LIVING A LIFE IN BOOKS: HOLIDAYS

 



 

I have had some wonderful holidays in my life, and yet I am secretly always longing to jump into my favourite books and share a holiday there.

I once wrote a post about a destination resort with the title

There may be murderers, but no riff raff

which pretty much sums it up, right? Can you work out which trip-based book that was without checking?


I’m looking at these particular choices - not quite all based on crime books, but let's start with one of the best:

 

1)  A cruise on the Nile. Yes, even if the Richest Woman in England, Linnet Doyle, is going to be murdered, I want to be on the SS Karnak in Agatha Christie’s Death on the Nile.  I even know which table I shall sit at in the dining-room: I want to be with Mrs Allerton for meals. I love so much the early scene in which she is looking round the dining room and identifying the other guests, matching them with her list, discussing people's clothes. I would have been her perfect companion in this and in all future chat sessions.

the richest woman in a 'simple'dress


Tip: watch out for your lipstick. Someone will pretend to be having a nice girly chat and put a gun in your bag

Now, you could do a whole blogpost on holidays in Agatha Christie, and guess what – I did

Tuesday Night Club: Choice holidays from Christie Tours

So you can read more, though I included bad holidays as well as good ones there.

 

2)  Some generic hotel in the French countryside, or maybe a nice small town in Italy or Greece – shutters at the window, a shady courtyard. A waiter will bring an aperitif as we sit outside under a vine or a tree. Who is that suspicious man in the corner? Only time will tell. Authors: Mary Stewart, Elizabeth Ferrars



Tip: take a compact, so you can use the mirror to spy on someone else while pretending to fix your makeup

 

3)  A Hotel in the South of France where the guests are all up in everyone else’s business. There is a tremendous Eric Ambler book – Epitaph for a Spy – which is an ur-text for this kind of thing. I love drinks on the terrace, spying on each other at mealtimes, playing billiards together. There is (obv) ‘an emaciated blonde in satin beach pyjamas and imitation pearl earrings the size of grapes’. Later she is ‘swathed in a semi-transparent pale blue peignoir, sitting on the bed manicuring her nails’.

Epitaph for a Spy by Eric Ambler

 

Ambler hero looking relaxed and vacation-ish

Tip: Watch out for your roll of film. What a nostalgic idea that is! I may have to collect examples of rolls of film, prints and negatives (for example in Christie’s The Man in the Brown Suit). All gone now, young people probably don’t even know what those film canisters looked like. (Who remembers the Guardian readers’ obsession with uses for a 35mm container?)

 

4)  A 1950s hotel that has posh people in it, but still has shared bathrooms (obviously I would hate this in real life). There’s an obscure book by John and Emory Bonnet, 1959, No Grave for a Lady

Tuesday Night Club: Holidays & How They Change

And I used it to look at what was taken for granted back then. This one is set in an imaginary Channel Island called Lyonesse, and is joy from start to finish. 

Tip: get to the bathroom early for hot water privileges




5) The key to a holiday hotel in the past was that it had a writing-room – in case you’re not sure, that’s a room where you go to write letters, as is essential on holiday. The two hotels at 3 and 4 both have them. Perhaps the last actual instance of this was in the wonderful

Thus Was Adonis Murdered by Sarah Caudwell

It’s from 1981, and as I explained in the post, ‘Julia writes letters  to her friendsevery day, updating them on events (! Yes, you just have to suspend your disbelief. And believe us, any young people reading, this didn’t happen even then, in the days before email and mobile phone.

Tip: check your guide-books carefully

6)  A lovely package holiday with a wide collection of other guests: You can all get to know each other, fall in love, and keep watch as to who was sneaking out to the beach or back to the hotel.

Key example: Tour de force by Christianna Brand.



Tip: watch out for a tear in your bikini

7) A long journey by liner from the UK to New Zealand. Ngaio Marsh’s books are a chancy business, many of them do not stand up to contemporary scrutiny, but Singing in the Shrouds is a marvellous picture of an ocean voyage (it’s not really a holiday, more of a journey, but I’m counting it in). OK so there’s a serial killer on board, but there is also Mrs Dillington-Black, with her 'feather in her hat, her earrings, the orchids on her great bust and her furs.’

Singing in the Shrouds by Ngaio Marsh



 

Tip: Be careful of people who sing over you and break your necklace. Move away quickly



 

Then there are:

Holidays I do not want to go on in any circs: camping, hiking and sailing. Swallows and Amazons versions of that. The coach trip in Nemesis – it did not sound as luxurious as advertised by Agatha Christie, and in addition they seem to be forever moving and changing locations without actually getting anywhere or travelling very far. Bertram’s Hotel is cancelled for obvious reasons.

 

But…. The finest holiday in any book comes here

 

The Fortnight in September by RC Sherriff

 

No notes, no questions taken, just read it if you never have. The post will tell you why.

 

 

Comments

  1. Ah yes - Mary Stewart came into my mind immediately. You'd have to be prepared for some discomfort and suspense of course, but always a happy ending. Not sure about the Fortnight in September - the Stevens family is lovely, but that boarding house really was on its last legs! The summer that stays in my mind though is the one in Elizabeth Bowen's short novel A World of Love - summer verging on autumn in a decaying great house in the Irish countryside. It's many years since I read the book but her descriptions of the summer countryside and of a leisurely lifestyle on the verge of change have stayed with me.

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    1. I've lately been re-reading some Elizabeth Bowen, but haven't come to that one yet - I will look out for it. You do a great job of making it sound enticing

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  2. What a good choice of holidays, Moira! I can see the appeal of all of them . I'm very glad you included Thus Was Adonis Murdered. It's a shame Caudwell wrote only four books on this series. There's also the beautiful New England coast in Phoebe Atwood Taylor's The Cape Cod Mystery. Cool breezes, enjoying the ocean, drinks and dinner in the evenings...and murder.

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    1. Oh yes, thanks Margot, Cape Cod is a great addition. And those lovely seaside houses

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  3. I'd love to be snowbound on the Orient Express. Not very seasonal though. I recently read The Greengage Summer for the first time and Rumer Godden's dreamy evocation of a long hot summer in a grand(ish) French hotel is miraculous. All the descriptions of food are very alluring too.

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    1. oh yes, I could fancy a snowbound train. And also a greengage summer....

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  4. Gladys Mitchell had numerous examples of holiday travel (some of it mixed with business). There were walking and bus tours in Britain plus trips abroad. Mrs B had a couple holidays in Greece, Come Away Death and Lament for Leto. She had a trip to Holland in Death of a Delft Blue, but that was for a conference or some other business matter. I'm surprised she never had a convention in Geneva!

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    1. She certianly did, though I'd not sure she is the ideal holiday companion. I think better for reading about than joining in

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  5. Carol Carnac's Crossed Skis had a skiing holiday but I'm not sure of the country, presumably Switzerland. E C Lorac let Inspector MacDonald have a busman's holiday in Fell country.

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    1. And there was a Patricia Moyes one about skiing too... I love the way that at those times it was such a niche activitiy, and expensive - most of the readers wouldn't even have thought of it

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    2. Moyes wrote a few other books based on holidays as well as Dead men don't ski. In which people seemed spent little time skiing and huge amount of time in cable cars. The curious affair of the third dog is set in the English countryside where Emily Tibbetts is roped into running a Hoop la stall at a fête when she stays with her sister at Gorsmere and Tibbets trace a missing greyhound and the Tibbetts return home from a holiday in Amsterdam on The night ferry to death. Honestly, it's just much more restful to stay at home.

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    3. Gobbledegook post, sorry and I meant ski lifts not cable cars. I do enjoy the way that the Tibbetts often feel slightly under or overdressed, slightly out of their depth in unfamiliar places and situations but turning this social unease into into a positive when investigating crimes. My top tip is dress slightly wrongly and confuse the baddies.

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  6. Harriet Vane's ill-fated walking tour in Have His Carcase. Would a Gaudy count as a holiday?

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    1. Just proving my point about why hiking holidays are awful. The Hotel Resplendent, on the other hand...

      It's a good question, whether a reunion counts as a holiday. Not sure of the answer

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  7. Joan Cockin's Inspector Cam is on a holiday (he hopes) in Villainy at Vespers. Poirot spends a couple Christmases at country homes, in a professional capacity, but in Hercule Poirot's Christmas, Inspector Japp has an uncomfortable holiday in Wales!

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    1. Oh yes, I really enjoyed reading about his Cornish holiday,, and the long-suffering Mrs Cam

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  8. IIRC in Wentworth's Out of the Past, Miss Silver and her niece are having a holiday by the sea when a murder happens near their boarding house. Trying to remember any others where Maud is on holiday rather than seeing her client in London, but can't think of one off-hand!

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    1. Yes, she's on holiday with Ethel Burkett isn't she?
      I'm sure there must be others, but they do tend to drift away in my mind

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  9. Was Katharine Grey on holiday in Mystery of the Blue Train, or was she just going to spend the winter in Europe? Or is that the same thing?

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    1. I'm not sure - it might have been described as 'travelling' (always far superior to mere tourism) or 'wintering abroad'. Definitely for enjoyment though, so counts as a holiday

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  10. Mrs DB would like to say it's Blick, but then she laughs good humouredly, shaking all her chins

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    1. She is SUCH a great character. I am guessing this is Lucy?

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  11. The moon sight-seeing in A Fall of Moondust by Clarke turns out terribly, but it would be a spectacular thing to have done.

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  12. The boarding house in A Fortnight in September is truly awful, and Mrs. Huggett's doomed efforts to maintain her livelihood make her a most pitiful character. You admire the Stevens family for their loyalty. My husband and I look forward to new experiences and delights on vacation, but when we stay in my home town in the UK, we want everything to be the same. If a favorite restaurant isn't quite as good anymore, we still want to go there. One of the beauties of this wonderful book is how it shows the importance of their routines to the family - there's a long passage almost at the end of the book, starting "A year wasn't a long time, really. They would soon be here again" where Mr. Stevens reveals what the yearly holiday means to him, even though it's modest in every way. I could go on about this book - Mrs. Stevens and her glass of port, Mary's sad little romance, but I join you in directing readers to your post.
    Nerys

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