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Novels that evoke British places very well ...please recommend

72 replies

revolvenotevolve · 20/08/2013 19:53

Id love to read some novels set around Britain and that really evoke the place so it inspires a visit ! Any recommendations ?

OP posts:
comfortablymum · 20/08/2013 20:03

I really enjoyed 'Notes from a Small Island' by Bill Bryson quite a few years ago now. He's an American writing about his travels along the south coast and his affectionate, humorous and quite accurate observations of the geographical areas covered and of the British in general - observations that only a foreigner could make. There's a lovely bit when he arrives in West Bay and describes a restaurant he comes across in an episode of what could only be described as serendipity that prompted me to do the same a few years ago and that restaurant continues to be one of my (and now my children's) favourites. I don't know how much West Bay has changed since Broadchurch was filmed there but it won't have been spoilt.

Quangle · 20/08/2013 21:12

Salt by Jeremy Page is fantastically evocative of East Anglia.

I don't actually think you can beat Dickens for a sense of place - Great Expectations for E Anglia and London. I think of Dickens so often as I walk around London - he is everywhere! I went up the Shard recently and seeing how tightly packed everything is and how the Victorians just thought "stuff Southwark Cathedral - we're putting a railway across there" - Dickens captured all that and London still has his spirit, I think.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 20/08/2013 21:16

Great idea for a thread.

Dracula - Whitby
Persuasion - Lyme Regis

AndyMurraysBalls · 20/08/2013 21:17

Wuthering Heights.
Rebecca.

hotair · 20/08/2013 21:17

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Morgause · 20/08/2013 21:19

Any Poldark novel - Cornwall
How Green was my Valley - The Welsh Valleys

LordEmsworth · 20/08/2013 21:44

North & South - Manchester and Hampshire.

tripfiction · 21/08/2013 08:40

Rivers of London is a great suggestion for Soho. Enjoyed that.

You can try the following which is a random selection from the blog:
Cornwall: tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/UK%20%28Cornwall%29
Isle of Man:
tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/UK%20%28Isle%20of%20Man%29
Scarborough:
tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/UK%20%28Scarborough%29
Yorkshire:
tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/UK%20%28Yorkshire%29
A collection of novels to evoke the British coastline:
tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/Novels-that-capture-the-flavour-of-the-British-Coast.html
And two UK Roadtrips:
tripfiction.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/Road-trip-Britain-via-books.html

Hope you find something.....

JassyRadlett · 21/08/2013 08:46

The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society has a good feel of Guernsey to it - at least, the Guernsey I've visited, I've never lived there.

PetiteRaleuse · 21/08/2013 08:52

Jamaica Inn for Cornwall. I've never been but feel like I have.

DuchessofMalfi · 21/08/2013 09:07

Rebecca, My Cousin Rachel - two more Daphne Du Maurier novels set in Cornwall.

Hardy's novels for Dorset. Tess for North Dorset's Blackmore Vale. Mayor of Casterbridge for Dorchester etc.

DuchessofMalfi · 21/08/2013 09:08

And The Book of Ebenezer le Page by G B Edwards for Guernsey.

revolvenotevolve · 21/08/2013 10:08

Thanks for ideas so far and tripfiction for the links Thanks any other ideas anyone - perhaps some modern stuff too?

OP posts:
bibliomania · 21/08/2013 12:41

Some crime fiction can be good - Ann Cleeves for Shetland and Northumberland. I'm not a major fan of Ian Rankin and the Inspector Morse, but they might give a feel for Edinburgh and Oxford respectively.

The Mapp and Lucia books by E F Benson for Rye.

The 39 Steps for Scotland.

On Chesil beach.

The French Lieutenant's Woman, also for Lyme Regis.

MiddleAgeMiddleEngland · 21/08/2013 14:14

I'd agree with lots of the above (haven't read the rest!)

The Peter May trilogy for the Outer Hebrides if you'd like to venture that far afield.

Definately yes to the Morse books for Oxford. Also Larkin's Jill for another Oxford book.

bibliomania I love Fowles' FLT, my favourite of all his novels.

RemusLupinsBiggestGroupie · 21/08/2013 14:21

Ooh yes to 'Jill.' Also, Forster's 'Maurice' and Waugh's 'Brideshead Revisited.'

SconeRhymesWithGone · 21/08/2013 14:22

Another mystery writer: P.D. James.

clearsommespace · 21/08/2013 14:23

'Waterland' by Graham Swift really evokes the Fens but I'm not sure it would inspire a visit.

Ellisisland · 23/08/2013 07:48

NW by Zadie Smith for modern day London

Selks · 23/08/2013 07:50

Tess of the D'Urbervilles.

Selks · 23/08/2013 07:52

George Mackay Brown's short stories for their impressions of Orkney.

crumpet · 23/08/2013 14:41

9 Tailors by Dorothy L Sayers -the fens.

AphraBehn · 23/08/2013 15:10

Bath is still very much like how Jane Austen describes it in Northanger Abbey and Persuasion.

SmokedMackerel · 23/08/2013 15:20

Outlander by Diana Gabaldon, for the Scottish highlands (it is set in the eighteenth century though!)

Chocolatestain · 23/08/2013 15:45

It's another oldie, but A Glastonbury Romance by John Cowper Powys is great for evoking Glastonbury and its surrounding countryside before the new agey types moved in.