Forever L.A.: A Field Guide to Los Angeles Area Cemeteries \u0026 Their Residents by Douglas Keister


Forever L.A.: A Field Guide to Los Angeles Area Cemeteries \u0026 Their Residents
Title : Forever L.A.: A Field Guide to Los Angeles Area Cemeteries \u0026 Their Residents
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 1423605225
ISBN-10 : 9781423605225
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 256
Publication : First published May 1, 2010

Stunning photographs, fascinating text, and easy GPS directions for finding gracious architecture, fabulous artwork, and memorable gravesites of famous Los Angeles “residents.”


Forever L.A.: A Field Guide to Los Angeles Area Cemeteries \u0026 Their Residents Reviews


  • Loren

    This is the best guide to the cemeteries of Los Angeles yet. Jammed with Douglas Keister's beautiful color photographs -- all exquisitely printed -- the book weighs more than the other guides, which might make it prohibitive to drag around a graveyard with you, if you're juggling a camera and notebook, too. If you're just sightseeing, this is the book for you. All the color headstone photos make it easy to know exactly what you're looking for.

    However, the book is short on history of the graveyards. Permanent Californians is better for that, as well as more fully developed biographies of the biggest stars. Forever L.A. also focuses on fewer celebrities; if you want a more comprehensive list, Laid to Rest in California is the book you want.

    In addition, Forever L.A. suffers from puzzling organization. You can read the section on Westwood Village Memorial Park, but the text directs you elsewhere in the book to the listing for Don Knotts and somewhere else again to read about Marilyn Monroe. In fact, Marilyn's biography snuggles up against one for Joe DiMaggio, who isn't buried in L.A. at all. I guess this just proves my contention that any collection of gravestones is necessarily going to be idiosyncratic and reflect the predilections of the person compiling it.

    I see what Keister was doing when he collected together all the stars of The Wizard of Oz or Bonanza or It's a Mad, Mad (etc.) World, but I found it frustrating not to have all the cemetery information gathered into the appropriate chapter when I was standing in the graveyard. Is this book meant for armchair travelers or people in the field?

    And why is the Haunted Mansion at Disneyland included at all? While the photos are lovely, the section takes up valuable book real estate that could have been used by Angelus Rosedale, where Hattie McDaniel is buried and Buffy the Vampire Slayer was filmed.

    Still, if you are traveling to L.A. and want to visit graveyards, I suggest you start with this book. It's the most recent and has by far the prettiest pictures. You just might want to dip into the other books for more depth after you get home.

  • Lorraine

    This fantastic guide to all cemeteries in the Los Angeles, CA area has all kinds of information and photography for an interested reader.. The author discusses various styles of monuments, provides letters referring to the different societies represented in the L.A. Area cemeteries, and produced histories of the residents of these cemeteries as well as history for the L.A. area itself. This guide even has explanation of symbols used in funerary art which is often hard to find. Highly recommended and truly captivating reading!

  • MKF

    Not one of my favorite guide books of cemeteries. The book was disorganized and sent you to other parts if you wanted to read a biography of certain people. The people he chose were a few of the most well know with a bunch that I had no idea who they were. This book does not do L.A. cemeteries justice.