A Delicious Country

Rediscovering the Carolinas along the Route of John Lawson's 1700 Expedition

By Scott Huler

264 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 25 halftones, 2 maps, notes, bibl., index

  • E-book EPUB ISBN: 978-1-4696-4829-3
    Published: February 2019
  • Hardcover ISBN: 978-1-4696-4828-6
    Published: March 2019
  • E-book PDF ISBN: 979-8-8908-5348-6
    Published: February 2019

Buy this Book

To purchase online via an independent bookstore, visit Bookshop.org
In 1700, a young man named John Lawson left London and landed in Charleston, South Carolina, hoping to make a name for himself. For reasons unknown, he soon undertook a two-month journey through the still-mysterious Carolina backcountry. His travels yielded A New Voyage to Carolina in 1709, one of the most significant early American travel narratives, rich with observations about the region's environment and Indigenous people. Lawson later helped found North Carolina's first two cities, Bath and New Bern; became the colonial surveyor general; contributed specimens to what is now the British Museum; and was killed as the first casualty of the Tuscarora War. Yet despite his great contributions and remarkable history, Lawson is little remembered, even in the Carolinas he documented.

In 2014, Scott Huler made a surprising decision: to leave home and family for his own journey by foot and canoe, faithfully retracing Lawson's route through the Carolinas. This is the chronicle of that unlikely voyage, revealing what it's like to rediscover your own home. Combining a traveler's curiosity, a naturalist's keen observation, and a writer's wit, Huler draws our attention to people and places we might pass regularly but never really see. What he finds are surprising parallels between Lawson's time and our own, with the locals and their world poised along a knife-edge of change between a past they can't forget and a future they canā€™t quite envision.

About the Author

Scott Huler is the author of six previous books of nonfiction and is based in Raleigh, North Carolina.
For more information about Scott Huler, visit the Author Page.

Reviews

ā€œAn ethnographic journey backward and forward in time through the lens of a cultureā€™s pathways. . . . Like all ā€˜roadā€™ books, the story here is about the journey, not the destination.ā€--North Carolina Historical Review

ā€œHulerā€™s is a most delightful, thoughtful, and novel studyā€”a delicious book to be sureā€”and one that will give A New Voyage more traction to be more widely read.ā€--Environmental History

"An absorbing read. Huler's experiences during his modern trek do not, of course, duplicate what John Lawson found so long ago, but forms of beauty and dispossession rhyme down the centuries in thought-provoking patterns."--Charles Frazier, author of Varina

"It's been said that one of the only true plots is this: A man goes on a journey. In A Delicious Country, Scott Huler demonstrates why that narrative arc retains such strength. His retracing of John Lawson's epic circumnavigation is thoughtful, relaxed, humorous, and generous. It retrieves for us a lost world of discovery and wonder and reminds us that the goal of every departure is to learn to value home."--Maryn McKenna, author of Big Chicken: The Incredible Story of How Antibiotics Created Modern Agriculture and Changed the Way the World Eats

"An eye-opening journey through the contemporary South. As he does in his other excellent books, Huler reminds us in A Delicious CountryĀ that the present and the past coexist all around us. He writes with great specificity about each topic at hand, but he never loses sight of the larger human story. The book excels as a work of exploration, history, and science. It is also simply what reviewers like to call 'a rousing good read.'"--Michal Sims, author of The Adventures of Henry Thoreau

"From the boggy salt marshes near Charleston to the parking lot of the Charlotte Motor Speedway and beyond, Scott Huler has breathed new life into the English explorer John Lawson's all-but-forgotten 1700 journey through the Carolinas. While much of the physical landscape has changed over the centuries, the characters who inhabit it are still vibrant, still contradictory, still completely unforgettable. Only a storyteller as warm and witty as Huler could wrangle such a sprawling, complex natural history into an engrossing travelogue that leaves the reader wanting nothing but more."--Bronwen Dickey, author of Pit Bull: The Battle over an American Icon