Just finished three good books on various aspects of water in our state. As a native of Southern California (and resident of Fillmore, which lost many folks due to the St. Francis dam collapse) I have always marveled at the waterworks, old railroad bedding, and other features of times long past. Long reads, but well worth it. The King of California is especially interesting if you have no idea what the Central Valley really looked like before the dams.
Cadillac Desert, Mark Reisner, 495 pages
The King of California, Mark Arax & Rick Wartzman, 430 pages
Water and Power, William Kahrl, 451 pages
That's my summer reading list, hope I get an A on my book reports. I'd still like to find something written to describe the siphon pipes and how they were engineered and operated. Not enough technical details to satisfy my search as yet. I know one was blown up in the 1920's, collapsed and re-opened by slow hydraulic pressure, on steel plating that flexed back, wow!
John