Hiding behind the title of Rachel Knox’s debut, Anywhere Else: Essays on Florida, is a braided set of reckonings, of leaving, longing, and return, asking not just what home is, but who gets to define a place so overdetermined in the national story. Knox’s Anywhere Else resists the easy narratives that so often flatten Florida into caricature. What emerges instead is a place rendered through accumulation—of memory, media, desire, contradiction—where personal history and cultural myth are in constant negotiation. These essays trace not a single arc of departure and return, but a series of recursive encounters with “home,” each one reframing what it means to belong to a place so frequently misunderstood, dismissed, or reduced to spectacle.
Knox writes with an attention that is both intimate and analytical, moving fluidly between lived experience and cultural critique. An anecdote opens outward; a fragment of pop culture refracts a deeper emotional truth; a landscape becomes charged with the weight of history. The essay form suits her precisely because it allows for this elasticity—this capacity to hold multiple temporalities and meanings at once. Florida, in her hands, is neither simply refuge nor aberration, but something far more unstable and generative: a site where identity is shaped through tension, distortion, and reclamation.
What is especially striking is Knox’s refusal to resolve these tensions. Instead, she lingers in them, attentive to the ways narratives about place are constructed and imposed, by outsiders, by institutions, and by those who call it home. In doing so, she restores texture to a landscape often stripped of it, insisting on its complexity without sentimentality.
The conversation that follows extends these concerns, offering insight into Knox’s approach, her investment in the essay as a form, and her commitment to reimagining Florida not as an anomaly or as a meme, but as a lens through which broader American realities come into focus.
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