In Rich People in Santa Barbara, Elizabeth Gilchrist captures the intoxicating, claustrophobic world of the coastal elite, where the light is pervasively golden, the wine endlessly flows, and the cost of happiness is just beyond reach. Barbara and Lydia are women on the edge, their lives and relationships as meticulously constructed as the gardens they tend. Gilchrist’s prose is lush, vibrant and her characters are unforgettable.
– Adam Cushman, author of Cut
These are two wonderful, engaging novellas about the all-but-secret world of Santa Barbara society of the not-so-distant past. These people are still around behind their gates and high hedges. Beneath the snobbery and scandal, there is something eerie, something noir. Elizabeth Gilchrist knew this world well, and she writes of it with sympathy, humor, and ruthless honesty. A great read.
– Kent Anderson, author of Sympathy for the Devil, Night Dogs, Green Sun,
and Liquor, Guns & Ammo.
Elizabeth Gilchrist portrays the lives of characters with generational wealth in Santa Barbara’s coastal city through meticulous descriptions of settings, bringing the characters to life as they navigate life’s vicissitudes.
– Elsie Augustave, author of The Roving Tree
A smell of eucalyptus and salt air, morning fogs, mountains in the distance, lust, adultery and unsolved murders. If Raymond Chandler's Los Angeles has been called "the great wrong place," Elizabeth Gilchrist's Santa Barbara runs a close second. She is its bard. Her selection of period details is impeccable, her wit and judgment playful and subtle. Her wealthy characters, seemingly proper and socially responsible, listen to the best jazz, eat the most sensible food, drive the hippest cars, and move in an atmosphere of entitled amorality and dread.
– Phillip Lopate, author of Two Marriages, editor of Art of the Personal Essay