Geoffrey Dunn explores the diverse history of Santa Cruz County with the intensity and love that only a homeboy can. Dunn alternately embraces and slaps his hometown as he wanders its historic and contemporary by-ways, relating stories that have eluded previous writers. The figures that emerge from this book will linger long after you put it down. From Old Chepa, the Californio woman whose life spanned the entire 19th century, to African-American community activist, Helen Weston, Dunn tells their stories with affection. And, lest you think that all of his profiles come from the more progressive parts of Santa Cruz's tapestry, he also includes an illuminating biography and interview with Edith Manchester, one of the leaders of Santa Cruz's anti-abortion community. The book is punctuated with some previously unpublished photographs and drawings, as well as several original poems. This book is a perfect addition to the library of anyone wishing to understand the spirit and character of an ever-evolving California coastal community. Geoffrey
Dunn Santa Cruz is in the Heart pulls no punches. The book provides a view of Santa Cruz that few outside the town's working community have ever seen. As Dunn illustrates in his profile of Helen Weston, racism and prejudice are still alive and well. Dunn quotes "I've met more racial prejudice in California-in Santa Cruz-than I ever did in Hope [Arkansas], or anywhere else in the South for that matter." Geoffrey Dunn writes with an urgency and compassion about the town that he continues to love. "A wonderful
book on our community..." "Geoffrey
Dunn is our Steinbeck and Sam Shepard rolled into one." "Dunn
writes about Santa Cruz as no one else ever has." "Excellent..." "Reading
[Santa Cruz is in the Heart] has made me more aware and understanding
of my surroundings-it's put a lot of things into context for me|"
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