But this map now reveals some surprising bubbles of blue in dark-red regions, and vice versa, with abutting neighborhoods showing vast differences in voting preferences.

So it is that a thin ribbon of Trump love appears in a neighborhood along East Fulton Street in Grand Rapids, an island in a sea of Hillary Clinton blue.

Traveling north to the Upper Peninsula, classic Trump Country overall, you’ll spot two townships ‒ Mansfield and Mathias ‒ that serve as blue outposts for Clinton, each of them surrounded by Trump red.

President Trump narrowly won Michigan, getting just over 10,000 more votes than former Secretary of State Clinton. He did so, in part, by rolling up overwhelming margins in rural areas of the state, with a number of counties switching from backing former President Obama in 2012 to supporting the GOP nominee in 2016.

Neighborly divides were plentiful across the state.

For instance, Grand Traverse County backed Trump, giving him a 13-point victory over Clinton. But every precinct in the urban hub of Traverse City went for Clinton.

In suburban Detroit, Livonia backed Trump 49-45 percent. But a couple precincts in the southeastern part of that city backed Clinton.

Much has been written about Macomb County and the “Reagan Democrat.” Maybe they were really “Obama Republicans” – the blue-collar county went for President Obama in both 2008 and 2012. Macomb went for Trump 54-42 and almost every precinct in the northern part of the county or along Lake St. Clair backed Trump, with his support rising above 60 percent the farther north they sit.

Sometimes, the strongest support for two very different candidates sat side-by-side: In Saginaw County, the residents of Buena Vista Township, a majority African-American community, gave Clinton 81 percent of the vote. In the bordering township to east, voters in almost-all-white Blumfield Township gave Trump 80 percent of their support.

On the map, click on the precincts in and around your community to see how your neighbors voted in November. Ready to move?