Every Friday, we celebrate the weekend — and all the reading and relaxing and daydreaming time ahead — with Melissa's favorite book- and travel-related links of the week. Why work when you can read fun stuff?!
This post is part of our Endnotes series.
Oh, to be reading a decidedly Gothic novel in the candlelit library of the Casa Loma in Toronto. The hilltop castle (Casa Loma is, literally, Hill House in Spanish_ is a Gothic Revival mansion with a fascinating history. It was originally built as a private residence, circa 1903, with an elevator, central vacuum, two secret passages (!), a swimming pool, bowling lanes in the basement, and an oven large enough to cook an ox. In the 1920s, it became a hotel (and liquor-fueled hotspot during American Prohibition); in the ’30s, its reputation for being haunted led to a radio show devoted to its ghosts. During WWII, the stables were used for sonar production and U-boat detection. Now, it’s a fully-restored museum and an excellent place to tuck into a steak at the Blueblood Steakhouse. The rooms on the main floor of the house read like the cards from a game of Clue: Billiards Room, The Conservatory, Dining Room, Great Hall, Peacock Alley, Sir Henry’s Study, Smoking Room, and The Library. With its ornamental plasterwork on the ceiling, crystal chandeliers, parquet floors, and glass-lined bookshelves, the library looks like a spectacular place to curl up with a book. You could start with 5 Gothic Novels That Feature Moody Houses and Haunted Heroines, or dig into this list of 43 Gothic Novels with a Strong Sense of Place for more variety. (And our podcast episode that answers the question What is Gothic? is filled with recommendations.) If dark academia calls to you this time of year, here’s a list of 7 Dark Academia Novels that pleasingly combine atmosphere and plot. You can find more Spooky Season treats on our Destination Pages for Manor House, Halloween, and Secret Passages. Finally, don’t miss this fun video walk-thru of Casa Loma.
The Washington Post shared a list of 10 noteworthy books for October that’s packed with solid recommendations. I’m excited to read The Treasure Hunters Club (strangers, Nova Scotia, treasure hunt), The Stone Witch of Florence (medieval Florence, folk magic), and The Last One at the Wedding (opulent estate, wedding peril). (gift link)
Noted has become one of my favorite Substacks. Each week, English professor Jillian Hess features a remarkable (noted?!) note-taker with photos, quotes, and more about how and why they journaled. In this installment, she shared how none of her readers’ think with notes.’ So many great ideas!
I am 100% here for an Anne Radcliffaissance. The University of Sheffield is on it. ‘Radcliffe — whose writing inspired the likes of Wordsworth, Coleridge, Keats, the Shelleys, Byron, Austen, and Scott — was once a central figure in English literature, read across the world and considered by some critics as better than Shakespeare at creating a sense of terror and suspense.’ (The Guardian weighed in, too, with a fantastic piece on her writing.)
Travel writer and author Evan Rail will be our special guest on an upcoming episode of The Library of Lost Time. His book The Absinthe Forger is out on 24 October. If you’re in the States, you can meet him and hear him talk about it! (Here’s a good radio interview with him as a sneak peek.)
There’s so much colorful design inspiration in this interview with British-Nigerian artist and designer Yinka Ilori.
Yes, please, tell us more about the strange romance of seahorses. ‘My goal at this unsociable hour was to become one of the privileged few humans to ever witness the birth of a pygmy seahorse. Enigmatic, charismatic, and poorly known, these miniature fish had been reluctant to give up their secrets, until now.’
Must-click headline: When Did Witches and Vampires Get So Sexy?
Related: Witches Around the World. ‘The belief in witches is an almost universal feature of human societies. What does it reveal about our deepest fears?’
I always enjoy the What To Read If Substack, and/but this edition about Spooky Season reads is particularly awesome. I want to read all of them!
I read Little House in the Big Woods by Laura Ingalls Wilder when I was a kid, and I’ve never forgotten the details of Pa butchering meat and building a smokehouse. It’s one of those things that’s lodged in my brain forever. If you’ve experienced something similar, you will enjoy this post from Eater about a visit to the Ingalls Homestead in South Dakota. ‘Standing on the Ingalls Homestead is deeply affecting. More than 100 years after the events in Little Town on the Prairie, set in De Smet, it is still easy to envision Laura and her sister Mary playing in the fields while Pa plows. Here, I’m 8 years old all over again, jarred back into a time when seeing the real-deal Ingalls homestead would have been the highlight of my life. I barely resist the urge to emulate the 12-year-old Laura and go chase frogs in the creek.’
News you can use: 10 Places for Pancake-Lovers from Atlas Obscura.
Say ‘Merhaba’ to Giresun, Turkey, the hazelnut capital of the world.
If you listen to our podcasts, you know I’ve been a little obsessed with David Tennant in Macbeth. There’s great news if you can’t get to London! The stage version will be landing on movie theater screens around the world in February.
In other page-to-screen news: The much-maligned Mary from Pride and Prejudice is getting a spinoff story in The Other Bennett Sister.
Did you hear the news about the theme for the Costume Institute’s 2025 exhibit at the Met (the raison d’etre of the Met Gala)? It’s ‘Superfine: Tailoring Black Style,’ and you can read the 1934 essay by Nora Neale Hurston that inspired it.
In each mini-podcast episode, we discuss two books at the top of our TBR, then share a fun book- or travel-related distraction. Get all the episodes and books galore here.
In this episode, we get excited about two books: The Hitchcock Hotel by Stephanie Wrobel and Book and Dagger: How Scholars and Librarians Became the Unlikely Spies of World War II by Elyse Graham. Then Mel recommends the History Extra podcast for all your Spooky Season storytelling needs. [transcript]
Parts of the Strong Sense of Place podcast are produced in udio. Some effects are provided by soundly.
Top image courtesy of Anastasia Turetska/Unsplash.
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