Barbara, those are wonderful memories, it sounds like a perfect trip!
We should get up a Book Walkers club here or something. Even if somebody takes one step it's one more than they did yesterday. CNN recently featured a woman who works at an airport and sat all day and she developed a plan of short 10 - 15 minute walks thru the day on her breaks, and she's lost no end of weight and the best part is she feels SO much better. CNN had a film of her and the power and energy she exerts are amazing. That's going to be one of my new things this year, who can't take 10 minutes to walk somewhere? 5 down, 5 back.
I came IN to say I am reading a really good book, good in an odd sense, it's an unusual experience. It's not a new book I think it was written in 1957, called A Traveller in Rome by H.V. Morton. He apparently has written a lot of them, my loss, which I'm trying to make up now.
It's kind of essays or thoughts as he goes to Rome for the first time, etc. His disappointment with his hotel room which he had fantasized about the "balcony," and how he ended up loving the view and why...the demented elevators of Rome.....It's a slow meandering quiet book, but it's the kind of book, and this is what's interesting, that you read a little bit and put it down...I think that's the point..... but the book stays with you, the sort of ...spell....it casts stays with you and it's a good spell. You find yourself rethinking what he's said, even when you're doing or reading or watching something else....it's quite an extraordinary thing. It's not flashy and it's not shoot em up, it's.....something.
Whether or not you've been to Rome, it's a perfect armchair travel description of how Rome assaults the senses and lots of interesting tidbits and history and literature. And if you HAVE been to Rome he's spot on. So far. I am really enjoying it and it's almost hard to explain....The dying Keats and his last view of the Spanish Steps... reflections of casually looking down from the plane over the Alps and how difficult it used to be to cross it before air travel with examples.....you have to read it to understand, and the style and topic might not be for everybody in our Instant World, but if you like armchair travel (it IS 57 years old, after all) it's for you.