A Reading Roadtrip Across the U.S.A. - Goodreads News & Interviews

A Reading Roadtrip Across the U.S.A.

Posted by Cybil on May 13, 2024
 
Book lovers know that one of the greatest joys of reading is the ability to go anywhere, anytime, through the magic of the written word. For this summer, we're offering up a literary roadtrip through the U.S.A. with this list of 51 books to represent every state in the union, plus D.C. The action in each book is set in the affiliated state, so you can read your way through America, from Alabama to Wyoming. That’s if you want to travel alphabetically, which we don’t recommend. It’s fun, but not very fuel efficient.
 
Our curated collection covers a wide range of genres: “serious” literary fiction, but also outstanding thrillers, comic novels, science fiction, mystery, romance, historical fiction, and even a splash of horror. And we’ve noted several titles that won or were nominated for Goodreads Choice Awards.
 
All of these books are relatively recent, and some are on the new fiction shelves right now. While many states have older books that are more readily identified with them individually, this list represents a kind of 21st-century survey of American reading.
 
Scroll over the covers below to learn more about each book, and add any interesting destinations to your Want to Read shelf! Happy reading, America (and everyone else)!
 
 

Alabama

A 2022 Goodreads Choice Award nominee for Best Historical Fiction, Take My Hand is set in the environs of 1973 Montgomery, Alabama. Young Black nurse Civil Townsend turns whistleblower when she discovers an appalling situation involving state medical care, reproductive politics, and two young girls from a dirt-poor family. The bleakest part: Author Dolen Perkins-Valdez’s acclaimed novel is based on real events.  


Alaska

From the author of The Nightingale, Kristin Hannah’s The Great Alone peers deeply into the wild and enduring appeal of Alaska, America’s last real frontier. When Vietnam veteran Ernt Allbright moves his family to a remote corner of the state, they find themselves in a land of transcendent beauty, enduring communities, and persistent danger.


Arizona

Particularly resonant in these anxious days, Lydia Millet’s literary novel spins a kind of meditative modern fable. After walking(!) from New York to Arizona, a wealthy philanthropist starts his new life by contemplating some old-fashioned notions. The ultimate question: Can bedrock virtues like kindness and hope make a difference when confronting the existential dilemma that is climate change?


Arkansas

Millie Cousins, senior-year residential assistant at the University of Arkansas, finds a complex kind of trouble when she crosses paths with an ambitious visiting professor and some cruel undergraduate pranksters. Just beneath the narrative, author Kiley Reid (Such a Fun Age) digs into themes of privilege, race, queer politics, and campus power dynamics.


California

Longlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize (and nominated for a 2022 Best Debut Novel GCA) Leila Mottley’s Nightcrawling introduces the unforgettable teenage heroine Kiara, who must endure some awful times to survive her circumstances in Oakland, California. Goodreads reviewers praise Mottley’s book for its empathetic characterizations and ultimate celebration of the enduring power of love.


Colorado

Beginning in 1930s Denver, this Western saga from Kali Fajardo-Anstine (Sabrina & Corina) chronicles five generations of an Indigenous Chicano family in the place they call the Lost Territory. When tea leaf reader Luz "Little Light" Lopez receives intense visions of her ancestral origins, she realizes that she’s been called upon to keep the family stories alive.


Connecticut

One of the most enthusiastically acclaimed literary debuts in recent years, Ocean Vuong’s epistolary novel takes the form of a long letter from a queer Vietnamese American son to his mother in the city of Hartford. Nominated for a 2019 Best Fiction GCA, Vuong’s book wrestles with issues of trauma and forgiveness while moving like a fever-dream fusion of memoir and epic poem.


Delaware

Mapping new territory in the long tradition of American immigrant stories, Cristina Henriquez’s heartrending novel starts in a cinder-block complex off a highway in Delaware, where the Rivera family is desperately hoping for a new future in the United States. Teenage daughter Maribel, recovering from a near-fatal accident in Mexico, finds that the help she desperately needs is blocked by language and cultural barriers.


Florida

Author Kristen Arnett (Mostly Dead Things) is known for writing about contemporary LGBTQ+ life with warmth, wit, and hard-won wisdom. Her 2022 sophomore novel introduces desperate mom Sammie Lucas, whose quest for a picture-perfect queer family is challenged by increasingly severe troubles with her troubled teen and absent wife. Bonus trivia: In 2018, Arnett had a very Florida moment that is slightly internet famous.  


Georgia

Nominated for a Best Debut Novel GCA last year, Terah Shelton Harris’ book tells a unique kind of love story. Eight years after a traumatic sexual assault, young mother Sara Lancaster returns to Savannah to run her father’s bookstore and build a new life with her genius-level daughter. That’s when she meets Jacob, an astrophysicist with his own remarkable story.


Hawaii

This rowdy short story collection paints a picture of America’s complicated island paradise through a series of character portraits colored with magical realism. Stitched into the narratives—sometimes scary, sometimes sexy—you’ll find fascinating details on Hawaiian history and mythology: haunted highways, Elvis impersonators, and one highly unsettling corpse flower.  


Idaho

Pulitzer Prize winner Anthony Doerr (All the Light We Cannot See) delivers a genre-defying epic in three separate timelines—15th-century Constantinople, present-day Idaho, and a starship several decades into the future. Doerr is interested here in stewardship—of Earth, of stories—and his book could be accurately shelved under historical fiction, literary fiction, science fiction, or fantasy.


Illinois

Starting out in the 1990s Chicago art scene, author Nathan Hill (The Nix) chronicles a complex modern marriage that ends up mired in depressing 21st-century weirdness. Jack and Elizabeth try to preserve their bond through dubious wellness regimens, cultlike mindfulness groups, and some ill-advised polyamorous adventures. Wellness earned a 2023 GCA nomination for Best Fiction.


Indiana

Having aged out of the foster care system, a young woman moves to an “affordable housing complex” in fictitious Vacca Vale, Indiana. Over the course of one blistering July week, Blandine Watkins tries to navigate life in a dead city filled with “empty factories, empty neighborhoods, empty promises, empty faces.” Grim and funny, Tess Gunty’s acclaimed debut offers a sustained gaze into some dark corners of modern America.


Iowa

In the surprisingly kinetic environs of Iowa City, three young adults pilot their way through a most extraordinary year. Ivan, Fatima, and Noah form the core of a shifting group of students, friends, and lovers, each trying to find a proper trajectory into the future. Author Brandon Taylor’s campus novel explores themes of class, race, and Life Itself with clarity and empathy.


Kansas

It’s a crazy plan, but it just might work. The small town of Big Burr, Kansas, has been labeled "the most homophobic town in the U.S." So a national nonprofit decides to send a kind of queer task force into town. Its two-year mission: to build bridges and sort things out. Things, as you might imagine, get weird. Author Celia Laskey brings humor and humanity to a very American story.


Kentucky

Based on a true story, Horse is an utterly unique historical epic that unspools in three timelines, each proceeding from events in Kentucky circa 1850. When an enslaved groom forges a deep bond with an extraordinary horse, the consequences echo through the years—to New York in 1954 and to D.C. in 2019. Bonus trivia: Author Geraldine Brooks won the Pulitzer Prize for her 2005 novel, March.


Louisiana

Author Eric Nguyen’s debut novel follows the fate of a Vietnamese immigrant family who arrive in New Orleans in 1979. Desperate mother Huong does her best to keep the family together as one son drifts into a local Vietnamese gang, while the other struggles to accept his blossoming sexuality. Twenty-four years later, Hurricane Katrina changes everything.


Maine

Maine, 1962: An Indigenous Mi’kmaq family travels down from Nova Scotia to pick berries for the summer. When their four-year-old child disappears, the incident causes terrible harm and a mystery that will haunt multiple families for decades. Author Amanda Peters’ debut novel is recommended for readers of The Vanishing Half and Woman of Light.


Maryland

Author Susan Muaddi Darraj brings readers into the heart of a Palestinian American community in Baltimore, where three different families make their way in a fast-evolving America. Darraj’s debut novel shifts perspective through a diverse cast of characters as they experience heartbreak, loss, triumph, and the revelation of a few dark secrets.


Massachusetts

Nantucket romance specialist Elin Hilderbrand (28 Summers) returns to her stomping grounds once again with this story of a rather treacherous vacation proposition. Recently widowed Hollis Shaw has arranged for a holiday weekend with four former besties from different times in her life—her teenage years, twenties, thirties, and midlife. Could be a genius idea! Could be an epic fiasco! Let’s find out!


Michigan

It’s cherry-picking season in northern Michigan, and Lara is finally telling her grown daughters about that One Magical Summer when she was an aspiring actress with a rowdy and randy theater group. Lara has taught the girls everything they know. But not everything she knows. Ann Patchett (The Dutch House) delivers a tale of mothers, daughters, youth, romance, and the enduring power of a theatrical classic.


Minnesota

Author William Kent Krueger has earned a loyal readership with his Cork O’Conner series of Minnesota mystery-thrillers. His highly acclaimed 2019 historical fiction novel switches gears entirely, telling an epic on-the-road story of four orphaned kids who escape a brutal residential school for Native American children. If you sense echoes of Huckleberry Finn and The Odyssey while reading this one, that’s on purpose.


Mississippi

Author Jesmyn Ward is the only woman—and the only Black American writer—to win the National Book Award for fiction twice. One of those prestigious awards went to Sing, Unburied, Sing, her engaging and resonant 2017 novel about the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the plight of 21st-century rural families, and the still-unfolding saga of America herself.


Missouri

One of 2024’s most talked about (and raved about) books, Percival Everett’s bold novel takes the concept of literary retellings to entirely new places. James is Everett’s version of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, only told from the perspective of Huck’s stalwart companion, James, the enslaved runaway who, it turns out, has his own stories to tell.


Montana

Author Victor LaValle brings his subversive style of genre-straddling adventure to the American West, circa 1914, with the story of a single woman trying to make her way as a homesteader in Montana. Adelaide Henry is courageous and resourceful. She also carries a steamer trunk that must be kept locked, lest people start to disappear. Is it horror? Mystery? Historical fiction? The answer is yes.  


Nebraska

A 2021 GCA nominee, The Lincoln Highway is a road-trip story circa 1954, in which four young men make their way from Nebraska to New York City. Author Amor Towles (A Gentleman in Moscow) works his usual narrative magic by juggling multiple points of view across several fascinating characters, 10 days of adventure, and a weirdly slippery 1948 Studebaker.


Nevada

Crooked senators! Mafia murders! Cryptocurrency scams! Gloriously feathered hair! The new thriller from author Chris Bohjalian (Midwives) follows the curious case of a Princess Diana impersonator who finds herself tangled up with lethal bad guys in the Las Vegas underworld. Also on display: Buckingham Palace Casino, the most depressing entertainment venue in the history of the cosmos.


New Hampshire

The psychological suspense thriller Mad Honey tells a story of tragic murder and unlikely romance in small-town New Hampshire. Single mom Olivia McPhee has returned to her hometown with her troubled teenage son. It doesn’t go well. Coauthors Jodi Picoult (My Sister’s Keeper) and Jennifer Finney Boylan (She’s Not There) explore one of the genre’s most reliable themes: the secrets we keep.


New Jersey

Just a few hundred miles south-southwest, author Ann Napolitano (Hello Beautiful) details the awful fate of one particular flight out of Newark. Twelve-year-old Edward Adler is the sole survivor of a stunning tragedy. Suddenly and forever without his family, young Edward must make his way in the world. Goodreads members really fell in love with this one.


New Mexico 

Forensic photographer Rita Todacheene sees dead people. More specifically, she sees the ghosts of murder victims who point her toward clues in the aftermath of a crime scene. Set in New Mexico’s Navajo Nation community, Ramona Emerson’s inventive story combines elements of supernatural horror, murder mystery, crime thriller, and character study.


New York

Winner of the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for fiction (along with Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead), Hernan Diaz’s epic novel begins with a flashy New York City couple living large in America’s Roaring Twenties. But just where did Benjamin and Helen Rask get their seemingly endless wealth? Trust is a layered novel concerning foundational inequalities and how power and money dictate what we come to think of as history.


North Carolina 

This rather delicious suspense thriller invites readers to the estate known as Ashby House, high in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina. When the richest woman in the state leaves her nine-figure fortune to her adopted child, all manner of weirdness ensues. Author Rachel Hawkins (The Wife Upstairs) delivers another twisty confection concerning shady relations, deadly secrets, and lovely views from the terrace.


North Dakota 

An enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, author Louise Erdrich has been called one of the most significant writers in the literary movement known as the Native American Renaissance. Her 2020 novel The Night Watchman weaves together multiple story lines concerning family, public policy, and Native American dispossession in 1950s North Dakota. Bonus trivia: The Pulitzer Prize–winning novel is based in part on the life of Erdrich’s grandfather.


Ohio

Twin sisters Arcade and Daffodil grew up under difficult circumstances in small-town Ohio. When a local woman is found drowned in the river, the sisters wake up to a nightmare that’s just beginning to unfold. Poet and novelist Tiffany McDaniel draws from actual history with this intense mystery thriller, documenting a specific tragedy to explore larger questions about poverty and justice.


Oklahoma 

Oscar Hokeah’s well-regarded debut novel profiles a young Native American man through the voices of multiple characters in a struggling Oklahoma community. Ever Geimausaddle has only ever known instability and constant, churning change. But he’s committed to stopping the cycle of chaos for the next generation. Author Hokeah is a registered member of Cherokee Nation and the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma.


Oregon

An agoraphobic rock star mom. A hard-guy drug money enforcer. Extremely crooked federal agents. And a sorcerous severed hand that induces homicidal madness. Such are the ingredients in Keith Rosson’s gonzo horror-story-slash-crime-thriller. Emphasis on the slash. Oh, and the good citizens of Portland get morphed into crazed and bloodthirsty killers. That, too.


Pennsylvania

The best pleasant-surprise success story in recent years, The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store introduces readers to Chicken Hill, the historical neighborhood in Pottstown, Pennsylvania, where Black and Jewish families once lived in harmony under the shadow of their wealthy and dangerous neighbors. A huge critical and commercial hit in 2023, James McBride’s novel struck a welcome chord with its celebration of the power of community.


Rhode Island

Following up her hit 2012 debut, The Miseducation of Cameron Post, author Emily M. Danforth brings us a story of young love and gothic vibes at Rhode Island’s Brookhants School for Girls, circa 1902. One hundred years later, the past and present collide when Hollywood decides to film a movie at the haunted ruins of the school. Danforth’s dizzying mix of grim comedy, ghost story, and queer romance features some nice period illustrations, too.


South Carolina

Set in the lovely city of Charleston, this unique horror/mystery story follows the strange fate of Louise and Mark Joyner, estranged siblings who are forced to sell the family home when their parents die. But why did mom cover all the mirrors? And why is the attic door nailed shut?  Author Grady Hendrix (The Final Girl Support Group) has a wavelength all his own, broadcasting on a very specific frequency between scary and funny.


South Dakota

A different kind of crime thriller—with about a dozen clever twists—Winter Counts introduces the character of Virgil Wounded Horse, freelance enforcer on the Rosebud Indian Reservation in South Dakota. When bad guys slip through the cracks of the legal system, whether federal or tribal, Virgil is the last line of defense and/or retribution. Weiden’s debut was nominated for two GCAs in 2020.


Tennessee

Inspired by the author’s own family history, the acclaimed debut novel from Tara M. Stringfellow unfolds over the course of 70 years and three generations in a historic Memphis neighborhood. Stringfellow has described Memphis as the Black fairy tale she always wanted to read—a parable with multiple voices that ponders the values we pass to future generations.


Texas

A riff on the Old West story template, The Bullet Swallower introduces the legendary Mexican bandido El Tragabalas, fleeing through Texas to escape a magical curse. What starts in 1895 winds up in 1964 when Mexican singer Jaime Sonoro discovers he has inherited his ancestor’s otherworldly problems. The go-to description on this one is Cormac McCarthy meets Gabriel García Márquez, and that’s about right.


Utah

Crime fiction meets outdoor adventure in this lively novel from Todd Robert Petersen, which takes place in and around the beautiful badlands of Utah. When an innocent anthropologist gets mixed up with a pair of inept criminals, a bigger-picture problem is revealed, concerning public land, national monuments, energy exploration, and crooked lobbyists. Plus the poor sheriff who has to deal with it all…


Vermont

Deep in the woods of Vermont, restoration expert Maggie Holt moves into a derelict Victorian estate named, rather excellently, Baneberry Hall. It seems that 25 years earlier, Maggie’s parents fled the same house in dread and panic, then wrote a book about it. Think Amityville Horror. So what’s really happening in Baneberry Hall? Author Riley Sager (Final Girls) has the strange and surprising details.


Virginia

Set in the Appalachian region of Virginia, Barbara Kingsolver's Demon Copperhead introduces a protagonist and narrator like no other. Well, maybe like one other: The book is inspired by Charles Dickens’ 1850 classic David Copperfield, and Kingsolver is ultimately interested in similar ideas concerning resourceful young people and devastating poverty. Kingsolver’s novel won the 2023 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction, along with Hernan Diaz’s Trust.


Washington

While mopping floors on the midnight shift at the Sowell Bay Aquarium, lonely widow Tova Sullivan makes a new friend: Marcellus, the giant Pacific octopus living at the aquarium. A kind of gentle mystery in the key of magical realism, Shelby Van Pelt’s lovely debut earned her astonishing sales numbers, a fiercely loyal readership, and two GCA nominations in 2022.


Washington, D.C.

Young bride Eleanor Quarles has just arrived in the nation’s capital, having married into one of the city’s wealthy Black families. Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, teenage Ruby Pearsall hopes to escape crushing poverty and be the first in her family to attend college. Historical fiction ace Sadeqa Johnson (Yellow Wife) alternates between the two stories until they gradually knit together into a redemptive tale of 1950s America.


West Virginia

Based on the real-life West Virginia coal warsTaylor Brown’s Rednecks furthers the proud tradition of big-picture historical fiction with undeniable contemporary resonance. In 1920s coal country, a multicultural community of miners and their allies take on crooked feds, vicious gun thugs, and the powerful coal companies. Brown’s book features characters both fictional and historical, including the author’s own great-grandfather.  


Wisconsin

Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Powers delivers an imaginative novel of literary speculative fiction with this story of an astrobiologist studying life on the personal, cellular, and cosmic scale. Theo Byrne has developed an experimental treatment for his troubled nine-year-old, who is obsessed with drawing pictures of endangered species. It’s a timely story: Powers says his novel is, in part, about the anxiety of family life on a damaged planet.


Wyoming

A grand historical love story set in the high plains of Wyoming, this latest novel from author Sandra Dallas (The Persian Pickle Club) brings readers to the tiny outpost of Wallace, circa 1916. When schoolteacher Ellen Webster meets rancher Charlie Bacon, the young couple must rely on each other to survive the cruel seasons of life on the prairie.


Now it's your turn! Which books do you think best represent your state? Tell us in the comments below!

 

Comments Showing 1-50 of 53 (53 new)


message 1: by Mar (new)

Mar Now make a world tour and put a few books from every continent 🙏✨


message 2: by Cybil, Goodreads employee (new)

Cybil Mar wrote: "Now make a world tour and put a few books from every continent 🙏✨"

This could get you started!
https://www.goodreads.com/blog/show/2...


message 3: by Aubrey (new)

Aubrey What book best represents my state? Hmm… I’d probably have to say Welcome to Wonderland by Chris Grabenstein.


message 4: by Avery (new)

Avery Nagy Idk I’m from Michigan so probably anything with a summer beach house 🤷‍♀️


message 5: by Chels (new)

Chels Do Canada next!


message 6: by Megan (new)

Megan  Honaker I think PR should be represented so I asked a friend for his Puerto Rican recommendations:

Puerto Rico Strong - Post hurricane Maria, super informative. Eye opening. Easy to read.

Happy Days, Uncle Sergio - Spanish edition had a VERY Puerto Rican flavor.

La Llamarada - one of our best classics

War Against All Puerto Ricans - eye opening, raw, informative.


message 7: by Megan (new)

Megan Brevard I like Cold Mountain for NC.
Cold Mountain


message 8: by Andrea (new)

Andrea Basically every other state has a proper novel and not just a summer pulp romp, but Massachusetts. I feel disappointed and surprised considering the state’s contributions to the literary world.


message 9: by Jasmine (new)

Jasmine Chels wrote: "Do Canada next!"

Great idea!


message 10: by Betsy (new)

Betsy Kunsman Love these lists - I’m always finding a read I wouldn’t have found otherwise


message 11: by Kat (new)

Kat Galvez Love this! Definitely want to read the book listed for New Jersey. 👏🏼👏🏼


message 12: by Laceygoodbooks (new)

Laceygoodbooks I have the great alone excited to read it this summer


message 13: by reen (new)

reen Could y’all please recommend non struggle black stories for the south like alabama and mississippi? Like the other states


message 14: by Emily (new)

Emily Can you please also give some books from US territories? The US officially has 14 territories including PR, Guam, and American Samoa to name a few!


message 15: by Stephanie (new)

Stephanie O'Brien I wish there was a printable check list of all of the books


message 16: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa Chels wrote: "Do Canada next!"

YES!


message 17: by Amy (new)

Amy Lonesome Dove for Texas, but maybe everyone has already read it?


message 18: by Alison (new)

Alison Everett Elin Hilderbrand is such a cop out for Massachusetts


message 19: by Cari (new)

Cari Stephanie wrote: "I wish there was a printable check list of all of the books"

YES!!!


message 20: by Holden (new)

Holden Wunders Nevada is always just Las Vegas something. Could’ve put in an Ellen Hopkins book instead


message 21: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Sorey Megan wrote: "I think PR should be represented so I asked a friend for his Puerto Rican recommendations:

Puerto Rico Strong - Post hurricane Maria, super informative. Eye opening. Easy to read.

Happy Days, ..."

Thank you for commenting and listing some titles. I totally agree that PR should be included!


message 22: by Lisa (new)

Lisa Sorey Stephanie wrote: "I wish there was a printable check list of all of the books"

I agree! Or at least a way to save this list!


message 23: by Kirsty (new)

Kirsty Great article, lots of books to add to my TBR list 👍


message 24: by Cara (new)

Cara Wow! Great list!


message 25: by Mary (new)

Mary  H Lisa wrote: "Megan wrote: "I think PR should be represented so I asked a friend for his Puerto Rican recommendations:

Puerto Rico Strong - Post hurricane Maria, super informative. Eye opening. Easy to read.
..."


I emailed it myself


message 26: by Amanda (new)

Amanda Talley So many social justice themes present in a majority of these recommendations


message 27: by Anne (new)

Anne Wi Alligators in B Flat is a fantastic and mostly positive description of Florida. I liked the book so much I've read it 3 or 4 times!


😼jiriguru Love the initiative but I’m more on the non-fiction side. Anything for us the non-fiction lovers? History, social science, politics, biography, memoir… 🥹


message 29: by Dusty (new)

Dusty CANADA!
These are just what comes to mind. Far from exhaustive, just books I’ve enjoyed. What did I miss?

BC: Monkey Beach- Eden Robinson

Alberta: Bad Cree- Jessica Johns/ Come Back- Rudy Wiebe/ Who by Fire- Fred Stenson

New Brunswick: Mercy Among the Children- David Adams Richards

Manitoba: The Break- Katherena Vermette

NWT: Late Nights on Air- Elizabeth Hay

Saskatchewan: August into Winter- Guy Vanderhaeghe

Ontario: Indian Horse- Richard Wagamese

Newfoundland: The Shipping News- Annie Proulx

Yukon: Call of the Wild- Jack London


message 30: by Law (new)

Law Dusty wrote: "CANADA!
These are just what comes to mind. Far from exhaustive, just books I’ve enjoyed. What did I miss?

BC: Monkey Beach- Eden Robinson

Alberta: Bad Cree- Jessica Johns/ Come Back- Rudy Wiebe/..."


I just read Bad Cree. It was okay, but it was a good horror novel, though.


message 31: by Law (new)

Law Amanda wrote: "So many social justice themes present in a majority of these recommendations"

What's your point?


message 32: by Alianna (new)

Alianna Meier This is such a great idea!!! Maybe some international books too!


message 33: by Jonathan (new)

Jonathan Freeman What happened to John Irvine - Mr New England


message 34: by Linda (new)

Linda Lisa wrote: "Stephanie wrote: "I wish there was a printable check list of all of the books"

I agree! Or at least a way to save this list!"


You can go into desktop mode on your phone, or look at the list on a computer, select all the text, copy it and then paste it into a word or other text document. It may not include the pictures of the books though.


message 35: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa Florida: The Light Pirate, Lily Brooks-Dalton


message 36: by Vanessa (new)

Vanessa 😼jiriguru wrote: "Love the initiative but I’m more on the non-fiction side. Anything for us the non-fiction lovers? History, social science, politics, biography, memoir… 🥹"

Best. State. Ever.: A Florida Man Defends His Homeland, Dave Barry


message 37: by Boyce (new)

Boyce I love this. Thank you!


message 38: by Debbie (new)

Debbie Anderson This is a great list! I do think that John Kennedy Toole's "A Confederacy of Dunces" be a great choice for Louisiana.


message 39: by Mackay (new)

Mackay Colorado: Angle of Repose by Wallace Stegner.


message 40: by Sharon (new)

Sharon Andrea wrote: "Basically every other state has a proper novel and not just a summer pulp romp, but Massachusetts. I feel disappointed and surprised considering the state’s contributions to the literary world."

Agree, that is a very lightweight choice.


message 41: by Dawn (new)

Dawn Johnson Avery wrote: "Idk I’m from Michigan so probably anything with a summer beach house 🤷‍♀️"

Probably an Emily Henry book.


message 42: by Sylwia (new)

Sylwia My favorite post by y'all, this is awesome. I agree with the folks asking for one from every country!!!


message 43: by Lindsay (new)

Lindsay Bell As a native Hoosier himself, I’d also include John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars for Indiana.


G_occasionally_reads Cybil wrote: "Mar wrote: "Now make a world tour and put a few books from every continent 🙏✨"

This could get you started!
https://www.goodreads.com/blog/show/2......"

🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻


message 45: by Michael (new)

Michael Dennis It's interesting that virtually all of the selections have the same type of cover design to them.


message 46: by Law (new)

Law Dawn wrote: "Avery wrote: "Idk I’m from Michigan so probably anything with a summer beach house 🤷‍♀️"

Probably an Emily Henry book."


Funny Story would be a good choice.


message 47: by Dubhease (new)

Dubhease Chels wrote: "Do Canada next!"

There are listopias here for every province and territory. (This is PEI, but there are links at the top of the page)

https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...


Cindy Jiménez-Vera Of course that Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands should be included in a read across America summer reading list. I would love to read books set in the Caribbean this summer. 🏝️


message 49: by Michelle (new)

Michelle Of course I went to my state first. Wisconsin. I read that book. And. did. not. like. it. So, that does not inspire confidence in this list for me. Instead, for Wisconsin, I recommend this book by Mary Behan. It was an absolute gem of a read! A Measured Thread


message 50: by Karen (new)

Karen Stephanie Plum is the quintessential Jersey Girl, In the Unlikely Event by Judy Blume based on a true story in NJ written by a Jersey Girl, Don’t Forget to Write is a Jersey Shore experience.


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