Tag Archives: books

New Literary Maps of Charles Dickens and Sherlock Holmes

Check out two new new collections we launched this morning: Sherlock Holmes and Charles Dickens. Explore Victorian London of Oliver Twist or Edwin Drood or follow along in the footsteps of Holmes and Dr. Watson as they solve the curious case of the dog in the nighttime. The full press is release below.

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Placing Literature Launches Charles Dickens and Sherlock Holmes Collections

Readers, travelers and literary tourists can explore more than
600 places around Victorian London

NEW HAVEN, CONN., Oct. 13, 2016—Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) today launched two literary maps from Victorian literature—Charles Dickens curated by the Dickens Society and Sherlock Holmes curated by Thomas Bruce Wheeler, author of The Mapped London of Sherlock Holmes. The interactive map allows readers to browse, visit and share the sites of famous (and not so famous) scenes from the Dickens and Arthur Conan Doyle canons.

Placing Literature is the global clearinghouse for location-based literary information, collecting crowdsourced information about books and the locations where they take place—and displaying them all on an interactive world map. Since launching in June 2013, readers, educators, librarians and authors have mapped more than 3,500 places from novels, short stories, poems and plays ranging from Shakespeare to Kerouac.

“A single location can evince layers upon layers of imaginaries as Placing Literature reveals,” said Tom Ue, a Victorian Literature scholar at the University of Toronto. “Taking a stroll along the Piccadilly of Victorian and Modernist writing, one may rub shoulders with the adventurer Lord Roxton or, just as likely, the gentleman thief A. J. Raffles. Placing Literature is a wonderful resource for exploring these very connections between literature and geography.”

“Please, Sir, I Want Some More”

ds-logoThe Dickens Society worked with its members around the world to map more than 100 locations from 12 Dickens novels, including Oliver Twist, David Copperfield, Pickwick Papers, Great Expectations, A Tale of Two Cities, Bleak House and Little Dorrit. Participants in the crowd-sourced project included admirers of the Victorian author from academic scholars at universities to voracious readers.

The collection will continue to be curated and updated by members of the Dickens Society in hopes of maintaining a live collection that researchers and readers can repeatedly visit to learn new insights into how the author used real places from his life in his stories. At the University of Sassari, Italy, Simonetta Falchi has even led a class of undergraduate students in mapping Oliver Twist as part of their studies, and several of Charles Dickens’ descendants are also involved with the project.

“Seeing this collection of Dickens sites on a virtual map gives you a sense of the incredible scope of Dickens’s fiction and his deep connection to place and space,” said Emily Bowles, Communications Committee Chair for the Dickens Society. “This is a fantastic resource for both academics and enthusiasts, and something our members will continue to build on.”

“Excellent!” I cried. “Elementary,” said he.

seated-sherlockThe Sherlock Holmes collection is made up of more than 400 locations identified by Thomas Bruce Wheeler in his ebook, The Mapped London of Sherlock Holmes. Wheeler also maintains an interactive Sherlock Holmes map at www.sherlockslondon.com that includes nine “In Sherlock’s and Watson’s footsteps” walking routes. The book and map also contain GPS addresses for walking instructions on smart phones. The book generates street-level photos of the 400 Sherlock Holmes locales. Created over the course of 20 years, the continually maintained map is useful to both casual fans of the great detective as well as serious Sherlockians.

“London, That Great Cesspool…”

Each place card on Placing Literature provides rich content about the book, the scene and the place where each plot point occurs. A place card near Saffron Hill indicates the location of Fagin’s Den in Oliver Twist. While nearby in the same neighborhood, Holmes and Dr. Watson speak with an inspector in The Adventure of the Six Napoleons. In White Chapel sits Princess Puffer’s opium den from the Mystery of Edwin Drood—a real parlor which Dickens and his friends would frequent. Right down the street is the home where Sherlock and Dr. Holmes retrieve a bloodhound named Toby in Sign of the Four.

On each card, visitors can view a photo of the location, search Google and Wikipedia for more information on the place, purchase the book from a local bookstore, write a review on Goodreads, share the place on social media, report an error and even check in, indicating that they’ve been to that particular location.

Placing Literature is on the lookout for additional collections of literary places and is putting out a request for data. Libraries, universities, cultural organizations and researchers should contact info@placingliterature.com if they have existing data or would like to work with Placing Literature to create content for local programming.

About Placing Literature

Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) is a crowdsourcing website that maps literary scenes that take place in real locations. Map a scene from your favorite novel or explore the literature of a place at PlacingLiterature.com. Follow us at Facebook.com/PlacingLiterature and twitter.com/PlacingLit.

 

Tags: #PlacingLiterature, #literaryroadtrip, #maps, #literarymaps, #Dickens, #ArthurConanDoyle, #Sherlock, #OliverTwist, #Victorianliterature, #DickensSociety

 

Placing Literature Launches Dylan Thomas Map

We’re honoring one of the greatest poets of the 20th Century with a new map of places from the Dylan Thomas canon. Thomas was one of the most influential writers of the 20th century and really kicked off the age of the literary rockstar, making appearances all over the world and embracing the new medium of radio. He was known as a master storyteller and produced several radioplays that he would perform live on the air. The Dylan Thomas Centre in Dylan’s hometown of Swansea is curating the collection for us.

 

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Placing Literature Launches Map of Places in Dylan Thomas Poems, Short Stories and Radio Broadcasts

The collection features more than 50 locations in Wales and is curated by the Dylan Thomas Centre in Swansea

 

NEW HAVEN, CONN., Feb. 2, 2016—Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) today launched a literary map of Dylan Thomas poems set across Wales. Curated by the Dylan Thomas Centre in Swansea, the collection includes places that the Welsh poet wrote about in his poems and discussed in his popular radio broadcasts. The interactive map allows readers to browse, visit and share the sites of famous (and not so famous) scenes from the Thomas canon.

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Placing Literature is the global clearinghouse for location-based literary information, collecting crowdsourced information about books and the locations where they take place—and displaying them all on an interactive world map. Since launching in June 2013, readers, educators, librarians and authors have mapped more than 3,000 places from novels, short stories, poems and plays ranging from Shakespeare to Kerouac.

Swansea Council manages the Dylan Thomas Exhibition at the Dylan Thomas Centre in Swansea’s Maritime Quarter. The Council also has a team there who work on literature, outreach and educational programs to promote creative writing and share Dylan’s talents with people of all ages, abilities and backgrounds.

Cllr Robert Francis-Davies, Swansea Council’s Cabinet Member for Enterprise, Development and Regeneration, said: “Dylan Thomas has arguably done more than anyone else in history to put Swansea on the map over the years, so it’s a further boost for the city’s international profile that our most famous son is again being recognized in such an innovative and imaginative way. We look at a number of innovative ways to mark and promote our links with Dylan and projects like this help complement our strategy to preserve his legacy and celebrate his genius Our staff at the Dylan Thomas Centre have done a fantastic job in contributing to the map, which will educate people from across the world on how Swansea inspired the wordsmith, helping attract more virtual and physical visitors to Swansea in future.”

Each place card on Placing Literature provides rich content about the poem, the scene and the place where each plot point occurs. For example, you can click on markers on the map near Swansea to learn about Cwmdonkin Park where Dylan played as a child and memorialized in Reminiscences of Childhood and his radio play Return Journey. Nearby, Swansea Bay plays an important part in the poet’s first collection, 18 poems.

On each card, visitors can view a photo of the location, search Google and Wikipedia for more information on the place, purchase the book from a local bookstore, write a review on Goodreads, share the place on social media, report an error and even check in, indicating that they’ve been to that particular location.

Placing Literature plans to launch additional collections of literary places and is putting out a request for data. Libraries, universities, cultural organizations and researchers should contact info@placingliterature.com if they have existing data or would like to work with Placing Literature to create content for local programming.

About Placing Literature

Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) is a crowdsourcing website that maps literary scenes that take place in real locations. Map a scene from your favorite novel or explore the literature of a place at PlacingLiterature.com. Follow us at Facebook.com/PlacingLiterature and twitter.com/PlacingLit.

About Dylan Thomas Centre

The Dylan Thomas Centre in Swansea is the focal point for exhibitions, studies and events on Dylan Thomas. Visit us at http://www.dylanthomas.com.

Tags: #PlacingLiterature, #literaryroadtrip, #maps, #literarymaps, #DylanThomas, #Swansea, #Wales, #Welshpoetry #poetry

 

Placing Literature Adds Maine Locations

Maine collection includes works by Stephen King, E.B. White and Henry W. Longfellow as well as the 3,000th literary location mapped on the website by users around the world
 

NEW HAVEN, CONN., Feb. 2, 2016—Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) today launched a literary map of Maine that allows readers to browse, visit and share the sites of famous (and not so famous) scenes from Maine literature. The data was sourced from the Maine Sunday Telegram (a part of MaineToday Media) and includes nearly 100 literary places from such authors as Henry W. Longfellow, Stephen King, E.B. White and Elizabeth Strout.

Placing Literature is the global clearinghouse for location-based literary information, collecting crowdsourced information about books and the locations where they take place—and displaying them all on an interactive world map. Since launching in June 2013, readers, educators, librarians and authors have mapped more than 3,000 places from novels, short stories, poems and plays ranging from Shakespeare to Kerouac.

Maine_070716“Maine is quintessentially American and has been the setting for some of the most-loved American novels,” said CEO and Co-Founder Andrew Bardin Williams. “The opportunity to virtually explore literary places gives readers a greater understanding of the books they are reading while enhancing people’s appreciation of the fabulous places in the great state of Maine.”

Each place card on Placing Literature provides rich content about the book, the scene and the place where each plot point occurs. For example, clicking on a marker near Penobscot reveals the farm where E.B. White set Charlotte’s Web. Across the state, you can explore the section of the Appalachian Trail where Red Sox fan Trisha McFarland gets lost in Stephen King’s The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon. Along the eastern border with Canada lies a marker for the former Houlton Army Air Base where nine-year-old Clare works side-by-side with German prisoner-of-wars in the potato harvest in Ethel Pochoki’s A Penny for a Hundred.

On each card, visitors can view a photo of the location, search Google and Wikipedia for more information on the place, purchase the book from a local bookstore, write a review on Goodreads, share the place on social media, report an error and even check in, indicating that they’ve been to that particular location.

The Literary Map of Maine was originally compiled by the Maine Sunday Telegram in partnership with several libraries and cultural organizations throughout the state in 2008. Readers submitted entries and an eight-member committee narrowed the selection to 50 places—which has since grown to 100 places. The paper has given permission to republish the literary places on PlacingLiterature.com.

Placing Literature plans to launch additional collections of literary places and is putting out a request for data. Libraries, universities, cultural organizations and researchers should contact info@placingliterature.com if they have existing data or would like to work with Placing Literature to create content for local programming.

 

About Placing Literature

Placing Literature (PlacingLiterature.com) is a crowdsourcing website that maps literary scenes that take place in real locations. Map a scene from your favorite novel or explore the literature of a place at PlacingLiterature.com. Follow us at Facebook.com/PlacingLiterature and twitter.com/PlacingLit.

Tags: #PlacingLiterature, #literaryroadtrip, #maps, #literarymaps, #Maine, #literaryMaine, #MaineSundayTelegram, #MaineToday

Guest Blog: Mapping In Leah’s Wake

Week-with-Placing-Literature-bIt’s Placing Literature Week on best-selling author Terri Giuliano Long’s blog. Teri will be sharing her thoughts about how place shapes literature, will be asking her readers to share their favorite literary places and will be giving away a $25 gift card to Amazon. Today, I authored a guest blog that talks about how Terri became involved with Placing Literature. Visit the site and check back throughout the week.

 

 

 

Placing Literature Passes 3,000 Literary Places Mapped

We passed an amazing milestone earlier this week with our 3,000th literary place mapped on PlacingLiterature.com. The place, Zuckerman’s barn from the children’s classic Charlotte’s Web, is part of our latest collection from the Maine Sunday Telegram. The collection of literary places from books set in Maine will be formally launched later this month.CharlottesWeb_060216

In the meantime, keep searching and mapping literary places around the world and share them on social media with your friends. Happy exploring!

Top 10 Places in Western Literature

Definitive, relevant literature is able to capture the imagination of readers, take them to a place they’ve never been and enable them to empathize with characters they care about. Think about Charles Dickens’ London or Dashiell Hammett’s San Francisco. Good authors use place as a character to provide physical and emotional context to their stories.

As a co-founder of PlacingLiterature.com I’m constantly wondering what makes a good literary place. In honor of our relaunch this month, I put together a list of the Top 10 Literary Places in Western Literature (in no particular order). It’s impossible and presumptuous to boil the entire Western Lit canon down to 10 places, but I gave it a try, knowing that there’d be universal disagreement. Make your own list. Map places that are missing on our site (it’s free and easy!). Join the Placing Literature community.
Twain1. Aunt Polly’s House – Hannibal, Missouri

The Adventures of Tom Sawyer by Mark Twain

Mark Twain is the quintessential American writer, and nothing conjures up life on the Mississippi River more than the image of the scallywag Tom Sawyer tricking the neighborhood children into white washing his aunt’s fence for him. The straw hat, the overalls, the long piece of grass sticking out of his mouth, the white picket fence. You don’t get any more Twain than that.

NotreDame2. Cathédrale Notre Dame de Paris – Paris, France

The Hunchback of Notre Dame by Victor Hugo

The disfigured Quasimodo is left for dead on the steps of the famous Parisian cathedral and is raised by the archdeacon who gets him to do his evil bidding. Vilified for his looks despite having a kind heart, Quasimodo is synonymous with Notre Dame’s chiming bells, at one point swinging down the ropes to save his beloved Esmeralda from a murderous mob.

Ducklings3. Public Garden – Boston, Massachusetts

Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey

Children around the world have a place in their hearts for Mr. and Mrs. Mallard who decide to make a new home among Boston’s residents on an island in Boston Public Garden. There they brave speedy bicyclists, snapping turtles, the strange swan boats and a cadre of policemen. Today, a statue stands in the park memorializing the Mallards and their eight ducklings: Jack, Kack, Lack, Mack, Nack, Ouack, Pack and Quack.

Dickens4. Fagin’s Den, London, England

Oliver Twist by Charles Dickens

No list of literary places could be complete without at least one Dickens’ reference, and here is his most vivid location. As the Artful Dodger leads Oliver to Fagin’s den in London’s Saffron Hill neighborhood, you can see, feel and smell the squalor and filth that line the street–a potent use of place in literature that eventually led to social change for the city’s poorest residents.

Kerouac5. Six Gallery – San Francisco, California

The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac

The reading that sparked the beginning of the Beat movement is memorialized in what many consider Kerouac’s best novel. Based on real events, Ray Smith (Kerouac) hypes the crowd by sharing a jug of wine and shouting “Go! Go!” as Alvah Goldbook (Allen Ginsberg) performs his poem Wail (Howl) for the first time at a small art gallery on Fillmore Street in San Francisco.

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6. Central Park Carousel, New York, New York

The Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger

Tourists line up to sit on the exact bench where Holden Caulfield watches his sister ride the carousel while fruitlessly trying to grab the golden ring. Her dogged determination and childish innocence gives him joy but reminds him that his childhood is over and he will never have that feeling again.

Photo from Central Park Conservatory

Sherlock7. Reichenbach Falls, Shattenhalb, Switzerland

The Final Problem by Arthur Conan Doyle

Choosing 221B Baker Street would have been the obvious choice but our users are more clever than that. Reichenbach Falls lies on the Via Alpina, a backpacking trail that traverses the Alps, and is the scene of an epic battle between Sherlock Holmes and his nemesis Professor Moriarty. As you crest the hill and catch a glimpse of the falls you can just imagine the two Victorians in hand-to-hand combat in a driving rainstorm, their silhouettes illuminated by periodic flashes of lightning. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at his best.

Gables8. Prince Edward Island, Canada

Anne of Green Gables by Lucy Maud Montgomery

Little girls beg their parents to take them on pilgrimages to the Canadian province so they can see where Anne’s imagination so often got the best of her. While the farm, Avonlea, the schoolhouse and the Lake of Shining Waters are fictional, Lucy based the book on places she knew well while growing up on PEI.

verona9. Verona, Italy

Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare

Most playwrights leave stage setting to the director, but the greatest of them all was a master of creating place as a character. Who can forget the town of Verona in mid-July, hot and the mad blood stirring, the Montagues and Capulets out and about looking for trouble? Immediately, the reader is thrown into a dangerous place, great tragedy just a single misstep away.

10. Bonus: CAD-FACE/The Silo, Outside Atlanta, Georgia

Wool Part One (Silo series Book 1) by Hugh Howey

Given the state of publishing today–and the fact that this post is appearing on IndieReader–it’d be remiss not to mention at least one location from an independently-published novel.

Written by the high-profile and commercially successful indie author, Hugh Howey’s Silo series mainly takes place underground in a post-apocalypse world where humanity clings to survival in the Silo, a subterranean city extending 144 stories beneath the surface. The series jumps through time around the event that triggers man’s demise, but is centered at this secret location outside of Atlanta, Georgia.

So there you have it. PlacingLiterature.com’s Top 10 Literary Places in Western Literature. Discover more literary places from around the world at PlacingLiterature.com.

Andrew Bardin Williams is a co-founder of Placing Literature, a crowdsourced website that maps novels that take place in real locations. Map a scene from your favorite novel or explore the literature of a place at PlacingLiterature.com. Follow us at Facebook.com/PlacingLiterature and twitter.com/PlacingLit.

Unless otherwise stated, photos courtesy of Panaramio.com.

This article originally appeared on IndieReader.com and The Huffington Post.

RJ Julia Author Spotlight: Breena Clarke

Breena ClarkeBreena Clarke is our RJ Julia Author Spotlight for August. Breena just released her third novel, Angels Make Their Hope Here, about a young black woman who escapes slavery via the Underground Railroad and settles in a remote town in New Jersey. A mixed community of whites, blacks and reds, Russell’s Knob is not paradise, but it’s a place where Dossie feels she can lay down roots.

Breena’s first novel, River Cross My Heart, is an Oprah Book Club selection and takes place throughout Georgetown in the District of Columbia. Her second novel, Stand the Storm also takes place in Georgetown.

Russell’s Knob in Angels Make Their Hope Here is not a real town but is based on the highland region of New Jersey near Patterson. Breena and her husband took many drives around the area for location scouting, and Breena is confident that she has captured the essence of the time and place in the novel.

Breena talks about place on the Placing Literature podcast with host Tim Knox of InterviewingAuthors.com. Check out the podcast and Breena’s map as she continues to plot the places in her novels throughout August.

IndieReader Author Spotlight Harry Groome

Harry Groome is our IndieReader Author Spotlight for May. Harry is a former chairman for a large healthcare company and is a critically acclaimed self-published author in his second life. His parody of Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Fished with a Worm, won an IndieReader Discovery Award in 2012. His other novels and short stories have received great reviews as well.

The paperback release of Thirty Below is scheduled during the month, and Harry will be mapping the scenes from the book on Placing Literature to build momentum up to the launch. Teasing his readers with location information from the novel will help create buzz and give readers additional ways to interact with the author and his novels.

Check out Harry’s map on PlacingLiterature.com throughout the month and follow him on his website.

R.J. Julia Booksellers Author Spotlight Brian Freeman

I like it when things come full circle. I like the symmetry. I appreciate the natural order of things. I try to live a balanced life. In fact, my nickname is Even Steven. When Katie and I started researching the connection between fictional stories and the real places where they are set, Brian Freeman was one of the first authors we studied. And now a year later we’re introducing Freeman as our R.J. Julia’s Author Spotlight for April. I couldn’t be more excited.

The Twin Ports of Duluth, Minn., and Superior, Wis., was one of the regions where we focused our initial research–San Francisco and New Haven were the other two–and it became clear that Freeman is a literary legend in the area. Locals are proud that Freeman sets many of his Jonathan Stride novels in places they know–Duluth Central High School, the Kitchi Gammi Club, the Aerial Lift Bridge and the “Stride Cottage” as it is known on Park Point. Katie and I even visited many of these places while conducting our research.

Fast forward a year and Freeman himself is on our site mapping the new Jonathan Stride novel, The Cold Nowhere. He’ll also encourage his fans to map the places from his other novels throughout April, engaging with them over social media as they plot and share.

Check out the map on PlacingLiterature.com and follow Brian Freeman on Facebook.

IndieReader Author Spotlight Dianna Love

Who says love is in the air? Well, I do. It’s February, the month for lovers, and Placing Literature is focusing on Romance authors. Like horror stories, the interesting thing about romance novels is that they often use real places to give their stories a sense of realism. It can be exciting to read about two strangers who fall in love over time while telecommuting at their local coffee shop. Reading about two people falling in love at Nook, the coffee shop down the street from your apartment, is absolutely titillating.

New York Times bestselling author Dianna Love is our IndieReader Author Spotlight for February. The appropriately-named Love is the author of the critically-acclaimed Slye Temp romantic thriller series about a group of undercover agents who want to do the right thing but seem to get mixed up with the wrong lovers. Slye Temp’s cases send Love’s protagonists around the world to exotic locations, and we’ve been encouraging her to map international places on our map. In our phone interview, Love mentioned that she often visits the places she writes about—usually while on motorcycle road trips with her husband—giving the setting in her novels a realism they otherwise wouldn’t get.

Follow Love on Placing Literature and her Facebook page to track her progress.