Books about Oakland, California
Encyclopedia
This is a list of books about Oakland, California
Oakland, California
Oakland is a major West Coast port city on San Francisco Bay in the U.S. state of California. It is the eighth-largest city in the state with a 2010 population of 390,724...

grouped by subject and listed by publication date. The list includes, primarily, commercially published works about the city. Some books are included which cover the region or state but contain significant coverage of Oakland, or are limited print run titles (booklets, commemorative volumes, privately printed volumes, government reports). Ephemera such as cookbooks, yearbooks, or catalogs are not included. Books on sports are generally not included (Oakland A's, Oakland Raiders
Oakland Raiders
The Oakland Raiders are a professional American football team based in Oakland, California. They currently play in the Western Division of the American Football Conference in the National Football League...

, etc), with some exceptions, such as biographies of notable coaches and owners with ties to the city.

General histories and descriptions

  • 1878 New Historical Atlas of Alameda County, California
    Alameda County, California
    Alameda County is a county in the U.S. state of California. It occupies most of the East Bay region of the San Francisco Bay Area. As of the 2010 census it had a population of 1,510,271, making it the 7th most populous county in the state...

    , Illustrated
    (Thompson & West), reprinted 1976 by Valley Publishers.

  • 1883 History of Alameda County, California, "including its geology, topography, soil and productions, together with a record of the Spanish Grants; the early history and settlement; the names of original Spanish and American pioneers; a full political history, comprising a tabular statement of officers of the County since its formation; separate histories of each of the townships, showing their progress. Also incidents of pioneer life, the raising of the Bear Flag of California, and biographical sketches of early and prominent people, and of its cities, towns, churches, schools, secret societies, etc." (Oakland: M. W. Wood; facsimile edition issued 1969 by the Holmes Book Co., Oakland).

  • 1897 Athens of the Pacific, George W. Calderwood (Oakland: G.T. Loofbourow).

  • 1907 History of the State of California and Biographical Record of Oakland and Environs, Also Containing Biographies of Well-known Citizens of the Past and Present, in 2 vols., J. M. Guinn (Los Angeles: Historic Record, Co., 1907). "Few states of the Union have a more varied, a more interesting or a more instructive history than California, and few have done so little to preserve their history." This 2-volume set gives a general history of California and scores of biographies (with formal portraits) of prominent citizens of Oakland and environs of that day. A one-volume facsimile edition appeared in 1997.

  • 1911 Oakland California, Oakland Chamber of Commerce (San Francisco: Sunset Magazine Homeseekers' Bureau of Information). Promotional booklet published when Oakland's City Hall, the Hotel Oakland, and the Claremont Hotel
    Claremont Resort
    The Claremont Hotel Club & Spa is a historic hotel at the foot of Claremont Canyon in the Berkeley Hills, providing the resort with scenic views of San Francisco Bay. The hotel building is entirely in Oakland, bordering Berkeley....

     were all under construction, before there were bridges on the Bay, describing Oakland as "on a magnificent harbor in what promises to be the center of the highest development of Anglo-Saxon civilization…"

  • 1932 The Romance of Oakland: A Story of the Growth and Development of Oakland and Alameda County, Roy C. Beekman (Oakland: Landis & Kelsey).

  • 1932 Oakland's Early History, Edson F. Adams (Oakland). A brief account by a descendant of one of the city's founding fathers. It includes excerpts from Mayor Horace Carpentier's April 29, 1854 address to the City Council, in which he advocates: free schools, peaceful relations with neighboring towns, 100% preservation of the native oaks, and the relocating of the State Capital to Oakland.

  • 1942 Oakland, A History, G. A. Cummings and E. S. Pladwell (Oakland: Grant D. Miller). It includes the beautiful 1936 National Park Service historical map of the East Bay along with line drawings of historic scenes and people.

  • 1961 The Beginnings of Oakland, A. U. C., Peter Thomas Conmy (Oakland: Oakland Public Library
    Oakland Public Library
    The Oakland Public Library is the public library in Oakland, California. Opened in 1878, the Oakland Public Library currently serves the city of Oakland, along with some neighboring smaller cities including Emeryville and Piedmont. The Oakland Public Library has the largest collection of any...

    ). "A.U.C." stands for ad urbe condita, latin for "from the founding of the city" (a quote from Livy
    Livy
    Titus Livius — known as Livy in English — was a Roman historian who wrote a monumental history of Rome and the Roman people. Ab Urbe Condita Libri, "Chapters from the Foundation of the City," covering the period from the earliest legends of Rome well before the traditional foundation in 753 BC...

    ). It is an account of the city's early history, especially the unfolding legal status of land claims from the Peraltas on. It includes a concise summary of famous Oaklanders.

  • 1982 Oakland, the Story of a City, Beth Bagwell (Novato: Presidio Press [maroon cover]; reprinted Oakland: Oakland Heritage Alliance
    Oakland Heritage Alliance
    Oakland Heritage Alliance is a non-profit organization based in Oakland, California. OHA advocates the protection, preservation, and revitalization of Oakland's architectural, historic, cultural and natural resources through publications, education, and direct action.OHA began in 1980 with a...

    , 1994 [green cover]; updated ed. was planned for publication in 2006). Bagwell was the first president of the OHA.

  • 2005 Oakland's Neighborhoods, Erika Mailman (Oakland: Mailman Press), a collection of prose, poetry, and pictures from a large number of contributors.

  • 2006 Oakland: The Soul of the City Next Door (GrassRoutes Travel Guide), Serena Bartlett, illustrated by Daniel Ling (Oakland, CA: GrassRoutes Travel).

  • 2009 Oakland & Berkeley: Urban Eco-Travel, by Serena Bartlett (GrassRoutes Travel / Sasquatch Books).

  • 2010 America's ‘Healthiest" City’: A History of Early Oakland, California, Deanne Lamont (Saarbrücken, Germany: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller). “In the decades between the Civil War and the great 1906 earthquake, Oakland was convincingly advertised as America’s healthiest city.”


Corporate/Chamber of Commerce Productions (typically with profiles of sponsoring businesses printed as a final section):
  • 1896 The Illustrated Directory of Oakland, California (Oakland). Detailed views of downtown business blocks with reference to owners, occupants, professions, and trades; and a brief history of the city. Some coverage of Alameda and Berkeley.

  • 1893 Oakland, its Environs and Advantages, a Description of the Most Attractive Suburban Town in America, "The Embowered Town," (San Francisco).

  • 1893 Views of Oakland, California (Oakland: Pacific Press Publishing Company). “A bird’s-eye view of the city, views of prominent business blocks, hotels, city and county buildings, public schools, colleges, churches, residences, etc.; and a description of Oakland by the president of the Board of Trade.” From a time when (mostly now gone) landmark buildings of a past era were new and magnificent.

  • 1911 Greater Oakland, Evarts Blake (Oakland: Pacific Publishing Co.). Fully 455 pages of description, ads, photos, and a nice foldout map.

  • 1925 Who Made Oakland?, Florence B. Crocker (Oakland: Dalton). "And a great voice from the Heavens said: `God made Oakland and all that is glorious herein.' Oakland is the choicest gift God ever gave to man.'" It includes the 1924 Bekins fold-out street map of Oakland, Berkeley, Alameda, and Piedmont.

  • 1981 Oakland, Hub of the West, David Weber (Tulsa: Continental Heritage Press). Exceptionally well presented: extensive, detailed historical essays with a striking selection of historical photographs.

  • 1988 Alameda County, California, Ruth Hendricks Willard (Northridge: Windsor Publications).

  • 1996 Oakland Welcomes the World, Mary Ellen Butler (Montgomery: Community Communications).

  • 2000 The Spirit of Oakland: An Anthology, Abby Wasserman and Diane Curry (Carlsbad, CA: Heritage Media). It includes essays by a collection of local authors; ambitious in scope, especially in attention to individual neighborhoods.

  • 2002 Oakland: Portrait of Progress, Pam Baker (Montgomery: Community Communications).

  • 2005 Imagine: A Pictorial Celebration Honoring the 100th Anniversary of the Oakland Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce (Oakland: Oakland Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce).

Specialized histories and descriptions

  • 1885 Catalogue of the Oakland Free Public Library, Charles L. Miel (Oakland: Tribune Publishing Co.).

  • 1906 How Oakland Aided Her Sister City, Harris Bishop (Oakland: Oakland Relief Committee). A souvenir album from the 1906 earthquake and fire, when Oakland's 60,000 residents took in 200,000 refugees from San Francisco.

  • 1931 Fourscore Years: a History of Mills College, Rosalind A. Keep (Oakland: Mills College). Keep was the daughter of Professor Josiah Keep, teacher of astronomy and geology and close friend of President Susan Tolman Mills.

  • 1934 Port of Oakland, ed. DeWitt Jones, George Ebey, Herbert Shears, Raymond Barry, and Charles F. Burns (Oakland: Oakland Board of Park Commissioners).

  • 1946 U. S. Naval Hospital Oakland California, Louise Dowlen, Dorothy Thompson and Charles Haynes (Oakland: Welfare and Recreation Department). A commemoration of the fourth anniversary of the Oak Knoll Naval Hospital.

  • 1955 A History of the Fred Finch Children's Home: Oldest Methodist Home for Children in California, 1891-1955, Reginald R. Stuart & Grace D. Stuart (Oakland: Fred Finch Children's Home).

  • 1967 The Hospital Women Built for Children, Murray Morgan (Children's Hospital Oakland
    Children's Hospital Oakland
    Children's Hospital Oakland, full name Children’s Hospital & Research Center Oakland, is a children's hospital in Oakland, California. It is the only independent children’s hospital in the northern part of the state and is designated a Level I pediatric trauma center...

    ).

  • 1967 Trees and Shrubs of Mills College, Baki Kasapligil (Oakland: Mills College
    Mills College
    Mills College is an independent liberal arts women's college founded in 1852 that offers bachelor's degrees to women and graduate degrees and certificates to women and men. Located in Oakland, California, Mills was the first women's college west of the Rockies. The institution was initially founded...

    ). An exhaustive checklist with locator map.

  • 1970 Its Name Was M.U.D., John Wesley Noble. The pre-history and history of the East Bay Municipal Water District
    East Bay Municipal Utility District
    East Bay Municipal Utility District , colloquially referred to as "East Bay Mud", provides water and sewage treatment for customers in portions of Alameda County and Contra Costa County in California, on the eastern side of San Francisco Bay, including the cities of Richmond, El Cerrito, Hercules,...

     up through its first 44 years.

  • 1971 The Peraltas, Pearl Randolph Fibel (Oakland: Peralta Hospital). Published to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Spanish land grant of Rancho San Antonio to Luis Maria Peralta
    Luís María Peralta
    Luis María Peralta was a soldier in the Spanish Army, who received one of the largest of the Spanish land grants, Rancho San Antonio, a plot that encompassed most of the East Bay region of California.-Biography:...

    , which included all of what became Oakland (and much of the rest of the East Bay).

  • 1974 Heinold's First and Last Chance: Jack London's Rendezvous, Otha Donner Wearin. "Built over a century ago [1883] from the remains of an old whaling ship and first used as a bunk house for the men working the oyster beds off the east shore of San Francisco Bay and located at the foot of Webster Street on the waterfront of Oakland, California, stands a small one-story shack of a building, unique in construction and famous for memories." And there it still stands, the Last Chance Saloon
    Last Chance Saloon
    Last Chance Saloon was a popular name of a type of bar in the United States which began to appear in the 19th century as an early expression of border economics...

    .

  • 1975 History of Oakland, California Post Office 1851-1975, Rod Mabe (Oakland: Oakland Post Office).

  • 1978 People Are for the Birds, Paul Covel (Oakland: Western Interpretive Press). On the birds of Lake Merritt, by a leading naturalist.

  • 1979 Oakland 1979, City of Oakland Office of Community Development (Oakland: City of Oakland). Pictures and quotes from the flatland Community Development neighborhoods.

  • 1984 A Vision Achieved: Fifty Years of East Bay Regional Park District, Mimi Stein.

  • 1989 Three Weeks in October, , Bill Mandel (San Francisco: Woodford Publishing). Remembering the 1989 World Series
    1989 World Series
    †: Game 3 was originally slated for October 17 at 5:35 pm; however, it was postponed when an earthquake occurred at 5:04 pm.-Game 1:Saturday, October 14, 1989 at Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in Oakland, California...

     and the Loma Prieta Earthquake
    Loma Prieta earthquake
    The Loma Prieta earthquake, also known as the Quake of '89 and the World Series Earthquake, was a major earthquake that struck the San Francisco Bay Area of California on October 17, 1989, at 5:04 p.m. local time...

    .

  • 1990 Oakland Ballet: The First 25 Years, William Huck (San Francisco: San Francisco Performing Arts Library and Museum). Sadly, there were not to be a second 25 years--the Ballet closed up shop for good in 2006.

  • 1991 Can Physicians Manage the Quality and Costs of Health Care? The Story of the Permanente Medical Group, John G. Smillie (New York: McGraw-Hill).

  • 1991 The Bay Area at War: How We Reacted to the Persian Gulf Crisis, edited by Eric Newton and Roger Rapoport (Oakland: Oakland Tribune and Berkeley: Heyday Books
    Heyday Books
    Heyday Books is an independent nonprofit publisher based in Berkeley, California.Heyday was founded by Malcolm Margolin in 1974 when he wrote, typeset, designed, and distributed The East Bay Out, a guide to the natural history of the hills and bayshore around Berkeley and Oakland...

    ).

  • 1992 Oakland's Christmas Pageant, 1919 - 1987, ed. Aileen Moffitt. A full history of the Pageant and the amazing 68-year tenure of Miss Louise Jorgensen, the "Spirit of Christmas."

  • 1992 Fire In the Hills: A Collective Remembrance, ed. Patricia Adler (Berkeley). On the Oakland Firestorm of 1991

  • 1992 Comrades of Lov II, George Peter Vasille (New York: Vantage Press). A private reminiscence of a Soviet ship's stay in Oakland during WW II.

  • 1992 An Ensign to the Nations: History of the Oakland Stake, Evelyn Candland (Oakland: Oakland California Stake, Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints).

  • 1992 Two Men at the Helm': The First 100 Years of Crowley Maritime Corporation, 1892-1992, Jean Gilbertson (Oakland: Crowley Maritime).

  • 1993 The Second Gold Rush: Oakland and the East Bay During World War II, Marilynn S. Johnson (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press). A social and political history of Oakland and the East Bay as it was transformed by wartime industry and the influx of domestic migrants.

  • 1993 Guide to East Bay Creeks, Christopher M. Richard, ed. (Oakland: The Oakland Museum). Creek hydrology & geology; guided tours of selected creeks; conservation issues, and a fabulous map of past and present waterways; plus a good summary of the discovery and ongoing controversy over the naming of the Rainbow trout
    Rainbow trout
    The rainbow trout is a species of salmonid native to tributaries of the Pacific Ocean in Asia and North America. The steelhead is a sea run rainbow trout usually returning to freshwater to spawn after 2 to 3 years at sea. In other words, rainbow trout and steelhead trout are the same species....

    , Oncorhynchus mykiss also known as Salmo iridia, first identified in a creek in the Oakland Hills
    Oakland Hills, Oakland, California
    Oakland Hills is an informal term used to indicate the city neighborhoods lying within the eastern portion of Oakland, California.-The geologic feature:...

    . Try this online watershed locator.

  • 1994 The Story of Moore Dry Dock Company, James R Moore (Sausalito: Windgate Press). Illustrated history of the Oakland-based shipyard.

  • 1994 Operation Pet Rescue: Animal Survivors of the Oakland, California Firestorm, Gregory N. Zompolis (Exeter, NH: J. N. Townsend).

  • 1997 Real Heat: Gender and Race in the Urban Fire Service, Carol Chetkovich (New Brunswick: Rutgers). Reflections and analysis of the Oakland Fire Department class of 1-91; from the author's dissertation.

  • 1997 Sights and Sounds: Essays in Celebration of West Oakland, Mary Praetzellis and Suzanne Stewart, eds. (Rohnert Park: Anthropological Studies Center, Sonoma State University Academic Foundation; prepared for California Department of Transportation, District 4). One of the several mitigation projects from the Cypress Structure
    Cypress Street Viaduct
    The Cypress Street Viaduct, often referred to as the Cypress Structure, was a 1.6 mile long, raised two-tier, multi-lane freeway constructed of reinforced concrete that was originally part of the Nimitz Freeway in Oakland, California.It replaced an earlier single-deck viaduct constructed in the...

     replacement project.

  • 1998 The Oakland Roadster Show: 50 Years of Hot Rods and Customs, Andy Southard and Dain Gingerelli (Osceola WI: MBI). The granddaddy of roadster shows.

  • 1999 Fire in Oakland, California: Billion-Dollar Blaze, Carmen Bredeson (Springfield, NJ: Enslow Publishers).

  • 2000 Pacific Gateway: An Illustrated History of the Port of Oakland, Woodruff Minor (Oakland: Port of Oakland). Excellent photos, maps, and documentation of Oakland's Port and Airport
    Port of Oakland
    The Port of Oakland was the first major port on the Pacific Coast of the United States to build terminals for container ships. It is now the fifth busiest container port in the United States, behind Long Beach, Los Angeles, Newark, and Savannah...

    . Produced as an impact-mitigation measure for the demolition of the Grove Street Pier transit shed.

  • 2000 Fight or Be Slaves: The History of the Oakland-East Bay Labor Movement, Albert Vetere Lannon (University Press of America). The title is a quote from C. L. Dellums
    C. L. Dellums
    Cottrell Laurence “C. L.” Dellums was one of the organizers and leaders of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.He was born in Corsicana, Texas on January 3, 1900, and died on December 6, 1989, in Oakland, California...

    , Oakland's vice president of the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters.

  • 2000 A Parochial and Institutional History of the Diocese of Oakland, 1962-1972 and Two Centuries of Background, Peter Thomas Conmy (Saint Francis Historical Society).

  • 2001 We are the Church: A History of the Diocese of Oakland, Jeffrey M. Burns and Mary Carmen Batiza (Strasbourg, France: Éditions du Signe). A history of the Roman Catholic Community of Oakland and surrounds.

  • 2003 Storybook Strings: 50 Years of Puppetry at Children's Fairyland's Storybook Puppet Theater, Randal J. Metz (Oakland: Rappid Rabbit Publishing).

  • 2003 Keep the Ball Rolling: A Pictorial History of Claremont Country Club, 1903-2003, J. Parry Wagener (Donning Co. Pub.).

  • 2003 The Bad City in the Good War: San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, and San Diego, Roger W. Lotchin (Bloomington: Indiana Univ. Press).

  • 2004 Working Fire: The Making of an Accidental Fireman, Zac Unger (New York: Penguin).

  • 2004 Old School, Terrence Green (Philadelphia: Xlibris). Life and work at the Oakland Police Department in the 1960s and '70s.

  • 2006 Temescal Legacies: Narratives of Change from a North Oakland Neighborhood, Jeff Norman (Oakland: Shared Ground).

  • 2006 Seven Fires: The Urban Infernos That Reshaped America, Peter Charles Hoffer (New York: PublicAffairs). Boston, 1760; Pittsburgh, 1845; Chicago, 1871; Baltimore, 1904; Detroit, 1967; Oakland,1991; and New York, 2001; but surely the major Southern California fires of recent years could be added to the tale.

  • 2006 Shorthanded: The Untold Story Of The Seals, Hockey's Most Colorful Team, Brad Kurtzberg (Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse).

  • 2007 Oakland's Laurel District, Dennis Evanosky (Alameda: Stellar Media Group).

  • 2007 Mountain View Cemetery, Dennis Evanosky (Alameda: Stellar Media Group), number two in Evanosky's "History is All Around Us" series. Fully 142 years after the founding of Mountain View Cemetery, we now have this treasure-trove of facts, images, history, trivia, and short review of the evolving American cemetery. Profusely illustrated with pictures and locator maps, including many then-and-now juxtapositions. Especially strong on Civil War veterans and famous local personages.

  • 2010 Presumed Dead: A True Life Murder Mystery, Henry Lee (Berkeley). A San Francisco Chronicle reporter’s account of the 2006 murder of Russian-born physician and Oakland resident Nina Sharanova Reiser.

  • 2010 The Oakland Army Base: An Oral History, Martin Meeker, ed. (Berkeley: The Bancroft Library). Jointly sponsored by the City of Oakland and the Port of Oakland, and produced by the Regional Oral History Project at the Bancroft Library, UC Berkeley.

Minority communities

  • 1973 This Far By Faith: A Study of Historical Backgrounds and the First Fifty Years of the Allen Temple Baptist Church, J. Alfred Smith (Oakland: Color Art Press).

  • 1976 Free to Choose: The Jews of Oakland, Fred Rosenbaum (Berkeley: The Judah L. Magnes Memorial Museum).

  • 1977 The Reemergence of an Inner City: The Pivot of Chinese Settlement in the East Bay Region of the San Francisco Bay Area, Willard T. Chow (San Francisco: R & E Research Associates). A revision of the author's 1974 U.C. Berkeley thesis.

  • 1978 The Ohlone Way: Indian life in the San Francisco-Monterey Bay Area, Malcom Margolin, illus. by Michael Harney (Berkeley: Heyday Books; 25th Anniversary Ed. with a new Afterword, 2002). Quite regional in scope, but too important in subject matter and in the recent history of Native American studies to not include here.

  • 1983 Effective Urban Church Ministry: Based on Case Study of Allen Temple Baptist Church, G. Willis Bennett (Nashville: Broadman Press).

  • 1989 Visions Toward Tomorrow: The History of the East Bay Afro-American Community, 1852-1977, Lawrence P. Crouchett, Lonnie G. Bunch III, and Martha Kendall Winnacker (Oakland: Northern California Center for Afro-American History and Life).

  • 1992 The Unsung Heart of Black America: A Middle-class Church At Midcentury, Dona L. Irvin (Columbia, MO: Univ. Of Missouri Press). Portraits of 40 members of Downs Memorial United Methodist Church quietly making a difference in their community.

  • 1996 Abiding Courage: African American Migrant Women and the East Bay Community, Gretchen Lemke-Santangelo (Chapel Hill: U. of North Carolina Press).

  • 2000 Hometown Chinatown: History of Oakland's Chinese Community, L. Eva Armentrout Ma (New York: Garland Publishing). A greatly expanded version of The Chinese of Oakland: Unsung Builders by Eve Armentrout Ma and Jeong Huei Ma, ed. Forrest Gok and the Oakland Chinese History Research Committee, 1982.

  • 2002 Urban Voices: The Bay Area American Indian Community, Community History Project, Intertribal Friendship House, Oakland, Susan Lobo ed. (Tucson: Univ. of Arizona Press).

  • 2003 Soul on Bikes: The East Bay Dragons MC and Black Biker Set, Tobie Gene Levingston, with Keith and Kent Zimmerman (St. Paul, MN: Motorbikes International Publishing). The history of the Oakland-based African-American Motorcycle Club.

  • 2005 Beyond Christianity: African Americans in a New Thought Church, Darnise C. Martin (New York University Press). Draws on ethnographic work in a Religious Science church in Oakland, California, to illuminate the ways a group of African Americans has adapted a religion typically thought of as white.


Books about the Black Panthers, founded in Oakland in 1966 (see also the “Personages” section below):
  • 1993 Rage, Gilbert Moore (New York: Carroll & Graf). An account of the 1968 murder trial of Huey P. Newton
    Huey P. Newton
    Huey Percy Newton was an American political and urban activist who, along with Bobby Seale, co-founded the Black Panther Party for Self Defense.-Early life:...

    .

  • 1997 Seize the Time: The Story of the Black Panther Party and Huey P. Newton, Bobby Seale
    Bobby Seale
    Robert George "Bobby" Seale , is an activist. He is known for co-founding the Black Panther Party with Huey Newton.-Early life:...

     (Baltimore: Black Classic Press).

  • 1998 The Black Panther Party Reconsidered, Charles E. Jones (Baltimore: Black Classic Press).

  • 2002 Black Panthers, 1968, Pirkle Jones
    Pirkle Jones
    Pirkle Jones was a documentary photographer born in Shreveport, Louisiana. His first experience with photography was when he purchased a Kodak Brownie at the age of seventeen. In the 30's his photographs were featured in pictorialist salons and publications...

     and Ruth Marion Baruch (Los Angeles: Greybull Press). Limited edition boxed set of photographs.

  • 2002 The Black Panthers Speak, ed. Philip S. Foner (Da Capo Press, reprint of 2nd ed.). A collection of original material from the mid-1960s movement in Oakland.

  • 2006 Up Against the Wall: Violence in the Making And Unmaking of the Black Panther Party, Curtis J. Austin (U. of Arkansas Press). A study of the rise and fall of the Panthers, focusing on its internal debates over strategy.

  • 2006 The Black Panthers, Charles E. Jones
    Charles E. Jones
    Charles E. Jones was the 26th mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia from August 1947 until September 1948. He was born in Whitby, England and moved to Vancouver in 1905. It is uncertain whether the Whitby of his birth was the fishing port in Yorkshire, or the district of Whitby in Ellesemere Port...

     and Bobby Seale (Aperture).

  • 2009 Howard L. Bingham's Black Panthers 1968, Howard Bingham
    Howard Bingham
    Howard Bingham Howard Bingham Howard Bingham (born Jackson, Mississippi, 1939 is the biographer of Muhammad Ali and a professional photographer.He was the son of a minister and Pullman porter for the US railroad. After initially failing a photography course, he was hired by a local newspaper and...

     and Gilbert Moore (Los Angeles: AAMO Books).

  • 2010 Living for the City: Migration, Education, and the Rise of the Black Panther Party in Oakland, California, Donna Murch (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press).

Biographies

  • 1917 About "The Hights" at Oakland, California, Juanita Miller
    Juanita Miller
    Juanita Miller , patron of the arts in Dallas, Texas, played a formative role in saving the Dallas Symphony Orchestra from collapse in the 1970s and promoting the city’s cultural institutions...

     (Oakland: Chas. P. MacLafferty).

  • 1931 My Own Story, John L. Davie (Oakland: Post-Enquirer Publishing). Autobiography of the long-serving former mayor; revised by Jack Herzberg and reissued 1988 as His Honor, The Buckaroo (Reno: Publisher Jack Herzberg).

  • 1937 Everybody's Autobiography, Gertrude Stein
    Gertrude Stein
    Gertrude Stein was an American writer, poet and art collector who spent most of her life in France.-Early life:...

     (New York: Random House
    Random House
    Random House, Inc. is the largest general-interest trade book publisher in the world. It has been owned since 1998 by the German private media corporation Bertelsmann and has become the umbrella brand for Bertelsmann book publishing. Random House also has a movie production arm, Random House Films,...

    ). Brief mention of Oakland, from the woman who coined the phrase, "There's no there there".

  • 1938 Dr. Samuel Merritt, His Life and Achievements, Henning Koford (Oakland).

  • 1953 The Story of Cyrus and Susan Mills, Elias Olan James (Stanford: Stanford University Press). biography of the founders of Mills College
    Mills College
    Mills College is an independent liberal arts women's college founded in 1852 that offers bachelor's degrees to women and graduate degrees and certificates to women and men. Located in Oakland, California, Mills was the first women's college west of the Rockies. The institution was initially founded...

    .

  • 1967 Some Random Reminiscences of an Antiquarian Bookseller, Harold C. Holmes (Oakland: Holmes Book Company). Holmes Books was a bookstore in downtown Oakland.

  • 1972 Celebrities At Your Doorstep, Leonard, H. Verbarg (n.p.: Alameda County Historical Society). A compilation of newspaper columns profiling Oakland and East Bay personalities.

  • 1964 Alex Dunsmuir's Dilemma, James Audain
    James Audain
    James Audain was a soldier, author, and racehorse breeder/owner. Educated at Wellington College, Berkshire and the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst, he became a cavalry officer...

     (Victoria, B.C.: Sunnyland Publishing). Audain is the great-nephew of local figure Dunsmuir, of the Dunsmuir House
    Dunsmuir House
    The Dunsmuir House and Gardens is located in Oakland, California on a site. The Dunsmuir House has a neoclassical-revival architectural style and is listed in the US National Register of Historic Places...

    .

  • 1973 Ina Coolbrith, Librarian and Laureate of California, Josephine DeWitt Rhodehamel and Raymund Francis Wood (Provo: BYU Press). How a niece of Joseph Smith's became Oakland's first librarian and California's first Poet Laureate.

  • 1982 Borax Pioneer: Francis Marion Smith, George Herbert Hildebrand (San Diego: Howell-North Books). The story of "Borax" Smith, of Oakland's Realty Syndicate, Key Route, and Arbor Villa (his expansive mansion) fame.

  • 1990 Six Gold Stars Vol. 1: Thirty Years of Fighting Sin & High Crime with Oakland's Favorite Cop, Jean Mackellar, ed. (Berkeley: Glen Press).

  • 1990 Jack London and His Daughters, Joan London
    Joan London
    Joan London is the name of:* Joan London , Australian fiction author* Joan London , California author and daughter of Jack London...

     (Berkeley: Heyday Books).

  • 1991 Slick: The Silver-And-Black Life of Al Davis, Mark Ribowsky (New York: Macmillian).

  • 1992 The Water King: Anthony Chabot, His Life & Times, Sherwood D. Burgess (Davis, CA: Panorama West Publishing).

  • 1994 The Calvin Simmons Story, Rina Evelyn Wolfe (Berkeley: Muse Wood Press).

  • 1998 One Step From the White House: The Rise and Fall of Senator William F. Knowland, Gayle B. Montgomery and James W. Johnson (Berkeley: Univ. of Calif.). All about our former Senate Majority Leader, newspaper publisher, failed gubernatorial and presidential aspirant, and--in the end--dismal suicide.

  • 1999 Jack London: A Life, Alex Kershaw (New York: St. Martin's Griffin).

  • 1999 Prophet of the Parks: The Story of William Penn Mott, Mary Ellen Butler (Ashburn, VA: The National Recreation and Park Association). The story of Oakland's former parks superintendent who went on to manage the East Bay Regional Park District, direct the California Parks and Recreation Department, and eventually direct the National Park Service.

  • 2000 Lying Down With the Lions: A Public Life from the Streets of Oakland to the Halls of Power, Ronald Dellums and H. Lee Halterman (Boston: Beacon Press). The story of Dellums' 27 years as Congressman for California's 9th District, before entering the halls of power back on the streets of Oakland.

  • 2000 Miner, Preacher, Doctor, Teacher: Stories of an Odyssey from Ann Arbor, Michigan to Ketchikan, Alaska, to a Pioneering Medical Career in Oakland, California, Frederic M. Loomis, compiled by Lee Sims (Walnut Creek: Hardscratch Press). Loomis was Sims' grandfather.

  • 2001 Yellow Journalist: Dispatches from Asian America, William Wong (Philadelphia: Temple).

  • 2001 At The Cross: The Napoleon Kaufman Story, Napoleon Kaufman & Jimmie Hand (San Ramon: CWC Publishing).

  • 2003 The Dragon and the Tiger, Vol. 1: The Birth of Bruce Lee's Jeet Kune Do, the Oakland Years, Greglon Lee and Sid Campbell (Berkeley: Frog, Ltd.). Did you know that Bruce Lee lived in Oakland and developed much of his early technique in houses in the Grand Lake and Maxwell Park neighborhoods? Vol. 2 appeared in 2005, and then Remembering the Master: Bruce Lee, James Yimm Lee and the Creation of Jeet Kune Do in 2006.

  • 2004 On the Jericho Road: A Memoir of Racial Justice, Social Action and Prophetic Ministry, J. Alfred Smith Sr. with Harry Louis Williams II (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press). Smith's life and work, especially his long and fruitful tenure at the Allen Temple Baptist Church (1971 - 2007).

  • 2004 The Jerry Brown Reader, ed. Erik Bucy (Berkeley: Berkeley Hills Books). It includes speeches, essays, interviews, and media profiles up through his residence and mayoral tenure in Oakland.

  • 2005 The Promise: How One Woman Made Good on Her Extraordinary Pact to Send a Classroom of First Graders to College, Oral Lee Brown, with Caille Millner (New York: Doubleday).

  • 2006 Decca: The Letters of Jessica Mitford, Jessica Mitford, ed. Peter Y. Sussman (New York: Knopf). Our naturalized muckraking journalist, best known for her exposé of the funeral industry, The American Way of Death, lived in Oakland up to her own death in 1996.

  • 2008 Oakland, Jack London, and Me, Eric Miles Williamson
    Eric Miles Williamson
    Eric Miles Williamson is an American novelist and literary critic, member of the Board of Directors of the National Book Critics Circle, editor of the American Book Review, Boulevard, and Texas Review...

     (Huntsville, Texas: Texas Review Press).

  • 2008 BeatCop: A True and Fascinating Journey into the Perilous Career of a Police Officer., Jack Lundquist, Jr. (N.P., Vegasjacklv.com).

  • 2009 ViceCop: A Captivating Journey into the Life and World of a Vice Cop., Jack Lundquist, Jr. (N.P., Vegasjacklv.com). Sequel to BeatCop.

  • 2010 Charles Finley: The Outrageous Story of Baseball's Super Showman, G. Michael Green and Roger D. Launius (Walker & Company).


There are many books by and about people associated with the Black Panthers (for example, Huey Newton, Bobby Seale, Angela Davis, etc.), such as:
  • 1976 Angela Davis: An Autobiography (New York: Bantam).

  • 1978 A Lonely Rage: the Autobiography Of Bobby Seale, Bobby Seale (New York: Times Books).

  • 1994 The Shadow of the Panther: Huey Newton and the Price of Black Power in America, Hugh Pearson (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley).

  • 1998 The Angela Y. Davis Reader, ed. Joy James (Blackwell Pub.).


And books by and about the Hell's Angels motorcycle club (founded in 1948 in San Bernardino and brought to Oakland in 1957 by Ralph "Sonny" Barger) such as:
  • 1967 Hell's Angels: A Strange and Terrible Saga, Hunter S. Thompson (New York: Random House).

  • 1978 A Wayward Angel: The Fully Story of the Hell's Angels by the Former Vice-President of the Oakland Chapter, George Wethern and Vincent Colnett (New York: Richard Marek Publishers).

  • 2001 Hell's Angel: The Life and Times of Sonny Barger and the Hell's Angels Motorcycle Club, Keith Zimmerman, Kent Zimmerman, and Ralph "Sonny" Barger (San Francisco: Harper Perennial).

Sociological studies and reflections

  • 1974 Children of the Great Depression: Social Change in Life Experience, Glen H. Elder (Chicago: U. of Chicago Press; 25th Anniversary Edition with an additional chapter, 1998, Boulder: Westview Press). A longitudinal study of 167 individuals born in Oakland in 1920-21.

  • 1979 Bump City: Winners and Losers in Oakland, John Krich, with photographs by Dorothea Lange (Berkeley: City Miner Books).

  • 1981 The Serious Business of Growing Up: A Study of Children's Lives Outside School, Elliott A. Medrich (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press).

  • 1989 Two to Four from 9 to 5: The Adventures of a Daycare Provider, Joan Roemer as told to Barbara Austin (Grand Rapids: Harper Perennial). Seventy-two vignettes of life in a home-based Oakland day care.

  • 1995 Drive-By, Gary Rivlin (New York: Henry Holt). A reporter's-eye account of the people, events, and setting that led up to one mid-`90s drive-by gang shooting.

  • 1997 The Last Resort: Scenes from a Transient Hotel, Aggie Max (San Francisco: Chronicle Books).

  • 2001 Unmarried Parents, Fragile Families: New Evidence from Oakland, Maureen Rosamond Waller (Public Policy Institute of California).

  • 2003 American Babylon: Race, Power, and the Struggle for the Postwar City in California, Robert O. Self, Susan Erik Lape, and Gary Gerstle (Princeton: Princeton University Press).

  • 2003 Homegirls in the Public Sphere, Marie "Keta" Miranda (Univ. of Texas Press). An ethnographic study of Chicana gang members in the Fruitvale community of Oakland, contrasting public and private perceptions.

  • 2003 Safe Harbor: Refugee Stories from Oakland, Gary Turchin.

  • 2001 Yellow Journalist: Dispatches from Asian America, William Wong (Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press). A collection of essays by the former Oakland Tribune columnist.

  • 2004 Blues City: A Walk in Oakland, Ishmael Reed (New York: Crown).

  • 2004 No There There: Race, Class, and the Struggle for Political Community in Oakland, Chris Rhomberg and Roger Nichols (Berkeley: Univ. of California Press).

Government, education, and politics

  • 1968 Oakland's Not for Burning, Amory Bradford (New York: McKay). Mr. Bradford came from Washington in 1965 to help the city avoid riots as had occurred in Watts.

  • 1971 Making Schools Work; Strategies for Changing Education, Marcus Foster (Philadelphia: Westerminster Press).

  • 1998 Bay Cities and Water Politics: The Battle for Resources in Boston and Oakland, Sarah S. Elkind (University of Kansas
    University of Kansas
    The University of Kansas is a public research university and the largest university in the state of Kansas. KU campuses are located in Lawrence, Wichita, Overland Park, and Kansas City, Kansas with the main campus being located in Lawrence on Mount Oread, the highest point in Lawrence. The...

     Press). A comparison of 19th-century waterfront development in the two cities.

  • 1999 Some Buildings Just Can't Dance, R. S. Olson, R. A. Olson, and V. T. Gawronski (JAI Press). Examines Oakland's public policy responses to buildings damaged in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake.

  • 2002 Hard Lessons: The Promise of an Inner-City Charter School, Jonathan Schorr (New York: Ballantine Books
    Ballantine Books
    Ballantine Books is a major book publisher located in the United States, founded in 1952 by Ian Ballantine with his wife, Betty Ballantine. It was acquired by Random House in 1973, which in turn was acquired by Bertelsmann AG in 1998 and remains part of that company today. Ballantine's logo is a...

    ).

  • 2006 Oakland, California: Towards a Sustainable City, Moses Durst (Bloomington, Indiana: Authorhouse).

  • 2006 A Different View of Urban Schools: Civil Rights, Critical Race Theory, and Unexplored Realities, Kitty Kelly Epstein (N.Y.: Peter Lang Publishing).

  • 2008 Hugging the Middle: How Teachers Teach in an Era of Testing and Accountability, Larry Cuban (N.Y.: Teachers College Press). Examines the effects of contemporary testing in the Oakland
    Oakland Unified School District
    Oakland Unified School District is a public education school district which operates elementary schools , middle schools , and high schools in Oakland, California.-History:...

    , Arlington, and Denver school districts.

  • 2009 Crazy Like a Fox: One Principal’s Triumph in the Inner City, Ben Chavis with Carey Blakely (New York: New American Library
    New American Library
    New American Library is an American publisher based in New York, founded in 1948; it produced affordable paperback reprints of classics and scholarly works, as well as popular, pulp, and "hard-boiled" fiction. Non-fiction, original, and hardcopy issues were also produced.Victor Weybright and Kurt...

    ). An account of Chavis’ tenure at the American Indian Public Charter School, as recounted to a former AIPCS teacher.


Books from the Oakland Project at U.C. Berkeley, directed by Aaron Wildavsky
Aaron Wildavsky
Aaron Wildavsky was an American political scientist known for his pioneering work in public policy, government budgeting, and risk management....

 (all are Berkeley: University of California Press
University of California Press
University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing. It was founded in 1893 to publish books and papers for the faculty of the University of California, established 25 years earlier in 1868...

 unless otherwise noted):

  • 1971 The Politics of City Revenue, Arnold J. Meltsner. A detailed analysis of pre-Proposition 13 Oakland finances.

  • 1972 Power Structure and Urban Policy: Who Rules in Oakland?, Edward C. Hayes (New York: McGraw-Hill
    McGraw-Hill
    The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., is a publicly traded corporation headquartered in Rockefeller Center in New York City. Its primary areas of business are financial, education, publishing, broadcasting, and business services...

    ). "[T]he city's medium and large businessmen have reaped the major and continuing benefits of local policy, while the nonrich have reaped a harvest of more crowded housing, forced removal...higher taxes, and minimum public services....This study has shown the extent to which a very small set of persons and interests can find real expression in the current political organs of a city."

  • 1973 Implementation: How Great Expectations in Washington are Dashed in Oakland: Or Why It's Amazing That Federal Programs Work at All, This Being the Saga of the Economic Development Administration As Told by Two Sympathetic Observers Who Seek to Build Morals on Ruined Hopes, Aaron. B. Wildavsky and Jeffrey L. Pressman (expanded 2nd ed., 1979; 3rd ed., 1984). Examines the effects of the Federal Economic Development Administration.

  • 1975 Urban Outcomes: Schools, Streets and Libraries, Frank S. Levy, Arnold Meltsner, and Aaron Wildavsky.

  • 1975 Federal Programs & City Politics : The Dynamics of the Aid Process in Oakland, Jeffrey L. Pressman.

  • 1978 Personnel Policy in the City: The Politics of Jobs in Oakland, California, Frank J. Thompson.

  • 1978 Marcus Foster and the Oakland Public Schools: Leadership in an Urban Bureaucracy, Jesse J. McCorry.

  • 1986 Municipal Coping Strategies: As Soon as the Dust Settles, Jay D. Starling (Beverly Hills: Sage). A study of municipal decision-making.

Schoolbooks and children's books

  • 1924 The Story of Rancho San Antonio: A Brief History of the East San Francisco Bay District From the Time the Shell Mounds Were Forming to the Present, Daisy Williamson De Veer (Oakland: Claremont Press). De Veer was the Curator of Education at the Oakland Museum.

  • 1930 Oakland: A Story for Children, Regina Kennt, et al. (Oakland: Oakland Board of Education).

  • 1959 Land of the Oaks, James Harlow (Oakland: Board of Education). "A study of the history and government of Oakland and Alameda County, prepared for use in the Oakland Public Schools as a partial fulfillment of the California state law requiring the teaching of state and local government."

  • 1968 Heritage of Oakland, Oakland Public Schools. Not as detailed as Land of the Oaks, but very nicely designed and illustrated.

  • 1969 Oakland, the Mellow City, Hoover Jr. Hi. School (Oakland: Junior League of Oakland). Oakland's past and then-present, depicted in student drawing and poems.

  • 1972 Mark Will Ward: A Black Family in the City, Bob & Lynne Fitch, ed. Paul J. Deegan (Mankato, Minnesota: Amecus St.). Black family life in North Oakland, through the eyes of a schoolboy.

  • 1974 Dr. Marcus A. Foster: A Man for All People, Dorothy Hallum (Hayward: Alameda County School Dept.).

  • 1983 Oakland A to Z, or Tripping Around Oakland, a Coloring Book Guide to Exploring the City of Oakland, June Naboisek, illustrations by Nancy Gorrell (Berkeley: Pandora Press).

  • 2008 Randolph in Oakland, Erika Mailman (North Carolina: Lulu)

Buildings, parks, and architecture

  • 1934(?) Oakland Parks and Playgrounds, ed. DeWitt Jones, George Ebey, Herbert Shears, Raymond Barry, and Charles F. Burns (Oakland: Oakland Parks and Recreation Department).

  • 1964 The Improvement Era: Oakland Temple issue, Salt Lake City: Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints. Magazine-format depiction of the Oakland Temple and an article by Harold W. Burton, its chief architect.

  • 1970 The Ultimate Victorians of the Continental Side of San Francisco Bay, Elinor Richey (Berkeley: Howell-North Books).

  • 1971 East of These Golden Shores: Architecture of the Earlier Days in Contra Costa and Alameda Counties, David Bohn (Junior League of Oakland and Scrimshaw Press).

  • 1979 The Buildings of Oakland, Robert Bernhardi (Oakland: Forest Hill Press).

  • 1979 East Bay Heritage: A Potpourri of Living History, Mark A. Wilson (San Francisco: A California Living Book). A full guide to East Bay architectural history from 1800 to 1950, with narrated walking tours (eight of Oakland).

  • 1978 Rehab Right: How to Rehabilitate Your Oakland House without Sacrificing Architectural Assets, Helaine Kaplan Prentice and Blair Prentice (Oakland: City of Oakland Planning Department). Three editions were published by City of Oakland, followed by this 1987 revision, Rehab Right: How to Realize the Full Value of Your Old House (Berkeley: Ten Speed Press).

  • 1981 The Oakland Paramount, Susannah Harris Stone (Oakland: Oakland Paramount Theatre; reprinted 2002). Before & behind the scenes looks at the Paramount Theatre, opened in 1931 and reopened in 1973.

  • 1987 Architecture and Urban Design in Oakland: an Annotated Bibliography, Robert Dobruskin (Berkeley: University-Oakland Metropolitan Forum).

  • 1989 The Oakland Museum: A Gift of Architecture, Warren Radford, Kevin Roche, Dan Kiley, Geraldine Knight Scott and Allan Temko
    Allan Temko
    Allan Bernard Temko was a Pulitzer Prize-winning architectural critic and writer based in San Francisco.Born in New York City and raised in Weehawken, New Jersey, Temko served as a U.S...

     (Oakland: Oakland Museum Association).

  • 1996 Through These Doors: Discovering Oakland at Preservation Park, Helaine Kaplan Prentice, Andrew Brubaker and Betty Marvin (Oakland: Oakland Redevelopment Agency). About Preservation Park
    Preservation Park
    - Preservation Park :Preservation Park is located in Oakland, California. The park includes sixteen historic buildings, five of which stand in their original location, and eleven of which were moved from elsewhere in Oakland to avoid demolition...

    .

  • 2001 The Peraltas and Their Houses, J. N. Bowman (Oakland: Alameda County Historical Society). A reprint of a 1951 article in the California Historical Society Quarterly. It includes line drawings and placement maps.

  • 2008 Art Deco San Francisco: The Architecture of Timothy Pflueger, Therese Poletti (Princeton Architectural Press). Timothy L. Pflueger
    Timothy L. Pflueger
    Timothy Ludwig Pflueger was a prominent architect, interior designer and architectural lighting designer in the San Francisco Bay Area in the first half of the 20th century. Together with James R...

     was the architect of the Oakland Paramount Theatre as well as one of the designers of the Oakland - San Francisco Bay Bridge.

Passenger railways and ferries

  • 1961 Suburban Railway: Along the East Shore of San Francisco Bay, Earle C. Hanson (San Marino: Pacific Railroad Publications).

  • 1967 BART at Mid-Point: San Francisco’s Bold New Rapid Transit Project, Harre W. Demoro (Los Angeles: Interurbans).

  • 1972 BART: Off and Running, Joseph A. Strapac (Burlingame: Chatham Publishing).

  • 1977 Interurban Railways of the Bay Area, Paul C. Trimble (Fresno: Valley Publishers).

  • 1977 Red Trains in the East Bay: The History of the Southern Pacific Transbay Train & Ferry System (Interurban Specials 65), Robert Ford (Glendale: Interurbans). "The SP never made a dime on its investment. But for three decades the red trains rolled and the ferries steamed, giving the customers one of the finest commutes anywhere."

  • 1978 Key System Album, Jim Walker (Glendale: Interubans). Interurbans Press Special No. 68.

  • 1980 Red Trains Remembered, Robert S. Ford (Glendale: Interurbans). Interurbans Press Special No. 75.

  • 1985 The Key Route: Transbay Commuting by Train and Ferry, Harre W. Demorro (Glendale: Interurban Press).

  • 1989 From Bullets to BART, William Middleton (Chicago: Central Electric Railfan’s Association).

  • 1993 BART Past and Future: A Pictorial Review with Highlights of History, Drle C. Hanson (Walnut Creek: Bay Area Railroadiana).

  • 1996 Danville Branch of the Oakland, Antioch and Eastern Railway (Danville: Museum of the San Ramon Valley).

  • 1999 Electric Railways Around San Francisco Bay, Donald Duke (San Mariano: Golden West Books).

  • 2006 Key System Gallery, James A. Harrison (Shade Tree Books). "A photographic visit to the Trans-Bay and City Streetcar Lines of the Key System
    Key System
    The Key System was a privately owned company which provided mass transit in the cities of Oakland, Berkeley, Alameda, Emeryville, Piedmont, San Leandro, Richmond, Albany and El Cerrito in the eastern San Francisco Bay Area from 1903 until 1960, when the system was sold to a newly formed public...

     and its Affiliated Street Railways in Oakland, Berkeley and East Bay cities, 1902-1958."

  • 2007 Key System Streetcars, Vernon J. Sappers (Signature Press).

  • 2010 Bay Area Rail Transit Album, Vol. 1: BART, Joe Mendoza (CreateSpace). Color photographs and schematic cross sections of all 43 stations, plus many historic pictures and descriptions of America’s first automated mass transit system.


See also various of the Arcadia "Images of America" titles below.

See also several issues of Western Railroader (San Mateo, CA), including:
- "Key System-East Bay Transit." (#11, v. 1, no. 11, September 1938)
- "Key System Roster; East Bay Transit Roster" (#41, v. 4, no. 7, June 1941)
- "East Shore and Suburban Railway." (#217, v. 21, no. 1, November 1957)
- "Oakland, San Leandro and Hayward's Electric Railway" (#223, v. 21, no. 7, May 1958)
- “Early Day Trolleys of the East Bay,” (#?, v. 22, no. 4; February 1959)
- "Oakland, Antioch and Eastern Railway" (#382, v. 34, no. 12, December 1971).

Photographic essays and art books

  • 1894 Views of Oakland California (N.P., Pacific Press Publishing Company). "Official Souvenir of the Twenty-Seventh Annual Encampment, G.A.R. - Department of California - Held at Oakland, California, April 23-28, 1894 - including Views of Oakland and a Description of the City." ("G.A.R." was the Grand Army of the Republic, a fraternal group for Union veterans of the Civil War.)

  • 1972 Oakland's Image, Lois Rather (Oakland: The Rather Press). Limited edition art book.

  • 1976 Oakland: A Mediterranean City, Roger Urban. Oakland's climate--the mildest in the nation, and shared with only central Chile, southwestern Australia, the South African Cape, and the Mediterranean basin itself--shapes its natural and man-made setting in beautiful ways. If only the Gondolas had been plying Lake Merritt at the time.

  • 1983 The Carousel Animal, Tobin Fraley, photography by Gary Sinick (Berkeley: Zephyr Press). The work of Oakland's Tobin Fraley Studios

  • 1991 Voyage, Paula Blasier, photographs by Terrence McCarthy (n.p.: Bramalea Pacific). The saga of creating Richard Deutsch
    Richard Deutsch
    Richard Deutsch is an American sculptor who works primarily in the Minimalist and Expressionist genres. Although his work ranges from small table-top pieces to multi-story sculptures, Deutsch "is well-known for his large-scale architectural and environmental projects."-Life and career:Deutsch was...

    's massive garden sculpture at 1111 Broadway out of two 16-ton ship propellers.

  • 1993 Bay Area Blues, Lee Hildebrand and Michelle Vignes (San Francisco: Pomegranate Artbooks). From Eli Mile High to Cozy Den, from Bob Geddins
    Bob Geddins
    Robert L. "Bob" Geddins was an American San Francisco Bay Area blues and rhythm and blues musician and record producer....

     to Sonny Rhodes to Beverly Stovall (on the cover), this book documents the Oakland Blues scene in the early `80s. A 1989 version was published in French, with Vignes' photographs and a text by Francis Hofstein.

  • 1995 Oakland Rhapsody, Richard Nagler and Ishmael Reed
    Ishmael Reed
    Ishmael Scott Reed is an American poet, essayist, and novelist. A prominent African-American literary figure, Reed is known for his satirical works challenging American political culture, and highlighting political and cultural oppression.Reed has been described as one of the most controversial...

     (Berkeley: North Atlantic Books
    North Atlantic Books
    North Atlantic Books is a non-profit, independent publisher based in Berkeley, CA. Founded by authors Richard Grossinger and Lindy Hough in Vermont, North Atlantic Books was named partly for the North Atlantic region where it began in 1974, as well as Alan Van Newkirk's Geographic Foundation of the...

    ). Bits of Oakland's past and present in juxtapositions of people and settings.

  • 1996 Ink, Paper, Metal, Wood: Painters and Sculptors at Crown Point Press, Kathan Brown (San Francisco: Chronicle Books
    Chronicle Books
    Chronicle Books is a San Francisco-based American publisher of books for adults and children.The company was established in 1968 by Phelps Dewey, an executive with Chronicle Publishing Company, then-publisher of the San Francisco Chronicle. In 1999 it was bought by Nion McEvoy, great-grandson of...

    ). Fine art printing from a major Oakland art press, including work by William Brice
    William Brice
    William Brice was an artist known for his large-scale abstract paintings.-Biography:Born to actress Fannie Brice and gambler/criminal Nicky Arnstein, April 23, 1921, he spent his early years living with his mother and his sister Frances , while their father was in prison on a variety of charges...

    , Chuck Close
    Chuck Close
    Charles Thomas "Chuck" Close is an American painter and photographer who achieved fame as a photorealist, through his massive-scale portraits...

    , Richard Diebenkorn
    Richard Diebenkorn
    Richard Diebenkorn was a well-known 20th century American painter. His early work is associated with Abstract expressionism and the Bay Area Figurative Movement of the 1950s and 1960s. His later work were instrumental to his achievement of worldwide acclaim.-Biography:Richard Clifford Diebenkorn Jr...

    , Eric Fischl
    Eric Fischl
    Eric Fischl is an American painter, sculptor and printmaker.-Early life:Fischl was born in New York City and grew up on suburban Long Island; his family moved to Phoenix, Arizona in 1967...

    , Alex Katz
    Alex Katz
    Alex Katz is an American figurative artist associated with the Pop art movement. In particular, he is known for his paintings, sculptures, and prints and is represented by numerous galleries internationally.-Life and work:...

    , Sol LeWitt
    Sol LeWitt
    Solomon "Sol" LeWitt was an American artist linked to various movements, including Conceptual art and Minimalism....

    , Brice Marden
    Brice Marden
    Brice Marden , is an American artist, generally described as Minimalist, although his work defies specific categorization. He lives in New York and Eagles Mere.Marden is represented by the Matthew Marks Gallery.-Life:...

    , Ed Ruscha, and Wayne Thiebaud
    Wayne Thiebaud
    Wayne Thiebaud is an American painter whose most famous works are of cakes, pastries, boots, toilets, toys and lipsticks. He is associated with the Pop art movement because of his interest in objects of mass culture, although his works, executed during the fifties and sixties, slightly predate...

    .

  • 1997 Society of Six: California Colorists by Nancy Boas (Berkeley: University of California Press
    University of California Press
    University of California Press, also known as UC Press, is a publishing house associated with the University of California that engages in academic publishing. It was founded in 1893 to publish books and papers for the faculty of the University of California, established 25 years earlier in 1868...

    ). Six Oakland painters joined together in 1917 to form an association that lasted nearly fifteen years. The Society of Six—Selden Connor Gile, Maurice Logan, William H. Clapp, August F. Gay, Bernard von Eichman, and Louis Siegriest—created a color-centered modernist idiom that shocked establishment tastes, and were an important post-impressionist group of the era in Northern California.

  • 1997 Going Out in Style: The Architecture of Eternity, Douglas Keister (New York: Facts on File). Surveys American cemeteries generally but features many examples from Oakland's Mountain View Cemetery
    Mountain View Cemetery
    The Mountain View Cemetery is a large cemetery in Oakland, California. It was established in 1863 by a group of East Bay pioneers under the California Rural Cemetery Act of 1859. The association they formed still operates the cemetery today...

    , including the front cover and title page.

  • 1999 Contact Sheet 101: South to West Oakland, Lewis Watts (n.p.: Light Work Visual Studios). Juxtapositions of images of the deep South
    Southern United States
    The Southern United States—commonly referred to as the American South, Dixie, or simply the South—constitutes a large distinctive area in the southeastern and south-central United States...

     and West Oakland.

  • 2001 Our World: The Children of Oakland, Marianne Thomas (Oakland: Harbor House). portraits of youth from 34 different racial/ethnic groups. Harbor House is an evangelical Christian ministry in Oakland.

  • 2001 Made in Oakland: The Furniture of Garry Knox Bennett, Garry Knox Bennett, Ursula Ilse-Neuman, and Arthur Coleman Danto (American Craft Museum).

  • 2003 Oakland, A Photographic Journey, Bill Caldwell (Oakland: Momentum Publications). An extensive photographic sesquicentennial tribute to Oakland. Features many old and new views of Oakland in juxtaposition.

  • 2004 East Bay Then and Now, Dennis Evanosky and Eric J. Kos (San Diego: Thunder Bay Press
    Thunder Bay Press
    Thunder Bay Press is a publisher known for its Then and Now books. It publishes nonfiction promotional books, often containing specially commissioned photography. Subjects include cooking, sports, history, transportation and nature. It is owned by Baker & Taylor Publishing Group....

    ).

  • [2007] 100 Families Oakland: Art & Social Change, Sonia BasSheva Mañjon, photography by TaSin Sabir (Oakland: Oakland Museum of California
    Oakland Museum of California
    Oakland Museum of California or Oakland Museum is a museum dedicated to the art, history, and natural science of California located in Oakland, California....

    ). Documentation and exhibit catalog of this 2005-2007 arts & social change project, exploring how the experience of learning and creating art together can strengthen families and communities.

  • 2009 Historic Photos of Oakland, Steven Lavoie (New York and Nashville: Turner Publishing). A collection of nearly 200 historic photographs and fact-filled captions and chapter introductions written by an Oakland native and librarian..

  • 2010 The Marvelous Museum: Orphans, Curiosities & Treasures, Mark Dion (San Francisco: Chronicle Books). An analysis of the role of the museum in contemporary society, using the Oakland Museum of California as a case study.


Volumes in the "Images of America" series by Arcadia Publishing (Mount Pleasant, South Carolina):
  • 2004 Oakland's Chinatown, William Wong.

  • 2004 Oakland Hills, Erika Mailman.

  • 2005 Oakland Fire Department, Geoffrey Hunter.

  • 2005 Oakland (Postcard History Series), Annalee Allen.

  • 2005 The Bay Bridge, Paul C. Trimble and John C. Alioto Jr.

  • 2006 Theaters of Oakland, Jack Tillmany and Jennifer Dowling.

  • 2006 Selections from the Oakland Tribune, Annalee Allen.

  • 2007 Ferries of San Francisco Bay, Paul C. Trimble and William Knorp.

  • 2007 Black Artists in Oakland, Jerry Thompson and Duane Deterville.

  • 2007 Oakland Police Department, Phil McArdle.

  • 2007 The Key System: San Francisco and the Eastshore Empire, Walter Rice and Emiliano Echeverria.

  • 2007 The Pullman Porters and West Oakland, Thomas Tramble and Wilma Tramble.

  • 2007 Rockridge, Robin Wolf and Tom Wolf.

  • 2008 Oakland's Equestrian Heritage, Amelia Sue Marshall and Terry L. Tobey.

  • 2008 Oakland Aviation, Ronald T. Reuther and William T. Larkins.

  • 2009 Jews of Oakland and Berkeley, Frederick Isaac.

  • 2011 Italian Oakland, Rick Malaspina.


Volumes from Blurb.com
  • 2008 Welcome to Oakland: A Photo Album, by Ross Moody.

  • 2008 Neighborhood Harvest, by residents of West Oakland.

  • 2009 Land of Oakland, by Bullimalinna Sot.

Fiction set in Oakland

  • 1986 (written in 1960) Humpty Dumpty in Oakland
    Humpty Dumpty in Oakland
    Humpty Dumpty in Oakland is a realist, non-science fiction novel authored by Philip K. Dick. Originally completed in 1960, but rejected by prior publishers, this work was posthumously published by Gollancz in the United Kingdom in 1986...

    , Philip K. Dick
    Philip K. Dick
    Philip Kindred Dick was an American novelist, short story writer and essayist whose published work is almost entirely in the science fiction genre. Dick explored sociological, political and metaphysical themes in novels dominated by monopolistic corporations, authoritarian governments and altered...

    , Gollancz
    Gollancz
    Gollancz often refers to the British publishing house Victor Gollancz Ltd.Gollancz, a family name originating from the Polish town Gołańcz , is mainly known as the name of a prominent British Jewish family, including:* Sir Hermann Gollancz , rabbi* Sir Israel Gollancz , scholar of...

  • 1997 Mistress of Spices
    Mistress of Spices
    The Mistress of Spices, , set in contemporary Oakland, California, is a novel by Indian American writer and University of Houston Creative Writing Program professor Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni.-Plot summary:...

    , Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
    Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
    Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni is an Indian-American author, poet, and the Betty and Gene McDavid Professor of Writing at the University of Houston Creative Writing Program....

    , Doubleday Books
  • 1992 Way Past Cool, Jess Mowry
    Jess Mowry
    Jess Mowry is an American author of books and stories for children and young adults. He has written fourteen books and many short stories for and about black children and teens in a variety of genres, ranging from inner-city settings to the forests of Haiti...

    , Farrar, Straus & Giroux, about young African-American teens trying to survive and make the right choices in a world of gangs, guns, drugs and violence.

External links

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