I am devouring the final pages of my third Alaska novel and will soon be moving south to Arizona, which means I am spending a lot of time on the couch, cup of coffee by my side, feet propped on the table and laptop on my lap, browsing bookish websites. Sleuthing titles from each state has already become one of my favorite pastimes. I love sorting through book lists, reading synopses, receiving recommendations, organizing titles and authors, getting that tingly “Oooh, I have to read that one!” feeling, and most importantly, lining up my book queue so that I always know what I’m going to read next.
I’ve only selected books for three states so far (Alabama, Alaska, and Arizona) because I’m winging this as I go. My process has been to assemble the next state’s book list when I begin reading the final pick of my current state. I start with a call for recommendations from you and from Twitter. I enter your recommendations into my spreadsheet (yes, a spreadsheet of book titles. How geeky can you get, right? I know you want to see it though. I’ll give you a taste in a minute.) and then start running through my list of geographic-reading resources:
1. LitMap Project
I heard about LitMap on one of the early episodes of the BookRiot podcast and put it in my pocket for my reading road trip. Though the screenshot above only shows North America, on the LitMap Project website you can search locations all over the world. And even better? You can submit titles too. So if you know books set in specific states, please submit titles. I think this is a really cool idea and would love to see it get lots of action. Navigating the map took a little getting used to at first, but I think that might have more to do with my mouse than the website. I have registered and will be litmapping all of my reads for this project. (And I just saw that I am in the Litmappers Hall of Fame! Awesome.)
2. Business Insider’s map of the Most Famous Books Set in Every State
I wrote about this map in my introductory post about the project, It’s official: I am reading America, so I won’t go into a lot of detail about it here. I won’t necessarily be reading all the books from this map, but it gives me a good jumping off point and reminds me not just of titles I love, but titles that have long been on my TBR list and I will now get to thanks to this project.
3. Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award Maps
After reading the Science paper linking literary fiction and empathy, I decided I want to read literary award winners set in various states around the US. When I began my reading project I couldn’t find maps of Pulitzer and National Book Award winners based on setting. So I made them. I wrote down every title from the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction list, plus the finalists, read synopses of all the works, and marked the titles that were set in a particular state. I did the same with the National Book Award list. Now these maps serve as a quick reference when I research a new state.
4. TripFiction
TripFiction: see a location through an author’s eyes is a website where you can search by location to find books set in a particular area. The site includes reviews for each book and offers opportunities for readers (that’s you!) to submit titles and reviews.
5. USA Literary Map
I adore this hand-lettered literary map designed by Geoff Sawers and Bridget Hannigan, and when I’m stuck, I often refer to it for author names. The map is available at The Literary Gift Company, along with close-up shots of regions of the US that are difficult to see on the full map.
6. Authors of color from each US state
Reading diversely – reading the perspectives of men, women, white authors, black authors, Native American authors, Hispanic authors – is a major component of my Andrea Reads America project. Finding authors of color who hail from each state and who set their work in that state has proven challenging. I sent out a plea – Authors of color from each US state: will you help me fill in the gaps? – and was thrilled by the response from readers. The result is a photo gallery of authors from each state, titles they set in their home state, and a state-by-state list of those titles. If you are looking to diversify your reading life, this is a great place to start.
7. The Readers podcast
On The Readers episode 85, recorded in October 2013, hosts Simon (UK) and Thomas (USA) each chose and described 10 (or 11) books that represented the different regions of their respective countries. I had already started my US tour in Alabama, and I think I may have squealed when I heard the show’s topic. I scribbled down most of the titles Thomas suggested for various regions of our country. It’s a great list by a thoughtful reader, and Simon has me wanting to take a British tour as well. Maybe when my current project is done, I’ll hop across the pond.
8. Goodreads
Thank heavens for Goodreads lists, and for reviewers who tag books based on geographic setting. I found many of my Alaska titles on the Goodreads Best Books on Alaska list. I’m still learning how to navigate Goodreads (e.g. I don’t know how to tag books), but I have a feeling I’ll be an expert by the time this is all over.
9. Google search
After I’ve gone through steps 1 through 8, I run a basic google search. For Alabama, I searched “books set in Alabama by Alabama authors” and found this great list, 10 favorite novels by Alabama authors set in Alabama. For Arizona, I found an exhaustive list, Reading Arizona: The Literary Landscape, which even includes the specific region in Arizona the book is set in.
The Spreadsheet
It did not take long before I realized I had some serious data management issues when all I was doing was scribbling notes in my yellow composition book. When recommendations started pouring in as comments on blog posts, I decided to set up a spreadsheet to organize titles. As I run through the resources above, and when you all are so kind as to give me recommendations, I enter the information in my spreadsheet:
Since part of my project is to read men, women, and non-Caucasian authors, I often have to dig deep to find a minority author to flesh out my list (although in Arizona I’ve got several Native American authors to choose from – very exciting). I mark the titles I am most excited to explore based on recommendations, book blurbs, and literary awards, then go through my short list to make sure all three authorships are represented. Twice my short list was comprised of three women (an exciting problem), and so I went back in and adjusted til my list of three was well rounded.
Then? I read.
Reading: good times.
This is really comprehensive… well done! 😀
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Thank you, Sam.
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This is amazing, I was wondering how on earth you would go about such a mammoth undertaking! And I love the spreadsheet.
Excitingly, I checked out the LitMap abd foud out that Hard Times is probably based on my hometown which has moved it right up on my TR list!!
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