Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Searching for Place




LUCY BURDETTE: You know that Key West as a place is important to me both because we live there half a year and because it’s the setting for my series. (The Mango Murders, number 15, coming to a bookstore near you on August 12!) I like nothing better than hearing from a reader about how much they enjoy visiting Key West vicariously or, how they have literally traveled in Hayley Snow’s footsteps, eating what she’s eaten, stopping to admire places she’s been.

Lorenzo and Dominique the cat man at Mallory Square


I travel this way as a reader myself. Sometimes I adore a book or series so much that I must travel there. You might remember this happened with Shetland, because of Ann Cleeves’ Jimmy Perez series.




At the end of May, John and I traveled to France for our vacation/anniversary. Yes, we went to my beloved Paris, but we first spent three days in Saint-Malo, a tiny peninsula on the north coast of Brittany. Once I knew we were going, I determined to read All the Light You Cannot See, which had been languishing on my bedside table forever. This walled city was bombed by the allies at the end of World War II, both in the book and the movie, and in reality. It has since been rebuilt, almost every stone put back in place, so that you can imagine what it looked like in the early 1940s. I could imagine the main character Marie Laure’s life as we walked the bumpy cobblestones of the old streets.



Here’s a bakery at approximately the place she visited over the course of the book carrying messages to and from the resistance.



Here is the path to the island that’s underwater at high tide where she loved to escape.




St Malo from across the bay…



Have you traveled to a place because you read about it in a novel? Are there places you’re longing to go (real or fictional) after reading about them?

16 comments:

  1. This is so interesting, Lucy . . . although I have not traveled somewhere because I read about it in a novel, I can see how that would be an amazing experience . . . .

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  2. I can't say that I have traveled specifically to a place because I read about it, but I have been to places prior to having read about it. So far my favorite places I visited were Key West prior to reading your Key West mysteries Lucy. And M.C. Beaton's Agatha Raisin detective series set in the Costwolds.

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  3. YES, Singapore was on my bucket list for many years after reading Ovidia Yu's charming Aunty Lee culinary mysteries. That dream came true with two solo trips to Singapore in April 2024 and March 2025.

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    1. P.S. It was a bonus that I got to meet up with Ovidia to eat several Singaporean signature foods on both trips!

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    2. That is really exciting, Grace!

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  4. Many times we have chosen a destination from a novel. They are often out of the way places that we had to work to get there! Once we’d done the Big Three — mine are Paris, London, and Rome — we got brave about driving, down one of those British lanes, on the wrong side of the road.
    Examples:
    Nether Wallop/St Mary Mede, where Miss Marple series was filmed
    Salisbury and Old Sarum, thanks to author Edward Rutherford , who entranced me all those years ago

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  5. My travels in recent years have taken me to places that I have previously only read about, but making connections with the books and real life places has only been a bonus not the purpose for going there.NYC, Washington, DC, Savannah and Tybee Island, Chicago…to name a few. There are so many places in the UK that I want to go because of my fiction reading and also my ancestors are from England.
    Has anyone been to a place they read about only to be totally disappointed because it wasn’t like the book at all?

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  6. I would also love to visit Shetland. Newport, Rhode Island (which isn't that far from me) is a draw because of Alyssa Maxwell's historical mysteries set there. Julia's Adirondacks, Debs's Cotswalds and and Rhys's Cornwall, Dublin and County Cork because of Jenn's and Sheila Connolly's books, Catriona MacPherson's Edinburgh, and more! I would also love to get back to Key West now that I've seen it through Hayley's (and Lucy's) eyes.

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  7. When I first traveled to the Four Corners area of New Mexico, it was because my best friend lived there, but I binged on books by Aimee and David Thurlo and by Tony and Anne Hillerman before and during the trip.

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  8. I'm going to be iconoclastic and say sometimes going in a book is BETTER than going in person. When I read about Venice with Donna Leon or our own Rhys Bowen, I get to see all the beautiful places, and places no tourist goes, and I get to experience the sights and sounds without crowds, puzzling over the exchange rate, complaining about prices or sore feet from walking!

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    1. Julia, good heavens, are you in Europe? Because...seven AM for you is a time we never hear from you, LOL!

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  9. Three pines, three times!

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  10. Alaska, because of Dana Stabenow's books.

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  11. Boston comes to mind. To walk in Paul Revere's shoes, to see where the Boston Tea party took place.

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  12. Lucy, you and I must think alike! It seems like I always want to go to the place I have met in the books I've read. Someday, ha ha, maybe I will get to Nantucket or Tahoe, but for now I am very happy to be able to visit via the pages. No crowds of other tourists, just like Julia said.

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  13. Hey everyone, Athens and the Greek Islands! Thank you Jeffrey Siger. Irwin has been intrigued since book #1.

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