Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

Writers' relationships with their surroundings are seldom straightforward. While some, like Jane Austen and Thomas Mann, wrote novels set where they were staying (Lyme Regis and Venice respectively), Victor Hugo penned Les Misérables in an attic in Guernsey and Noël Coward wrote that most English of plays, Blithe Spirit, in the Welsh holiday village of Portmeirion.
Award-winning BBC drama producer Adrian Mourby follows his literary heroes around the world, exploring 50 places where great works of literature first saw the light of day. At each destination – from the Brontës' Yorkshire Moors to the New York of Truman Capote, Christopher Isherwood's Berlin to the now-legendary Edinburgh café where J.K. Rowling plotted Harry Potter's first adventures – Mourby explains what the writer was doing there and describes what the visitor can find today of that great moment in literature.
Rooms of One's Own takes you on a literary journey from the British Isles to Paris, Berlin, New Orleans, New York and Bangkok and unearths the real-life places behind our best-loved works of literature.

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Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

Writers' relationships with their surroundings are seldom straightforward. While some, like Jane Austen and Thomas Mann, wrote novels set where they were staying (Lyme Regis and Venice respectively), Victor Hugo penned Les Misérables in an attic in Guernsey and Noël Coward wrote that most English of plays, Blithe Spirit, in the Welsh holiday village of Portmeirion.
Award-winning BBC drama producer Adrian Mourby follows his literary heroes around the world, exploring 50 places where great works of literature first saw the light of day. At each destination – from the Brontës' Yorkshire Moors to the New York of Truman Capote, Christopher Isherwood's Berlin to the now-legendary Edinburgh café where J.K. Rowling plotted Harry Potter's first adventures – Mourby explains what the writer was doing there and describes what the visitor can find today of that great moment in literature.
Rooms of One's Own takes you on a literary journey from the British Isles to Paris, Berlin, New Orleans, New York and Bangkok and unearths the real-life places behind our best-loved works of literature.

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Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

by Adrian Mourby
Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

Rooms of One's Own: 50 Places That Made Literary History

by Adrian Mourby

eBook

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Overview

Writers' relationships with their surroundings are seldom straightforward. While some, like Jane Austen and Thomas Mann, wrote novels set where they were staying (Lyme Regis and Venice respectively), Victor Hugo penned Les Misérables in an attic in Guernsey and Noël Coward wrote that most English of plays, Blithe Spirit, in the Welsh holiday village of Portmeirion.
Award-winning BBC drama producer Adrian Mourby follows his literary heroes around the world, exploring 50 places where great works of literature first saw the light of day. At each destination – from the Brontës' Yorkshire Moors to the New York of Truman Capote, Christopher Isherwood's Berlin to the now-legendary Edinburgh café where J.K. Rowling plotted Harry Potter's first adventures – Mourby explains what the writer was doing there and describes what the visitor can find today of that great moment in literature.
Rooms of One's Own takes you on a literary journey from the British Isles to Paris, Berlin, New Orleans, New York and Bangkok and unearths the real-life places behind our best-loved works of literature.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781785781865
Publisher: Icon Books, Ltd. UK
Publication date: 06/01/2017
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 234
File size: 21 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Adrian Mourby was an award-winning BBC drama producer before turning to full-time writing. He has published three novels, two AA travel guides and a book of humour based on his Sony Award-winning Radio 4 series Whatever Happened To…? In recent years Adrian has won two Italian awards for his travel journalism. He also writes extensively on opera and has produced operas by Mozart, Handel and Purcell, both in the UK and in Europe.

Table of Contents

Italy 1. George Sand 2. Henry James 3. Thomas Mann 4. Ernest Hemingway 5. John Keats 6. E.M. Forster

Southern England 7. Jane Austen 8. Thomas Hardy 9. H.G. Wells 10. Vita Sackville-West

Northern England & North Wales 11. William Wordsworth 12. Charlotte Brontë 13. Beatrix Potter 14. Ted Hughes 15. Noël Coward

London 16. Samuel Johnson 17. Charles Dickens 18. Oscar Wilde 19. Rudyard Kipling

Oxford 20. Lewis Carroll 21. J.R.R. Tolkien 22. William Morris

Edinburgh 23. Robert Louis Stevenson 24. J.K. Rowling

Channel Islands 25. Victor Hugo 26. Mervyn Peake

Paris 27. Marcel Proust 28. James Joyce 29. Erich Maria Remarque 30. Jean-Paul Sartre

Berlin 31. Bertolt Brecht 32. Christopher Isherwood

New York & New Orleans 33. Damon Runyon 34. Dorothy Parker 35. Dylan Thomas 36. Arthur Miller 37. Jack Kerouac 38. Tennessee Williams 39. Truman Capote

St Petersburg 40. Alexander Pushkin 41. Fyodor Dostoyevsky 42. Mikhail Bulgakov

East Asia 43. Lafcadio Hearn 44. George Bernard Shaw 45. Somerset Maugham 46. Graham Greene

North Africa 47. Olivia Manning 48. Paul Bowles 49. William S. Burroughs

50. Postscript: Virginia Woolf

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