8 Literary Destinations Around the World

Visit places that inspired your favourite novels, see where your best-loved authors lived and wrote, and explore cities you’ve thus far only experienced on the pages of a special book. Make a point of saving

Visit places that inspired your favourite novels, see where your best-loved authors lived and wrote, and explore cities you’ve thus far only experienced on the pages of a special book.

Make a point of saving up as far in advance as you can. You could aside your 13th cheque, put your knowledge of the game to work as you bet online with favourable NRL Premiership odds, or even beat the dealer to 21 at online casino! Once you have enough to fund your break, all you’ll need to do is decide where to begin.

1. Anne’s Green Gables

If you especially loved L. M. Montgomery’s Anne of Green Gables series, be sure to make a pilgrimage to Prince Edward Island, off the Canadian coast.

You’ll be able to step inside the 19th century farmhouse the lonely orphan ended up calling home, and follow the Haunted Wood trail that taught Anne and her bosom friend Diana about the perils of an imagination gone wild!

2. Beatrix Potter’s Hill Top Farm

If you grew up with Samuel Whiskers and Peter Rabbit you’ll have no trouble recognising Beatrix Potter’s 17th-century hearth and rambling garden.

With her favourite ornaments kept where they were when she was alive, you may well find yourself expecting to see her striding through the door as you explore her Lakeland home!

3. Dublin’s Literary Pub Crawl

Actors perform works by Yeats and James Joyce as you visit eight of Dublin’s most legendary pubs.

The tour includes Trinity College, which counts Oscar Wilde as an alumni, and finishes up at Davy Byrnes, which Leopold Bloom visits in Ulysses, by Joyce.

4. Hemingway’s Key West Home

Hemingway shared his striking Spanish-colonial home with clowders of cats, whose offspring still stalk the tropical gardens surrounding it.

Take in the study, where the author famous for his Iceberg Theory of writing composed To Have and Have Note about the US island city and its locals on the typewriter still sitting on his desk.

5. Karen Blixen’s Nairobi Home

If you were moved by Blixen’s autobiography Out of Africa, or the 1985 Sydney Pollack film starring Meryl Streep based on book, then Blixen’s Kenyan living space is a must-see.

With mosquito nets gracefully draped over beds and the grounds manicured to perfection, you can have a look at where the author lived in the 1920s.

6. Pablo Neruda’s Santiago Home

La Chascona, the eccentric home of the best-known Chilean poet, is situated in Barrio Bellavista, the bohemian quarter of Santiago.

Unconventional personal keepsakes fill up every room, and the secret passages and other surprises it holds will delight fans.

7. The Père-Lachaise Cemetery in Paris

Seek out the graves of some of the most famous writers in the world at the best-known graveyard in Paris.

Marcel Proust, Abelard and Heloise, and Molière are all resting here, and the cemetery boasts a number of memorials as flamboyant as its occupants once were.

8. The Sydney Writers Walk

Bronze plaques engraved with inspirational quotes have been embedded in the Circular Quay’s surrounding walkway in Sydney, Australia.

With literary excerpts from Charles Darwin, D H Lawrence, Christina Stead, and more,  the plaques will make your stroll along the Sydney Harbour up to the Opera House that much more interesting.