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This was a nice introduction to London during my trip. I would have enjoyed it more if I understood all of the literary references.

One of my favorite non-fiction books. If you are a life long reader and have travelled to London in books you'll love this book.

Anna Quindlen, you're great, but so damn pretentious.
suzanne_earley's profile picture

suzanne_earley's review

3.0

Read Harder Challenge 2017 -- Read a travel memoir

I was looking for travel memoirs that had a book theme to them and thought I'd hit the jackpot when I found this one. It was only OK to me. I didn't care for the author's attitude.

If English literature is part of your formation as a human being, you'll love this beautifully descriptive and nostalgic book.

It started beautifully & her words are a dream but there were just too many glib comments.
As a Londoner I just found her comments at time without depth & grounding.

3.5

I wanted to like this, but it left me largely unmoved. Enjoyable but lightweight; I wish Quindlen had explored her Anglophilia a little more critically.

Imagined London isn't really a travel book. It's more of a place book. An homage. Anna's love of London - its' characters both real and imagined, its' spaces both past and present - is an essential and relevant part of this book. She doesn't pretend to be anything but a huge fan of this amazing city and the works of literature it has both inspired and produced.

If you are a lover of British literature, many names and book titles will thrill you with their familiarity as Quindlen gives us a tour around London. Of course there is Dickens and Shakespeare, but we meet Heyer and Waugh, Austen and Doyle as we make our literary way. It's not the sort of book you'd necessarily take with you on a journey - but one you'd want to read beforehand, to get your feet wet a bit and know how to best use your time if seeing bookish sites is one of your top priorities.

But more than all that, Quindlen is also thinking about herself as a reader and as an American who loves everything British and about the way we imagine things in our head versus the way they are in real life. Perhaps a city like London just has to be appreciated in many different levels - as the place that it was, the place it was only ever imagined to be and the place that it actually is. Quindlen's got a beautiful style and while maybe the subject of this book isn't for everyone, for what it is, it is beautifully done.

This will never leave my house. A book on two of my faves: literature and London