Stuck in Britain? Welcome to the ultimate literary road-trip
Following Boris Johnson’s decision to extend the last stage of lockdown, many of us are having to accept we’re just not going to get abroad this summer.
But where to holiday in Britain? If you’re a book lover, one solution might be to target somewhere associated with your favourite read. From the Lake District, where Beatrix Potter wrote her beloved Peter Rabbit books, to Dartmoor, where the hound of the Baskervilles roamed, to Poldark’s Cornwall to the medieval oaks of Macbeth’s Birnam Wood, there are scores of locations that could add a literary flavour to your trip.
Here are eight of the best.
Greenway House, Galmpton, near Brixham, Devon
This was Agatha Christie’s dream house, her holiday home for 40 years. She described it as having “woods sweeping down to the Dart below, and a lot of fine shrubs and trees”. Not only that, but the gardens are full of woodland walks and boast a two-storey boathouse with a balcony, the setting for the murder in Dead Man’s Folly (1956). You may not find a corpse there today, but it may make you just a little bit nervous…
Manchester’s Landmark Poetry
Lemn Sissay’s “landmark poetry” can be found all over Manchester, from the wall above a café in Dilworth Street, to the pavement of Tib Street in the Northern Quarter. The poem Let There Be Peace adorns the atrium space of University Place and, perhaps most spectacularly, a “morning poem” forms part of a mural on a red-brick end-of-terrace in Old Trafford. It’s spectacular because the words are embellished by an owl, a peacock, a hummingbird and other birds, both exotic and local. If you thought Old Trafford was only about sport, think again.
Holy Trinity Church, Quarry Rd, Headington, Oxford
The beautiful Gothic Revival church where CS Lewis worshipped for the last 30 years of his life is worth a visit even if you aren’t a fan, but lovers of The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe should head straight for the Narnia stained-glass window. It’s a tasteful, understated piece – predominantly white and including many images drawn from the Narnia chronicles, notably a majestic close-up of Aslan in one panel and, in the other, the flying horse Fledge soaring gracefully over the deserted citadel of Cair Paravel. You can feel yourself shivering in Narnia’s perpetual winter as you gaze at it.
The Dickens Museum, Doughty St, London WC1
Charles Dickens lived in this modest terraced house when he was on the verge of becoming a hugely successful novelist. To visit is to get an impression of how manically productive he was – you can see the study in which he wrote solidly for four hours every morning, producing in remarkably short time Nicholas Nickleby, Oliver Twist and the later instalments of The Pickwick Papers. For something more relaxing, don’t miss the café in the peaceful courtyard at the back: it’s among London’s best.
Ashdown Forest, East Sussex
Ashdown may be the official name, but lovers of Winnie-the-Pooh know this as the “Hundred Aker Wood”, and a map you can download (from ashdownforest.org) will lead you to the very bridge where Pooh invented the game of Poohsticks. (Bring your own sticks, though: previous visitors have denuded the area of suitable twigs.) The map will also take you to the Sandy Pit where Roo played, the place where Piglet dug the Cunning Trap to catch a Heffalump, and the site of the North Pole, which Pooh used to save Roo from drowning.
Dove Cottage, Grasmere, Cumbria
William Wordsworth’s former home has recently been restored to early 19th-century authenticity, leaving rooms where you can read by candlelight and duck to avoid bashing your head against the beams. In tribute to the inspiration the poet drew from the landscape, there are also galleries where you can just sit and gaze out the window, as he once did. His scribbles on the many manuscripts of his masterpiece The Prelude show how much he agonised over his work and may make you feel better about that unfinished novel lurking in your bottom drawer.
Dylan Thomas Boathouse, Dylan’s Walk, Laugharne, Carmarthenshire
You have to peer in the window of Thomas’s “writing shed” to see the air of studied disarray. A jacket hangs over the back of the chair, the desk is strewn with papers, the wastepaper bin two-thirds full. The poet, dissatisfied with what he is trying to write, has clearly just thrown down his pen in frustration and gone to the pub. But the view! Head downhill to the boathouse where he once lived, have tea on the terrace, gaze out to sea and you’ll understand why any artist would have sold his soul to live here.
J M Barrie’s Birthplace, Brechin Road, Kirriemuir, Angus
The author of Peter Pan has left his mark all over Kirriemuir: a statue of Peter, playing his characteristic pipe, stands in the High Street, just along from an art gallery called The Wendy House. Inside the museum you can see Barrie’s smudged typescript with the original unhappy ending, suggesting that refusing to grow up may not be such a good idea. But the highlight is in the garden: a life-size (and rather ferocious-looking) sculpture in driftwood of Captain Hook’s nemesis, the crocodile who has swallowed a clock that ticks constantly inside it, reminding visitors that time gets us all in the end…