During the Golden Rush, people traveled from all over the country in hopes of becoming rich and beginning a new life style. However, Lucille Miller depicted the brutal reality of the California lifestyle. Didion mentions that situations like Lucille Miller’s case were something you would never see in the newspaper but was “always there between there”. It was “the revelation that the dream was teaching the dreamers how to live”. In “Some Dreamers of the Golden Dream,” the author Didion uses imaginary to depict the San Bernardino Valley as a hell. It is a place where the “hills blaze up spontaneously,” and “every voice seems a scream” (3). In “Some Dreamers of the Golden Dream “, the couple is the living the dream but then the wife gets caught up and carried away in the dream causing it all to go …show more content…
In Didion’s view, California is a place where the sun-dappled outward image hides a darker side, and Baez’ institute is a perfect example. Didion writes, “it is a place where the sun shines and the ambiguities can be set aside a little while longer, a place where everyone can be warm and loving and share confidences”. Baez appears to be happy; however, in many case, she is lost, and disconnected from reality. In addition to that many of the essays in the book present California as a place where people come to live their dream. However, these people are very different from one another because some of the Didion’s figures are happy for a while, there always seems to be some tinge of sadness. Therefore, even though they enjoy the California Dream for shorts of period time, the dream was ultimately spoiled for them like Howard