Literary West Review

Explore the Literary Life of the Modern American West

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Latinx YA Fiction Recommendations

Mexican Whiteboy — realistic/YA coming-of-age fiction about a half-Mexican, half-white teen navigating identity, racism, and belonging in Southern California. Explores bicultural tensions, family conflict, and self-acceptance.

The House on Mango Street — a classic coming-of-age novel (vignette style) following a young Latina girl growing up in a working-class Chicago neighborhood as she dreams of a better life while coping with cultural, economic, and gender constraints.

I Am Not Your Perfect Mexican Daughter — contemporary YA fiction about a Mexican-American teen dealing with grief, family expectations, and the pressures of being “the perfect daughter.” It delivers sharp insight into immigrant family dynamics, intergenerational conflict, and identity struggles.

The Last Cuentista — middle-grade / YA-adjacent dystopian / science-fiction with a Latinx protagonist. Blends speculative fiction and Mexican cultural roots: the story centers on a young girl who preserves ancestral stories after Earth’s destruction — combining folklore, resilience, and identity.

Esperanza Rising — though older than the others, this novel remains a go-to if you care about immigrant experience and resilience. It follows a young Mexican girl’s journey from privilege to migrant working in the U.S., touching on hardship, identity, class, and hope. (Traditionally considered “middle grade / YA-adjacent.”)

Books for Better Understanding Wildfires in the Modern American West

Wildfires in the American West are far more than “natural disasters.” They are the product of decades of ecological pressures, climate change, and shifting land-management practices. As fires grow increasingly frequent and severe, the need to understand their causes and consequences becomes ever more urgent. The books below offer a blend of first-person narratives, ecological history, and scientific insight. Together, they illuminate how wildfires reshape communities and landscapes and invite readers to think more deeply about climate, stewardship, and what it means to live—and adapt—in a rapidly changing West.


Wildfire Days is a memoir regarding author Ramsey’s time as a wildland firefighter in Northern California. After moving from Texas, she joined an elite hotshot crew, becoming the only woman and one of the oldest recruits on the team. She recounts the grueling physical, mental, and emotional demands of fighting fires.

Author: Kelly Ramsey

Publisher: Scribner


This is Wildfire is a well-informed resource for understanding why wildfires are growing in severity—and a practical handbook for living in an era of intensifying fire. This book offers clear, actionable advice for homeowners and communities on reducing risk, strengthening resilience, and better protecting themselves in the “age of heat.”

Authors: Nick Mott and Justin Angle

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing


Under Fire and Under Water investigates how extreme weather, including wildfires and flooding, is transforming the American West into a region increasingly difficult to inhabit. Cain also examines how people continue to build and rebuild in high-risk areas despite repeated disasters, and why many communities resist taking the necessary protective measures to adapt.

Author: Bruce Cain

Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press


In When It All Burns, Thomas offers a first-hand account of a harrowing six-month fire season as a firefighter with the elite Los Padres Hotshots. In addition to the physical demands, Thomas also explores how the suppression of Indigenous fire-management practices, profit-driven forestry policies, and climate change have converged to turn wildfire into a modern, systemic crisis.

Author: Jordan Thomas

Publisher: Riverhead Books


Fire Weather recounts the 2016 Fort McMurray wildfire and uses it as a case study in how rising temperatures, prolonged drought, and volatile fuels are transforming fire behavior. Though not set in the American West, the book is essential for understanding the conditions that now shape fires across the region. The same heat, wind, fuel loads, and development pressures seen in Canada are driving increasingly destructive fire seasons throughout the West. Vaillant’s narrative offers a crucial lens for understanding why wildfire has become one of the defining challenges of a hotter, drier world.

Author: John Vaillant

Publisher: Vintage

Celebrating Indigenous Cultures of the American West

From the rolling grasslands of the Great Plains to the red rock canyons of the Southwest and the rocky shores of the Pacific Coast, Indigenous nations have shaped the American West through deep-rooted knowledge, vibrant cultural traditions, and enduring relationships with the land. The books in this collection honor those legacies, offering histories grounded in Native perspectives, personal narratives of identity and belonging, and powerful accounts of sovereignty, resistance, and renewal. Together, they celebrate the diversity and continuity of Indigenous cultures across the American West, a region defined not by borders but by the strength, resilience, and brilliance of the peoples who have always called it home.


We Are the Land: A History of Native California

Authors: Damon B. Akins & William J. Bauer Jr.

A people-centered history of Native California, this book highlights cultural continuity and political resilience from pre-contact times to today. Through an Indigenous geographic lens, it reframes stories of missionization, settler violence, and modern activism.

Region: Pacific Coast (California)


Native Nations: A Millennium in North America

Author: Kathleen DuVal

A panoramic narrative regarding how Indigenous nations shaped the continent long before European arrival and long after colonization began.

Regions: Southwest, Great Plains, Pacific Northwest


The Rediscovery of America: Native Peoples and the Unmaking of U.S. History

Author: Ned Blackhawk

A winner of multiple awards, this groundbreaking work demonstrates how Indigenous peoples directly influenced the formation of the United States.

Regions: Southwest and National


Whiskey Tender

Author: Deborah Jackson Taffa

A memoir shaped by the author’s Quechan and Laguna Pueblo heritage and her upbringing in New Mexico. Taffa explores family history, assimilation pressures, Catholic schooling, intergenerational trauma, and cultural reclamation.

Regions: Southwest


Sabrina & Corina

Author: Kali Fajardo-Anstine

A National Book Award finalist, this short-story collection is centered on Latinas of Indigenous descent in Colorado and the American West. The stories confront generational trauma, systemic injustice, identity loss, and survival, while also exploring heritage, belonging, and the resilience of Indigenous-Latina communities.

Regions: Southwest/Mountain West


There There

Author: Tommy Orange

Set in Oakland, California, There There weaves together the intersecting lives of urban Indigenous people navigating identity, history, and community in the modern West. The novel illuminates the ongoing effects of displacement while emphasizing cultural resilience and connection. It stands as a defining work of contemporary Indigenous literature.

Region: Pacific Coast


An Indigenous Peoples’ History of the United States

Author: Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz

This award-winning title—also available in a young readers adaptation—reexamines the nation’s history through the perspectives of Native nations, challenging dominant narratives and offering a fuller, more truthful account of America’s origins.

Regions: Great Plains, Southwest, Pacific Coast


Lakota America: A New History of the Lakota

Author: Pekka Hämäläinen

Lakota America offers a sweeping history of the Lakota Nation, tracing its rise from a small mid-continent community to one of the most influential Indigenous powers in North America. The book emphasizes Lakota political strength, adaptability, and nation-building as forces that helped shape the history of the American West.

Region: Great Plains

2025 National Book Award Winners

The winners of the 2025 National Book Awards were announced November 19 at the 76th National Book Awards Ceremony held in New York City. During the ceremony, two lifetime achievement awards were also presented: George Saunders was recognized with the National Book Foundation’s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters and Roxane Gay received the Literarian Award for Outstanding Service to the American Literary Community. Following are this year’s winners:

Winner for Nonfiction

One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This
Author: Omar El Akkad
Publisher: Knopf/Penguin Random House

Winner for Fiction

The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)
Author: Rabih Alameddine
Publisher: Grove Press/Grove Atlantic

Winner for Poetry

The Intentions of Thunder: New and Selected Poems
Author: Patricia Smith
Publisher: Scribner/Simon & Schuster

Winner for Translated Literature

We Are Green and Trembling
Author: Gabriela Cabezón Cámara
(Translated from Spanish by Robin Myers)
Publisher: New Directions Publishing

Winner for Young People’s Literature

The Teacher of Nomad Land: A World War II Story
Author: Daniel Nayeri
Publisher: Levine Querido

About The National Book Awards

The National Book Awards were established in 1950 to celebrate the best writing in the United States. Since 1989, the Awards have been overseen by the National Book Foundation, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to celebrate the best literature published in the United States, expand its audience, and ensure that books have a prominent place in our culture. Although other categories have been recognized in the past, the Awards currently honors the best Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry, Translated Literature, and Young People’s Literature published each year.

A panel of judges selects a Longlist of ten titles per category, which is then narrowed to five Finalists, and a Winner is announced at the Awards Ceremony in the fall. Each Finalist receives a prize of $1,000, a medal, and a Judges’ citation. Winners receive $10,000 and a bronze sculpture.

Aspen Words Literary Prize 2026 Longlist Announced

Aspen Words has announced the 2026 longlist for the Aspen Words Literary Prize, a $35,000 annual award for a work of fiction that illuminates a vital contemporary issue.

The following 15 works are in contention for this award:

  • “The True True Story of Raja the Gullible (and His Mother)” by Rabih Alameddine (Grove Press)
  • “King of Ashes” by S.A. Cosby (Flatiron Books)
  • “The Wilderness” by Angela Flournoy (Mariner Books)
  • “Culpability” by Bruce Holsinger (Spiegel & Grau)
  • “Intemperance: A Novel” by Sonora Jha (HarperVia)
  • “The River Is Waiting” by Wally Lamb (Simon and Schuster; Marysue Rucci Books)
  • “Ring: A Novel” by Michelle Lerner (Bancroft Press)
  • “A Family Matter” by Claire Lynch (Scribner)
  • “Wild Dark Shore” by Charlotte McConaghy (Flatiron Books)
  • “These Heathens: A Novel” by Mia McKenzie (Random House)
  • “Happy Land” by Dolen Perkins-Valdez (Berkley)
  • “This Here Is Love” by Princess Joy L. Perry (W. W. Norton & Company)
  • “Endling” by Maria Reva (Doubleday)
  • “Behind the Waterline” by Kionna Walker LeMalle (Blair)
  • “So Far Gone: A Novel” by Jess Walter (Harper)

About the Aspen Word Literary Prize

The $35,000 Aspen Words Literary Prize honors an influential work of fiction that illuminates a vital contemporary issue and demonstrates the transformative power of literature on thought and culture. Open to authors of any nationality, the award is one of the largest literary prizes in the United States, and one of the few focused exclusively on socially engaged fiction. The prize’s past winners include Mohsin Hamid, Tayari Jones, Christy Lefteri, Louise Erdrich, Dawnie Walton, Jamil Jan Kochai, Isabella Hammad, and Tommy Orange.

The shortlist will be announced on March 11, 2026, and the winner will be revealed on April 23, 2026.

More information: www.aspenwords.org/longlist

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