It was 5 years ago
today that I began this blog by re-posting a book review I had written for a
friend at the time who had a blog of her own. That review led to another which
led to still another and before long I was in the “habit”, so to speak, of
blogging daily on a variety of subjects. I no longer have the friend, but the
blog lives on thanks to people like you stopping by. As long as people read it,
I’ll write it. And so, with this re-post
I begin my 6th year of Rooftop Reviews.
Ever wonder what the Marina District along the Northern
edge of San Francisco was like in 1916? Or what Ocean Beach was like before all
those houses arrived in the Richmond and Sunset Districts? Then “The Sugar’s at
the Bottom of The Cup” by Elda Del Bino Willitts is a book for you.
With a sparse and direct approach to the subject, Mrs.
Willits takes you back in time to an era when steamships still arrived daily in
San Francisco and filled the streets with newly arrived Americans from all over
the world. Adding to this mix was the influx of European immigrants arriving by
train from the East.
Elda Del Bino was seven years old when she stepped off the
train and into the fast moving cosmopolitan world of San Francisco. With
straightforward prose she vividly describes her journey by ship to New York and
Ellis Island and then the train trip across rural America prior to the First
World War, arriving in San Francisco in 1916.
Taking up residence in the Cow Hollow area South of
Lombard Street and the present day Highway 101, finding jobs, enrolling in
school, learning English, Mrs Willitts draws a clear and accurate picture of
San Francisco’s bygone era. Through the changes of the 1920’s and the dark
years of the Depression, the book captures the flavor of a changing city. The
World War Two years in San Francisco and the changes in morals and values that
flowed from that war are all here to examine in the life of one elderly woman.
Full of wit and inescapable charm, Mrs. Willitts has
written a wonderful and informative book about San Francisco, the City by the
Sea.
This review has also been featured on Garden Lust Journal: http://mendogardens.blogspot.com/
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