This is a very comprehensive, detailed study with close readings of a variety of works, concentrating on Los Angeles and New York. Throughout, Levick provides suggestive insights into the way memory is constructed, suppressed or remade. * Literature & History * Drawing on a creative and impressively constructed archive of interviews, novels, stories, and essays, Levick offers an illuminating meditation on the persistence of collective memory and history embedded within urban landscapes, art, and community. The book powerfully argues for how these accreted forms become a resource of resistance against urban modernity's creative destruction * Myka Tucker-Abramson, Assistant Professor in American Literature, University of Warwick, UK * One notable strength of Levicks method is the expansiveness of her multistoried monograph, both in terms of engagement with literary works in the twentieth century and in the scope of its theoretical and historical commitment. Each chapter is intricately built on in-depth readings while the monographs structure allows for a deepening of engagement with each new concept introduced. * Modern Language Review *