Walking London, Updated Edition: Thirty Original Walks In and Around London (IMM Lifestyle Books) Routes from 2 to 6 Miles with Photos, Complete Maps, & Details of Sites, Public Transport, Pubs & More
The essential companion for any urban explorer who wants to discover the true heart of London! London is a walker's paradise! Walking London is the essential companion for any urban explorer—whether visitor or native—committed to discovering the true heart of one of the world's greatest capital cities. In 30 original walks, author, distinguished historian, and London expert Andrew Duncan reveals miles of London's endlessly surprising landscape. From wild heathland to formal gardens, cobbled mews to elegant squares and arcades, bustling markets to tranquil villages—Duncan reveals the pick of the famous sights, but also steers walkers off the tourist track and into the city's hidden corners. These 30 carefully planned walks—ranging from 2 to 6 miles, but always within easy reach of a quiet park or cosy pub—guide you through the capital's most interesting and attractive quarters. Handsomely illustrated with specially commissioned color photographs and complete route maps, this book provides full details of addresses, opening times, and the best bars and restaurants to visit en route. For the walking enthusiast, your favourite Anglophile, and even London residents, Walking London is your comprehensive guide to exploring London on foot! "Andrew Duncan has a feel for the city and a knack of finding major sights and forgotten corners which few can match." —JOURNAL OF THE LONDON SOCIETY "Duncan's walks are well chosen, making sinuous progress through varying London landscapes" —THE OBSERVER
Andrew “Swift Shoes” Duncan has mapped out 30 strolls in and around London proper. From the short jaunt thru Covent Garden (2 miles) to the Bataan death march of Highgate to Hampstead and back (13 miles), there is something here for almost everyone. There are panoramic walks and waterside walks and shopping walks and garden walks and country walks and village walks and… I’m almost out of breath just thinking about them.
Walking London not only has descriptive bits about the local landmarks but there’s also a modest amount of London’s storied history intertwined with the thoughtfully planned hikes and amblings here. I learned things about the Great Fire of 1666 and the Blitz of WWII that I never knew. Plus, I am no longer completely ignorant of the likes of Sir Christopher Wren and Samuel Pepys and John Nash (for the record, I was already well aware of Charles Dickens—Americans aren’t worldly but some of us are semi-literate).
As much as I enjoyed this, the true test will be two months from now when I actually set foot (pun intended) in London. Four stars for now but I respectfully reserve the right to bump this rating up (or down) upon my return.
There are few better ways to get to know a city than to walk it. My parents bought me this for Christmas 2000, after I'd been living here for a year or two. There are some terrific walks in here - long and short, central London, greater London, parks, city... All of them are graded according to ease, and have interesting pointers about the historical sights on the way.
You're going to ask what my favourite was, aren't you? Well, since you ask, I rather liked the one along the Regent's Canal. Not a thoroughfare you'd ever think of walking for any great distance. It takes you past some amazing things, including right through the heart of London Zoo (from which you're separated). Do it in the spring, when the blooms are on the trees.
This book would be very helpful if I were to actually take it to London, I think. But it was also published in 1999 and I imagine some landmarks may have changed. With the last walking guide, I felt there needed to be more descriptions. This is quite literally a step by step walking guide and maybe 25 photos - so I need a happy medium. The neighborhood maps were helpful!
Excellent guide to London; easy-to-follow instructions to follow precise routes through the city. This book is a walking history lesson for everyone, even London residents. Especially London residents. By far, the best routes I managed to take were through Marylebone, Chelsea and around Covent Garden. To look forward to are Notting Hill, Islington and the City East.
Walks completed: Kensington, Chelsea, Bayswater to Belgravia, Central Parks, Regent's Park, Marylebone, Mayfair, Westminster and S. James', Soho to Trafalgar Square, Covent Garden, Lambeth and the South Bank, Fleet Street and S. Paul's, Greenwich.
Walks remaining for a future date: Notting Hill, Regent's Canal, Bloomsbury, Inns of Court, Islington, Clerkenwell, Bankside and Southwark, the City (East), Wapping to Limehouse, Kew to Hammersmith, Barnes to Fulham, Highgate to Hampstead.
Walks too distant to be considered: Windsor and Eton, Hampton Court, Syon Park to Strawberry Hill, Richmond, Dulwich.
Great book. Did most of the walks. Very nice to see things that you normally would miss completely, like little streets and stairs. Not all the walks are equally interesting, which will depend on your interests. In a few cases the instructions are not always clear. Sometimes it mentions interesting things of the route and it is not always very clear that this will take you off the route. Will try to do another similar book next year.
Routes are clear and information helpful, but it's neither one of those "pocket" guides (i.e., easily carried) nor a voluminous "read all about it" guide -- in truth, I prefer one or the other type. This one strikes a middle ground.
There's some interesting sites and routes in here. I wish the walks had been more easily adaptable for scenarios where you would want to start in the middle of the walk/adjust the route, but it has a nice range of neighborhoods.