Career
She has published three novels, (Bloomsbury, 2001), (Overlook, 2008), and (Overlook, 2010). Participant comedy of manners and part cautionary tale, (named after the stunning coastal promontory in Malibu) tells the interlocking stories of disparate characters all bound by their connection to the land by the sea. There"s Frank Bain, the nouveau-riche surfer with a giant vineyard that"s blighting the landscape and an unhealthy attachment to his mistress, Ellis, the old-line Malibu free spirit who"s caught between Frank and a drifter named Pablo Schwartz.
"Ellis came from the service side of the counter," Arnoldi writes, "and Frank expected to be waited on."
Secretariat in Mexico and Malibu, explores the death of surf culture, the destruction of public land by cartel marijuana growers using pesticides and rodenticides, native and invasive species, and obsessive love.
Seven years after publishing, Arnoldi paints a searing portrait of wealthy Westside Los Angeles life, dramatizing the dysfunctionality of the modern American family while examining how it actually is that people get so screwed up. While tales of dysfunctional families abound, this one separates itself from the pack with concise prose, escalating tension, and wry humor.”
Amateur bodybuilder Aurora Johnson is vacationing in sunny California.
While working out at the gym, she meets Charles Worthington, a wealthy eccentric with a passion for up-and-coming bodybuilders, a passion that surpasses the sport and veers towards the kinky. Aurora, thrilled to have found a “sponsor,” willingly surrenders her life to Charles.
Under his tutelage, she begins an intense training program—regular workouts with a trainer, special high protein meals, and even muscle-enhancing drugs—all the while putting up with Charles’ sexual games.