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Tag Archives: Platform 9 ¾
Series 1: Adventures of a literary stalker
So there I was, standing soaked right through to my M & S bra high up on the Yorkshire moors, peering through the twilight to get a photo of a cliff annoyingly obscured by gusts of rain. Ten minutes later, … Continue reading
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Tagged 221B Baker Street, Abbotsford, Brontë Parsonage Museum Haworth, Charles Kingsley, Chawton Cottage, Doone Valley, Emily Brontë, Harry Potter, Higher Bockhampton, history of reading, Jane Austen, John Keats, Keats’s House Hampstead, Kensington Gardens, literary landmark, literary landscape, literary museums, literary pilgrimage, literary tourism, literary tourist, Loch Katrine, Loch Lomond, Lorna Doone, love of literature, Malham Cove, nicola j. watson, Nicola Watson, Platform 9 ¾, R.D. Blackmore, Rhymer’s Stone, Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott, The Literary Tourist: Readers and Places in Romantic and Victorian Britain, Thomas Hardy
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