The Californians by Brian Castleberry is about a young man, Tobey Harlan, trying to escape from a wildfire, the events that happened a hundred years ago, and how they affect the present. Tobey has just been dumped, and to make matters worse, he lost everything he owned, even his job, to a Northern California wildfire. He decides to steal three paintings by a popular artist Di Stiegl from his father’s house, in hopes that with the money he gets from selling the painting, he can move somewhere no one can find him.
A hundred years earlier, German Jewish immigrant, Klaus Aaronsohn was in love with silent cinema. He manages to gain access to a film studio in Astoria, Queens and changes his name to Klaus von Stiegl, and crafts a persona of a mysterious German film director. His popularity soared and he became well-known and famous. He ends his career directing a notorious 60s-era detective show.
The novel is told from alternating points of view of the different characters and time periods. I was excited to read the book but after a few chapters, I decided this wasn’t the book for me. The book had too many characters and it was difficult to keep track of them and how they all related to each other. The writing style was confusing and tedious to read. The book would jump between characters and periods and it wasn’t always clear when the change was being made. After reading more than twenty-five percent of the book, I stopped reading because nothing was going on that kept my interest.