Best-Selling Author Mike Davis Dies of Cancer at 76

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LOS ANGELES (CNS) - Mike Davis, the author of the best-selling book "City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles," died Tuesday from complications related to esophageal cancer at age 76.

Davis, a Marxist urban scholar, wrote works focusing on the social fractures in Los Angeles and how the contemporary city was shaped by different powerful forces in its history. Though best known for "City of Quartz" -- which was published in 1990 -- Davis wrote over 20 books over a career spanning more  than four decades, including "Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties" which was released in 2020 and became a Los Angeles Times best seller.

"City of Quartz: Excavating the Future in Los Angeles" won the Deutscher Memorial Prize, which honors a new book published in English "which exemplifies the best and most innovative new writing in or about the Marxist tradition" and was named a best book in urban politics by the American Political Science Association.

"When you judge the work of somebody, it's what the work itself did, the ways it makes us think differently," historian William Deverell, director of the Huntington-USC Institute on California and the West, told The Times. "Equally important: How many ships did it launch? And `City of Quartz' launched so many ships -- whether it's dissertations or conferences or articles."

Davis died at his home in San Diego, according to his daughter and literary agent Róisín Davis.

Davis told The Times in a July interview that he had accepted his terminal cancer diagnosis, but added he had hoped for a more dramatic end to his life.

"If I have a regret, it's not dying in battle or at a barricade as I've always romantically imagined," Davis told The Times

Davis is survived by his fifth wife, artist, curator and scholar Alessandra Moctezuma, their twin children, James and Cassandra Davis, as well as two children from his previous marriages: Jack and Róisín Davis.


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