
THE BRIGHT EDGES OF THE WORLD Author Garrett Peck in Conversation and Reading from his New Book
Sun, Feb 22
|Bishop's Lodge Ballroom
Please join Bishop's Lodge and Garcia Street Books from 4pm to 6:30 as Garrett Peck discusses his new book THE BRIGHT EDGES OF THE WORLD: Willa Cather and Her Archbishop.


Time & Location
Feb 22, 2026, 4:00 PM – 6:30 PM
Bishop's Lodge Ballroom, 1297 Bishops Lodge Rd, Santa Fe, NM 87506, USA
About the event
Please join Bishop's Lodge Sunday, February 22nd from 4pm to 6:30 for a reading and conversation by Garrett Peck about his new book The Bright Edges of the World: Willa Cather and Her Archbishop. Garcia Street Books will be on site with copies available for sale.

Author and historian Garrett Peck traces Willa Cather’s adventures in the Southwest and how they influenced her best book. Six months before she died, Willa Cather called her 1927 novel Death Comes for the Archbishop her “best book.” The Atlantic magazine concurred, including Archbishop on its Great American Novels list in 2024. A perennial favorite for people who love New Mexico, the novel tells an unusual story of two French priests and best friends serving on the American frontier before the arrival of the railroad. This Western work of fiction is loosely based on two historical figures, Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy and Bishop Joseph Machebeuf.
In The Bright Edges of the World, Garrett Peck explores how Cather’s travels to the Southwest inspired her writing. She visited the Southwest six times between 1912 and 1926, and from these journeys came three novels, the last of which was Death Comes for the Archbishop. Through Cather’s letters, postcards, articles, and interviews, Peck traces how integral travel was to Cather’s imagination while highlighting the vital contribution that Cather’s longtime partner, Edith Lewis, made to the story. The Bright Edges of the World is richly illustrated to highlight Cather and Lewis’s extensive Southwestern adventures.
Though Archbishop is a work of fiction, Peck explores how Cather wove some of the most legendary people in New Mexican history into her novel, such as Archbishop Lamy, Kit Carson, and Padre Antonio José Martínez, while subtly hinting toward the complexity of Pueblo Indian and Navajo (Diné) faith. Archbishop is a multicultural novel that reflects the diversity of New Mexico’s people.
Death Comes for the Archbishop remains a timeless book of friendship on the American frontier and an inspiration for people who, as Cather wrote, “have gone a-journeying in New Mexico on the trail of the Archbishop.”
Pre-order your copy now to pickup at the event:
You can also purchase the book at the event, as well as copies of Willa Cather's Death Comes For the Archbishop.

Garrett Peck is an author, historian, and tour guide in Santa Fe, specializing in adventure travel and historic and cultural interpretation. He leads the Willa Cather’s Santa Fe tour, teaches stargazing, and leads many other tours.
The author of nine books about American history, Garrett’s latest is The Bright Edges of the World: Willa Cather and Her Archbishop (University of New Mexico Press, March 2026). The book explores Cather’s travels to the Southwest that inspired her to write her “best book” (her words), Death Comes for the Archbishop.
Garrett has lectured for the Library of Congress, the National Archives, Smithsonian Associates, historical societies, and literary clubs. A native Californian, he graduated from the Virginia Military Institute and George Washington University and is a U.S. Army veteran.
