February 4, 2012

Latest Contest: Win a Copy of 24 Hours in London!

Book Cover

Book Cover

My review of this lovely book with be forthcoming in the next couple days – it’s awesome and every Anglophile should own it.

Now’s your chance to score your own copy of 24 Hours in London.

Simply leave a comment on this post telling us what you would do if you only had 1 hour in London?

What would you see? What would you do? What would you eat?

2 Winners will be picked in one week! Good luck! May the best comments win!

Just what the heck is 24 Hours in London?

Every hour of every day, London is packed full of fantastic, unusual things to do. The trick is to know what’s on, when. For the first time, this innovative and new guidebook gives a rundown of one of the greatest cities in the world, hour by hour, listing London’s best kept secrets, plus an innovative spin on old favourites. This first edition includes all contact details, websites where applicable, and its chatty style makes it perfect for both visitors to the UK and locals who want to learn more about their home town.

Our own Dispatches from the South columnist Mike Harling had this to say about the book:

24 Hours London practically demands to be read. Marsha s writing is succinct, informative and entertaining and the temptation to read just one more hours worth is hard to resist. And once devoured, it will serve as an indispensible reference book, handy for those out of town guests or to give a welcome assist if you ever find yourself with unfilled time on your hands. –Michael Harling, author of Dispatches from an Accidental Expat.

Here’s a nifty little video about the book:

About jonathan

Jonathan is a consummate Anglophile with an obsession for Britain that borders on psychosis. He keeps Anglotopia running in his spare time, always dreaming of his next trip to England, wishing he lived there - specifically Dorset - and is always trying to figure out a way to move to England. It will happen one day. Keep up with him on Twitter here.


Comments

  1. Cindy says:

    Afternoon tea at The Ritz!

  2. shreena says:

    I’d spend the hour on the South Bank:
    - Stroll across the bank, looking at the outdoor Dali sculptures, book market, and skateboard area (15 mins)
    - See all the city’s big sights (the eye, parliament, gherkin, st paul’s etc) from Waterloo or Millenium Bridge and get a quick and cheap photo op (10 mins)
    - have a cup of tea/a snack on the terrace of the Tate Modern cafe (10 mins)
    - before seeing some world-famous Modern art for free (25 mins)

  3. Robyn says:

    Being a history nerd (and an admirer of Anne Boleyn and Lady Jane Grey), I would spend the hour at the Tower, looking for the London Stone, and hopefully make it to Buckingham Palace in time to see the changing of the guard. I’m keeping this list short because I realize that the chances are high that I’d forget about the time limit and spend the entire time retracing Anne Boleyn’s last steps/staring at the London Stone/sitting and contemplating Buckingham Palace, just jazzed that I was finally in London. I know I’m weird. :)

  4. deniz says:

    Thanks for hosting this contest! What *wouldn’t* I do! Hmmm, well, I think I’d have to visit the IKnit store – I’ve never been, in all my years of knitting!

  5. RKCharron says:

    Hi :)
    Thank you for the opportunity to win.
    If I only had one day in London, I’d tour Buckingham Palace and the Tower of London, ride the Millenium Wheel, listen to Big Ben chime, visit Baker Street for the Sherlock Holmes museum, visit The Globe theater and check out Harrod’s.
    :)
    Happy Holidays,
    RKCharron

  6. Luna_85 says:

    Lovely contest. I hope to win. I’ve only spent maybe 2 hours in London (and months elsewhere in England) so this will be a very interesting read!

  7. Jessica says:

    With only 1 hour I’d get some tea and shortbread or scones, walk past St. Paul’s across the Millenium Bridge to Bankside to admire the view across the Thames, and see the Globe and Tate Modern up close.

  8. Willy Baum says:

    I would visit as many bookstores as possible on Charring Road.

  9. Cindy Thomas(Parental Unit) says:

    I would go straight to Westminster Abbey, light a candle and spend the hour in reflection and peace.

  10. Dan Holloway says:

    I don’t go in for contests, so please don’t enter me, but I love London as though it were the childhood sweetheart I come back to again and again; you can do an awful lot there in an hour if you keep good company. Forget the landmarks and just chill. I wrote a post a while back about a magical hour I did spend there this October with playwright Sabina England. It might give people some ideas

    I used to work in a luxury flooring showroom in a fairly affluent part of the
    country, so I’ve met a fair few people who are allegedly “celebs” but I can honestly say I’ve never been starstruck – or not until last week. I was really rather nervous as I skipped down the steps beneath a twenty foot tall plastic Freddie Mercury and into Tottenham Court Road tube station, because I was about to meet the best writer I’ve ever come across. Like, ever.

    Sabina England is better know to some of us by her online monikers lie DeafBrownTrashPunk (authonomy) Deaf Indian Muslim Anarchist (blogger) and DeafMuslim (twitter). It was on Authonomy I first found her, and her coruscating novel, a brutal, brilliant twist on the post-slacker ‘burbs, Brown Trash. Online she’s blunt, in your face, pretty much as brutal as her writing if she thinks you’re an idiot, and (which some people have been unable to get their head around) hyper-sensitive and insecure about her work. She’s also known for her mohawk hair.

    Which is why the first thing I remember thinking was “What happened to your hair?” Rather embarrassingly, instead of “hello” or “how’s the play going?” (she was in England for a fortnight, promoting the iopening of her play, How the Rapist was Born, at the Tristan Bates Theatre in Covent Garden), I think that was the first thing I said as well.

    “I died my hair so many colours it started falling out,” she said. “So I cut it all off.” She made a sweeping, cutting action with her arms. When Sabina talks, she does it with her whole body. She does everything like that. Tiny, nuanced details just aren’t part of the way she works – she puts every bit of her body and soul into everything she does. Only I soon realised the nuances ARE there. Her mind, like her body, is never still. It’s always rushing ten steps ahead, playing tricks, branching off and waiting for the world to catch up. The result is I felt like I’d spent a week with her, talking and hanging out and exploring and getting to know her. But in reality it was just an hour and a quarter.

    We started with coffee. Standing outside Starbucks at the start of new Oxford Street, I suggested we go in.

    “Fuck Starbucks!” she said, turning and giivng the finger to the building. So we went for a great little place under Centrepoint called “First Out”, where Sabina enthused about the walls filled with stsr portraits painted in glitter.

    We sat outside, me drinking an espresso, she smoking and taking in (“Am I drinking the soup?” she asked, slurping from the spoon, “Or am I eating it?”, taking a great gulp) a broccoli and stilton soup with lashings of cress (“What the fuck’s this? It’s gree, so I guess it must be healthy”). She told me about her week. About her session watching the cast rehearse – eyeballing them through the whole play until they were terrified from what I can gather (although she then broke into one of her wonderful, toothy, expansive smiles that melt her features entirely, and told me “I was so happy with them”. It felt like the experience had meant the world to her – everything seems to mean the world to her. Which is why her work’s so brilliant; and why she’s such an exciting person to be around. And why she comes across as so vulnerable); about her afternoon in a school encouraging young Muslim girls to be creative – “they kept looking at me and asking ‘are you a Muslim?’ ‘Yeah I’m a Muslim;’” about the Americans who started texting their mates druing a performance “theat’s so rude!” she says. She looks genuinely hurt, and I realise the Sabina who took people’s criticism and, it has to be said, utter rudeness to heart on Authonomy, is 100% genuine. “It’s my play!” she continues. “MY PLAY. How dare they?” And for the first, but not the last, time, I’m reminded of Tracey Emin, and I find myself thinking I hope the world’s nice to her and she’s OK.
    Then we walk up Charing Cross Road. We head into Foyle’s where I learn she loves graphic novels, and her favourite author is Aravind Adiga. She picks books off shelves and opens them all with a sense of delight – “have you read this one?” she asks. “And this one?” “What about this one?” We head into a guitar shop on the corner of Tin Pan Alley, and dive into the labyrinth of Covent Garden, where she takes me to the Tristan Bates Theatre and shows me the posters for her play. I ask her to sign a flyer and she goes bright red.
    We turn off Shaftesbury Avenue (she hates the anodyne, imported musicals. I ask her why she doesn’t stand outside teh doors and shove flyers for How the Rapist Was Born into people’s hands “Yeah!” she says, and her eyes light up), and she tells me anecdotes from her time in London. There’s one about the famous playwright who came to see the play, and how she didn’t know who he was till someone told her afterwards. “I was so RUDE to him,” she says. “I wrote him an e-mail saying how sorry I was. I wasn’t meaning to be rude but I get so nervous when I’m with lots of people.” There’s the story of a cabbie who wound down his window and shouted abuse at her. “I didn’t know what he said” (Sabina has been deaf since she was a baby) “so I turned to the woman standing next to me and she said ‘he said open your legs and I’ll give you some pleasure – that’s disgusting’ but I didn’t mind because he was hot” – people ahve problems coming to terms with Sabina’s sexual frankness; it’s something else that reminds me of Tracey Emin. Bloody hell, I think, when she tells me about the people who take offence at her play, have we really amde so little progress we still find it scary when a woman says what she thinks.
    And she tells me about the lovely old Christian lady she’s staying with she found on Craigslist. I picture their evenings together and I think it would make a lovely scene in a film. It reminds me of the scenes between Dot and Mary in Eastenders back in the mid 80s.
    We head into Chinatown, where she stops and closes her eyes and takes in the smells. As we walk, her head is never still. “I love London,” she says, and she gives the impression she’s stuffing as many memories into her head as she can before she goes back to midtown, USA. We end up in an amusement arcade, where she plays a rally game and tells me how she used to hang out in the malls playing games as a teenager.
    Finally we say goodbye. She smiles and says thank you for coming to see her, and I sense she’s genuinely as grateful for every tiny compliment someone pays her as she is upset at every criticism.
    I descedn into the underground at Picadilly Circus just 75 minutes after I sank myself into Tottenham Court Road, but I get on the train feeling changed. There are very few people you meet, and come away feeling life’s different from how it was before you met. Sabina is a bright, traffic-stoppingly beautiful, brutal, brilliant person, the kind of person whose talent changes the world rather than being changed by it. It’s certainly changed me

  11. Bartholomew Henry says:

    I’d go to Soho Square and find the bench dedicated to Kirsty Maccoll and sing along to all of her songs that are on my ipod. XO.

  12. Darlene says:

    My first Tube stop would be Green Park so that I could pop into the Marks & Spencer Food Hall for a package of ready-to-eat scones with scrummy cream and jam and a pot of Heather Honey & Ginger Lakemead yogurt. With those treats tucked into my bag it would be up Picadilly for a browse at Hatchards and Fortnum & Mason. Purchasing a lovely box of tea would be a must to accompany my scones! Then it would be on to Picadilly Circus to catch the Tube to Russell Square so that I could get to Lambs Conduit Street and my favourite bookshop of all, Persephone. Nicola Beauman, the owner, usually has tea and cake in her back room but I would offer her a scone and a cup of tea from the goods that I had bought earlier. She could ring up the purchase of a new book and I would be off…until next time.

  13. Megan says:

    With just one hour in London, I’d go back by parliament and Big Ben and walk across the bridge over the Thames with my camera securely fastened around my neck! I was there at sunset in May and can only equate that to a religious experience. I’d love to just wander through there again!

  14. Sue Hillman says:

    It would have to be a very busy hour and ideally not such a cold day as today! Start at County Hall with a walk across Westminster Bridge as earth really does not have anything to show more fair with views back to Big Ben, Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey. A quick boat ride on a Thames Clipper to enjoy the river and a view right up to the City and across to the South Bank. Then a fine afternoon tea on the beautiful terrace of Somerset House with a chance to pop ones head into the house or Courtauld Gallery to see some great art afterwards before walking out across the wonderful courtyard. That’s probably about an hour’s worth but if there’s time a nip up to Trafalgar Square as it’s a great space as there’s always something going on . Phew – relax!
    Sue

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