So much of our travels can be enjoyed through the prism of literature. Some writers are intrinsically connected to a destination and you can still visit places associated with them. Just a very few examples:

Miguel Cervantes with Alcalá de Henares, Spain
Agatha Christie with Devon, England
Isak Dineson (Karen Blixen) with Kenya
Ian Fleming with Jamaica
Gabriel García Márquez
with northern Colombia
Thomas Hardy with Dorset, England
Victor Hugo
with Paris
Ernest Hemingway with Key West, Havana, Madrid, and Paris
Franz Kafka
with Prague
James Joyce with Dublin
R.K. Narayan with Madras (Chennai), India
Pablo Neruda with Valparaíso and Viña del Mar, Chile

Tennessee Williams with New Orleans
William Wordsworth
and Beatrix Potter with England's Lake District

The literary travel possibilities are nearly endless - have a read!


Cover photo: Bruce Tuten

53 Members
Join Us!

5 of Europe´s top destinations for literary travelers

David Paul Appell This continent is arguably the world´s most literary in the sense that it has arguably produced most of the world´s most celebrated writers, poets, and playwrights. And its great literary destinations are not just cities of famous names—they´re places where you can walk directly into books, manuscripts, and writers’ lives. The five below—admittedly heavy on Britain and Ireland—stand out because they combine atmosphere with specific, visitable landmarks that bring literature…

Read more…
0 Replies

Communing with literary greats in England's Lake District

  Jorge Franganillo The Lake District of Cumbria in northwest England, a 5½-hour drive from London and two from Liverpool and Manchester, is a mountainous region and national park renowned for its gorgeous scenery - centering around 19 eponymous lakes - as well as its literary associations with a group of 19th-century "Lake Poets" such as William Wordsworth (one of his most famous poems, "Daffodils," was inspired here and whose local house, Dove Cottage, you can visit), Beatrix Potter (of…

Read more…
0 Replies

The writing of 'In the Footsteps of Dracula: A Personal Journey and Travel Guide'

Old Parish Church Cemetery in Whitby, England My obsession to travel to every site related to either the fictional Count Dracula or his real historical counterpart, Prince Vlad Dracula the Impaler, grew out of a visit to Whitby, England, where part of the novel Dracula takes place.  I stood on the cemetery hill (top) where, in Bram Stoker's Dracula Lucy Westenra and Mina Murray spent hour after hour sitting on their "favourite seat" (a bench placed over a suicide's grave near the edge of the…

Read more…
0 Replies

Literary cruises in 'Whatever Your Pastime or Interest, There May Be A Cruise For You!'

Valtours/Dreamstime.com Whatever hobby, pursuit or pastime you enjoy, it’s possible there’s a voyage that will let you combine it with the pleasures of cruising. From food to fashion, music to mystery, the offerings are as varied as the destinations which are included on ship itineraries. An Internet search for cruises that interest you may turn up one or more alternatives. While cruise lines are gradually beginning to return to normal services, it’s necessary to check what sailings are being…

Read more…
0 Replies

You need to be a member of Tripatini to add comments!

Join Tripatini

Comments are closed.

Comments

  • Currently reading Norman Lewis' collection of travel essays, A View of the World. Lewis, who passed away at the age of 95 in 2003, is one of the finest, if not the finest, travel writers ever to come out of the United Kingdom, and there is some competition there. Try and pick up a copy of this for writing on banditti in Sardinia; Cuba in the age of Hemingway, Fleming and Castro; Naples; Ibiza; taking Cossacks back to Central Asia to a very grim future during World War II...and after all his adventures he went back to a small farmhouse in rural Essex.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1436803/Norman-Lewis.html

  • TravelTools is the world's most advanced travel software featuring all back-end website features such as newsletters, maps, calendars of events, reservations, itinerary builders, custom itinerary maps, route planners, client admin panels, advertising, e-commerce, and a robust data-mining engine. TravelTools serves destination marketers by providing a link between points of interest and visitors. It also serves highly-differentiated affinity markets such as literary and book travels.


    
I am looking for investors and/or strategic marketing partners to expand our scope into all aspects of travel, point of presence advertising, and event support. Our fully-developed product includes full and innovative support for QR codes, Smartphones, and Social Media sites.


    
Interested and qualified parties must be willing to sign an NDA since our marketing plans and applications are far-advanced and ready to apply to the market. Interested parties must also be ready to attack the market since we are not interested in creeping forward and exposing our solutions without gaining a significant, first mover advantage. Please respond to http://www.tools-for-travel.com/contact.html


    
Our applications will change travel marketing and how travelers interact in space. Each of our applications are instantly monetized. They also develop robust and profitable data assets built on individual and aggregate user profiles and preferences.
  • Recently got back from a trip to Valencia.

    The most famous writer from there--at least one I have heard of--is Vicente Blasco Ibanez, who many people would be forgiven for not having heard of, Most have heard of his most famous novel, The Four Horseman of the Apocalypse (Los Cuatros Jinetes de Apocalipsis).

    He has a fairly wide road named after him in Valencia, and it is this road that the Valencia authorites want to lengthen so that impatient people can get to the Mediterranean Sea one minute quicker than they would have done otherwise, but the problem is to many that in order for this to be done it will have to wade through and destroy an area of the Roma/fishing village of Cabanyal, which I walked through for a wonderful two hours. Yes, it's crumbling, but money better spent than spent on needless roads could make the area amazing.
    Have a look at this site for more details:
    http://vidalondon.net/2010/10/10/valencians-fight-to-save-cabanyal
    Ibanez is perhaps a little wordy and dense for modern tastes (not yours of course, you read everything), along the lines of my favourite Spanish writer from that generation, Pio Baroja y Nessi, but worthwhile nonetheless.
    Valencia is always worthwhile, especially is areas of Cabanyal, El Carmen and Russafa, which is the wonderful Slaughterhouse bar/bookstore, quite the place to be.
    http://slaughterhouse.es
    Lastly, I wrote something a little more comprehensive on Valencia at
    http://allhallovians.blogspot.com
    As always, happy reading, happy travelling

  • New York Travel Writers Association's new prez, Denise Mattia, pulled an interesting quote out of her hat at last night's meeting:  
    “In times of change, learners inherit the earth while the learned find themselves beautifully equipped to deal with a world that no longer exists.” 
                -Eric Hoffer
  • And yes, Sam, I will...or did. The article is below.

  • Hi David,

    Yes, I did, and it seems I did not just follow in the footsteps of Gabo but also the equally celebrated David Appell. I will read your article on Barranquilla, a city I liked. I must be unique in that I have now travelled twice from the USA to Colombia and still have not been to Cartagena.

  • Here is my latest humble effort, on Colombia, with Spain, my favourite place in the world.colombia.article.pdf

    https://storage.ning.com/topology/rest/1.0/file/get/9012270856?profile=original
  • Cool trip, Terry! In Quilla, did you go to La Cueva, the bar/restaurant where Gabo & cronies hung out? It's a bit tarted up these days but still has a lot of lore inside (I wrote about Barranquilla for MSNBC.com a little while back; click here if you're interested in having a look). Then in Cartagena last year I rode by the house he owns there -- zipped up like a fortress, that one!
  • I've just discovered this group. I read One Hundred Years of Solitude when I was a teenager, and its images are still with me. Terence, will you be writing about your trip, and if so, where?
  • I just returned from northern Colombia, where essentially I was following the "trail" of Gabriel García Márquez, from his earliest journalistic days in the sweaty, ramshackle port of Barranquilla (be sure to see its wonderful Museo del Caribe, which has a floor dedicated to the 1982 Nobel Prize winner (this year's winner, Peru's Mario Vargas Llosa, was the first south American winner since the Colombian)). I also went to Santa Marta and Riohacha, where the La Guajira Wayuu indians influenced his novella, The Incredible and Sad Tale of Innocent Eréndira and Her Heartless Grandmother. One notable excursion was to a hot spring in the Cienaga swamp, unlit (the car's headlights helped a little), with bats the size of dinner plates swooping down and, unseen behind thick foliage, a goods train rumbling by from the mines of Aracataca, García Márquez's birthplace. This really set my literary mind aswirl, images of the 3,000 dead workers massacred in the banana plantation of his fictional town of Macondo (did you see that the BP oil rig in the Mexican Gulf was called Macondo!) being transported away, as memorably portrayed in his One Hundred Years of Solitude.
This reply was deleted.