Doolen's focus on what he calls "cartographic texts" doesn't disappoint: it proves to be a fulfilling, informative, and astute assemblage of writings that chart the multiple forms of expressive culture U.S.-empire building takes historically and geographically. The book uncovers and analyzes U.S. empire's discursive bedrock, a textual and cultural foundation of albeit uneven imperial narratives that pervade obscure newspapers, western travel accounts, presidential diaries, and official governmental acts. These are the figurative "territories of empire," to use Doolen's apt title, that convincingly show how empire and its culture of coloniality inhabit even the most prosaic texts of U.S. print culture and literary history writ large.