LATimes
 
_English pubs in literature -- can America  compete?_ 
(http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/jacketcopy/2010/07/english-pubs-in-literature.html)
 
July 8, 2010


British author Richard Francis is a novelist and a scholar -- this fall, 
Yale  University press will publish his book "Fruitlands: The Alcott Family, 
the  Englishmen, and Utopia" about the Transcendentalists, particularly 
Bronson  Alcott (father of Louisa May, who grew up to write "Little Women"). It 
promises  to be an engaging literary and cultural history, one that's 
thoroughly and  carefully researched. So for now, before things get too heady, 
Francis has  published a novel in England, "The Old Spring," about the day in 
the life of a  pub. 
"All my life I’ve loved pubs. My non-fiction is concerned with utopian  
theories and experiments, and pubs can be seen in the same light -- they are  
communities devised to make people feel happy, though of course they don’t  
necessarily succeed," Francis writes _on his  blog_ 
(http://richardfrancis.wordpress.com/works/the-old-spring/) . "Neither do 
utopian communities, and my 
guess is that pubs have a  higher success rate." 
At the Guardian, Francis lists his _top  10 pubs in literature_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2010/jul/08/richard-francis-top-10-pubs-literature)
 , 
beginning with Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales" and  ending with Graham 
Swift's "Last Orders," with suitable helpings of Charles  Dickens, H.G. Wells, 
Thomas Hardy, William Shakespeare and even T.S. Eliot along  the way. 
His list is, sadly, very British. Aren't there some great pubs in American  
literature? What would you nominate for the top 10 American pubs -- make 
that  bars -- memorialized in literature?
-- Carolyn Kellogg

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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