What does it mean to have a childhood? As both red and blue states loosen child labor laws, Americans are debating questions that last came up at the beginning of the 20th century.
When Americans travel, they see mountains and valleys and oceans. When Susan Straight travels, she sees novels. As she passes through regions of the country on one of her epic road trips, she views people and landscapes through the lens of literature.听
Growing up, 鈥淏ooks were this huge deal to me, and books were how I learned about America,鈥 she says in a video interview. Ms. Straight, a professor of creative writing at the University of California, Riverside, started a project 鈥 just for fun 鈥 to create a literary map of the United States. And she didn鈥檛 simply plunk a marker down in the middle of a state and call it good. Instead, using Google Maps, she pinpointed the places where each of the novels was set. If she wasn鈥檛 certain, she contacted the authors.听
鈥淚 tried to find exact locations for everything,鈥 she says. 鈥淗ere鈥檚 the 7-Eleven or here鈥檚 the campground in Alaska. That was super fun.鈥澛
She calls her project .听
Beyond the map鈥檚 cool factor, the featured novels offer insights into the people of a particular place. Ms. Straight says her literary map rejects red-state/blue-state divisions in favor of human empathy and understanding. 鈥淚f you want to know how somebody in Alabama feels, read one of the books set in Alabama,鈥 she says.听
Ms. Straight is also a collector of stories as she travels, including the ones she hears from gas station attendants, truckers, and truck stop servers. 鈥淎merica is an amazing land full of storytellers,鈥 she says.
She鈥檚 also aware that some people would find her compulsive need to map novels slightly, well, obsessive. She says with a laugh: 鈥淚t was really crazy that I spent five years of my life doing this!鈥澛