Paul Haddad’s books include the critically acclaimed Freewaytopia: How Freeways Shaped Los Angeles, the Los Angeles Times bestseller 10,000 Steps a Day in L.A.: 57 Walking Adventures, and High Fives, Pennant Drives, and Fernandomania: A Fan’s History of the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Glory Years, 1977–1981 (named one of the Best Baseball Books of 2012 by the Daily News). As a Hollywood-born native, he has written about Los Angeles for the L.A. Times, LAist, and HuffPo. He has authored three novels, including the L.A. Noir Paradise Palms: Red Menace Mob. A graduate of USC’s School of Cinematic Arts, Haddad has been nominated for multiple Emmys as a documentary producer. PaulHaddadBooks.com @la_dorkout
"""Paul Haddad's Inventing Paradise is an enthralling, deeply researched account of the leaders of industry who built a small, agrarian riverside village into one of America's largest, strangest, most alluring cities. This is a story of speculation, trickery, and greed as well as earnest, almost realized visions of a true and accessible Utopia. The research is astounding, the writing propulsive, heartfelt, and even funny. Like the best histories, this work is about who and where we are, not only recounting the past but also illuminating the future.""--Jeff Hobbs, author, The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace (L.A. Times Book Prize winner) ""Paul Haddad has written a delightful and immersive account of the formative years of a great American city. With a novelist's sense of voice and detail and a historian's command of the national context, Haddad reminds us that no element of contemporary Los Angeles was pre-ordained--and invites us to reflect on the ways that the past shapes the places we call home.""--Henry Grabar, author, Paved Paradise: How Parking Explains the World ""Inventing Paradise interweaves the lives of the city builders who are remembered in the names of Los Angeles's streets and neighborhoods--Chandler, Huntington, Sherman, Mulholland, and more--to reveal how and why L.A. grew into today's wacky sprawl of neighborhoods, canyons, and beachfront. Paul Haddad's captivating account describes how the city's boundaries, never planned out but assembled piece by piece over decades, formed from the hubris and greed of these men, who found their sun-warmed paradise between the mountains and the Pacific and grew audacious dreams into fortunes.""--Kevin Roderick, editor and publisher, L.A. Observed ""Paul Haddad's Inventing Paradise is a brilliant and entertaining look at the early history and development of Los Angeles, told via the lives of six towering figures who turned a dry, small town into a verdant, thriving, metropolitan paradise. It is destined to join such outstanding works as Mike Davis's City of Quartz and Gary Krist's The Mirage Factory as classics of L.A. history.""--Steve Soboroff, Los Angeles-based businessman, philanthropist, and civic leader ""In the tradition of Carey McWilliams, Kevin Starr, and D.J. Waldie, Haddad unveils with deep research and critical flair six historical power brokers who turned Los Angeles into a profitable (for some) urban paradise. By hoarding resources and controlling public information, these six men helped shape the city we love and struggle with today. A must-read for L.A. history buffs and urbanists alike!""--Pamela Prickett, author, The Unclaimed: Abandonment and Hope in the City of Angels ""Compelling from start to finish, Haddad traces the seemingly impossible development of the Shangri-La of the Southland through the exploits of six titans that built Los Angeles. His rigorous research uncovers anecdotes, documents, and conversations that breathe life into each paragraph. Inventing Paradise is a brilliant read, and a must-own historical tome for anybody with even a passing interest in Los Angeles!""--Evan Lovett, L.A. in a Minute ""Paul Haddad does a fantastic job of telling the story of how Los Angeles went from a city with the largest rail system in the world to car-dominated, smog filled sprawl. Despite the last 80 years of car-centric planning, I'm optimistic that Angelenos have had enough of living with the consequences of building a city that forces them to drive for nearly all trips. Haddad's expert account of how we got here is a gripping tale of past mistakes, and also of future possibilities to create a better city.""--Michael Schneider, founder of Streets For All ""Sure, everyone knows how amazing L.A. is now . . . but do you know how we got to be this miraculous metropolis? Inventing Paradise is a fascinating and engaging exploration of the City of Angels, revealing just who made the city and how their motivations led to an imperfect paradise.""--Alex Cohen, Emmy award-winning journalist"