Do you know what Los Angeles County is reading? The answers might surprise you.
Every Wednesday, a small group of dedicated book lovers huddles in a library conference room not far from Sawtelle Japantown. On this afternoon, the group is reading the Latin American classic âOne Hundred Years of Solitudeâ by Gabriel GarcÃa Márquez.
In Farsi.
But first there is tea, a nod to Iranian culture and the homeland left behind by these patrons of the West Los Angeles Regional Library. The tea is hot and dark and strong, sipped with a sugar cube held between the teeth.
This is Los Angeles County, as seen through the books we read. It encompasses Monrovia, where the most-circulated works include âBecoming,â Michelle Obamaâs wildly popular memoir, and âThe Library Book.â Susan Orleanâs love letter to literacy is also the first selection of the Los Angeles Times Book Club.
And it includes Glendale, whose readers checked out Kazu Kibuishiâs manga blockbuster âAmuletâ more than any other volume in the first three months of 2019.

As the Times launches its new community book group, we decided to find out what the county is reading â and, therefore, thinking about. We surveyed 35 library systems, asking which books were most circulated in the first quarter of 2019 and which ones have the longest waiting lists. Twenty-eight responded, representing more than 200 branches.
The lists of most-popular titles were collected from systems as small as Signal Hillâs, which has one branch and 11,000 patrons, and as massive as the County of Los Angeles network, which has 85 public branches and serves more than 3.4 million people. They paint a detailed, multicultural portrait of the region.
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Most popular library books
We analyzed the top three books in more than 200 library branches throughout Los Angeles County in the first quarter of 2019. These, in descending order, appeared most often.
- âBecomingâ
- âDark Sacred Nightâ
- âThe Reckoningâ
- âCrazy Rich Asiansâ
- âEducatedâ
- âLong Road to Mercyâ
- âPast Tenseâ
- âThe Alchemistâ
- âWhere the Crawdads Singâ
The blockbusters are all there; as the most populous county in the United States, Los Angeles is a big part of what made them bestsellers in the first place. Think âBecomingâ and Michael Connellyâs âDark Sacred Night,â John Grishamâs âThe Reckoningâ and Kevin Kwanâs âCrazy Rich Asians.â
But the data also highlight the regionâs unique neighborhoods, places whose singularity is written in the books residents hold dear. At the Mark Twain Branch Library, in the Westmont neighborhood of South Los Angeles, the three most circulated books are two anthologies of horror stories and the MacArthur Study Bible.
Patrons of Santa Monicaâs Main Library routinely fly a liberal flag; their top choice is âFear: Trump in the White House,â by Bob Woodward. Glendoraâs most-read book was Dr. Seussâ âGreen Eggs and Ham.â Among the favorites countywide were volumes in Spanish, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese, Russian, French, Portuguese and Farsi.
So, why use libraries to investigate the books readers here love most?
Because, as Los Angeles city librarian John Szabo explains, ârich folks use our libraries. Folks without homes, who are homeless, arenât just coming here for air conditioning. Theyâre reading and theyâre using our services, and thatâs important to remember.
âUndocumented residents of L.A. are making use of our libraries and have the same rights and privileges in our library that anybody else has,â he said. âFolks in rural Sunland-Tujunga, who have horses, make use of our libraries. We serve everybody.â

A Persian epic and Iranian tea
The West L.A. Library Farsi Reading Club meets in a second-floor conference room with scraped up, Band-Aid-colored walls. Every session starts with sweets, a poetry reading and tea.
The gathering, said librarian Ramin Naderi, is a Southern California reflection of life in Iranâs neighborhood teahouses, where performers called naghÄls recite sections of the âShahnameh,â an epic poem of pre-Islamic Persia that first appeared in the year 1010.
On this rainy Wednesday afternoon, Naderi reads the wistful âRecalling Youth Daysâ by contemporary poet Rahi Moayeri, which is projected on the wall in sinuous Arabic script: ⦠My fate didnât grant me grey-headedness for anything/For these white strands, my youth was paying. â¦
Because there are never enough copies of Farsi books to go around, members also read aloud from the book of the moment. This week is Chapter 10 of âOne Hundred Years of Solitude,â which related in part the story of Remedios the Beauty and her great-grandmother, Ãrsula Iguarán. Ãrsula is the wise BuendÃa family matriarch, Remedios an innocent who wanders around naked.
Which sparks a debate between Max Rahani, 73, and Raheleh Olomy, a decade his junior, about politics and the role of women. In Farsi, of course.
This is Rahaniâs post-meeting English-language recap:
Olomy: âWhy blame Remedios? Without clothes, she has freedom.â
Rahani: âIf a woman has ideas and is nude, itâs OK. Maybe they are protesting.⦠If [they] are nude without any idea behind that, itâs not OK.â
The West Los Angeles libraryâs 10 most-read books start with Obamaâs âBecomingâ and end with âÄbÄ« ÄrÄm,â by Iranian author, BahÄrah BÄqirÄ«, known for her romance novels. That âBecomingâ would make the areaâs list of the most-circulated is a no-brainer. But the popularity of âÄbÄ« ÄrÄmâ tells us more about the neighborhood, about who lives and reads there.
The West Los Angeles Regional Library is one of five in the Los Angeles Public Library system that had Farsi books on its most-read list. Five of the top 10 books at the the West Valley branch were in Farsi, as were three of the top 10 at the Encino-Tarzana branch and the branch in Westwood, a.k.a. âTehrangeles.â Sylmarâs best-read list included two.


Where Chinese lit and âWimpy Kidâ top the list
There are so many superlatives when it comes to the population of Los Angeles County, and they all play out in the regionâs libraries. It has more Iranians than any other county in the United States. Nearly 50% of the population is of Hispanic origin. The largest Chinese population of any county in the nation is here too.
At the Chinatown Branch Library, for example, the 10 most-requested books are all Chinese-language volumes. No surprise there. But the sole branch in pricey San Marinoâs one-library system also lists Chinese-language books among its most circulated.
City Librarian Irene McDermott notes that the 2010 census showed 53% of residents identify as Asian in San Marino. That helps explain why three of the most-circulated adult books at the Crowell Public Library are in Chinese: âStories of Lian Jiang,â âLove in Cold Palaceâ and âStruggles in the Palace.â
But if you look at all books, not just adult reading, the San Marino top 10 takes a dramatic shift. Yes, âStories of Lian Jiangâ and âLove in Cold Palaceâ still make the grade, at No. 3 and 4 most-circulated respectively. But all the rest of the books are for children, with âDiary of a Wimpy Kidâ titles at spots No. 1, 2, 8, 9 and 10.
âOh, to be Jeff Kinney!â McDermott said, referring to the author who created beleaguered seventh-grader Greg Heffley, star of 13 Wimpy Kid books, with a 14th due in November, and four movies. When Gregâs first miserable week in middle school ended, he wrote in his journal (Do NOT call it a diary!) that âthe only reason I get out of bed on weekends is because, eventually I canât stand the taste of my breath anymore.â
At the Santa Monica Public Libraryâs Pico Branch, the second and third most checked-out books are aimed at the short set. Thereâs âGeronimo Stilton,â an Italian series detailing the exploits of an adventurous mouse of the same name. And âDisney Fairiesâ â need we say more?
Patty Wong, Santa Monica director of library services, lauds the quality of childrenâs books, one reason she says theyâre so popular. Not only do most have top-notch illustrations, but theyâre âprobably the strongest-edited of the materials out there.â They also have big crossover audiences.
âOur childrenâs materials donât only speak well to the children for whom theyâre intended,â she said. They also resonate with âearly learners and English-language learners. When I was in Berkeley and doing a lot of work with non-English speakers, specifically Japanese ⦠a lot of older Japanese speakers wanted to learn more about American culture through our childrenâs books.â

All about Michelle Obamaâs journey â or your own
Self-help books make a big splash, in keeping with Szaboâs tenet that âlibraries are the peopleâs university.â At the Cypress Park Branch Library not far from Dodger Stadium, the two most-circulated books are test preparation study guides for becoming a custodian. Many branches include âUnfu*k Yourself: Get Out of Your Head and Into Your Life.â
And at the Azusa Public Library, âGirl, Wash Your Face,â by Rachel Hollis, is beaten out only by the blockbuster memoirs âEducated,â by Tara Westover, and âBecoming.â Leila Hassen, the library services manager, said âGirlâ is particularly popular with female patrons in their 20s and 30s.
âItâs definitely an empowering book, being kind to yourself and forgiving toward yourself,â Hassen said. âItâs a huge trend for our patrons. Thereâs a huge focus on wellness.â
And then thereâs politics. In these polarizing times, when social media is filled with angry ranting about all things electoral, political books of all stripes are liberally sprinkled among library branchesâ most-circulated books and those with the longest wait lists.
Want to read it? Get in line.
Throughout the LA County Library systemâs 85 public branches, more people have reserved these books during the first quarter of 2019 than any others. They appear in descending order.
- âBecomingâ
- âWhere the Crawdads Singâ
- âEducated: a Memoirâ
- âThe Library Bookâ
- âRun Awayâ
- âDog Man: Brawl of the Wildâ
- âBad Blood: Secrets and Lies in a Silicon Valley Startupâ
- âBecomingâ [large print]
- âMedical Medium Liver Rescueâ
Race and gender, left and right, factual and conspiracy theorist, theyâre all there. Beyond Woodwardâs âFear,â which is a hit at various branches, âUnhinged: An Insiderâs Account of the Trump White Houseâ by onetime Trump political aide Omarosa Manigault Newman came in at No. 4 at the Ascot Branch Library in South Los Angeles.
âEverything Trump Touches Dies,â by Republican strategist Rick Wilson is No. 10 at the Chatsworth Branch Library. Readers at the Junipero Serra Branch Library near USC were fond of âShip of Fools: How a Selfish Ruling Class is Bringing America to the Brink of Revolution,â in which Fox News star Tucker Carlson skewers politicians both red and blue.
Politically tinged fiction was also popular, including George Orwellâs â1984â and âAnimal Farm,â Ray Bradburyâs âFahrenheit 451â and âThe Handmaidâs Taleâ by Margaret Atwood, which envisions a dystopian world in which fertile women (a rarity) are forced to produce children for the male ruling class. (âHandmaidsâ dressed in red show up regularly at political protests these days.)
Members of Get Lit â A Los Angeles Book Club Meetup found serious political overtones in âAsymmetry,â a recent novel in three movements, by Lisa Halliday. The first section considers the relationship between Alice, a books editor in her mid-20s, and Ezra Blazer, a famous, aging novelist based on Philip Roth, whom Halliday dated back in the day.
Get Lit meets monthly on the second floor of the Original Farmers Market at Fairfax Avenue and 3rd Street in Los Angeles. Members range from their 20s on up, and their conversation floats above clinking plates, barking dogs, and other peopleâs chatter.

The politics that snagged these readersâ interest â and, often, annoyance â was gender-based through and through, a general acknowledgement of Blazerâs power and Aliceâs subservience. Just listen:
Kristen Knox, a member for three years: âI kept praying for the guy to die so something would happen. Sheâs at his beck and call. If it were my friend, Iâd slap her. âOh, honey!â â
Alex Newman, âAsymmetryâsâ rare defender: âTo me, it never read as predatory. To me, he never did anything but give her money.â
Perhaps the most popular book across Los Angeles County was also political. And personal. And inspirational. And a little confessional. And political.
âBecoming,â which debuted in November, sold nearly 10 million copies in its first three months, according to Bloomberg, prompting Bertelsman Chief Executive Thomas Rabe to declare, âWe believe this could become the most successful memoir ever.â

It appeared more times than any other among the three most popular books of all 200-plus branches surveyed.
It was the second-most-read book, systemwide, in the Los Angeles Public Library between January and March, behind Connellyâs âDark Sacred Night.â
âBecomingâ had the longest waiting list of any book in the LA County Library. That system owns 121 copies. In the first quarter, 893 people placed a hold on Obamaâs memoir, hoping to read it before the next election comes and goes.
If you want to borrow it, youâll have to wait. And wait. And wait.
Vera Castaneda contributed to this report.
Credits: Animations by Swetha Kannan. Books icon by Hawraa Alsalman from the Noun Project.