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.
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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?
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 . . . .
ReplyDeleteI 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.
ReplyDeleteI would like to see more of the Cotswolds. And visit the restaurant from Debs's A BITTER FEAST:)
DeleteI do wish it was real! I'd go in a minute!
DeleteMay I join you? With a side trip to the ice cream place, too? Elisabeth
DeleteThe ice cream place is real!
DeleteYES, 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.
ReplyDeleteP.S. It was a bonus that I got to meet up with Ovidia to eat several Singaporean signature foods on both trips!
DeleteThat is really exciting, Grace!
DeleteThat's so cool Grace, what fun to share the food tour too!
DeleteThat’s exciting, Grace! My cousin’s younger son and his family live in Singapore. My cousin and his wife visit them a couple of times a year. They post pictures on Facebook when they get back from each trip. More and more, I think I would like to visit Singapore!
DeleteDebRo
DEB RO: Singapore is a fascinating country that has transformed itself within the last 60 years. A unique blending of historical & ultra modern attractions with several different ethnic groups (Chinese, Malay, Indian, Middle Eastern) living together. I am briefly going back there on a long layover before landing at SFO next February.
DeleteMany 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.
ReplyDeleteExamples:
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
Those sound wonderful Ann, I will have look at those!
DeleteMy 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.
ReplyDeleteHas anyone been to a place they read about only to be totally disappointed because it wasn’t like the book at all?
that's a very good question Brenda. I will think on that.
DeleteI first visited Berlin, Germany in 1985. I read plenty of Cold War spy novels. East Berlin was bleak and gray, the people were dour and not welcoming. I expected that but was not prepared for the glitzy clean wealthy West Berlin. I was disappointed that it had recovered so well & was prospering after WWII!
DeleteAlso, I walked along the Berlin Wall & passed through Checkpoint Charlie. But it was not as bleak and scary like I saw in the books (or movies).
DeleteBrenda - After reading so many Greek tales, studying the mythology, history, etc I have to say I was slightly disappointed to find that Athens (with the exception of wonderful and brilliant Acropolis) was just a large city that wasn't all that special like Rome or Paris or London.
DeleteI 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.
ReplyDeleteYou have a lot to see Edith! Newport would be easy for you...
DeleteWhen 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.
ReplyDeleteYes, that's another great way to travel!
DeleteBoth of those series are wonderfully authentic. We lived in that area for several years and loved it. And also grew up mostly on NM. The Hillermans are my go to reads when I want to return to NM. (Heather S)
DeleteI'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!
ReplyDeleteJulia, good heavens, are you in Europe? Because...seven AM for you is a time we never hear from you, LOL!
DeleteSo true Julia, Key West may sound better in the books as well
DeleteI loved Venice in person!
DeleteThree pines, three times!
ReplyDeleteOh fun, but Three Pines isn't a real place. Is the town she based it on just like TP?
DeleteAlaska, because of Dana Stabenow's books.
ReplyDeleteAlaska - Paige Shelton's version!
DeleteBoston comes to mind. To walk in Paul Revere's shoes, to see where the Boston Tea party took place.
ReplyDeleteYou should go while you're up in New England for the crimebake!
DeleteDru Ann, when I was a child, after reading JOHNNY TREMAIN I desperately wanted to go to Boston. I didn't understand that the city was no longer the 18th c. version! (Selden)
DeleteLucy, 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.
ReplyDeleteYes Nantucket is lovely off-season!
DeleteI visited Nantucket only once, about forty -nine years ago. It was just before the beginning of the summer tourist season, and it was COLD! And so beautiful! We rented bikes and explored the island. We brought picnic lunches to the beach. (I wore a hoodie to keep warm!)
DeleteSince then, I’ve read books set in Nantucket and I would love to return there.
DebRo
Hey everyone, Athens and the Greek Islands! Thank you Jeffrey Siger. Irwin has been intrigued since book #1.
ReplyDeleteI don't know his books, will look those up.
DeleteI thought the same thing, Lucy. Though I already have a taste for the Greek Islands from Mama Mia and Anthony Horowitz's Magpie Murders series (Jane lives on an island for one of them.)
DeleteMy favorite place in Athens was the Acropolis. But it's the islands that are so exceptional. We loved a small island about an hour ferry ride from the port of Athens called HYDRA. It doesnt allow cars on the island. But you can take a donkey ride. A regret is we didn't go to Santorini.
DeleteJudy, I hope you and Irwin are enjoying your trip so far!
DeleteI can't think of a particular specific book that led me to a particular specific place. I wanted to go to the Highlands and Islands of Scotland because of songs and stories and books--The Middle Window by Elizabeth Goudge and D.K Broster's Jakobite trilogy. Now, I would love to go to Key West, as I feel I know it from Lucy's books. However, I'm not traveling much these days, but I will keep reading.
ReplyDeleteYes keep reading Gillian! You reminded me somehow that Iceland is another place I now want to visit because of Indridisson and other Icelandic mystery writers
DeleteIt was the opposite for me. I went to Reykjavik, Iceland for work in March 2015. I found Ragmar Jonasson boojs (translated into English) at a bookstore in the city. I started to read more Icelandic authors before going on my next Iceland vacation in February 2017. And of course I am reading new books set in Iceland to prep for going to Iceland Noir in November!
DeleteThat will be so much fun Grace, if cold...but you are used to that.
DeleteIceland's cold should not be so bad. For me, it's the short 6 hours of daylight in mid-November that will be an adjustment.
DeleteI’m the same, GRACE. I pick up books set in the place that I am already traveling to. I enjoy how much more I learn about a place. I likely drove my companions crazy in Tuscany last year because I kept relating things I had learned reading Camilla Trunchieri’s mysteries.
DeleteYeah, I like to buy local set books from indie bookstores in that country. It was my only choice back then since Ragnar's books were not published in North America back in 2015. But Minotaur/ St Martin's Press started publishing his newer books from 2017 & Ragnar became more widely known (& he started to go to LCC & Bouchercon).
DeleteI've said this before, but after reading one of Deborah's books, I come away with a sense of dislocation--takes a bit to reorient myself *here*, since I've been immersed in *there*. And too many places to mention--places where a book's setting and the author's skill in describing it, including it almost as a character in a book--have made me want to visit those places! And the opposite--places I've visited (like Boston), then find a book set there--it's like taking a vacation back to those places.
ReplyDeleteMartin Walker does a great job capturing the essence of the Dordogne region in SW France in his Bruno, Chief of Police series. I still plan to write a short story about Spinalonga, a former leprosy colony in NE Crete. I was fascinated that the Resistance hid out on Spinalonga during WW2. Yes, there is already a book and movie about the island.
ReplyDeleteI have one of those Dordogne books on my pile but haven't gotten to it yet.
DeleteI love Martin Walkers books set in the Dordogne and especially like his main character (the chief of police) who is also a great cook.
DeleteYes, we travelled to the Dordogne in 2023 and it was the Bruno books that put it in our map.
DeleteOoh, thanks for the reminder that there is a new Martin Walker book coming out soon! I think I have it preordered.
DeleteThis is less from novels than from TV shows, but still... When my husband and I went to England in 2023, we devoted one entire day to a tour of villages used for location shoots for MIDSOMER MURDERS. (Honestly, it was a high point of the trip!) We also made a stop in Newcastle upon Tyne. It was the wrong season to be able to get a tour of VERA shooting locations, but just walking the streets of Newcastle we were able to identify scenes we recognized. Donna Leon's books have pushed Venice high on my to-be-visited list. And Juliet Blackwell's OFF THE WILD COAST OF BRITTANY has piqued a desire to visit Brittany.
ReplyDeletethis reminds me, watching The Sandhamn Murders gave us a big itch to see Stockholm, which we did a year ago. Loved that trip!
DeleteThanks for reminding me that I need to cue up the next Lucy Burdette for my trip to Florida this weekend! I love reading mysteries set in the places I travel—I learn so much about a culture and how people live from being inside the heads of characters who live in it. Tony Hillerman’s books set in Navaho country, for example, made driving through the southwest so much more meaningful than just snapping photos of the famous sights.
ReplyDeleteAlways glad to remind! Hope you enjoy.
DeleteLucy, I love traveling through books, and sometimes because of them! I haven’t read All the Light You Cannot See yet, but after following your trip on Facebook, we had to watch the movie. Loved it so much I’m definitely reading the book next!
ReplyDeleteThe book is much better than the movie!
DeleteLucy, thanks for the photos taken in Saint-Malo. I loved that book (movie, too?) I also love reading mysteries set in places we have visited such as Parker's Boston, McGarrity's New Mexico, the Cotswolds, etc. Read Matterhorn this year and could follow a great chase scene throughout Zurich and environs. Annette
ReplyDeleteHow fun is that!
DeleteLoving reading everyone's stories about travel based on reading. I can't say that has ever been my sole motivation in traveling; I'm much more likely to travel to places where I know someone, or with someone I know. With one exception: Prague. I didn't know anything about it, nor anyone in that country, and I was on my own.
ReplyDeleteMy experience is usually the opposite: I read books that take place in locations I've been to. It's more fun to recognize Parisian landmarks, or the hills of Tuscany/piazza in Siena, or the endless plains of the Serengeti, because I can visualize them from memory.
Wasn't Prague AMAZING?! And for me, too, the great pleasure of traveling has come from going places I know *nothing* about and discovering it in person. I'd never have gone there if it hadn't been for the planning of my husband and resident, enthusiastic travel guide who (because I asked him not to) never showed me pictures or descriptions of where we were going to go... so I had the incredible thrill of discovering in person. Machu Picchu. Zabriskie Point. ... Breathtaking especially when you're clueless.
DeleteYes, and Machu Picchu, as well! I had no idea what to expect, so I devoured everything!
DeleteHaven't been to either Prague or Machu Picchu. So interesting that you didn't want to know anything ahead Hallie. 50% of the pleasure for me is in the planning!
Deletei love following in your footsteps, Lucy... and actually my first trip to Key West and was doing just that! I'd heard how great the place is from you and other dear friends.
ReplyDeleteWe look forward to having you back!
DeleteI was in the Lakes District of England and took a side trip called James Herriot’s Yorkshire. I had read all his books and watched the original tv series. The scenery was as beautiful as the pictures I had seen. The one surprise was that the street where the veterinary practice was filmed consisted of one small block rather than in the middle of a busy town. It had never actually been used in reality, just for filming purposes.
ReplyDeleteLondon is a literary paradise from Charles Dickens to Sherlock Holmes and countless other authors.
The Old Bailey, Inns of Court, Covent Garden, everywhere I went was reminiscent of something I had read from childhood to adulthood. I have been there several times and never felt I covered all the areas I had read about.
Sometimes it’s been a travel book such as a Eurail guide which pointed out scenic train routes I wouldn’t have known about otherwise.
I went to what was then Yugoslavia, now broken up into Croatia, Slovenia and several other countries
because of watching the Olympics in Sarajevo. Ironically, I didn’t get to Sarajevo but saw a number of beautiful areas before the break up of the country.
I also visited Keukenhof in Holland because of The Victory Garden where they took a trip to the bulb park and I felt I had to see it.
Many of the books I have read have taken place in cities or countries I have been to and can now visualize because of having been there
I travelled with my mom to the Natchez Trace after reading about it in Nevada Barr’s mysteries.
ReplyDeleteI remember standing in St. Peter’s Square and looking up at the obelisk and thinking about Angels and Demons by Dan Brown.
ReplyDeleteIt seems like every place I have ever really wanted to visit was somewhere I'd read about in a book. My first few trips to England were a catalogue of favorite books: Peter Wimsey's Picadilly, Morse's Oxford, Herriott's Yorkshire, Jane Austen's Bath.... There was one big literary pilgrimage disappointment, however; Cadfael's Shrewsbury. Obviously, the books were set in medieval times, but still, there was absolutely nothing about that red-brick busy city that seemed to bear any relation to my book fantasy!
ReplyDeleteYour Gemma and Duncan series are among my favs! And having been to London a bit, I love it when I know exactly where they are! (Heather S)
DeleteI wanted to see the paddington station in London because of paddington bear and we saw it on our first trip to London England
ReplyDeleteDiana, I totally forgot about that. I was determined to see Paddington Station on my first trip to London because of Paddington Bear!
DeleteI hope my four Linder and Donatelli books will inspire some of you to want to visit the beautiful Swiss city of Bern! As for me, I'd been to Venice before I read Donna Leon for the first time, but on my next visit, I went to the address of the Venice police station that she describes just to see the door that Guido Brunetti walks in and out of every day.
ReplyDeleteYour Linder and Donatelli books are amazing! Probably will never go to to Switzerland, but feel that you books do a wonderful job of creating authentic place. (Heather S)
DeleteYes, Kim, they have!!!!!
DeleteYes, yes to your questions. I visited Deadwood after reading Ann Charles' Deadwood series. And to North Carolina after watching The Last of the Mohicans. And to Folly Beach after reading Karen White's On Folly Beach. And there are many more places I want to visit after reading about them, both here and abroad.
ReplyDeleteAlthough I have not yet read your books, I have been to Bern and it is a beautiful city. When I went to Switzerland with my mother I made sure that we went there because I knew she would enjoy it as much as I did.
ReplyDeleteI got in trouble for reading Centennial by James Michner when we were on a family vacation in Colorado some fifty years ago. My parents felt that I was spending too much time with my nose in the book, rather than looking at the scenery. But I remember being so excited to read about the Platte River as we were crossing it!
ReplyDeleteSorry, forgot to add my name - Karen R
ReplyDeleteBefore going to Israel and Hawaii I read James Michener’s books about each place. I was so glad that I did. I recognized places that I read about in his books, and I felt like I was visiting places that I already knew.
ReplyDeleteDebRo
What a wonderful trip you had, Lucy. Thanks for sharing so many of the places that were in the novel. What a treat! I try to read books set in places that I'm going to travel or by authors who live int he places I'm traveling--it definitely adds to the experience.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was younger, I was obsessed with the Anne of Green Gables series – and was lucky enough that my parents wanted to visit PEI - so I got to visit Cavendish and Charlottetown….. imagining myself as that redheaded imp romping through the fields.
ReplyDeleteAnd, of course, when I read any of the Key West food critic series, I have to have a notebook with me to write down many of the places. We are in Key West usually twice a year, and have found some fun out-of-the-way places based on Haly’s adventures.
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I forgot to add my name too. – Bettsie Brace.
DeleteHow about the Bow Street Runners, mentioned often in British historical mysteries? Last time I was inLondon, Bow Street was still there, law building and all. What fun to see it!
ReplyDeleteI loved English books as a child and my first trip to London ( or anywhere) I felt as if those books were coming alive- a boat ride on the Thames, the pigeons from Mary Poppins, the cheese restaurant Dickens liked, (yes, very touristy, but still!) King Henry's maze.
ReplyDelete