Novel Destinations: A Travel Guide to Literary Landmarks from Jane Austen's Bath to Ernest Hemingway's Key West is a delightful exploration of beloved writers and novelists over the years from William Shakespeare to Charles Dickens to Jane Austen to William Wordsworth as well as Thomas Hardy in England. Throughout America, we visit the sites of the homes of writers such as William Faulkner, Jack London, Eudora Welty, Tennessee Williams, Carl Sandburg, Robert Frost, Walt Whitman, Sinclair Lewis, Katherine Anne Porter, Willa Cather, Robert Louis Stevenson and John Steinbeck. From W.B Yeats Country in Ireland to the Keats-Shelley House in Rome at the bottom of the Spanish Steps to Alexander Dumas's Chateau in France to the birthplace museum of Miguel de Cervantes in Spain to the Russian writers, Tolstoy, Chekhov, Pasternak, and Dostoyevsky, the literary journeys were enjoyable.
The book was divided into two main parts. Part One was Travel by the Book: The best literary experiences at home and abroad, and Part Two being Journeys Between the Pages: The pages of literature come to life in the following eleven locales, immortalized by famous novelists.
One of my favorite sections highlighted the journeys and writing both at home and abroad of F. Scott Fitzgerald, chronicler of the Jazz Age; Ernest Hemingway, rugged adventurer; Mark Twain, an innocent abroad, Edith Wharton, famed Francophile, and Henry James. Another favorite section was about Charles Dickens including the Charles Dickens Museum, different sites where Dickens wrote, lived and dined, including destinations where certain of his books were written.
And a few of my favorite quotes:
"'We are planted between heaven and earth,' French feminist scribe George Sand wrote of the 14th-century monastery where she and her lover Frederic Chopin and her two small children settled in December 1838. 'The clouds cross our garden at their own will and pleasure, and the eagles clamor over our heads,' she wrote of the austere place. The foursome had left Paris for the winter, traveling to the Spanish isle of Majorca, in hopes the temperate climate would benefit Sand's sickly son and Chopin's consumption."
"An elegant residence graced by an oak-lined pathway, William Faulkner's Rowan Oak estate was in shambles when the writer purchased it in 1930. He completed much of the restoration himself, wielding a hammer and saw to create a sanctuary where he lived for more than three decades. The moniker Faulkner bestowed on the house comes from a Celtic legend about the rowan tree, which is believed to harbor powers of safety and protection."
"'If I can be said to have a home,' declared Tennessee Williams, 'it is New Orleans, which has provided me with more material than any other part of the country.' The playwright lived in the city's picturesque French Quarter, and visiting the haunts he once frequented is still possible today."
And so many more places I need to explore and so many more books I want to read.