As with a well-loved family member, it can be hard to nail down in a few words the character of a particular state. A series of images may come to mind instead--the natural wonders, man-made landmarks, familiar haunts and even the native products and foods that express the tone and character of the place we call home. Charles Monagan has been discovering and describing such Connecticut Icons for years on the back page of Connecticut Magazine. Within this gift book are a collection of 50 of his favorites, each with a full-page photograph and entertaining, informative background story. From the Yale Bowl to the hot lobster roll, the U.S.S. Nautilus to the Merritt Parkway, Monagan successfully captures the independent spirit and local pride of this New England state.
"First They Kill You," a medical memoir, is Charles Monagan's latest book (2025). In highly readable form, it recounts his extended battle with two blood cancers and the drama of the eventual cure through stem-cell replacement. His novels include "The Easter Confession," called "a superior whodunit" in a starred review from Publishers Weekly, and "Carrie Welton," which won across-the-board praise as a historical novel set in 1860s Connecticut, New York City, Saratoga Springs, N.Y. and Boston. Monagan was born in Connecticut himself and has spent all of his working life there, first as a newspaper reporter and then for many years as Editor of Connecticut Magazine. Along the way, he published several humor books as well as two editions of the nonfiction "Connecticut Icons."
Few people know Connecticut, its people and its places, the way Charles Monagan does.
Connecticut Magazine itself is a state icon. Monagan, its longtime editor, spent years sharing with readers the Nutmegger nuggets he discovered.
This revised and updated collection of those back-of-the-book backstories is light-hearted and appreciative. The short essays are colorfully illustrated. The overall package is part day trip inspiration, part fun facts, part show-and-tell.
Some reviewers have said they use it as a going-away present for visiting friends. For others, it's for browsing and display. At seven-by-seven inches and 125 pages, it's probably better suited to the first use. It fits better in the suitcase or on the night table than on a coffee table.
The photos are good but the real joy of this book is in the storytelling. That means the small format is suitable. Each icon, be it a place, a product, a food, a landmark, gets a two-page illustrated spread with tips so the reader can visit or learn more.
This is not the sort of book that the reader feels compelled to read cover-to-cover, although you could. It's the sort that you pick up and open at random and say "hey, I know that place" or "I didn't know that" or "let's check this out!"
The best, though, are the "hey, Martha" moments -- the stories behind Mounds candies, or Silly Putty, or the Sunfish sailboat. Those are the stories that are not found in guidebooks. They risk being lost to time unless someone like Monagan tracks them down and tells them.
Monagan, a novelist ("Carrie Welton") and humorist ("How to Get a Monkey into Harvard," "The Complete Neurotic" and "The Reluctant Naturalist"), does just that in this bright little volume.
I am a Connecticut native. I enjoyed learning about places I have seen but didn't know about. Great pictures and stories in a succinct way. I think this book should be included in history courses.
Very interesting and helpful for anyone interested in learning about or exploring Connecticut. Recommend checking the internet given that some of the information is outdated.