21st Century Literature discussion

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Question of the Week > Is There A Book That Made You Want To Travel Somewhere That Wasn't On Your Radar? (6/29/25)

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message 1: by Marc (new)

Marc (monkeelino) | 3454 comments Mod
Has any book you read ever made you want to travel to a place that wasn't already on your radar? What was the book and what was the destination?


message 2: by Henk (new)

Henk | 85 comments Recently The Adventures of China Iron by Gabriela Cabezón Cámara did that, I had Patagonia on the list for a long time but the nature descriptions in the novel are really impressive and makes you long for a trek through the pampas


message 3: by Joy D (new)

Joy D | 10 comments I actually went to a place after reading a book about it:
Astoria: John Jacob Astor and Thomas Jefferson's Lost Pacific Empire: A Story of Wealth, Ambition, and Survival.

It helped that it was not terribly far from where I live. I took 2 weeks, and drove from Nevada to California and up the Oregon coast to Astoria, staying in bed & breakfasts along the way. Also did some hiking. It was a beautiful summer vacation.


message 4: by Lark (new)


message 5: by Ruben (new)

Ruben | 68 comments Tenochtitlan (now called Mexico City), thanks to Alvaro Enrigue


message 6: by Hester (new)

Hester (inspiredbygrass) | 141 comments The Fens in Cambridgeshire after reading Waterland by Graham Swift . I'm completely beguiled and keep going back .

As a teenager I read North and South by Mrs Gaskell and moved to Manchester . Have lived less than an hour from the city ever since .

I'd love to go Finland and see Tove Jansson's island home


message 7: by Whitney (new)

Whitney | 2498 comments Mod
Ruben wrote: "Tenochtitlan (now called Mexico City), thanks to Alvaro Enrigue"

Good answer! It especially made me want to see it as it was in the 1600's.


message 8: by Emmeline (new)

Emmeline | 191 comments Hester, I love your answer!

The Fat Woman Next Door is Pregnant led to a life-long obsession with a Montreal that no longer exists. The real Montreal is pretty nice to visit too though.


message 9: by Hester (new)

Hester (inspiredbygrass) | 141 comments Thanks Emmeline . And I'm going to ferret out a copy of Michel Tremblay s novel . Sounds right up my street . I could also recommend Magnolia Street by Louis Golding followed by Five Silver Daughters written in the nineteen thirties and looking back at working class Cheetham Hill in Manchester . I'd forgotten all about it until you replied . Also the groundbreaking A Classic Slum by Robert Roberts that explores his own childhood at a similar time in Salford, Manchester. Some cities never leave you alone and part of the fun is living through the decades of transformation .


message 10: by Carl (new)

Carl Reads (carlreadsbooks) | 39 comments I'm reading a book that is doing exactly this (the Australian highlands); although I'm scared of spiders =/

Dusk


message 11: by Jess (new)

Jess Penhallow | 36 comments I recently read Latitudes of Longing and it really makes me want to visit South Asia especially the Andaman Islands


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