Armchair Traveling: Books Set in Every U.S. State

Posted by Cybil on May 17, 2021
 


The United States of America is an awfully big place. Sensibly, we chopped it into states a long time ago. This simplifies things—taxes, mapmaking, sports team allegiances—and it makes for an interesting way to divvy up the million-and-one stories that constitute American literature.
 
This time around, we’ve added another little twist. The 50 books below (51, actually, counting D.C.) have all been published within the last ten years. 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.

This collection represents popular contemporary books set in each state, from Alabama to Wyoming. Our carefully curated list also covers a wide range of genres: contemporary “serious” literature, but also outstanding thrillers, comic novels, young adult, science fiction, mystery, historical fiction, and even a splash of nonfiction and biography, auto- and otherwise.
 
Scroll over the covers below to learn more about each book, and be sure to add those that pique your interest to your Want to Read shelf! Happy reading, America!
 

Alabama

A critical and commercial smash in 2020, author Yaa Gyasi’s deeply moving novel profiles a family of Ghanaian immigrants in Alabama. Young medical student Gifty, motivated by her family’s problems with depression and addiction, turns to science to try to solve the eternal mysteries of faith, suffering, and love. Bonus trivia: Gyasi is also the author of the celebrated 2016 novel Homecoming.


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

A piercing and personal account of life in the borderlands, Francisco Cantú’s acclaimed 2018 book combines elements of autobiography, memoir, history, and investigative reporting. As a Border Patrol agent in the scrublands of southern Arizona, Cantú has experienced firsthand the corrosive nature of failed public policy and the violence that seems to be tragically endemic to borderland areas throughout history.  


Arkansas

Born and raised in small-town Arkansas, Garrard Conley was deeply and enthusiastically involved in church life. But when he came out as gay, this son of a Baptist pastor had to make a choice: agree to a church-supported “conversion therapy” program, or risk losing his connections to friends, family, and the God of his understanding. Conley’s memoir is a complex meditation on faith, family, and forgiveness.


California

Author Tommy Orange’s ambitious 2018 novel follows 12 characters from Native communities who travel to the Big Oakland Powwow in the San Francisco Bay Area—all of whom are connected in ways they have yet to discover. Orange’s poignant stories represent a kind of cultural cross-stitching, a gradually unfurling tapestry depicting the experience of urban Native Americans in contemporary America.


Colorado

Set in the fictional town of Crystal, Colorado, The Gifted School explores the conflicts that emerge when a very exclusive school for exceptional children opens in the community. The novel tracks four families as competition and the pursuit of academic prestige rattle marriages, careers, sibling relationships, and family dynamics. Being the smart kid in class brings its own set of problems.


Connecticut

Veteran storyteller Jodi Picoult centers her insightful 2016 novel on a hospital in Connecticut where labor and delivery nurse Ruth Jefferson finds herself in a situation so twisty and tragic that it eventually puts her square in the middle of the national media spotlight. Picoult’s smart and empathic story tackles thorny issues of race, privilege, and justice in modern America.


Delaware

Initially published in 2014, Cristina Henriquez’s heartrending novel stakes out new territory in the proud tradition of American immigrant stories. In a cinder-block complex off a highway in Delaware, the Rivera family is desperately hoping for a new future in the United States. Teenage daughter Maribel is recovering from a near-fatal accident, but the help she needs is blocked by language and cultural barriers.


Florida

As dedicated readers know, Colson Whitehead is constitutionally incapable of writing anything but great books. Winner of the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for fiction, The Nickel Boys is based on the real story of a reform school in Florida that operated for more than 100 years and left behind a grim legacy of corruption and abuse. Whitehead’s classic book ensures that this history shall not be forgotten.


Georgia

Set in Georgia and the dubiously progressive environs of the “New South,” Tayari Jones’ hit novel tells the tale of newlyweds Celestial and Roy, whose relationship is shattered when Roy is convicted of a crime he didn’t commit. An American Marriage has been widely heralded as a masterpiece of storytelling and a kind of sustained gaze into the past, present, and future of the country.


Hawaii

In 1995, off the coast of Kailua-Kona, Hawaii, a strange miracle occurs. Seven-year-old Nainoa Flores is saved from a watery death by—of all things—a school of sharks. Kawai Strong Washburn’s story moves to the strange rhythms of magical realism as the Flores family experiences further encounters with the numinous. Maybe those old Hawaiian gods are still around, after all.


Idaho

Tara Westover’s startling 2018 memoir begins in the wild and remote mountains of Idaho, where she was raised in a community of radical survivalists. Westover never saw a school classroom—or a doctor, for that matter—until she was 17 years old. Her determination to engage with the real world eventually takes her to Brigham Young University, then Harvard and Cambridge, England. Educated is a coming-of-age story unlike any other.


Illinois

Set in the art scene of Chicago during the 1980s, The Great Believers documents the personal and societal ravages of the AIDS epidemic at a time when much of the country was deliberately looking away. Later contemporary passages in Paris put the era into unique historical perspective through two intertwining story lines.


Indiana

Returning home to the ravaged and despairing Indiana factory town where she was raised, African American engineer Ruth Tuttle finds that her Ivy League education cannot save her from the shadows of her past. When she befriends Midnight, a young white boy in trouble, the two discover that rural Indiana is just another microcosm for the nation’s abiding trauma.


Iowa

Pulitzer Prize winner Marilynne Robinson returns to the town of Gilead in this heralded 2014 novel set in the heartland of Iowa. After spending her childhood on the run, a young woman named Lila takes shelter in a small-town church. Lila’s life takes a series of hard turns as she tries to reconcile her new situation with her desperate past.


Kansas

Author Ben Lerner’s 2019 novel, shortlisted for several major awards, chronicles the fate of the Gordon family in Topeka, Kansas. Married couple Jane and Jonathan work at the Foundation, a famous psychiatric clinic that attracts patients and caregivers from around the world. When their son Adam befriends the loner Darren Eberheart, The Topeka School becomes an insightful investigation of family, identity, and toxic masculinity.


Kentucky

In Depression-era rural Kentucky, five courageous women sign on for an ambitious project: taking books and literacy to nooks and crannies of America. Based on actual events, British author Jojo Moyes’ novel brings an outsider’s perspective to American historical fiction with the amazing story of the Packhouse Librarians of Kentucky.


Louisiana

Raised in a small Louisiana Black community, the Vignes twins ran away at age(s) 16 to chase their dreams. One sister ultimately elects to stay in the South and now lives with her daughter. The other sister goes north and, passing for white, discovers an entirely different experience of America. Brit Bennett’s deeply thoughtful story examines themes of race and history, memory and dreams.


Maine

This 2020 Goodreads Choice nominee for Debut Novel tells the story of Maine teenager Vanessa Wye, who falls into a relationship with her 40-year-old English teacher. Seventeen years later, Vanessa is persuaded to revisit her adolescence and make a difficult decision. My Dark Vanessa explores complex issues of consent, complicity, and victimhood.


Maryland

In a delightfully original mystery that might be termed "Maryland noir," veteran scribe Laura Lippman takes readers back in time to Baltimore in the 1960s with a story that combines elements of psychological suspense, historical fiction, and crime story. Recovering housewife Maddie Schwartz has forged a new life as an investigative journalist, and she’s determined to solve the city’s latest murder case.


Massachusetts

It’s 1997 in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and Casey Peabody is in crisis. Running away from mounting debt, a recent breakup, and her mother’s death, Casey is making one last stand in an effort to finish her novel and live a life less ordinary. Massachusetts native Lily King (Euphoria) has won a loyal readership due to her stubborn insistence on writing books with insight, humor, and heart.


Michigan

After a 20-plus-year career as a journalist, author Anissa Gray made her fiction debut in 2019 with this portrait of an American family in trouble. Sisters Viola and Lillian return to the Michigan house of their childhood to help eldest sister Althea as she awaits trial for a crime no one seems to quite understand. Caring for Althea’s teenage daughters, the sisters rediscover that abiding truism: Blood is thicker than anything.


Minnesota

Funny and moving, this playful family saga from author J. Ryan Stradal (Kitchens of the Great Midwest) has its priorities in order. It’s about family, mostly. But it’s also about beer, and it’s hard to argue with that. Two sisters raised on a Minnesota farm go in different directions in life, until they don’t. Their reconciliation may determine the fate of the most successful light brewery in the country.


Mississippi

Author Jesmyn Ward is the only woman—and the only African American—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. Ward’s writing has been compared with Toni Morrison’s and William Faulkner’s, and that’s pretty good company.


Missouri

In the event you’ve been in a coma and/or recently returned from space, Gone Girl is a true blockbuster of a novel, one of the most successful books of the decade. Gillian Flynn’s 2012 thriller is set in the town of North Carthage, Missouri, and you’re better off going into this one with no other advance details. Flynn puts plot twists on her plot twists, so avoid spoilers at all costs.


Montana

Social worker Pete Snow is in deep. After helping a nearly feral 11-year-old boy living in the Montana wilderness, Pete confronts the boy’s father, a disturbed survivalist with visions of Armageddon. Smith Henderson’s debut is squarely in the tradition of Big American Novels, with its weighty themes addressing the fundamental character of the nation.


Nebraska

The often strange and always intense world of pop culture fandom provides the backdrop for this acclaimed 2013 YA novel, which tracks two Nebraska sisters and their enduring love of the fictional Simon Snow. Author Rainbow Rowell delivers a new kind of coming-of-age story for the fast-moving, multimedia, increasingly weird 21st century.


Nevada

If you’ve ever longed for a page-turning story about handsome Nevada ranch hands, wealthy heiresses, amateur aviatrixes, and divorce laws in 1930s Reno—well, we have surprisingly good news. Julia Claiborne Johnson (Be Frank with Me) delivers a genre-busting novel about money, friendship, love, class, and the improvised families we make in life.


New Hampshire

Joe Hill is a marquee name in contemporary horror fiction and, thanks to recent events, The Fireman may be his single most terrifying premise. A bizarre plague is causing victims to spontaneously combust, resulting in violence, panic, and rather effective contemporary allegory. But a mysterious stranger, patrolling the ruins of New Hampshire, may have some answers.


New Jersey

Bruce Frederick Joseph Springsteen is New Jersey’s biggest celebrity booster and surely its most favorite son. His long-awaited and critically acclaimed 2016 memoir chronicles his unparalleled career in the music business, and also offers a unique perspective on the culture and history of New Jersey itself. Springsteen’s emotional eloquence translates just fine to prose, it turns out, and this book is a must-read for any serious fan.


New Mexico 

In the small town of Las Penas, New Mexico, unemployed 33-year-old Amadeo Padilla has been issued the part of Jesus in the annual Good Friday procession. But when his 15-year-old daughter shows up on his doorstep, everything changes. Author Kirstin Valdez Quade’s debut novel details one unforgettable year among five generations of a singular New Mexico family.


New York

Hanya Yanagihara’s celebrated novel—a Booker Prize nominee and a National Book Award finalist—follows four friends as they make their way in the urban wilds of 21st-century New York City. An actor, a painter, an architect, and a lawyer walk wide-eyed into the city that never sleeps, and things get dark in a hurry. A Little Life is a notoriously heavy read but an ultimately rewarding experience.


North Carolina 

This remarkable 2018 historical mystery novel proved to be that rarest of literary phenomena: the book that comes almost literally out of nowhere to win over millions of readers worldwide. Delia Owens’ tale of the “Marsh Girl” brings readers into the swamps and estuaries of coastal Carolina for a historical murder mystery with deep ecological themes. Every good thing you’ve heard about this book is true; go ahead and believe the hype.


North Dakota 

A member of the Anishinaabe Nation, author Louise Erdrich has been called one of the most significant writers in the literary movement known as the Native American Renaissance. Her acclaimed 2020 novel, The Night Watchman, weaves together multiple story lines concerning family, public policy, and Native American dispossession in 1950s rural North Dakota. Bonus trivia: The story is based in part on the life of Erdrich’s grandfather.


Ohio

Named Book of the Year by a dozen major media outlets, Little Fires Everywhere is set in the staid and ordered Cleveland suburbs of Shaker Heights. When Mia Warren and her teenage daughter Pearl rent a house with the Richardson family, issues emerge that upset the slow flow of the status quo. Celeste Ng’s insanely popular book explores themes of art, identity, and the cancerous nature of old secrets.   


Oklahoma 

The scope of David Grann’s riveting true-crime epic is suggested in the subtitle: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI. The book digs deeply into a sickening chapter of American history, wherein dozens—and maybe hundreds—of Indigenous people were murdered in pursuit of oil profits. The book is also a fascinating depiction of the quasi-frontier territories of Osage County, Oklahoma, in the 1920s. Bonus trivia: A film adaptation by Martin Scorsese is in the works.


Oregon

Squarely in the tradition of incisive, forward-facing speculative fiction, Leni ZumasRed Clocks imagines an America in which abortion is illegal, in vitro fertilization is banned, and every embryo has the rights of full personhood. The book tracks the stories of five women in Oregon, each providing a different perspective on the issues at hand. Set about five minutes into the future, potentially, Red Clocks is state-of-the-art social science fiction.


Pennsylvania

In the upper-class environs of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a Black babysitter is wrongly accused of kidnapping while babysitting for a white family. Things go downhill from there. Author Kiley Reid’s insightful 2019 novel was longlisted for the Booker Prize and has been heralded for spotlighting the everyday racial biases that plague so many. Bonus trivia: Reid’s book was inspired by her own adventures in babysitting.


Rhode Island

Born in London, raised in Rhode Island, and known for her stories of the Indian immigrant experience, Jhumpa Lahiri is truly an international storyteller. Her 2013 novel, The Lowland, follows its characters around the world but is largely set in Rhode Island, where Calcutta-born Subhash Mitra pursues a scientific career. Bonus trivia: Lahiri won a Pulitzer Prize for her debut short story collection, Interpreter of Maladies.


South Carolina

Set in 19th-century Charleston, South Carolina, Sue Monk Kidd’s revered historical novel follows the fate of two resourceful women: Sarah Grimke, the headstrong daughter of a wealthy Southern family, and the enslaved Hetty “Handful” Grimke, Sarah’s childhood handmaiden. Kidd’s unflinching narrative follows the two women’s amazing journey over four decades in pursuit of abolition and women’s rights.


South Dakota

A unique 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. Author Weiden’s debut novel offers a new spin on the old mystery thriller.  


Tennessee

From the author of First Comes Love and Something Borrowed comes a dramatic story of scandal among the privileged and not-so-privileged in Nashville, Tennessee. Emily Giffin’s novel was a Goodreads Choice nominee for fiction in 2018 and continues to earn praise for its treatment of class resentments, family dynamics, and the dangers of drinking and clicking.  


Texas

Recently back in circulation due to the excellent film adaptation with Tom Hanks, Paulette Jiles’ News of the World is a thrilling update to the classic western genre. In the aftermath of the Civil War, retired officer Captain Jefferson Kyle Kidd makes his living wandering between deep Texas towns, reading the latest newspapers to desperate, often illiterate pioneer communities. Then a ten-year-old orphan girl changes everything.


Utah

A unique memoir from conservationist and activist Terry Tempest Williams, When Women Were Birds finds the author reflecting on her childhood among a large Mormon clan in northern Utah. By way of a curious detail concerning her mother’s own journals, Williams’ autobiography explores themes of feminism, environmentalism, and the concept of absence—in art, in life, and in Utah.


Vermont

Deep in the woods of Vermont, restoration expert Maggie Holt is moving to a ramshackle Victorian estate named, rather excellently, Baneberry Hall. Twenty-five years earlier, Maggie’s parents fled the same house in the dead of night, driven out by a spectral malevolence. And it just gets creepier from there. Author Riley Sager (Final Girls) has earned a devoted following with his high-octane thrillers. Close those closet doors before you start reading.


Virginia

Author and journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates (Between the World and Me) makes his novel-length fiction debut with The Water Dancer, an ambitious blend of historical fiction, magical realism, and thrilling escape story. Set in the dark days leading up to the Civil War, Coates’ book details an underground war between slavers and enslaved—and confirms the abiding power of love. Click here for a Q&A with the author.


Washington

After years of living a life in Seattle that she never really wanted, Bernadette Fox has vanished. For her daughter Bee, there’s no other option: She must solve the mystery herself. By wading through an ocean of email, invoices, and other clues, Bee discovers that Mom has been hiding a secret past. Bonus trivia: Author Maria Semple is a former staff writer for TV’s immortal Arrested Development.


Washington, D.C.

Generally acknowledged as one of the true genius writers of his generation, author George Saunders made a giant splash with his 2017 debut novel. Set in Washington, D.C., on the eve of the Civil War, this phantasmagoric epic features Abraham Lincoln, Tibetan mysticism, and characters both historical and invented. It also breaks just about every rule on how novels are supposed to behave. Highly recommended.


West Virginia

Set in the misty mountain hollers of West Virginia, Amy Jo Burns’ lyrical Appalachian novel takes place in the appropriately named town of Trap, where 15-year-old Wren Bird and her mother are forced to live in seclusion by preacher patriarch Briar Bird. Wren’s quest for escape drives a powerful novel about family, hope, faith, snake handlers, moonshiners, and heartbreak.  


Wisconsin

In the small Wisconsin town of Little Wing, childhood friends Hank, Leland, Kip, and Ronny have returned to their roots in an effort to find their futures. So what do a farmer, a commodities trader, a rodeo stud, and a rock star have in common? The past, that’s what. Nickolas Butler’s heartfelt novel explores the age-old question of whether you can ever really come home again.


Wyoming

Author C.J. Box has won a devoted following with his Joe Pickett series, which chronicles the adventures of a Wyoming game warder named, not coincidentally, Joe Pickett. Dark Sky finds Pickett squaring off against a wily assassin in the treacherous wilderness of Wyoming’s farthest reaches. Box provides readers with another great story that straddles the divide between crime fiction and classic western.  


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

 

Comments Showing 51-100 of 197 (197 new)


message 51: by Angela (new)

Angela And one for Europe.


message 52: by Rebecca (new)

Rebecca Lacy wrote: "Would love to see a selection for Puerto Rico!"

I agree!!


message 53: by Diane (new)

Diane News of the World is a great novel. To get a sense of twenty-first century Texas, Bryan Washington's story collection, Lot or his novel, Memorial; Simon Han's novel, Nights When Nothing Happened; Kelli Jo Ford's novel, Crooked Hallelujah; Saeed Jones memoir How We Fight for Our Lives; Domingo Martinez's memoir The Boy Kings of Texas.


message 54: by Emily (new)

Emily Mitchell Linda wrote: "I have read a lot of these and have several others marked TBR. However, the list started me thinking once again about the cover of A Little Life (read). I seriously HATE that cover. I know, no part..."

It's been on my TBR for ages but honestly I FEEL THE SAME WAY! It looks like one of those old 4-chan meme faces. Offputting.


message 55: by Eileen (new)

Eileen Thanks for this list. I actually have a Goodreads list called 'Across the USA' where I list books I have read with the states at the top in bold. Some of them are on this list.
I wish there was a way to list it like you have here; or to see the state names without going to each book. I can write them down though.
Some of the ones I have read are on here and it was fun to see your suggestions. Thanks for doing this.


message 56: by Rachel (new)

Rachel Green Joy wrote: "This would make for a fun reading challenge. I'd also want to add books from Puerto Rico, Guam, US Virgin Islands, and American Samoa, because, why not?"

That would be great! And to echo other sentiments, I'd love to see something like this for other countries. Maybe there are some already and the American's just got this one? (I can hope at least)


message 57: by Elyse (new)

Elyse Would've been nice to include the US-owned territories as well:
Puerto Rico: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/1...
US Virgin Islands: https://www.goodreads.com/list/show/8...
American Samoa: https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...
Guam: https://www.goodreads.com/places/165-...
Northern Mariana Islands: https://www.mappit.net/bookmap/countr...


message 58: by Elyse (new)

Elyse Angela wrote: "I would like to see one for Canada."

Yes, Canadian provinces/territories please!


message 59: by Johanna (new)

Johanna Ellwood Yesica wrote: "I like challenging myself to read one book of each continent every year..."

What a great idea! I am trying to read a book from every country, but this makes is seem more achievable.


message 60: by Lisa of Hopewell (new)

Lisa of Hopewell I completed the 50 states read last year, but am excited to see a new book for North Dakota! I had to research that state and Rhode Island and Delaware. Now, why didn't you select Bookwoman of Troublesome Creek by Kim Michelle Richardson for Kentucky instead of Jojo's book. I like Jojo a lot but that book rankles.


message 61: by Laura (new)

Laura Bazal I wish "The Snow Child" was chosen for Alaska, or another work by an Alaskan author.


message 62: by Lynne (new)

Lynne There should be a list for cities, too. Los Angeles would have to be anything by Raymond Chandler.


message 63: by Courtenay (new)

Courtenay Great idea. I'd love to see a YA/MG list for each state, that would be amazing.


message 64: by Melody77 (new)

Melody77 I've found a lot of interesting books to read from this list.
Personnally for Wyoming, I would have suggested the Longmire series by Craig Johnson.


message 65: by Bivisyani (new)

Bivisyani Questibrilia I've only read 5 out of the whole list. Granted, I'm not from US, I guess it's okay lol


message 66: by Melissa (new)

Melissa May I suggest an inclusion for Puerto Rico & the Phillippines, for fun?


message 67: by Theresa (new)

Theresa Be nice if you’d made more of a world map. Maybe at least include the US Territories.

Let’s get some Canadian provinces soon ;)


message 68: by Amy (new)

Amy Yaa Gyasi’s first novel was Homegoing, not Homecoming.


message 69: by Atarah (new)

Atarah I'm shocked they didn't recommend an Anne Tyler book for Maryland.


message 70: by Wera (new)

Wera Evelin wrote: "That's fun, next one should be for Europe :)"

I agree!!


Addicted To Books - Luca Evelin wrote: "That's fun, next one should be for Europe :)"
YES, SOUND GOOD


message 72: by Mike (new)

Mike Dennisuk I love a good list! I’ve read 7 ... and a few more are on my TBR list. Thanks for the guide.


message 73: by Teneal (new)

Teneal Ohhh I wish I could save this list as a PDF!


message 74: by TMR (new)

TMR Love this little US list.


message 75: by Katy (new)

Katy  Jones How about Delirium by Lauren Oliver, which takes place in Maine and does not feature the super cliche inappropriate teacher - student relationship?


message 76: by Catistrophe (new)

Catistrophe A very good idea. I would be happy if such a liste is made for the countries of Europe.


message 77: by Simon (new)

Simon Great list! As a Brit who's travelled in the Eastern USA there are some interesting reads here! Thank you for compiling this. In London, Daunt Books do some good lists of books by country, letting you adsorb background before and during your travels. Worth checking out for the info, if nothing else.


message 78: by Jodi (new)

Jodi This is cool! One for Canada would be cool too!! 😎 🍁


message 79: by Sophie (new)

Sophie Fortunately, Canada is not a state of US.

Nancy Pickford's The Scent of Rain & Lightning for Rose, Kansas.

Lillian Boxfish Takes A Walk for New York, NY.

Lady Upstairs by Halley Sutton is a great choice for California (LA).


message 80: by Pen&Quill (new)

Pen&Quill  Read If a Europe list is next a Jenna evens Welch book has to get a spot!
She has one for Italy. Ireland. And Greece!


message 81: by Amy the book-bat (new)

Amy the book-bat Denise wrote: "I am a Jersey girl and I love Springsteen. However, most of these books are fiction and I don't think Springsteen's book "fits". A better choice, in my opinion, would have been Unsheltered by Barba..."

There are other non-fiction in the list, so Springsteen fits just fine.


message 82: by Tom (new)

Tom Thornton "The art of fielding" by Chad Harbach should be the obvious choice for Wisconsin, it's mind-blowingly good! Whereas "Shotgun Lovesongs" was a massive disappointment.


message 83: by Maridele (new)

Maridele For Colorado if you like historical fiction with some romance, The Bride's House by Sandra Dallas. It's set in the real town of Georgetown, Colorado which I have visited and therefore could somewhat picture the story in my head.


message 84: by Maridele (new)

Maridele For Indiana, there's a series of fun mysteries with a culinary flair called Country Store Mysteries by Maddie Day. Set in small town South Lick, Indiana.


message 85: by Maridele (new)

Maridele Lisa of Hopewell wrote: "I completed the 50 states read last year, but am excited to see a new book for North Dakota! I had to research that state and Rhode Island and Delaware. Now, why didn't you select Bookwoman of Trou..."

I read both and I liked Bookwoman better. I've also done a deep dive and found other books about the packhorse librarians. All were good. Carry the World by Susan Fanetti was probably my favorite.


message 86: by Antoinette (new)

Antoinette In my opinion, one of the best books of the last few years was This Tender Land by William Kent Krueger. Felt it should’ve been the Minnesota selection.


message 87: by AlwaysV (new)

AlwaysV This is such a super Amazing idea💝 Thank you 🤗

My wish ~ for the letters we don't have as the States~ Could we have books with the Cities/Towns/Villages of the missing alphabets, please?

Any great books from Quito, USA? Xavier, USA?
Yukon, USA? Zanzibar, USA? etc.


message 88: by Meghan (new)

Meghan The Oregon book is not very representative of the state. I would have preferred to see a book that isn't speculative fiction. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, for example.


message 89: by Fabiola (new)

Fabiola Evelin wrote: "That's fun, next one should be for Europe :)"

Agree!


message 90: by Fabiola (new)

Fabiola Loved the idea. Found a list (altough incomplete) for Mexican states. https://verne.elpais.com/verne/2019/0...


message 91: by Silvi (new)

Silvi I hope you're aware that not all goodreads users are American. We come from all over the world and America is not the center of the world. Just saying...


message 92: by Marc (new)

Marc Robins Dog Stars by Peter Heller is a great book set in Colorado.


message 93: by Kim (last edited May 24, 2021 03:31PM) (new)

Kim "Where the Crawdads Sing", while a good book is nothing like the North Carolina coast. Even the traveling described within the state of NC is off and unrealistic. Something from Sparks or Margaret Maron would have been better.


message 94: by Diane (new)

Diane Linda wrote: "I have read a lot of these and have several others marked TBR. However, the list started me thinking once again about the cover of A Little Life (read). I seriously HATE that cover. I know, no part..."

LOL - I am part of a challenge in one of my groups and one of the challenges is to read a book with an ugly cover - and since I already own this book and heard raves about it - this is one I chose for my ugly cover read! So I get what you are saying!


message 95: by Pippin (new)

Pippin Marc wrote: "Dog Stars by Peter Heller is a great book set in Colorado."

Agree, or possibly one of Kent Haruf's books (Plainsong?).


message 96: by Diane (last edited May 24, 2021 03:57PM) (new)

Diane This really is a fun post! What a great idea.


message 97: by Yaaresse (new)

Yaaresse Joy wrote: "This would make for a fun reading challenge. I'd also want to add books from Puerto Rico, Guam, US Virgin Islands, and American Samoa, because, why not?"

I second this idea! Great that they included DC, and let's extend that to it's logical conclusion by including the US territories and protectorates.

I'd also like to see if GR can pull together one for each country in the world. Maybe that would challenge them to dig a little deeper than this list did. While there are some good books here, they're the same ones we've seen on many, many, many of their other lists.


message 98: by Pippin (new)

Pippin For Illinois, I would highly recommend Long Way from Chicago by Richard Peck - probably the antithesis of The Great Believers:
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/3...


message 99: by Literary (new)

Literary Lioness Is there a way to to our this in to a challenge?!? I would love a fun way to not only track as I read through them, but be able to invite and see my friend's as well.


message 100: by K (new)

K Would love to apply this to romance, sci-fi, urban fantasy, history and women’s fiction titles.

Would also love to do one for each Australian state.


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