Lydia: Its removal from Burma is a felony and when triggered it has the power to melt human eyeballs. Giles: In that case I've severely underpriced it.

'Potential'


Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.

There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."


beth b - Nov 25, 2007 9:24:56 am PST #4336 of 28260
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

whitehorse tavern -check

Mark twain's house in Hartford

when DH and I were in london we found 84 charing cross road (it is a pizza shop). That was the only deliberate one.We went lots of other places that were literary -but they were mixed up with the historical.

and when arrived in SF we ran all over the city looking for places from Tales of the City

When we went to Hawaii I read Michners's book. More for context then for pilgrimage planning


beth b - Nov 25, 2007 9:27:48 am PST #4337 of 28260
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

I 've been thinking about what Erin said. I love going places that are crowded with history


Maysa - Nov 25, 2007 10:40:25 am PST #4338 of 28260

The first time I was in Boston, the friend I was traveling with and I happened upon the swan boats, and I started babbling about The Trumpet of the Swan and how much I'd ADORED that book as a child. Val had never read it and looked at me like I was mildly crazy.

I felt the same way when I saw the swan boats in Boston! Also, when I saw the pond in Central Park where Stuart Little raced his little ship.


Kathy A - Nov 25, 2007 5:19:19 pm PST #4339 of 28260
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I remember touching a Roman wall at the Museum of London, and about having a historical orgasm just thinking about all the people who have touched it through the years, who they were, when they were, their hopes and dreams and fears -- their essential humanity.

I get that same tingle, but being the Midwesterner that I am, anything older than 1875 can do that to me. The one time I was in Boston and saw a graveyard with stones going back to the 1700s gave me chills.


Atropa - Nov 25, 2007 6:50:43 pm PST #4340 of 28260
The artist formerly associated with cupcakes.

I've walked through what remains of the 100 Acre Wood, and played Pooh Sticks at Pooh Sticks Bridge.


Ginger - Nov 25, 2007 7:56:50 pm PST #4341 of 28260
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I felt just the same way about the London wall. I'm not alone!

Literary pilgrimages:

Green Gables on PEI
Orchard House
Walden Pond
House of Seven Gables
Hannibal, Missouri
A drink at the Hay-Adams Hotel, on the site of the home Henry Adams built with John Hay.
Hadrian's Wall (Rosemary Sutcliff)
221 Baker Street
The home where Samuel Johnson wrote the dictionary
Stratford upon Avon
Tintagel and Glastonbury (Arthur)


Fred Pete - Nov 26, 2007 5:14:59 am PST #4342 of 28260
Ann, that's a ferret.

I remember touching a Roman wall at the Museum of London

Even bigger tingle -- the piece of Roman wall still standing in place near the Tower of London. (It's just outside the nearest Underground station.)


sj - Nov 26, 2007 5:20:32 am PST #4343 of 28260
"There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea."

I would also love to see Orchard House (is that it?), Louisa May Alcott's childhood home.

I've been there. I'd be happy to go back with you anytime you are up this way.

Almost every trip I have taken to England has had some sort of literary pilgrimage in it. Bath was my favorite. I loved all of the Jane Austen things there. I also have seen Austen's house in Chawton, Kipling's house, I love the Globe in London (even though it is not original). There's more but I can't remember them all right now.

I remember being disappointed that I couldn't convince our tour guide to stop at Elizabeth Barrett Browning's grave in Florence.


Ginger - Nov 26, 2007 5:39:04 am PST #4344 of 28260
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I haven't been to London since the new Globe was built. Want.

Reading so informs my world that almost all my travel is some sort of literary pilgrimage. I also discovered that my large intake of British murder mysteries meant I had no trouble with the language or culture. I found it startling that there were Americans around me baffled by lift, lorry and what floor they were on.


Dana - Nov 26, 2007 8:32:10 am PST #4345 of 28260
I'm terrifically busy with my ennui.

I took my copy of Gaudy Night to Oxford the second time I went.