Favorite London Novels?
#1
Original Poster
Joined: Sep 2005
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Favorite London Novels?
We have taken advantage of American's Europe sale and are going to London for Thanksgiving (actually traveling to LHR on Thanksgiving Day). I would love suggestions on your favorite fiction, set in London, so that I am in a proper British mood! I am not a romance novel reader, but love historical fiction, spy novels, mysteries...
#2
Joined: Oct 2004
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There've been some very good threads on this topic in the past. Here's a fairly recent one with some good ideas to get you started:
http://www.fodors.com/community/euro...avel-books.cfm
http://www.fodors.com/community/euro...avel-books.cfm
#4
Joined: Feb 2006
Posts: 57,091
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hi paris,
anything by Dickens is very atmospheric - Oliver is a classic, largely set in London. from the ones mentioned on the thread quoted above, I'd suggest the Lord Peter Whimsey novels and John Mortimer's books about Rumpole are well-worth reading.
have a great trip,
regards, ann
anything by Dickens is very atmospheric - Oliver is a classic, largely set in London. from the ones mentioned on the thread quoted above, I'd suggest the Lord Peter Whimsey novels and John Mortimer's books about Rumpole are well-worth reading.
have a great trip,
regards, ann
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#9
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Joined: Sep 2005
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Ann, thank you. Read Dickens as a youngster...I think it might be wise to read those again. I love series books as well, so the Whimsey and Rumpole sound great.
Historytraveler, thank you. The Rutherford book is on my list.
Mnapoli, I am definitely going to grab one or both of those Sansom books.
All wonderful recommendations! I am taking my list to Borders and Half-Price Books tomorrow.
Historytraveler, thank you. The Rutherford book is on my list.
Mnapoli, I am definitely going to grab one or both of those Sansom books.
All wonderful recommendations! I am taking my list to Borders and Half-Price Books tomorrow.
#10
Joined: Oct 2004
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Don't you just love Half-Price Books? When I was there a few weeks ago they had the first of the Maisie books by Violet Winspear recommended on that other thread. I think I paid somewhere around 5 bucks for it. A very good deal!
#14
Joined: Feb 2004
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Thin's recommendation is one of the best you'll ever get.
A very nice novel set in contemporary London is According to Mark by Penelope Lively.
How about Brief Lives by Anita Brookner?
Have you read About A Boy by Nick Hornby? Very good.
A very nice novel set in contemporary London is According to Mark by Penelope Lively.
How about Brief Lives by Anita Brookner?
Have you read About A Boy by Nick Hornby? Very good.
#15

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,651
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You need go no further than Rumpole of the Bailey, by the late, great John Mortimer. You can visit every single spot he talks about, but need to know the real name (I can help with this, having a little OCD on the subject). For example, Pommeroy's Wine bar on Fleet Street is, in fact, El Vino, where you might enjoy a vintage "Chateau Thames Embankment". It helped that I worked right around the corner for 4 years!
#19
Joined: Feb 2003
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Will Thomas's Barker/Llewelyn series (not the second book -- that takes place mainly in Liverpool and Paris) would fit the bill, and it's really light reading for historical mystery fiction. These are set about 125 years ago. Half-Price Books should have some of them -- the big HPB in Dallas usually does. Also the three books by David Liss featuring Benjamin Weaver are solid period-piece mysteries in Hanoverian London.
Good friend of mine touts Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby. If you live and die with the ups and downs of any sports team, you can identify (the book is about an Arsenal soccer fanatic, not some whacknut Redsux fan like in the movie).
The absolute classic spy novel that takes place in London is Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, which LeCarre wrote during the Cold War before he went completely off his head.
Good friend of mine touts Fever Pitch by Nick Hornby. If you live and die with the ups and downs of any sports team, you can identify (the book is about an Arsenal soccer fanatic, not some whacknut Redsux fan like in the movie).
The absolute classic spy novel that takes place in London is Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, which LeCarre wrote during the Cold War before he went completely off his head.




