The presence of a "GCA" approach (actually there are two different types, "ASR", i.e. Surveillance Approaches which only provide lateral guidance (but the controller will provide recommended altitudes at each point), and PAR, Precision Approach Radar which provide lateral and vertical guidance) is indicated in a couple of ways. If you are familiar with approach charts, it is shown in the upper left corner. If it says "ASR" then that means the airport has radar approaches.
But as a VFR pilot, you may not be familiar with approach charts, and regardless it's a lousy way to find where they are if you don't already have some idea. So for that, you need to go to the TPP (the "chart books") available in many places of course, but from the FAA at
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/flight_info/aeronav/digital_products/dtpp/
Click on your region (there is a link above the individual files with an index) and go to page N1. This will list all airports in that region with radar approaches. It may not be very many, and as a VFR pilot you may not know what all the information means, but at least you know that they are available at those airports.
I will say it's not like every airport has them, not at all. I clicked on the "EC1" file (because it's the first one on the list) which covers Michigan and there are only 2 airports with radar approaches. The book with OK and AR (my region) has 8, but two of those are military bases.
And predominantly what you'll be seeing are the ASR type of radar approaches. These use the existing ATC radar and that's why they can only give you left/right guidance and recommended altitudes. PARs, on the other hand, require specialized ground equipment and are virtually exclusively a military thing (I know of no exceptions but would be happy to have one pointed out) - and even then, the military seems to be gradually getting ride of them too. At least for the Air Force, they used to be primarily at fighter bases (since fighters often didn't have much in the way of approach capability). In OK/AR, there are zero PARs, and there are quite a few military bases in these two states.
That said, you have to be pretty decent with basic IFR skills to be able to fly one. The controller is going to give you headings, and if you can't hold one it's going to be really hard for them to get you on the right one.