"Kendra Strand’s study is an original piece of scholarship that poses provocative questions about several important but under-studied Japanese medieval texts in a fascinating historical era. It’s an exciting work for its approach, subject matter, and the period covered, and the field will be all the better for it." - Charo D'Etcheverry, University of Wisconsin-Madison"Through a careful explication of the ‘geographical imagination’ and an analysis of three literary travel diaries from the Muromachi period, Kendra Strand guides readers along a path to understanding how travel literature navigates spatial and temporal realms as a mode of writing that places the traveller-poet in conversation with the past while offering powerful commentary on the poet’s present." - Christina Laffin, University of British Columbia