About Evan

Baltimore County
Evan L. Balkan is the author of three novels, including the PEN/Faulkner nominated Independence, and seven books of nonfiction, including The Wrath of God: Lope de Aguirre, Revolutionary of the Americas, as well as many essays and short stories in an array of publications. His screenplay Spitfire, adapted from his novel of the same name, won the 2016 Baltimore Screenwriters Competition, a Saul Zaentz Innovation Fund Fellowship, a Rocaberti scholarship, and was a… more

Root That Mountain

Root That Mountain, published in 2021, was my third published novel. 

Root That Mountain's synopsis:
Root That Mountain takes place in West Africa, set during the period just after the end of the civil war in Sierra Leone. Felix Laszlo’s father, a doctor working with Doctors Without Borders in Freetown, has been murdered by Revolutionary United Front rebels. Felix goes to Sierra Leone to retrieve his father’s body. In doing so, he comes to realize he knows less about his father than he thought. Compelled to try and truly understand the man, Felix returns to West Africa to learn about Sierra Leone, the civil war, and the trade in illicit “blood diamonds.” But with Issa Manzo, a renegade soldier from Niger, as his guide, Felix soon discovers that this investigation carries with it dark secrets and is far more than he bargained for.

"Evan Balkan's writing is transportive. At its heart, Root That Mountain is a story about an everyman, or, rather, an every-son, Felix, who takes on a leading role, traveling to West Africa to retrieve the body of his slain father. Against the backdrop of a war torn Sierra Leone, Balkan's remarkable book stretches across continents and reads as if it was lifted directly from John le Carré. I couldn't put it down." -- Cathy Alter, journalist and author.

  • Root That Mountain
    Root That Mountain
    Root That Mountain Down takes place in West Africa, set during the period just after the end of the civil war in Sierra Leone. Felix Laszlo’s father, a doctor working with Medecins Sans Frontieres in Freetown, has been murdered by Revolutionary United Front thugs. Felix goes to Sierra Leone to retrieve his father’s body. In doing so, he comes to realize he knows less about his father than he thought. Compelled to try and truly understand the man, Felix returns to West Africa to learn about Sierra Leone, the civil war, and the trade in illicit “blood diamonds.” But with Issa Manzo, a Nigerien renegade soldier, as his guide, Felix soon discovers that this investigation carries with it dark secrets and is far more than he bargained for.
  • Root That Mountain_1st three chapters.pdf
    Root That Mountain Down takes place in West Africa, set during the period just after the end of the civil war in Sierra Leone. Felix Laszlo’s father, a doctor working with Medecins Sans Frontieres in Freetown, has been murdered by Revolutionary United Front thugs. Felix goes to Sierra Leone to retrieve his father’s body. In doing so, he comes to realize he knows less about his father than he thought. Compelled to try and truly understand the man, Felix returns to West Africa to learn about Sierra Leone, the civil war, and the trade in illicit “blood diamonds.” But with Issa Manzo, a Nigerien renegade soldier, as his guide, Felix soon discovers that this investigation carries with it dark secrets and is far more than he bargained for.

Spitfire

Novel (middle grade), published 2018 by Amphorae Publishing.

Caroline Panski harbors one dream: to play ice hockey. But, as the neighborhood boys—and her mother—tell her: Boys play hockey; girls ice skate. But Caroline is not one to give up on anything easily. She navigates her little world with will and determination. But her little world is soon made much bigger by the fact that her father is fighting, and will eventually die, in Korea. Additionally, Caroline’s school is integrated and she develops a deep friendship with an African-American classmate, Joseph Wilson. It’s an unlikely alliance, and one that promises lessons in life for both of them. While trying out for a boys hockey team and, more importantly, through her burgeoning friendship with Joseph, Caroline learns firsthand about the limitations of race and gender in 1950s Baltimore. In the end, Caroline’s is a difficult and imperfect world, but one that allows for triumphs and moments of transcendence as well.

"Caroline Panski defies the norms--and the odds--to be the fiercest girl on ice! Moving, relevant, and utterly engaging, Spitfire inspires us all to fight for what matters: friendship and love." -- Elissa Brent Weissman, author of numerous bestselling MG/YA books.

  • Spitfire-Balkan.jpeg
    Spitfire-Balkan.jpeg
    Middle Grade novel, published 2018 by Amphorae Publishing. "Caroline Panski defies the norms--and the odds--to be the fiercest girl on ice! Moving, relevant, and utterly engaging, Spitfire inspires us all to fight for what matters: friendship and love." -- Elissa Brent Weissman, author of numerous bestselling MG and YA books.
  • Spitfire_Balkan_1st 2 chapters.pdf
    First two chapters of Spitfire, middle grade novel, published in 2018 by Amphorae Publishing.

The Wrath of God: Lope de Aguirre, Revolutionary of the Americas

Historiobiography, Published by the University of New Mexico Press in 2010

In 1560, General Pedro de Ursúa led an expedition through the Amazon in search of El Dorado. Three months later, Ursúa was murdered. His replacement, Fernando de Guzmán, was also murdered. Emerging from the chaos was the Biscayan Lope de Aguirre, who turned away from El Dorado and led his men to Peru to overthrow the royal forces and declare independence from the Spanish Crown. When Aguirre was finally killed, the aftermath was astonishing: hundreds dead, entire towns depopulated, and a nascent revolution quashed.

"Deliberately provocative, Evan Balkan's The Wrath of God examines Aguirre, a symbol of Basque fury and rampage, arguing that Aguirre's historical representation as a one-dimensional madman deserves revisiting. Indeed, Aguirre may be the Americas' first true revolutionary, a view shared by Simón Bolívar, among others. 2011 marked the 450th anniversary of one of the most extraordinary and least known events in the history of the Americas, and Balkan's work offers a timely investigation into the revolutionary's life and controversial methods." --Publisher blurb
  • Lope image.jpg
    Lope image.jpg
    Historiobiography, Published by the University of New Mexico Press in 2010
  • Balkan_WrathofGod11.pdf
    The Wrath of God: full text

Travel Writing

I have published multiple travel essays over the years and often lecture on the subject at various writing conferences both in the United States and abroad.  Here are some recent travel essays of mine, attached.
  • "A Beautiful and Haunted Tune," is about the Mississippi Blues Trail and the tension inherent in maintaining a tourist attraction (and the economic activity it generates) that relies on "authenticity," which in this case means keeping this part of the country shockingly poor and depressed. The essay was published in Cargo Literary Magazine, as well as the dual-language Chinese/English travel magazine Lost, and was the first place winner in the 2017 Storyhouse.org Travel Essay contest.
  • "On the Trail of the Tyrant," is about researching the Basque conquistadore Lope de Aguirre in a crumbling Venezuela, and it also won a Storyhouse travel writing contest.
  • You Can’t Go Home Again, Again(covering Bowie, Maryland; Costa Rica; Ecuador; and Iceland) was published in 2020 in Eunoia Review.
  • “Q” (about Quito, Ecuador) was published in 2018 in Ragazine. 
  • “What I Didn’t Do in Costa Rica” (about Costa Rica) was published in 2019  Storyhouse.org.
  • P1000736.JPG
    P1000736.JPG
    The home of Mississippi John Hurt, from "A Beautiful and Haunted Tune"
  • A Beautiful and Haunted Tune.pdf

    "A Beautiful and Haunted Tune"
    How do you reconcile a tourist attraction that relies on people remaining in poverty?
  • On the Trail of the Tyrant.pdf
    "On the Trail of the Tyrant"
    Searching for the ghost of Lope de Aguirre in Venezuela, 450 years after his scorched earth visit.
  • Q.pdf
    "Q"
    Finding a moment of grace in Quito, Ecuador.
  • What I Didn't Do in Costa Rica
    "What I Didn't Do in Costa Rica"
    What changes when you travel with family . . .
  • You Can't Go Home Again, Again
    "You Can't Go Home Again, Again"
    Traveling to the town where I grew up wound up being a more foreign experience than two recent trips to Central and South America.

Vanished! Explorers Forever Lost

Nonfiction, published by Menasha Ridge Press, 2007

From the back cover: "Some adventures end in glory, others in obituaries. Instead of receiving laurels and a parade, the adventurers in Vanished! met infamy on a road with no return. Immerse yourself in these gripping accounts of explorers who ventured forth―then simply disappeared. Their fates? We’ll never know. Vanished! draws you into seven page-turning accounts, including one that contains new details of Amelia Earhart’s unsolved disappearance over the vast Pacific. Head to Mexico with Ambrose Bierce, forever lost but not forgotten. Ride the wild Colorado with honeymooners Glen and Bessie Hyde, presumably drowned but whose bodies have never been found. Author Evan Balkan brings these stories to life, and death, in spine-tingling descriptions. Whether murder, sabotage, or just plain bad luck, these are true tales of adventure gone bad, of explorers vanished, forever lost."
  • Vanished cover.jpg
    Vanished cover.jpg
    Vanished! Published by Menasha Ridge Press, 2007.
  • VanishedCompleteBook.pdf
    The complete text of Vanished!

Shipwrecked! Deadly Adventures and Disasters at Sea

Nonfiction collection, published 2008 by Menasha Ridge Press

From the publisher: "For readers who relish the image of clinging to a sinking makeshift raft while fighting off sword-wielding and delirious mutineers wrenching the last cask of water from a sailor's sun-scorched hands (while sharks circle in famished anticipation), Shipwrecked! Adventures and Disasters at Sea is an irresistible read. A heady voyage through human suffering at the hands of unforgiving oceans, cruel captains, and implacable fate, this latest collection of Evan Balkan's impeccably researched true adventures details 14 major maritime disasters. Included are such legendary stories as the 1629 maiden voyage of the Batavia that ended in mutiny and murder, and the dramatic destruction of the majestic three-masted barquentine Endurance in ice-clogged Antarctic waters in 1912. A vast spectrum of human emotion and activity is featured in these exciting profiles, from deadly incompetence and brutish cannibalism to surprising self-sacrifice and quiet heroism."

Attached here are two pieces, outgrowths from this book. One is an academic essay on the Rubens Vase, which is a centerpiece at the Walters Art Museum and has a connection to shipwreck of the Batavia, off Australia, in 1629. The second is an excerpt from a proposed book that I hope to work on further in the coming years about the enslaved Robert Drury, a victim of the shipwreck of the Degrave off the coast of Madagascar in 1701. Drury was long thought to be a fiction of the English novelist Daniel Defoe, best known for his work, Robinson Crusoe. I have begun the process of trying to secure travel grants to visit Madagascar to aid on the research.
  • Shipwrecked cover.jpg
    Shipwrecked cover.jpg
    Shipwrecked! Nonfiction collection, published 2008
  • Rubens Vase_Balkan.pdf
    Essay "Rubens Vase"
  • Drury sample.pdf
    Work-in-progress on the enslaved Robert Drury on Madagascar in the early 18th century and the connections to English novelist Daniel Defoe.

Walking Baltimore: An Insider's Guide to 33 Historic Neighborhoods, Waterfront Districts, and Hidden Treasures in Charm City (and other guidebooks)

Baltimore guidebook, published 2013 by the Wilderness Press

From the publisher: "Walking Baltimore includes Charm City's well-known neighborhoods -- Downtown, the Inner Harbor, Mount Vernon, and Fells Point. But in the voice of its insider author, the book also covers lesser-known and far-flung corners, revealing what makes Baltimore such a wonderful and fascinating destination and hometown. Full of little-known facts and trivia, this book shows how and why Baltimore was an essential player in the country's early history and continues to be influential today. Here is a city almost unparalleled in American history and it lives up to its modern reputation as a quirky, come-as-you-are and be-what-you'll-be place. The zany Baltimore-based film director John Waters (of Hairspray fame) summed it up best when he said, 'It's as if every freak in the South was headed to New York City, ran out of gas in Baltimore, and decided to stay'."

Two other Baltimore guidebooks I have published are Secret Baltimore: A Guide to the Weird, Wonderful, and Obscure (Reedy Press, 2020) and 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles: Baltimore (1st ed., 2006; 2nd ed., 2009). Sample chapters from Walking Baltimore and Secret Baltimore are attached.


  • Walking Baltimore cover.jpg
    Walking Baltimore cover.jpg
    Walking Baltimore, published 2013, nonfiction guidebook
  • Guidebook excerpts_Evan Balkan.pdf
    Excerpts from two guidebooks: Walking Baltimore and Secret Baltimore.

Penelope Pine

Children's book, co-authored with my daughter, Amelia (16), forthcoming 2021 from HK Books

From the publisher: "Penelope Pine is a delightful story that teaches young readers to be happy with who they are!  Penelope is a pine tree. She lives in the forest with oaks, poplars, and maples, and enjoys playing with her tree friends. But when autumn rolls around and her friends turn beautiful colors, Penelope the evergreen believes that she doesn’t measure up. But when winter comes and her friends are suddenly very cold without their leaves, Penelope learns that she is perfect just the way she is."
  • Penelope Pine cover.jpg
    Penelope Pine cover.jpg
    Children's book, forthcoming 2021