The Lincoln Highway shares similarities with classic works of American literature that use long journeys as sites of character study and exploration of societal themes, such as John Steinbeck’s 1939 classic
Grapes of Wrath. Jack Kerouac’s 1957 novel
On the Road follows two young men on a road trip across America, and, like
The Lincoln Highway, uses a cross-country road trip to explore themes of coming of age, brotherhood, and American identity.
As I Lay Dying, a 1930 novel by William Faulkner, is about a different kind of road trip––a family bringing their mother’s body to her family burial ground––but it also chronicles the difficulties of travel and explores different points of view told in different narrative styles. A contemporary entry in this literary tradition is the 2019 novel
This Tender Land, by William Kent Kruger, which follows four young men traveling across the rivers of America after fleeing a brutal residential school in 1932.