, which the two girls attended, would be held at last Saturday’s meet.
“The Governor has said discussions on this issue should be guided by fairness, dignity, and respect. He rejects the right wing’s cynical attempt to weaponize this debate as an excuse to vilify individual kids. The Governor’s position is simple: stand with all kids and stand up to bullies,” the statement read.
“California is one of 22 states that have laws requiring students be permitted to participate in sex-segregated school sports consistent with their gender identity. California passed this law in 2013 (AB 1266) and it was signed into law by Governor Jerry Brown.”
At the rally, Hogan spoke and fired back at Newsom’s office for the statement.
“The recent statements coming from Governor Gavin Newsom’s office have made it clear that there is no intention of creating a safe, fair, and equitable environment for female high school athletes. Him and his office have gone as far as calling young girls bullies for speaking up for what we believe in,” Hogan said.
“The governor himself has admitted that males competing in women’s sports is unfair, yet nothing is being done to protect girls who train every day to compete on a level playing field.”
CALIFORNIA ATHLETE SAYS SHE CHANGES CLOTHES IN HER CAR TO AVOID SHARING A LOCKER ROOM WITH TRANS ATHLETE
California high school girls wear “Protect Girls Sports” shirts at a postseason track meet at Yorba Linda High School on May 10, 2025. (Reese Hogan/Courtesy of Reese Hogan)
Viola also rejected the “bully” assertion in Tuesday’s interview.
“I think his statement is manipulative, and it’s just completely untrue,” Viola said. “He’s saying stand up for all kids, yet he’s essentially trying to silence us… these girls are not bullies. They make a point, we all make an point to say we are not against any individual athlete, we are against California’s policies,” Viola said.
“We believe athletes deserve dignity and respect, and that’s why we believe women deserve the dignity of having their own category.”
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Crean Lutheran High School senior track and field star Reese Hogan speaks at a ‘Save Girls Sports’ rally. (Courtesy of Alyssa Cruz)
Both Viola and Hogan will compete at the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) Southern Section Final on Saturday in Moorpark, California.
And just like last year, there will be a podium ceremony after the competitions.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
California
GOP California governor candidates to face off at Clovis forum ahead of primary
With California’s June 2nd primary election nearing, Republican candidates for governor, Steve Hilton and Sheriff Chad Bianco, are set to appear at a forum in Clovis.
The Fresno County & City Republican Women Federated is hosting its “Celebrating 250 Years of America Dinner” and a gubernatorial forum on Friday, May 22nd, at The Regency Event Center, 1600 Willow Ave., in Clovis.
The forum will be moderated by State Senator Shannon Grove.
The discussion is expected to focus on major issues facing Californians, with questions presented via video by a panel of state and local figures, including Fresno County District Attorney Lisa Smittcamp on public safety and crime; former Fresno County Sheriff Margaret Mims on border control and citizenship; William Bourdeau of Bourdeau Farms LLC on water rights and agricultural issues; California state Assemblymember David Tangipa on taxation and fiscal responsibility; Jonathan Keller of the California Family Council on parental rights and education; and Matthew Dildine, CEO of Fresno Mission, on homelessness and mental health.
Clovis Mayor Pro Tem Diane Pearce and Fresno County Supervisor Nathan Magsig are listed as masters of ceremonies.
Doors are scheduled to open at 4:30 p.m., followed by a social hour at 5 p.m. Dinner and the program are set for 6 p.m.
Attire is listed as cocktail or business formal. Organizers said a portion of the proceeds will benefit the Veterans Home of California – Fresno.
GOP California governor candidates to face off at Clovis forum ahead of primary (Courtesy: Fresno County & City Republican Women Federated)
[RELATED] Top-two primary could pit same-party rivals as crowded Democratic field fractures votes
“This forum comes at a pivotal moment for our state,” FCCRWF event organizers said. “Bringing the top Republican gubernatorial candidates to Clovis allows Valley families, farmers, and business owners to get real answers on the issues that affect their daily lives, from water infrastructure to public safety and the skyrocketing cost of living.”
Individual tickets are $150, with discounts offered to FCCRWF members.
Table sponsorships are available at the $1,500, $2,500 and $5,000 levels.
Tickets and sponsorships are available online at FresnoRepublicanWomen.org.
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