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A Student of History

di Nina Revoyr

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6114429,292 (3.58)1
Rick Nagano is a graduate student in the history department at USC, struggling to make rent on his South Los Angeles apartment near the neighborhood where his family once lived. When he lands a job as a research assistant for the elderly Mrs. W-, the heir to an oil fortune, he sees it at first simply as a source of extra cash. But as he grows closer to the iconoclastic, charming, and feisty Mrs. W-, he gets drawn into a world of privilege and wealth far different from his racially mixed, blue-collar beginnings. Putting aside his half-finished dissertation, Rick sets up office in Mrs. W-'s grand Bel Air mansion and begins to transcribe her journals-which document an old Los Angeles not described in his history books. He also accompanies Mrs. W- to venues frequented by the descendants of the land and oil barons who built the city. One evening, at an event, he meets Fiona Morgan--the elegant scion of an old steel family-who takes an interest in his studies. Irresistibly drawn to Fiona, he agrees to help her with a project of questionable merit in the hopes he'll win her favor. A Student of History explores both the beginnings of Los Angeles and the present-day dynamics of race and class. It offers a window into the usually hidden world of high society, and the influence of historic families on current events. Like Great Expectations and The Great Gatsby, it features, in Rick Nagano, a young man of modest means who is navigating a world where he doesn't belong.… (altro)
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Couldn't put it down. Revoyr's writing is so good...I felt like I was walking along with Rick, looking over his shoulder.

Will someone I know please hurry up and read it so we can talk about it?! ( )
  Chris.Wolak | Oct 13, 2022 |
Questa recensione è stata scritta per Recensori in anteprima di LibraryThing.
I don't know much about Los Angeles, so I don't know how well the city was portrayed. This was a decent read about a grad student who gets pulled into the social circle of his wealthy employer. ( )
  brewergirl | Aug 22, 2020 |
The story is about a grad student in history that has lost interest in his dissertation, as well as his path in life. He takes a part-time job typing memoirs for a very wealthy elderly woman in Los Angeles. The memoirs are fascinating to him, and he considers changing his thesis to the history of this particular wealthy family and the early history of Los Angeles. The relationship between the student and his employer changes as they grow closer. He starts attending social events with her, accepting expensive clothing that she purchases him, and she becomes more of a mentor to him than an employer. He betrays her trust in him because his attentions are directed towards a married woman that is slighting older than him, and it's too late before he realizes he has just been manipulated. In the meantime, his employer offers to pay his way through law or business school to get his life back on track. The plans all fall apart when his betrayal is revealed, so he was "schooled" but his employer but I guess he didn't learn the lesson well enough. ( )
  kerryp | Jul 4, 2020 |
blech - not worth reading beyond sample (couldn't even finish sample)
  lulaa | Sep 6, 2019 |
In A Student of History, L.A.’s 21st century present, in the person of Ph.D. student Rick Nagano, meets its storied past in Marion W—, presiding grande dame of one of its oldest, wealthiest, and most secretive “original” families—families with streets named after them in Beverly Hills. Mrs. W— represents a living link to her grandfather, of one of the city’s founding oil barons....At its best, A Student of History reflects insightfully on not just class and history but their intersection in a young city’s living (if fading) reminders of its origins. “Mrs. W— once told me that the most important history never made it into written accounts,” Rick recalls— “that she, and people like her, were history . . . People like her, like the Harringtons, the Bakers, the Fehringers—they’re the ones who make the world run.”
 
Shrewdly delineated scenes, loaded conversations, and a delirious surge of desire caustically expose the city’s toxic ruling-class legacy of prejudice and entitlement, while stoking questions of privilege, trust, and betrayal. Wealth and power, Revoyr confirms in this taut, commanding, and delectable novel, are not shields against folly, crime, or sorrow
aggiunto da Lemeritus | modificaBooklist, Donna Seaman (Feb 1, 2019)
 
Revoyr’s sleek prose and fast pacing move the reader through the sharply observed world of old money and the bad behavior it protects.
aggiunto da Lemeritus | modificaKirkus Reviews (Jan 16, 2019)
 
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It started for the same reason that so many other things did then, because of my need for money.
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Maybe I’d learn something about LA history—I was, after all, an historian—although stupidly, with what I realize now was the particular arrogance of the overeducated and underemployed, I didn’t believe that there was anything the wealthy could teach me.
She was looking past me now, over my shoulder, out the door, out at history.
Ah, Westchester: the not-quite-Westside. Near the beach, so people could boast that they lived by the water. Yet no one would mistake Westchester for Santa Monica or the Palisades. For one thing, it was racially mixed—the escape hatch for blacks and Japanese who’d come from grittier areas. It was also so close to the airport that when planes took off, you could read the fine print on their bellies.
The one thing all these people had in common, of course, was wealth—wealth of the unimaginable variety; wealth that could only be whispered at; wealth that made them feel, to me, like members of a different species. And yet, as I learned, wealth alone did not earn membership in this exclusive group. The old historical families—those with roots in the late 1800s or early 1900s, or those whose families hailed from the East—were of the innermost circle. The next level out were the venture capitalists and their wives, who were tolerated but not embraced, privy only to the less exclusive events—because of the suspicions regarding how their fortunes had been obtained, or simply because they were, as Mrs. W— once sniffed, “new money.” None of the tech millionaires ever attended these events—which were formal and square—and the dot-com kids were too young, anyway. And only on occasion would we see movie and television stars, because “street people,” as Mrs. W— explained, “do not mix with show people.” Strangely, the second- and third-generation heirs seemed to look down on people whose wealth was self-created. And it goes without saying that all of these recipients of inherited wealth were white.
I remembered something my mother had said after that awkward graduation weekend at Stanford: You’re too impressed with people whose greatest accomplishment was being born lucky.
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Rick Nagano is a graduate student in the history department at USC, struggling to make rent on his South Los Angeles apartment near the neighborhood where his family once lived. When he lands a job as a research assistant for the elderly Mrs. W-, the heir to an oil fortune, he sees it at first simply as a source of extra cash. But as he grows closer to the iconoclastic, charming, and feisty Mrs. W-, he gets drawn into a world of privilege and wealth far different from his racially mixed, blue-collar beginnings. Putting aside his half-finished dissertation, Rick sets up office in Mrs. W-'s grand Bel Air mansion and begins to transcribe her journals-which document an old Los Angeles not described in his history books. He also accompanies Mrs. W- to venues frequented by the descendants of the land and oil barons who built the city. One evening, at an event, he meets Fiona Morgan--the elegant scion of an old steel family-who takes an interest in his studies. Irresistibly drawn to Fiona, he agrees to help her with a project of questionable merit in the hopes he'll win her favor. A Student of History explores both the beginnings of Los Angeles and the present-day dynamics of race and class. It offers a window into the usually hidden world of high society, and the influence of historic families on current events. Like Great Expectations and The Great Gatsby, it features, in Rick Nagano, a young man of modest means who is navigating a world where he doesn't belong.

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