It’s not my kind of place either. I think we went there looking for an English-language bookshop because I’d run out of books to read. I don’t understand what people see in it, when there are so many other wonderful things to see and do in the city.
ExACTly. Did you find your bookshop? It seems most bookshops here have a pretty decent English language section – even here in the small untouristy town where our daughter lives.
TBH I can’t remember. It was back in 2010, and I had bought an early version of the Kindle to travel with but it was one disappointment after another and was almost useless because their website was so hopeless. I couldn’t find Australian titles or literary fiction and I got sick of wading through genre dross and gave up. I could have read a whole book in the time I wasted looking for something to buy.
And although I’d downloaded some freebie classics, the Kindle had somehow renamed them so they were hard to locate in the Kindle ‘library’ and the feature that keeps track of where you’re up to, didn’t work for them at all. Not only that, we were not allowed to use the Kindle in the down time on the plane when all devices had to be turned off. (I didn’t discover that till I was on the plane, of course.) I get angsty on a plane if I haven’t got something to take my mind off the possibility of a crash, and the airline magazine just doesn’t do it for me.
So I still needed books in English and though it’s true that many places have an English language section, it’s the same as the Kindle offerings: heaps of rubbishy genre, classics which I’ve already read, and US and UK bestsellers.
Oh dear? I’m not a fan of Kindle et all, so I always have to totter tound with piles of Actual Books. I also get lucky with book exchange cafes and the like, finding things I would never normally read, but ultimately hit the spot. But yes, reading while travelling is A Problem!
I too thought it was La Rambla, but I was quickly set right. Actually my daughter and I quite enjoyed it and had a lovely HUGE glass of sangria whilst sheltering under a parasol from the rain and people watching.
I look forward to seeing and hearing more about Barcelona, as I was there for a short conference this past weekend at a hotel near the Gothic Quarter. I didn’t have much time for sightseeing but enjoyed a fun bike tour that took us to the Born Market (which I had just read about on your blog!), Parc de la Ciutadella, and the beach and harbor area. It is a lovely and vibrant city, and I hope to visit again. Yesterday’s flight departed early, but it was a bumpy ride home.
Is that La Rambla?!
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No fear. That’s an area we avoid. It’s the coffee shop attached to the Maritime Museum, one of our favourite museums in Barcelona.
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It’s not my kind of place either. I think we went there looking for an English-language bookshop because I’d run out of books to read. I don’t understand what people see in it, when there are so many other wonderful things to see and do in the city.
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ExACTly. Did you find your bookshop? It seems most bookshops here have a pretty decent English language section – even here in the small untouristy town where our daughter lives.
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TBH I can’t remember. It was back in 2010, and I had bought an early version of the Kindle to travel with but it was one disappointment after another and was almost useless because their website was so hopeless. I couldn’t find Australian titles or literary fiction and I got sick of wading through genre dross and gave up. I could have read a whole book in the time I wasted looking for something to buy.
And although I’d downloaded some freebie classics, the Kindle had somehow renamed them so they were hard to locate in the Kindle ‘library’ and the feature that keeps track of where you’re up to, didn’t work for them at all. Not only that, we were not allowed to use the Kindle in the down time on the plane when all devices had to be turned off. (I didn’t discover that till I was on the plane, of course.) I get angsty on a plane if I haven’t got something to take my mind off the possibility of a crash, and the airline magazine just doesn’t do it for me.
So I still needed books in English and though it’s true that many places have an English language section, it’s the same as the Kindle offerings: heaps of rubbishy genre, classics which I’ve already read, and US and UK bestsellers.
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Oh dear? I’m not a fan of Kindle et all, so I always have to totter tound with piles of Actual Books. I also get lucky with book exchange cafes and the like, finding things I would never normally read, but ultimately hit the spot. But yes, reading while travelling is A Problem!
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That looks miserable Margaret
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You just have to think positive and find things to do inside – as we were doing there, in one of our favourite museums.
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Hmmmm…a grip that Harry certainly has. A tad miserable,non?
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It’s fine. It gives us a bit of downtime we probably need, and for the locals to think we must feel uite at hoe. They’re right!
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Well how terribly English of you!!
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I too thought it was La Rambla, but I was quickly set right. Actually my daughter and I quite enjoyed it and had a lovely HUGE glass of sangria whilst sheltering under a parasol from the rain and people watching.
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It’s got a lot tackier recently though …
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That rain looks pretty heavy but (assuming you had somewhere pleasant to shelter) it certainly offered a good photo opp!
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The wonderful Maritime Museum was where I was when I took this shot!
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Nice rain capture Margaret. There’s always something to photograph no matter what!
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Plenty of rainy opportunities just now!
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Great shot, shame about the weather.
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Oh dear! Somehow I wouldn’t have expected Spanish meteorologists to have hit on the name Harry.
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I look forward to seeing and hearing more about Barcelona, as I was there for a short conference this past weekend at a hotel near the Gothic Quarter. I didn’t have much time for sightseeing but enjoyed a fun bike tour that took us to the Born Market (which I had just read about on your blog!), Parc de la Ciutadella, and the beach and harbor area. It is a lovely and vibrant city, and I hope to visit again. Yesterday’s flight departed early, but it was a bumpy ride home.
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