I’m excited to announce the revised edition of my 2006 book The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America: A Guide to Field Identification (Abrams) is now out from the University of Chicago Press. For the revision I redesigned the the layout and revisited all of my previous choices. I also added material created after the 2006 book went to press and added an afterward that explains the origin of the project. Find it on most major platforms or ask for it at your local book shop. You can read about the original version of the project and book here.

Praise for The Stray Shopping Carts

“I adore Stray Shopping Carts not only for its transportive qualities, but for how it reaches for—and achieves—beauty in the examination of an object that is both beautiful and sometimes burdensome.” —Hanif Abdurraqib, author of A Little Devil in America

“Montague’s sly masterpiece is back, a Baedeker equal parts Ballard, Borges, and Buffalo, New York. Don’t leave home without it.”—Ed Park, author of Same Bed Different Dreams

“A field guide to shopping carts is really a field guide to shopping: Montague’s poignant classifications reveal the often bleak, sometimes beautiful landscapes in which we acquire and dispose of goods. By the end of the book, the carts come to embody urban brokenness in a deeply human way.”—Alexandra Lange, author of Meet Me by the Fountain

“One of the funniest books I’ve seen.” —Stefan Sagmeister, designer

“Montague’s playful taxonomy of urban blight encourages us to look closer, and look differently, at the landscape around us; to take notice, indeed celebrate, that which accumulates in the margins. In accounting for that which is overlooked or framed out, a quiet, humanizing empathy emerges.” —Jordan Tannahill, author of The Listeners

“Thoughtfully conceived and beautifully designed, this field guide is a one-of-a-kind example of multidisciplinary engagement and originality. It’s a sociological study as much as it is a sharp ecocultural critique of our time.”—Giovanni Aloi, School of the Art Institute of Chicago

“Vladimir Nabokov once said, ‘the lost glove is happy.’ The fascinating array of photographs in this book makes one wonder whether the stray shopping cart is also happy.”—Richard Axel, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine


Description from the University of Chicago Press:

A taxonomy we didn’t know we needed for identifying and cataloging stray shopping carts by artist and photographer Julian Montague.

Abandoned shopping carts are everywhere, and yet we know so little about them. Where do they come from? Why are they there? Their complexity and history baffle even the most careful urban explorer.
 
Thankfully, artist Julian Montague has created a comprehensive and well-documented taxonomy with The Stray Shopping Carts of Eastern North America. Spanning thirty-three categories from damaged, fragment, and plow crush to plaza drift and bus stop discard, it is a tonic for times defined increasingly by rhetoric and media and less by the plain objects and facts of the real world. Montague’s incomparable documentation of this common feature of the urban landscape helps us see the natural and man-made worlds—and perhaps even ourselves—anew.
 
First published in 2006 to great perplexity and acclaim alike, Montague’s book now appears in refreshed and expanded form. Told in an exceedingly dry voice, with full-color illustrations and photographs throughout, it is both rigorous and absurd, offering a strangely compelling vision of how we approach, classify, and understand the environments around us. A new afterword sheds light on the origins of the project.