I am also just back from London where I spent four days doing research for the NIP, which is set in Victorian London. I got back late last night after a flight delay, but it was a productive trip. There is nothing to match the thrill of going to an archive and being let handle documents that were signed by your characters. Or seeing new photos of them that make you look at them a bit differently. I'm grinning like a loon now thinking about all the valuable stuff I saw and did for the novel while in London. And I ate cake, oodles of it.
I did research here:
And while I was there I visited this pair, in honour of Wolf Hall:
Anne Boleyn |
Thomas Cromwell |
My main character liked to eat here so, naturally, I had to do the same:
Café Royal - window treats |
Valrhona choc orange cake & tea |
And while in Kew we ate in this lovely pub, where the halloumi on ciabatta was tdf:
Otherwise it was wandering, eating and even accidentally bumping into friend and fellow writer Kathleen Murray and her son across the road from here:
St Paul's Cathedral |
And I found an Emily quote in the Bishopsgate Hall:
I bought books in Foyles refurbished place on Charing Cross Road:
Saw a grumpy kid off Brick Lane:
And an illusionist on Regent Street:
Plus iconic thingies, like The Gherkin:
I also bought two little essays on book shops, in chapbook form, to give away here, Ann Patchett's The Bookshop Strikes Back and The Unknown Unknown by Mark Forsyth. I'll post to anywhere in the world. Simply leave a comment and say which booklet you would prefer to win.
London was, as always, fab. I love the frenetic pace of it all, the mad Tube queues, the fantastic veggie food, the posh shops like Liberty, the abundant charity shops and markets, the beautiful Victorian square we stayed on, the Londoners who are so Londony they are almost like parodies of themselves. All of it is intoxicating, every time.
But it was equally lovely to be in my own bed last night, surrounded by silence, and to get back to the desk this morning armed with all I had learned about my characters, and their city. It proved a slow writing day (travel always distracts and unsettles me) but I'm hoping tomorrow will be more productive. Onward!
Nu, "The Bookshop Strikes Back" is my pick! for our lovely editor and friend, Linda Black...we are housesitting @ the infamous, historical Winslow-Haskell Castle in Auburndale, MA, near Boston...gypsy style! Win me this book!! LOVE! Marcelle
ReplyDeleteAre you on the East coast now??!! I can't keep up, lady. Your names, you and Linda's, are in the hat :)
ReplyDeleteYes!!..am back to share the op on this amazing castle-house, got a profile writing job in NYC next week and off to the Vineyard after..before I even get to Colrain! Wammmo... May 1 fly to Dublin!!!! Moving fast.xxxx
ReplyDeleteLove the pics, the history, art and buildings, yummy cake, and the "grumpy kid"!
ReplyDeleteGlad you got everything your wanted and more out of your research trip!
Could I go in the hat for The Unknown Unknown, please?
That orange chocolate cake!! I really do feel I should accompany you on these trips to eh... Carry your luggage, and, ehhh.... Mind you, you know? Hope the poxed baby gets better soon! Xx
ReplyDeleteRachel o thanks for reading and, of course, you are in the hat.
ReplyDeleteMarcella - how cool! I googled the house - fab!
ReplyDeleteEms - I'll throw you in the hat too. Yes, a baggage carrier, heh heh.
ReplyDeleteOh to have an excuse to visit London again! Your visit sounds like the perfect mix of enjoyment and enjoyment. Can you please put me in the hat for Mark Forsyth's essay?
ReplyDeleteIt's a wonderful of a place, Margaret, to be sure. You are in the hat, my dear.
ReplyDeleteIt's a wonderful of a place, Margaret, to be sure. You are in the hat, my dear.
ReplyDeleteThe Bookshop Fights Back.
ReplyDeleteYour trip looks wonderful. Delighted you had a good time. It's been years since I was in London, must plan a trip back.
What a fabulous trip, I just love your pic of that grump kid amidst all the crazy Brick Lane deco. Could I ask you to put my lovely almost Mother-in Laws name into the hat please? Mrs Ann Pyatt regularly buys the most wonderful books for me and she is retiring this week so would love 'The Unknown,unknown. Thanks.xx
ReplyDeleteMary Lys, safely in the hat!
ReplyDeleteShauna, your almost MIL is in the draw :)
ReplyDeleteShauna, your almost MIL is in the draw :)
ReplyDeleteMary Lys, safely in the hat!
ReplyDeleteoh, the bookshop strikes back !! I read a review of it recently, it sounds fantastic. looks like a lovely trip and cake sounds good.
ReplyDeleteWith your words and text I felt your excitement of knowing you were where you needed to be as a writer and as an adventurer. As for my pick, "The Bookshop Strikes Back." Who can resist applauding such a noble effort?
ReplyDeleteSounds like a wonderful trip! I would love to be added to the hat for the Ann Patchett.
ReplyDeleteYou are in, Laura!
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ReplyDeleteBillie - you're safely in the hat!
ReplyDeleteJackie - you too!
Billie - you're safely in the hat!
ReplyDeleteJackie - you too!
Karen McDonnell has asked to be in the draw via FB, as she had trouble posting here.
ReplyDeleteSo, you're in, Karen, for The Bookshop Strikes Back.
Draw tomorrow - Thursday 6th!
And the winners, as drawn by my lovely assistant, Finn, are:
ReplyDeleteMary Lys - Ann Patchett's chapbook
Rachel Fenton - Mark Forsyth's chapbook
Congrats, dear, ladies.
Please send your addresses to me at nuala AT naualnichonchuir DOT com
(Rae, if you are still at Lavery, I have yours!)
Oh YUSSSSSS! Thank you~ so very stoked to have won! And I'm still at Lavery :)
ReplyDelete