Proud, defiant, thoughtful, and at times melancholy, the saints in this beautifully designed people's history of L.A. reveal their own unique versions of transcendence and, in doing so, challenge traditional notions of what it means to be blessed. Playfully borrowing from various artistic genres from illuminated manuscripts to comic strips and encased in a sumptuous gold cover, All the Saints of the City of the Angels combines meticulous research with creative inspiration to depict in paint and ink Angelenos both historical and contemporary. Since 2000, J. Michael Walker has been researching every Los Angeles street named for a saint. Delving into city records, hagiographies, old photographs, maps, advertisements, and history books, Walker has emerged with what he calls a loopy valentine to the City of the Angels. On San Julian Street, in the heart of Skid Row, San Julian's legend as the patron saint of wanderers comes to life as he talks to the homeless in the shelters. A hidden path off San Sebastian Drive leads Walker to contemplate the similarity between San Sebastian who, after being pierced with arrows, was nursed back to health by an elderly woman and the Tongva Indians who, once declared extinct by the government, are now experiencing a cultural renaissance thanks to the efforts of generations of elders. Populated by the portraits of both the famous and the forgotten, and filled with stories and secrets from every age, this beautifully offbeat volume peels back layers of western history to reveal the humanity underneath. Published in collaboration with the Autry National Center Walker's large-scale paintings, which were the source for All the Saints of the City of the Angels , were exhibited at the Autry National Center in the spring of 2008. ''J. Michael Walker sees angels everywhere, the divine in the ordinary, saints in survivors. And that, in our era of fear and rage, is miracle enough for me.''--Sandra Cisneros, author of The House on Mango Street and Caramelo ''J. Michael Walker takes us on an incredible and fascinating historical journey of discovery utilizing both his stunning paintings and his amazing stories in All the Saints of the City of the Angels. This book is a treasure found; it should be shared and cherished by all.''--Synthia SAINT JAMES, internationally exhibited artist and illustrator ''In company with 103 saints, we watch the small pueblo of Los Angeles unfold to become one of the major cities of the world. With sadness and joy, happiness and sorrow, success and failure, and yes, even life and death, Walker has given us poignant accounts of the geography of grace in the city he loves.''--Michael E. Engh, S.J., Dean of Bellarmine College and Professor of History at Loyola Marymount University ''Art and history coming together at the streetscape level: inventive, erudite, and thoughtful.''--William Deverell, professor of history at the University of Southern California and director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West ''Los Angeles has many faces, many dimensions, many roots. J. Michael Walker focuses on one of the most important--the naming of streets, mountains, cities, and terrains for Catholic saints, a legacy of Spanish and Mexican rule. It's as important as anything the Germans, Anglos, Irish, Hungarians, Armenians, Japanese, or Chinese have brought to these lands. They're all valid--and this book is a good place to start to find out why.''--Luis J. Rodriguez, author of The Republic of East L.A. and Music of the Mill ''J. Michael Walker has created a moving people's history of L.A. that unites its past, present, and hope for the future.''--Charlene Villasenor Black, associate professor of art history at UCLA and author of Constructing the Cult of St. Joseph: Art and Gender in the Spanish Empire ''J. Michael Walker's book is an original, deeply empathetic spiritual geography of Los Angeles that sights present day sanctity among today's humble and downtrodden.''--Laura Perez, associate professor of Chicano studies at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of Chicana Art: The Politics of Spiritual and Aesthetic Altarities ''This book does a wonderful job addressing the cultural and spiritual meaning behind the saint-named streets of L.A.!''--''Man One,'' L.A.-based urban muralist, graffiti artist, and co-owner of Crewest Gallery, Los Angeles ''Walker's narrative and drawings represent a sacred art for people who search for the divine in the wistful or worrisome faces of real Angelenos. A round of applause for All the Saints!'' --Jaime Lara, associate professor of Christian art and architecture, and program chair of religion and the arts at Yale University Divinity School Artist finds L.A.'s saints in unlikely places When J. Michael Walker first visited Santa Clara Street, he felt a twinge of disappointment. "There's nothing here," he thought as he scanned the two-block street in southeast Los Angeles, hemmed in by red-brick walls, b