"A worthwhile introduction to a body of literature perhaps not as well-known as it should be."—Publishers Weekly
"Great Plains Literature is meant to be not just a guide, but an inspiration."—Tom Isern, Prairie Public News
"Great Plains Literature is a fascinating introduction to the literary life west of Kansas City. . . . There is something here for everybody, with coverage of classical writers like Ole Edvart Rolvaag and Willa Cather as well as their predecessors and contemporary writers. One will find here writers from the region that they might not have heard of but who should be on the reading list; the book is full of pleasant surprises for those who are serious about understanding this place."—Ryder Miller, San Francisco Book Review
"A compact exploration of the history of the Great Plains as told through a thoughtfully selected collection of stories about the region."—Matthew J. C. Cella, Western American Literature
"In Great Plains Literature Linda Ray Pratt surveys historical and contemporary regional authors with depth and complexity. A joy to read, Pratt's study offers scholarly insight while maintaining popular accessibility."—Molly P. Rozum, Annals of Iowa
“The range and depth of the survey richly attest to the literary wealth accruing in a remarkable landscape formerly misconstrued as ‘the great American desert’ or the ‘flyover zone.’”—O. Alan Weltzien, author of Exceptional Mountains: A Cultural Geography of the Pacific Northwest Volcanoes
“Revelatory and keen to the scent of tragedy, Pratt’s chapters illuminate the small and large scales on which life unfolds, within family, region, and national history. Great Plains Literature is a must-read for students and scholars of this grand region, a comprehensive yet intimate and personal survey of a literary landscape of international importance.”—Susan Naramore Maher, author of Deep Map Country: Literary Cartography of the Great Plains
“A concise and compelling survey of more than two centuries worth of American and Canadian masters, writers who mediate between extremes of idealism and intolerance, democracy and imperialism, wealth and poverty, as they situate their work against the vast landscapes and forbidding climate of the central Plains. . . . Readers looking to orient themselves to the literary Great Plains would do well to start with Pratt’s timely and engaging volume.”—Daniel Simon, editor of Nebraska Poetry: A Sesquicentennial Anthology 1867–2017