
"Part field guide to Wallace Stegner's California novels, part hymn to Stegner's ideas of community and place, Matthew Stewart's graceful book asks what role the 20th-century California suburbs played in the author's famed geography of hope."
--Tara Penry, past president, Western Literature Association
"Provocative, extraordinarily well researched, and especially thoughtful. Matthew Stewart's study is a work of intellectual history, or if one wishes, a history of ideas. Through close, revealing readings of Stegner's novels and stories about California, Stewart provides a path-breaking examination of Stegner's thoughts, especially as they are related to such ideas as community, home, place, character, and sociocultural change."
--Richard W. Etulain, University of New Mexico
"Matthew Stewart is a historian who takes Stegner's fiction seriously as a guide to his thought about historical and social questions. His book offers an important and valuable reexamination of this multifaceted figure in the West."
--William Handley, University of Southern California