"What about Lorna Landvik?" you asked. Garrison Keillor? Wanda Gag? Susan Power?
"Good point," we answered.
When I wrote about a "Literary Legends" poll by stoicquotes.com, purporting to determine the favorite author in each state, I suggested a bunch of alternatives to the poll's choice, Sinclair Lewis. Many of you suggested alternate alternatives — so many of you that the responses amounted to an informal, highly unscientific mini-poll on just who our favorite Minnesota authors are.
It started with pushback on Lewis. Quite a few of you think the Sauk Centre native whose century-ago classics include "Babbitt" and "Main Street" might still be our fave. Among readers whose votes put him in fifth place for the title, Sue Zumberge, owner of St. Paul's Subtext Books, was perhaps most eloquent about his work's longevity: "Lewis was prolific, a Nobel Prize winner and even his less well received books such as 'It Can't Happen Here' have been shined up by the dust cloth of time. That to me is the proof."
Another authoritative voice is Tadhg B. Mac an Bhaird, whose Anoka-based Minnesota Authors Book Club exclusively reads local writers. He insisted it would be tough to pick one favorite among the dozens they've discussed, but that "Staggerford" novelist Jon Hassler and "The River We Remember" writer William Kent Krueger "loom large."
The methodology of the stoicquotes poll was confusing — do the writers have to be from the state whose favorite they're supposed to be? Is longtime residence enough to qualify? So readers, wisely, made up their own rules.
Several enthusiastically endorsed science fiction/fantasy writer Lois McMaster Bujold, for instance, based on the fact that she lived here for many years, even if she wasn't from Minnesota. "Romantic Comedy" writer Curtis Sittenfeld and "The English Experience" writer Julie Schumacher both earned mentions under the same criteria, as did "Wheat That Springeth Green" author J.F. Powers, who split his time between Minnesota and Ireland, Norway-to-Minnesota transplant Ole Rølvaag and "Shadow Baby" writer Alison McGhee.
Nobody's quite sure what to do with Laura Ingalls Wilder, who moved more often than a monarch butterfly but who has a whole museum in Walnut Grove to mark her temporary residency near there.