• A Literary Road Trip Across America

    Where to Go and What to Read There

    Literary Hub and Wildsam present: a literary road trip across America. Happy travels!

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    Illustrations by Mike McKeogh

    Alabama • AlaskaArizonaArkansasCalifornia • ColoradoConnecticutDelawareDistrict of ColumbiaFloridaGeorgiaHawaiiIdahoIllinoisIndianaIowaKansasKentuckyLouisianaMaine • MarylandMassachusettsMichiganMinnesotaMississippiMissouriMontanaNebraskaNevadaNew HampshireNew JerseyNew MexicoNew YorkNorth CarolinaNorth DakotaOhioOklahomaOregonPennsylvaniaRhode IslandSouth CarolinaSouth DakotaTennessee • TexasUtahVermontVirginiaWashingtonWest VirginiaWisconsinWyoming

    Alabama

    Spot to Read: Little Professor, Homewood

    Visit the state’s oldest independent bookstore to find something new to fill up your brain—and then head a few blocks south to Johnny’s Restaurant, where you can fill up your belly (with fried green tomatoes). [MAP]

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    What to Read There:

    Yaa Gyasi, Transcendent Kingdom

    Transcendent Kingdom
    by Yaa Gyasi

    Gifty and her family leave Ghana for Huntsville in this novel drawn from Gyasi’s life as the daughter of immigrants. [MAP]

     

    Salvation on Sand Mountain

    Salvation on Sand Mountain
    by Dennis Covington

    A National Book Award finalist, Covington’s book covers the trial of Glenn Summerford and a snake handling church in Appalachia with generous curiosity. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Ashley M. Jones

    Jones is Alabama’s current poet laureate; her 2021 collection REPARATIONS NOW! was longlisted for the PEN / Voelker Award.

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    Literary Landmark:

    Find your way to Nelle Harper Lee’s gravesite in Monroeville and leave a penny as tribute. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Alabama

    Alaska

    Spot to Read: Alaska State Library, Juneau

    The archives, stacks, and reading rooms here don’t skimp on majesty, and the design of the library itself—perched waterside and flanked by Thunder, Jumbo, Juneau, Roberts, and McGinnis peaks—is evocative of a bird poised for flight. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Julie of the Wolves
    by Jean Craighead George

    This tale of an Inuit girl and her adoptive wolf pack is an adventure classic. [MAP] See also: The Yiddish Policeman’s Union by Michael Chabon

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    Coming into the Country
    by John McPhee

    A master observer of place and people, McPhee’s travels through Alaska introduce readers to prospectors, politicians, and the bush community of Eagle. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Ernestine Hayes

    The Tlingit poet and former state laureate’s “The Spoken Forest” is installed at Totem Bight State Park in Ketchikan. [MAP]

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    Literary Landmark:

    Jack London fans will find echoes of The Call of the Wild in Skagway, Alaska, where much of Buck’s story unfolds. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Alaska

    Arizona

    Spot to Read: Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, Tucson

    Find 98 acres of botanical garden for walks and many desert landscape reading spots among sky-high saguaros. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    animal dreams barbara kingsolver

    Animal Dreams
    by Barbara Kingsolver

    Cosima “Codi” Noline returns to her rural Arizona home in Kingsolver’s 1990 novel, a meditation on grief, family, and homecoming. [MAP]

     

    The Death and Life of Aida Hernandez- A Border Story

    The Death and Life of Aida Hernandez: A Border Story
    by Aaron Bobrow-Strain

    What happens when an undocumented teen mother takes on the U.S. immigration system? This book is a harrowing deep-dive into the cost of the American dream. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Natalie Diaz

    A recipient of the MacArthur “Genius” Grant whose latest collection, Postcolonial Love Poem, won the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for poetry, Diaz teaches at Arizona State University, and has directed a Mojave language revitalization project at Fort Mohave. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: The Poetry Center

    Poet Steve Orlen called the Helen S. Schaefer Building—home base of The Poetry Center at University of Arizona—”the best living room in America for reading poetry.” [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Arizona

    (Or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to Tucson)

    Arkansas

    Spot to Read: Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville

    Moshe Safdie designed this stunning structure in harmony with surrounding mountain landscape; you can find a rare Frank Lloyd Wright Usonian house here, too. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    true grit

    True Grit
    by Charles Portis

    Mattie Ross is 14 when she sets out across western Arkansas seeking justice for the murder of her father; adventure ensues! [MAP]

     

    Hipbillies- Deep Revolution in the Arkansas Ozarks

    Hipbillies: Deep Revolution in the Arkansas Ozarks
    by Jared M. Phillips

    This archival deep-dive of Ozark beatniks is a departure from more common tales of the counterculture. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Rosa Zagnoni Marinoni

    In 1926, Marinoni created the University-City Poetry Club; for forty-five years, the club met at her home near the UA campus. In 1953, she was named poet laureate of Arkansas. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Johnswood

    John Gould Fletcher and Charlie May Simon lived here, writing from opposite sides of the house. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Arkansas

    California

    Spot to Read: Nepenthe, Big Sur

    Named for the sorrow-dispelling drug in Homer’s Odyssey, this perch is known for its dramatic Pacific views (and vibes); literary legends haunt these parts. If you need a change of scenery, the Henry Miller Memorial Library is right down the road. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    mecca_susan straight

    Mecca
    by Susan Straight

    There is no glitz and no glamour in Straight’s recent novel, which makes it all the more essential as a California epic. [MAP] See also: The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen; Farewell, My Lovely by Raymond Chandler

    Slouching-Towards-Bethelem

    Slouching Towards Bethlehem
    by Joan Didion

    Possibly the most iconic California book (and California writer) of all time. [MAP] See also: Eve’s Hollywood by Eve Babitz

    Poet of Note: Amy Uyematsu

    Uyematsu’s 30 Miles from J-Town won the Nicholas Roerich Poetry Prize in 1992. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: National Steinbeck Center, Salinas

    One of the largest literary museums in the country dedicated to a single author. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary California

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Los Angeles or San Francisco or the Bay Area, or Read 5 Reasons Why Writers Should Move to Orange County)

    Colorado

    Spot to Read: Rocky Mountain Land Library, Fairplay

    An ongoing labor of love: this residential library is the result of a transformation of an abandoned ranch, celebrating nature and history. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Plainsong

    Plainsong
    by Kent Haruf

    This spare, gorgeous novel is set in the High Plains, in the fictional town of Holt. [MAP]

     

    Deep Creek by Pam Houston

    Deep Creek
    by Pam Houston

    In these poignant essays, Houston revels in the Rockies’ beauty and chronicles the ways in which her 120-acre ranch high in the San Juan Mountains has healed and inspired her. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Camille Dungy

    The author of Trophic Cascade and distinguished professor at Colorado State University, Dungy released a new book of prose—Soil: The Story of a Black Mother’s Garden—in 2023. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: The Stanley Hotel, Estes Park

    The inspiration for The Shining came from a nightmare Stephen King had here, in room 217. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Colorado

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Denver)

    Connecticut

    Spot to Read: Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, New Haven

    A cathedral of 180,000 volumes (and thousands of linear feet) plus jaw-dropping permanent collections, all accessible for free—heaven for bibliophiles. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    revolutionary road book cover

    Revolutionary Road
    by Richard Yates

    Trouble brews in a suburban idyll when conventions are questioned and tested. [MAP] See also: On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong; Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo

     

    Yale Needs Women
    by Anne Gardiner Perkins

    In 1969, five women broke the gender barrier at Yale for the first time; this Connecticut Book Award-winning account follows them through the school’s early years of coeducation. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Antoinette Brim-Bell

    Brim-Bell, Connecticut’s 8th Poet Laureate, is the author of three collections: These Women You Gave Me, Icarus in Love and Psalm of the Sunflower. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Wallace Stevens Walk, Hartford

    Trace the 2.4 mile commute that Stevens made daily, from the house where his modernist verse was composed to his office at The Hartford. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Connecticut

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Hartford)

    Delaware

    Spot to Read: Bethany Beach Books, Bethany Beach

    This independent bookshop, set a few steps off the Bethany Beach boardwalk, is open year-round—but in the summer, you can walk straight out of the store and onto the sand, beach read in hand. (The question of what exactly constitutes a beach read is, as ever, one we must all answer for ourselves.) [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Book of Unknown Americans
    by Cristina Henríquez

    A star-crossed love story—as well as a choral portrait of the Latino immigrant experience in America—about a Mexican family who move to a Delaware apartment building. [MAP] See also: Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk

     

    Debt: The First 5,000 Years
    by David Graeber

    The American anthropologist and left-wing thinker’s seminal work of economic anthropology is essential reading in the land where pretty much all American credit cards are based. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Alice Moore Dunbar-Nelson

    The author of Violets and Other Tales and Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence made Wilmington her home. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: The Winterthur Library, Winterthur

    In this 175-room house, you’ll find a host of rarities, from 17th-century atlases and European style guides to chromolithographed ephemera. [MAP]

    District of Columbia

    Spot to Read: Busboys and Poets, Anacostia

    This bright and bustling neighborhood hub manages to be bar, bookstore, brunch spot and coffeeshop, all rolled into one. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Cane, Jean Toomer

    Cane
    by Jean Toomer

    A classic series of modernist vignettes that evoke Black life in urban and rural settings in the American South. [MAPSee also: Heartburn by Nora Ephron; Lost in the City by Edward P. Jones

     

    banned in dc

    Banned in D.C.
    by Cynthia Connolly

    A uniquely vivid, messy, and sweaty photographic document of D.C.’s vibrant early ’80s punk underground, which remains a potent force shaping the city’s culture. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Sandra Beasley

    Beasley’s propulsive and visceral work often takes on national landmarks—from a bracing outsider’s perspective. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Library of Congress Reading Room

    This soaring, cooly lit vault of national treasures is at the very heart of American letters. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary D.C.

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend there)

    Florida

    Spot to Read: Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, Miami to Dry Tortugas

    Nearly 3,000 square nautical miles of coastal and ocean ecosystem teeming with fish, coral, and birds. Protected, but free. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    florida

    Florida
    by Lauren Groff

    Nature means menace in this lush collection of short stories from three-time National Book Award finalist Groff, who lives and teaches in Gainesville. [MAP] See also: The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead.

     

    Susan Orlean, The Orchid Thief

    The Orchid Thief
    by Susan Orlean

    Orlean’s investigation of the 1994 arrest of horticulturist John Laroche and a group of Seminoles in south Florida for poaching rare orchids also served as the (very meta) inspiration for the film Adaptation. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Elizabeth Bishop

    Poems, Prose and Letters includes poetry from the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award winner’s time in the Keys. Start with “Roosters.” [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Zora Neale Hurston House, Fort Pierce

    Hurston’s childhood was spent in Eatonville, one of the first all-Black towns incorporated in the United States. But the last remaining residence associated with the beloved author is this one, in nearby Fort Pierce, where she lived toward the end of her life. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Florida

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Tampa, or Read 5 Reasons Why Writers Should Move to Tampa)

    Georgia

    Spot to Read: Spelman College, Atlanta

    Reading spots abound on the 39 verdant acres of this historically Black college, where luminaries like Alice Walker and Martin Luther King Jr. once crossed paths. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter

    The Heart is a Lonely Hunter
    by Carson McCullers

    A rich, humane exploration of spiritual isolation in a rural Georgia mill town. See also: An American Marriage by Tayari Jones.

     

    Charles M. Blow, The Devil You Know

    The Devil You Know
    by Charles Blow

    This journalist’s manifesto is also a call to action, asking Black Americans to migrate back south. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Chelsea Rathburn

    The author of Still Life with Mother and Knife also implemented the Georgia Poetry in the Parks project. [MAP]

     

    Literary Landmark: Flannery O’Connor Home, Savannah

    The iconic spinner of Southern Gothic stories grew up in this house, where she famously kept a chicken who walked backwards. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Georgia

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Atlanta)

    Hawai’i

    Spot to Read: Limahuli Garden and Preserve

    One of only five National Tropical Botanical Gardens in the U.S.; the Canoe Garden features plants brought over by the region’s original Polynesian inhabitants. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    This Is Paradise
    by Kristiana Kahakauwila

    A collection of raw, vivid stories that invert traditional conceptions of paradise. [MAP] See also: Sharks in the Time of Saviors by Kawai Strong Washburn

     

    Hawai‘i’s Story by Hawai‘i’s Queen
    by Queen Lili’uokalani

    A stirring account—first published in 1898, five years after the overthrow of the Kingdom—written by the islands’ last monarch. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: W.S. Merwin

    Before his death, the former U.S. Poet Laureate, who was dedicated to the restoration of Maui’s rainforests, restored an old pineapple plantation to its original state. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Talk Story Bookstore, Hanapepe

    The westernmost bookstore in the U.S. has more than 150,000 titles on offer, including essential Kaua‘i reads. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Hawai’i

    Idaho

    Spot to Read: Hemingway Memorial, Sun Valley

    Take a walk along Trail Creek and stop to rest and read for a while by the Hemingway Memorial, a simple column among the trees. For the slightly more morbid, his gravesite is also nearby, in Ketchum Cemetery. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    housekeeping robinson

    Housekeeping
    by Marilynne Robinson

    Fingerbone, Idaho is a living, breathing character in this novel, from Pulitzer Prize winner Robinson, about three generations of women and the homes they make—both material and interior. [MAP] See also: Train Dreams by Denis Johnson

     

    Educated
    by Tara Westover

    In this memoir, Westover, born to survivalist Mormon parents in Clifton, shares her harrowing experience of education in the rural Idaho of her childhood, and her journey beyond the confines of her family. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: CMarie Fuhrman

    The state’s Writer in Residence from 2022-2023 creates poetry inspired by landscape and wilderness and rooted in her Indigenous experience. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Homer Pound House, Hailey

    Sun Valley Center for the Arts is the steward of famed modernist poet Ezra Pound’s birthplace. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Idaho

    Illinois

    Spot to Read: Ray Bradbury Park, Waukegan

    This lovely little park, dedicated to the Waukegan native and science fiction legend, is a good spot to spend an uninterrupted hour traveling the universe via book. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Great Believers_Rebecca Makkai

    The Great Believers
    by Rebecca Makkai

    The AIDS crisis infiltrates and upends a community of friends in 1980s Chicago in this multi-generational novel. [MAP] See also: The Adventures of Augie March by Saul Bellow

     

    the warmth of other suns

    The Warmth of Other Suns
    by Isabel Wilkerson

    Wilkerson interviewed more than a thousand people in the crafting of this masterwork about the migration of Black Americans to northern and western cities. [MAP] See also: The Devil in the White City by Erik Larson

    Poet of Note: Patricia Smith

    The decorated Chicago-born poet is the author of eight collections and is the four-time individual champion of the National Poetry Slam. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Richard Wright House, Chicago

    Wright’s seminal 1940 novel Native Son was written in this four-room Bronzeville apartment. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Illinois

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Chicago)

    Indiana

    Spot to Read: Indiana Dunes National Park, Porter

    Inspiration should be easy to find in this lush expanse of shifting sand dunes, wetlands, oak savannahs and 15,000 acres of plant and bird variety. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    An American Tragedy
    by Theodore Dreiser

    A Terre Haute native, Dreiser published this novel—a study of a notorious murder case, and a resounding indictment of American society—in 1925. [MAP]

     

    Ross Gay, The Book of Delights

    The Book of Delights
    by Ross Gay

    An exploration of daily joys and wonder from an Indiana University professor and beloved lyricist. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Joyelle McSweeney

    McSweeney’s Toxicon and Arachne, a volume of two books on disaster and the catastrophic, is brilliant and unsettling. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: South Bend

    The fictional town of Vacca Vale, IN, where Tess Gunty’s National Book Award-winning The Rabbit Hutch is set, is based on South Bend, where Gunty grew up. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Indiana

    Iowa

    Spot to Read: Art Building West, Iowa City

    The shining edifice of this University of Iowa building is a sight to behold—and is surrounded by plenty of good reading spots. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    a thousand acres jane smiley

    A Thousand Acres
    by Jane Smiley

    Smiley’s beloved, Pulitzer Prize-winning novel transplants the intergenerational drama of Shakespeare’s King Lear onto an Iowan farm.

     

    The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid
    by Bill Bryson

    Bryson, best known for A Walk in the Woods, was born in Des Moines in 1951; this memoir is an often-hilarious and thoroughly nostalgic account of his childhood. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: D.A. Powell

    Powell wrote the bulk of his first collection, Tea, while he was a grad student at Iowa; the landscape permeates its pages. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Prairie Lights, Iowa City

    A beloved bookstore—and showcase for buzzy writers—in a designated UNESCO World City of Literature. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Iowa

    Kansas

    Spot to Read: Raven Bookstore, Lawrence

    In 2019, owner Danny Caine compiled a zine called “How to Resist Amazon and Why,” which has become a rallying cry for readers and independent bookstores alike. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Truman Capote, In Cold Blood

    In Cold Blood
    by Truman Capote

    This “nonfiction novel,” first published as a four-part series in The New Yorker, recounts the 1959 murders of the Clutter family in Holcomb, a farming community in southwest Kansas. [MAP] See also: Mrs. Bridge by Evan S. Connell

    Sarah Smarsh, Heartland

    Heartland
    by Sarah Smarsh

    A memoir that doubles as a cultural examination of socioeconomic disparities in America, written by a fifth-generation Kansan. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: William E. Stafford

    The prolific poet of the Great Plains won a National Book Award for Traveling through the Dark in 1963. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: 732 Alabama Street, Lawrence

    Langston Hughes lived here as a child with his maternal grandmother. The house was demolished in the ’60s, but a nearly identical one still sits next door. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Kansas

    Kentucky

    Spot to Read: Central Library, Lexington

    The world’s largest ceiling clock—complete with a five-story Foucault’s Pendulum—is housed within this library’s rotunda. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    A Place on Earth
    by Wendell Berry

    The 89-year-old writer-poet-activist lives and writes on a working farm in Henry County, from which he’s spun out many enduring, interwoven tales of the people in the fictional small town of Port William (inspired by his own hometown of Port Royal). [MAP]

     

    Blood Horses: Notes of a Sportswriter’s Son
    by John Jeremiah Sullivan

    In Sullivan’s first book, he combines reflections on his relationship with his late father with an in-depth history of American horseracing. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Crystal Wilkinson

    In Perfect Black, Kentucky’s poet laureate explores her intersecting identities as a Black woman born in Appalachia. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: bell hooks mural, Hopkinsville

    This hometown mural honors a woman deeply rooted in and shaped by the Western Kentucky landscape. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Kentucky

    Louisiana

    Spot to Read: City Park, New Orleans

    This park, dotted by 600-year-old live oaks and bordered by bayous, covers 1,300 acres. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Moviegoer
    by Walker Percy

    A young New Orleans stockbroker searches for meaning beyond artifice through a Mardi Gras quest; the result is an American masterpiece. [MAPSee also: Salvage the Bones by Jesmyn Ward

     

    The Yellow House
    by Sarah M. Broom

    Broom melds memoir with sweeping historical narrative as she writes about her family history and childhood home as well as the vast racial inequities in the city of New Orleans. [MAPSee also: Five Days at Memorial, by Sheri Fink

    Poet of Note: Jericho Brown

    Start with the Shreveport-born poet’s Pulitzer Prize-winning The Tradition, a lyrical collection about violence, identity, and legacy. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Faulkner House Books

    At 624 Pirate’s Alley in the French Quarter, you’ll find this jewel-box bookseller tucked into the house where Faulkner lived and wrote his first novel, Soldier’s Pay. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Louisiana

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in New Orleans)

    Maine

    Spot to Read: Novel Book Bar & Café, Portland

    Come for the cocktails and coffee roasted on-site, stay for the robust schedule of literary events. If you didn’t bring a book with you, no problem—you can find one on the shelves here (and bring it home with you when you’re ready to leave). [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Olive Kitteridge
    by Elizabeth Strout

    A beloved novel in stories that explores the quiet, mysterious undertow of life in the coastal town of Crosby, Maine (fictional, but rumored to be based on Brunswick). [MAP] See also: Night of the Living Rez by Morgan Talty

    Always, Rachel: The Letters of Rachel Carson and Dorothy Freeman, 1952-1964
    ed. Martha Freeman

    Impassioned correspondence between the great environmental writer and her close companion; the coast’s sublimity features often. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Sarah Orne Jewett

    Best known for prose awash in Maine’s landscape and tradition, her poetry, too, presents a vivid portrait of life in its seaport towns.

    Literary Landmark: Stephen King House, Bangor

    The author’s Bangor Victorian sits behind a wrought-iron fence adorned with spiders and bats, and acts as an archive for writers, by appointment only. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Maine

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Portland)

    Maryland

    Spot to Read: George Peabody Library, Baltimore

    An astonishing library with serpentine stairways that guide you to its centerpiece: the soaring stack room complete with tiered balconies. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Dinner at the Homesick Restaurant
    by Anne Tyler

    The domestic intimacies of the Tull family unfurl in Tyler’s ninth novel. In his review for The New Yorker, John Updike wrote that Tyler had “arrived at a new level of power.” [MAP] See also: Kindred by Octavia Butler

     

    Between the World and Me
    by Ta-Nehisi Coates

    In a letter to his son, Coates weaves stories of his life—beginning with his childhood at North Collington Avenue in West Baltimore—into an expansive American narrative. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Lucille Clifton

    Clifton’s work was first spotted by Langston Hughes, who published it in his 1970 anthology The Poetry of the Negro. In 1987, she became the first author to have two of her poetry books selected as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize.

    Literary Landmark: Edgar Allan Poe House, Baltimore

    A life-size raven greets visitors at the home of this master of the macabre. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Maryland

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Baltimore, or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to Baltimore)

    Massachusetts

    Spot to Read: Gardner Museum, Boston

    The immersive art museum’s New Wing joins the glass-walled interior with the Monk’s, Jordan, and Lynch gardens—a special landscape for cracking open a book. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Little Women
    by Louisa May Alcott

    The March women of Concord’s Orchard House have served as inspiration for generation upon generation of writers. [MAPSee alsoOn Beauty by Zadie Smith, The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath

     

    Schiff_THEWITCHES

    The Witches: Suspicion, Betrayal, and Hysteria in 1692 Salem
    by Stacy Schiff

    Schiff’s thrilling, meticulously researched account of the Salem witch trials will have you looking over your shoulder everywhere you go—and appreciating modern Salem all the more. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Mary Oliver

    With wisdom, humor, and attention to every precious detail, Oliver’s A Thousand Mornings brings the reader along to the shore, ponds, and marshes surrounding the poet’s Provincetown home. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: The Mount, Lenox

    Edith Wharton’s sweeping estate in the Berkshires, which she designed herself, now functions as a house museum and cultural center. Don’t miss the pet cemetery. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Massachusetts

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Boston)

    Michigan

    Spot to Read: Tahquamenon Falls State Park, Upper Peninsula

    Row out to this park’s island encircled by five lower falls. Four miles upstream, the dramatic Upper Falls cascades nearly 50 feet down, across 200 feet. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Nick Adams Stories
    by Ernest Hemingway

    These coming-of-age short stories were inspired by Hemingway’s summers at his family’s Northern Michigan cottage. [MAP] See also: The Jeffrey Eugenides oeuvre.

     

    Black Detroit
    by Herb Boyd

    Part memoir, part cultural history, Boyd’s illuminating take on Detroit explores the changemakers and freedom fighters who shaped (and continue to shape) the iconic city. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Lois Beardslee

    This Ojibwe poet’s collection Words Like Thunder was the first book by an Indigenous author to win the Michigan Notable Book Award. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Idlewild

    What began as a resort became a haunt for black intellectuals: Charles Waddell Chesnutt, W.E.B. DuBois, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston rubbed shoulders here. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Michigan

    Minnesota

    Spot to Read: Split Rock Lighthouse, Two Harbors

    The iconic lighthouse—which for a little extra literary flair, made an appearance in Baz Luhrman’s adaptation of The Great Gatsby—sits on a cliff 130 feet above Lake Superior, and is surrounded by a state park. Picturesque reading spots abound—if you can tear your eyes away from the view. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Sentence

    The Sentence
    by Louise Erdrich

    Erdrich’s (fictional) ghost story features the author’s real-life Minneapolis bookstore at its center. [MAP] See also: History of Wolves by Emily Fridlund

     

    All Our Relations
    by Winona LaDuke

    A formative work of Native resistance to oppression, written by an Anishinaabe environmental leader. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Joyce Sutphen

    The state’s poet laureate grew up on a farm in St. Joseph and won the Minnesota Book Award for First Words. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Minnesota Center for Book Arts, Minneapolis

    Papermaking, letterpress printing, and bookbinding all celebrate the book as an art form. Explore them here. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Minnesota

    Mississippi

    Spot to Read: Rowan Oak, Oxford

    Tour the house for inspiration, then find a spot among Faulkner’s gardens to read a while. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Salvage the Bones
    by Jesmyn Ward

    Esch Batiste and her family prepare for Hurricane Katrina in fictional Bois Sauvage, Mississippi, in this National Book Award-winning novel from Ward, who also experienced Katrina. [MAP]

     

    Kiese Laymon, Heavy

    Heavy
    by Kiese Laymon

    Laymon’s powerful memoir about growing up as a Black man in Jackson, Mississippi reckons with harm in both public and private life. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Natasha Trethewey

    Born in Gulfport, Mississippi, to parents whose pre-Loving v. Virginia marriage was illegal at the time of her birth, Trethewey served two terms as the Poet Laureate of the United States (2012-2014) and won the 2007 Pulitzer Prize in Poetry for her collection Native Guard. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Eudora Welty Gravesite, Jackson

    In Greenwood Cemetery, you’ll find the resting place of a brilliant voice of the American South. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Mississippi

    (Or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to Jackson)

    Missouri

    Spot to Read: Loose Park Rose Garden, Kansas City

    A public horticultural respite brought to you by the Kansas City Rose Society. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Stoner
    by John Williams

    William Stoner converts from Missouri farm boy to scholar in this tale of academia, war, and love. [MAP]

     

    Blue Highways
    by William Least Heat-Moon

    Take a vicarious three-month road trip around the United States via Ford Ecoline van, with this Boone County writer as your guide. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Carl Phillips

    Living and teaching in St. Louis, Phillips recently took home a Pulitzer for his collection Then the War: And Selected Poems. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Maya Angelou’s Birthplace, St. Louis

    The house at 3130 Hickory Street was just the beginning for the poet-essayist-activist legend. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Missouri

    (Or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to St. Louis)

    Montana

    Spot to Read: Missoula Public Library

    With its state-of-the-art design and breathtaking scenic views, it’s no surprise that this spot was declared the “World’s Best Public Library” of 2022 by the World Library and Information Congress in Dublin, Ireland—the first library from North America to win the prestigious award. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Perma Red
    by Debra Magpie Earling

    Debra Magpie Earling’s tale of a free-thinking woman on the 1940s Flathead Reservation holds stark present-day relevance. [MAPSee also: Fools Crow by James Welch

     

    Brothers on Three
    by Abe Streep

    More than a sports story (but an exciting one at that), this Montana Book Award winner follows two starters from the Arlee Warriors high school basketball team, who live and play on the Flathead Indian Reservation. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Henry Real Bird

    Crow Nation citizen, rancher, and former poet laureate, Henry Real Bird is known for traversing the state on horseback to craft an epic vision in verse. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Butte-Silver Bow County Archives

    The archives, you say? How exciting. But really: this is one of the best local history troves in America, documenting a wild city of mining millionaires and immigrant strivers. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Montana

    Nebraska

    Spot to Read: Terrace Books, Columbus

    Grab a spot in a cozy armchair—or relax on the eponymous terrace—after finding a new favorite in this independent bookstore in historic downtown Columbus. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    My Ántonia
    by Willa Cather

    The stories of immigrant Ántonia Shimerda and Jim Burden coalesce in Black Hawk, a town based on the author’s native Red Cloud. [MAP]

     

    Old Jules
    by Mari Sandoz

    Droughts, scarcity, and isolation are threaded through oral histories passed down from a pioneer father. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Ted Kooser

    His poetic ode to the state appropriately begins with “the gravel road rides with a slow gallop over the fields.” [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Neihardt Center

    Calling all John Neihardt fans: Here’s a dedicated commemoration of Nebraska’s Poet Laureate (in perpetuity!), at the site of his former home. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Nebraska

    (Or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to Lincoln)

    Nevada

    Spot to Read: The Peppermill

    Low neon lighting and purple plush booths serve as the backdrop for this Reno lounge, which slings breakfast and cocktails any time—perfect for 3 a.m. or p.m.—and which was a longtime favorite of MacArthur-winning art critic and writer Dave Hickey. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Beautiful Children
    by Charles Bock

    The son of pawnbrokers tells an intersecting, neon-lit tale of Las Vegas. [MAP]

     

    The Main Event
    by Richard O. Davies

    Before Nevada became synonymous with gambling, it earned its nickname the “Sin State” for its embrace of boxing.

    Poet of Note: Vogue Robinson

    Clark County poet laureate emerita writes with heart, rhythm, and hope. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Black Mountain Institute, Las Vegas

    A dedicated hub for writers and literary activism, with special emphasis on lifting up underrepresented voices. Catch a reading while you’re in town. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Nevada

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Las Vegas)

    New Hampshire

    Spot to Read: Diana’s Baths, North Conway

    After a gentle hike into White Mountain National Forest, you’ll find a series of small waterfalls and wading pools, with many spots for lounging. Try not to get your book wet. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    the world according to garp john irving

    The World According to Garp
    by John Irving

    The author’s fifth novel and magnum opus tackles themes of feminism, sexuality, and literary ambition against the backdrop of a New Hampshire boarding school. [MAP]

     

    Jane Kenyon: A Literary Life
    by John H. Timmerman

    This examination of the lyric poet’s life and work explores the construction of and inspiration behind her poetry as well as her lifelong struggle with manic depression. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Robert Frost

    Ever heard of him? The Dartmouth alumnus and Pulitzer Prize winner farmed and wrote in Derry, New Hampshire. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Joy Farm, Madison

    The treasured summer sanctum of E.E. Cummings is designated as a national historic place. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary New Hampshire

    New Jersey

    Spot to Read: Little City Books, Hoboken

    Browse this much-loved corner indie shop, run by Donna Garban and Kate Jacobs. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Philip Roth, American Pastoral

    American Pastoral
    by Philip Roth

    Swede Levov’s rise-and-fall saga, set in 1960s Old Limerock, is the first novel in Roth’s American Trilogy, and won the Pulitzer Prize in 1998. [MAP]

     

    The Pine Barrens
    by John McPhee

    If everything you know about New Jersey’s Pine Barrens comes from that one episode of The Sopranos, this NJ nonfiction classic will open your eyes. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: William Carlos Williams

    A practicing physician for more than 40 years, Williams’ empathic and honest verse has made him a household name in every state. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Allen Ginsberg’s Grave, Newark

    Pay homage to Allen Ginsberg, poet laureate of the Beat generation, at his gravesite at B’Nai Israel Cemetery. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary New Jersey

    New Mexico

    Spot to Read: St. Francis Cathedral, Santa Fe

    Step into the silence of a Romanesque Revival church built on the site of an adobe chapel. Fun fact: Willa Cather’s Death Comes for the Archbishop includes a fictionalized story of its construction. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Bless Me, Ultima

    Bless Me, Ultima
    by Rudolfo Anaya

    Myth, love and destiny comingle in this coming-of-age classic, set in rural New Mexico in the 1940s. [MAPSee also: House Made of Dawn by N. Scott Momaday

     

    Georgia O’Keeffe: A Life
    by Roxana Robinson

    This biography of Georgia O’Keeffe is also the story of New Mexico, the landscape she loved and painted. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Joshua Concha

    Concha’s poem “Rust” was chosen as one of fifteen installed in outdoor venues in Taos, where he is Poet Laureate. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark:

    D.H. Lawrence Ranch, Taos

    The novelist made his home here for a brief stint in the 1920s—enough time to write St Mawr and The Plumed Serpent. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary New Mexico

    New York

    Spot to Read: The Subway

    New York’s hottest reading spot is underground. Bonus points for the unmatched people (and title)-watching potential. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Best of Everything
    by Rona Jaffe

    Three women typists meet while working at a publishing house in this candid portrait of desire. [MAP] See also: Go Tell It On the Mountain by James Baldwin; The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald

     

    Up in the Old Hotel
    by Joseph Mitchell

    This collection of essays chronicles encounters with the people of New York, all originally published in the New Yorker between 1943 and 1964. [MAP] See also: The Power Broker by Robert A. Caro

    Poet of Note: Audre Lorde

    1968’s The First Cities was Lorde’s first collection of poetry, but her very first poem was published while she was a student at Hunter High School. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: New York Public Library, Manhattan

    The lamplit Rose Reading Room is a Beaux Arts sanctuary. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary New York

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Queens or Hudson)

    North Carolina

    Spot to Read: Malaprop’s Bookstore & Cafe, Asheville

    This community bookstore spotlights and supports the work of its regional writers and is replete with cozy reading hideaways, too. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Thirteen Moons
    by Charles Frazier

    The author’s follow-up to Cold Mountain, centered on a white orphan adopted by a Cherokee chief, was translated into the Cherokee language by the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in 2007. [MAP]

     

    Soul City: Race, Equality, and the Lost Dream of an American Utopia
    by Thomas Healy

    In the 1970s, Floyd McKissick dreamed of building a Black city in Warren County, North Carolina. Thomas Healy tells the tale. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: George Moses Horton

    The Hope of Liberty was published in 1829, transcribed from the poet’s mouth to the page by an admirer; Horton was the first Black man to publish a book in the South. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Wilma Dykeman Home

    Dykeman’s Asheville home now hosts a Writer-in-Residence program: four weeks of quiet space where the author of The Tall Woman once worked. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary North Carolina

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Asheville)

    North Dakota

    Spot to Read: Badlands Overlook, Medora

    The rolling badlands panorama is perfect for spotting elk or bison wandering through the otherworldly buttes. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Stephen Florida Gabe Hudson

    Stephen Florida
    by Gabe Habash

    In Habash’s debut novel, a college wrestler obsesses over a championship win; his loneliness is echoed in his surrounding landscape.

     

    Boys and Oil: Growing Up Gay in a Fractured Land
    by Taylor Brorby

    Environmental activist Brorby’s lyrical account of growing up gay in the harsh and breathtaking landscape—and zero-stoplight town—of Center, North Dakota. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Denise Lajimodiere

    The Ojibwe poet and author of Stringing Rosaries is the state’s latest laureate. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Louis L’Amour Trail, Jamestown

    At 15, L’Amour joined a circus; then he wrote 100 novels of The West. Take a self-guided walking tour through the town where he spent his formative years. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary North Dakota

    Ohio

    Spot to Read: Kenyon College, Gambier

    Bring a book and spread out on the classic quad of the home to the esteemed Kenyon Review. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Toni Morrison, Sula

    Sula
    by Toni Morrison

    In Morrison’s masterful second novel, an omniscient narrator details the lives of the children Nel Wright and Sula Peace and their families in a tightly woven Ohio neighborhood—the Bottom, on the edge of Medallion. [MAP]

     

    The Hard Way on Purpose
    by David Giffels

    This collection of linked essays is an insider’s mining of an American Rust Belt story. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Hanif Abdurraqib

    The decorated poet and essayist, born and raised in Columbus, was recently awarded a MacArthur “Genius” Grant. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Camden

    Visit the hometown of Sherwood Anderson, the author of small-town classic Winesburg, Ohio. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Ohio

    (Or Read 5 Reasons Writers Should Move to Cleveland)

    Oklahoma

    Spot to Read: Patience S. Latting Northwest Library, Oklahoma City

    This 35,000 square foot feat of glassed architecture resembles oil derricks and looks out on the prairie. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    the grapes of wrath

    The Grapes of Wrath
    by John Steinbeck

    In this classic novel of the Great Depression, The Joads—a family of sharecroppers from Sallisaw—set out for California, in hopes of leaving Dust Bowl-induced drought, poverty and hardship behind. [MAP]

     

    Killers of the Flower Moon
    by David Grann

    In this hallmark true crime investigation, a journalist exposes the Osage Nation murders of the 1920s, a pivotal moment of prejudice that shaped the FBI. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Joy Harjo

    Harjo is a member of the Mvskoke Nation and the author of ten books of poetry, including An American Sunrise, winner of the 2020 Oklahoma Book Award. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Woody Guthrie Center

    The folk hero was also a prolific writer of poetry and prose; his life’s work is celebrated here. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Oklahoma

    Oregon

    Spot to Read: Sylvia Beach Hotel, Newport

    This Oregon Coast hotel dates to 1918, each room with a literary theme. A little cheesy? Perhaps—but the purist wifi/TV/phone blackout is worth it. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    hard rain falling

    Hard Rain Falling
    by Don Carpenter

    In which orphaned teenager Jack Levitt must live by his smarts on the streets of Portland. [MAPSee also: The Residue Years by Mitchell Jackson

     

    No Time to Spare: Thinking About What Matters
    by Ursula K. Le Guin

    A collection of personal musings on life and language from the venerated Oregonian that feels a little like sitting inside Le Guin’s Portland living room (which will soon be opened, along with the rest of her house, as part of a new writers residency). [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Elizabeth Woody

    A Warm Springs tribal citizen, Woody is a national force as an artist and teacher, a former state laureate, and the creator of muscular, effervescent lines. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Powell’s City of Books, Portland

    Gotta do it. Get the tote. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Oregon

    Pennsylvania

    Spot to Read: Scott Arboretum, Swarthmore

    Swarthmore College’s 350-acre “garden of ideas” is a beautiful place to stop and read for an hour or two. Can we prove you’d be following in the footsteps of alums like Jonathan Franzen, Adam Haslett, and Norman Rush? No, but everyone likes flowers. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Rabbit, Run
    by John Updike

    This classic of ennui chronicles three months in the life of Harry “Rabbit” Angstrom, a former high school basketball player in a stale town. [MAP] See also: Straight Man by Richard Russo

     

    A Prayer for the City
    by Buzz Bissinger

    The Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist crafts a heartfelt epic of the idiosyncratic Philadelphia mayor Ed Rendell. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Trapeta B. Mayson

    Mayson’s potent poems address immigration and mental health, informed by her childhood in Liberia and her work as a social worker. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Pearl S. Buck House, Perkasie

    Green Hills Farm was the 67-acre homestead where Buck lived and wrote for 40 years; now, you can walk its halls and gardens. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Pennsylvania

    (Or Read 4 Reasons Writers Should Move to Pittsburgh or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Philadelphia)

    Rhode Island

    Spot to Read: John Carter Brown Library, Providence

    Featuring public exhibits and an indigenous languages collection, with materials sourced from the Arctic to Patagonia, the John Carter Brown Library is not to be missed. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Claire Luchette, Agatha of Little Neon

    Agatha of Little Neon
    by Claire Luchette

    When their parish is shut down, Agatha and her fellow sisters start a new life at a halfway house in the former mill town of Woonsocket. [MAP]

     

    Dylan Goes Electric
    by Elijah Wald

    A fascinating history of the historic night at the Newport Folk Festival when Dylan plugged his guitar into an amp and left folk music behind. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Tina Cane

    Cane is the founder of the popular program Writers-in- the-Schools, RI, as well as the author of The Fifth Thought, Body of Work and more. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Swan Point Cemetery, Providence

    H.P. Lovecraft cultivated a cult following for supernatural horror tales; now, ardent fans leave unusual mementos at a gravestone that reads “I am Providence.” [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Rhode Island

    South Carolina

    Spot to Read: Angel Oak, Johns Island

    This gorgeous old tree’s epic branches create sprawling shade perfect for lounging. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Edisto
    by Padgett Powell

    In Powell’s lyrical novel, Simons Manigault comes of age on the titular Edisto, a “named but never discovered place in the South” found between Charleston and Savannah; his mother, “the Duchess,” believes he could be a prodigious writer. [MAP]

     

    The Green Book of South Carolina
    by Joshua Parks

    Compiled by the WeGOJA Foundation (on behalf of the SC African American Heritage Commission), The Green Book of South Carolina is a first-of-its-kind travel guide to the most tourist-friendly destinations offering visitors avenues to discover intriguing African American history as they travel the state. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Marcus Amaker

    Charleston’s first poet laureate is also a musician and the lead graphic designer for the music magazine No Depression. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Harvin Clarendon County Library, Manning

    A five-foot-tall statue of Amelia Bedelia—the beloved (and literal-to-a-fault) creation of Manning-native Peggy Parish—stands outside the town library, which also hosts a yearly celebration around the author’s birthday. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary South Carolina

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Charleston)

    South Dakota

    Spot to Read: Full Circle Book Co-op, Sioux Falls

    A bookstore, art gallery, cafe, bar and gathering space all in one, nestled in the heart of Sioux Falls. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Winter Counts
    by David Heska Wanbli Weiden

    A crime thriller set on the Rosebud Indian Reservation, where one man sets out to curtail the dangerous drugs pouring into his community. [MAP]

     

    The Journey of Crazy Horse: A Lakota History
    by Joseph M. Marshall III

    The true story of the legendary Crazy Horse, drawn from oral histories and distilled by Lakota writer Marshall. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Lee Ann Roripaugh

    The former state poet laureate, author of Dandarians and Year of the Snake, among other books, teaches at the University of South Dakota and edits the South Dakota Review. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Ingalls Homestead

    The little house on the prairie where Laura Ingalls Wilder lived and wrote offers covered wagon and pony cart rides, crafts, and other activities (laundry on a washboard, anyone?). [MAP]

    Read more on Literary South Dakota

    Tennessee

    Spot to Read: Centennial Park, Nashville

    Visit this 132-acre oasis in Nashville’s West End. [MAP}

    What to Read There:

    A Death in the Family
    by James Agee

    Dual tragedies shape this autobiographical novel, winner of the Pulitzer Prize. [MAP]

     

    Dreams to Remember: Otis Redding, Stax Records, and the Transformation of Southern Soul
    by Mark Ribowsky

    The Stax Records story is a window into a transformative era in American Music and properly celebrates the iconic Memphis record label. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Caroline Randall Williams

    Her first collection of poetry reimagines the life of Shakespeare’s mysterious “Dark Lady.” [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Parnassus Books, Nashville

    Ann Patchett’s cherished shop opened in 2011. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Tennessee

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Nashville)

    Texas

    Spot to Read: Barton Springs, Austin

    Bathe in this revered, 68-degree urban sanctuary, enjoyed by lap swimmers, sunbathers and plenty of dogs. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Texas: The Great Theft
    by Carmen Boullosa, tr. Samantha Schnee

    Boullosa’s epic historical novel is a fresh and deeply absorbing reimagining of the history of Texas-Mexico borderlands. [MAP] See also: Lonesome Dove by Larry McMurtry, News of the World by Paulette Jiles

     

    Goodbye to a River
    by John Graves

    In 1957, Graves traveled down a stretch of the Brazos River by canoe just before a dam would destroy the river’s biome. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Carmen Tafolla

    Tarfolla’s poetry of place centers on San Antonio, where she grew up in the West-Side barrios. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: LBJ Library, Austin

    A recently renovated ode to the Stetson in the Oval, with an incredible collection focused on public policy. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Texas

    Utah

    Spot to Read: Bryce Canyon National Park, Bryce

    Wander through a maze of fantastic rock hoodoos, painted cliffs and wind-whipped alpine forests—the perfect spot for a little nature reading. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    When the Emperor Was Divine
    by Julie Otsuka

    Otsuka’s first novel, loosely based on family history, follows a Japanese American family living in Berkeley in the 40s, as they are suddenly “reclassified” and sent to an incarceration camp in Topaz, Utah. [MAP]

     

    Mormon Country
    by Wallace Stegner

    Wallace Stegner’s 1942 chronicle of Mormon life in “lovely Deseret” captures the arid western landscape that the LDS community claimed in its search for a safe haven. [MAPSee also: Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place, by Terry Tempest Williams

    Poet of Note: Paisley Rekdal

    The decorated former Utah poet laureate is the author of seven collections of poetry, including West: A Translation, which commemorates the 150th anniversary of the completion of the transcontinental railroad, and which Rekdal has adapted into an online multimedia project. She directs the American West Center at the University of Utah. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Arches National Park, Grand County

    Edward Abbey spent two summers working here as a park ranger; the landscape informed his masterpiece, Desert Solitaire. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Utah

    Vermont

    Spot to Read: Mad River Valley, Washington County

    Beloved for lazy river floats come summer, Mad River is paradise for rock climbers, readers, and sunbathers. Readers looking for a more pastoral backdrop will find it in the valley’s villages, where gabled barns and farms are stitched together by covered bridges. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Secret History, Donna Tartt

    The Secret History
    by Donna Tartt

    Academic obsession leads a quintet of eccentrics into occult darkness at the fictional Hampden College in Donna Tartt’s cult classic. [MAP]

     

    Wandering Home: A Long Walk Across America's Most Hopeful Landscape by Bill McKibben

    Wandering Home: A Long Walk Across America’s Most Hopeful Landscape
    by Bill McKibben

    In his most personal book, Bill McKibben ruminates on wildness as he hikes from Vermont’s Mt. Abraham to the woods of the Adirondacks. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Mary Ruefle

    Mary Ruefle does it all. The poet (Dunce), lecturer (Madness, Rack, and Honey), and erasure artist (A Little White Shadow) is also the beloved poet laureate of the Green Mountain State. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Bread Loaf School of English, Ripton

    A mountain haven for writers since 1920, Bread Loaf is known for mustard-hued buildings and its program champion, Robert Frost, who taught there for 42 years. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Vermont

    Virginia

    Spot to Read: Belle Isle, Richmond

    Sink into your book in this quiet, 54-acre island park in the midst of the James River. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    The Known World
    by Edward P. Jones

    Jones’s groundbreaking, Pulitzer Prize winning novel tells the story of Henry Townsend, a Black slave owner in antebellum Virginia, and the stories of those around him. [MAP]

     

    The Hemingses of Monticello
    by Annette Gordon-Reed

    In Annette Gordon-Reed’s game-changing history of the Hemings family, we gain insight into the tangled web of family and exploitation that defined their lives, and the ways in which they fought for agency within an oppressive system. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Rita Dove

    The Pulitzer Prize winning poet, whose “American Smooth” has quickly become a touchstone of contemporary verse, lives in Charlottesville and teaches at the University of Virginia. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Blackfriars Playhouse, Staunton

    At the American Shakespeare Center’s Blackfriars, the world’s only re-creation of Shakespeare’s indoor theatre, you can enjoy performances of Shakespeare year-round [MAP].

    Read more on Literary Virginia

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Richmond)

    Washington

    Spot to Read: Main Street, Port Townsend

    At the very tip of the state, marked by a Jamestown S’klallam totem pole, tune into this Victorian port’s community with a coffee at Velocity, then walk a few blocks to get lost in two remarkable bookstores: indie gem Imprint and William James, a gobsmacking trove of used and rare. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Jess Walter, The Cold Millions

    The Cold Millions
    by Jess Walter

    The acclaimed Spokane novelist brings the oft-forgotten radical history of the Northwest to life, taking on the riots over free speech and workers’ rights that broke out in his city in the early 20th century. [MAP]

     

    Red Paint: The Ancestral Autobiography of a Coast Salish Punk

    Red Paint: An Ancestral Autobiography of a Coast Salish Punk
    by Sasha La Pointe

    Profound and often wrenching, this power ballad of a book binds together two distinct Pacific Northwest threads: unbreakable Indigenous culture and underground rock-and-roll creativity. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Richard Hugo

    Bard of old docks and small-town bars, Hugo is also the patron saint of the Seattle literary center Richard Hugo House. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Raymond Carver’s grave, Port Angeles

    For a generation, Carver’s hard-bitten, sparse tales of working-class life defined the literary style of the modern Northwest. Born in an Oregon logging town, Carver spent his last years at the northern edge of the Olympic Peninsula, where a quietly elegant, low-key memorial is somehow perfect. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Washington

    (Or Spend a Literary Long Weekend in Seattle)

    West Virginia

    Spot to Read: New River Gorge, Fayetteville

    A whitewater river—one of the oldest on the continent—flows through deep canyons here. Scenic reading spots abound. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Machine Dreams
    by Jayne Anne Phillips

    Buckhannon native Phillips published this, her debut novel—the story of one family over some five decades in small town West Virginia—in 1984 to considerable acclaim. Her latest, Night Watch, is also set in West Virginia, and won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction this year. [MAP]

     

    The Glass Castle
    by Jeannette Walls

    Memories of a West Virginia family both dysfunctional and free-spirited are the beating heart of Jeannette Walls’s 2005 memoir. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Irene McKinney

    Raised on her family’s farm in Belington, McKinney writes poetry that explores the link between people, and place and mirrors the rural Appalachian landscape. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Talcott

    Legend has it that John Henry tried to show his strength as a railworker against a rock-drilling machine here; the story inspired Colson Whitehead’s novel John Henry Days. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary West Virginia

    Wisconsin

    Spot to Read: Boswell Books, Milwaukee

    This East Side indie book enclave is a community treasure. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Chad Harbach, The Art of Fielding

    The Art of Fielding
    by Chad Harbach

    In which the Harpooners—a baseball team at Westish College, a fictional school on the shores of Lake Michigan—embark on a Melville-influenced season. [MAP]

     

    Wisconsin Death Trip
    by Michael Lesy

    A mine is shut down in Black River Falls; this cult classic photobook recounts the grisly aftermath. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Lorine Niedecker

    The introverted daughter of a carp fisherman, Niedecker spent most of her life in Fort Atkinson, where she wrote New Goose and My Friend Tree. [MAP]

    Literary Landmark: Wisconsin Historical Society Library, Madison

    Stately rows of green lamps glow in this library’s dreamy reading room. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Wisconsin

    Wyoming

    Spot to Read: Whitebark Bakery and Cafe, Lander

    Lander, a small town with farm and ranch roots, has become a cultural and explorational hub. South of the Wind River Indian Reservation, on the cusp of the mountains, it now draws an adventurous crowd of climbers and hikers. Hang out here to absorb the far-flung creative ethos. [MAP]

    What to Read There:

    Cowboys and East Indians
    by Nina McConigley

    These short stories illustrate both Wyoming’s iconic landscape and its constantly shifting culture, weaving in a modern immigrant perspective on the West.

     

    The Grizzly Years
    by Doug Peacock

    In one of the most singular books about wilderness and wild things, a traumatized Vietnam vet communes with the grizzlies of Yellowstone. [MAP]

    Poet of Note: Gretel Ehrlich

    Primarily known for her nonfiction, especially her 1985 essay collection about Wyoming, The Solace of Open Spaces, Ehrlich has also published poems of rural life and natural spaces in collections like The Cold Heaven.

    Literary Landmark: The Virginian Hotel, Medicine Bow

    The mythology of the Western, as genre and archetype, dates back to Owen Wister’s 1902 novel The Virginian, set in this county and commemorated by this 1911-vintage hotel. [MAP]

    Read more on Literary Wyoming






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