Italy,
Here I Come!
I’m
coming back, Italy. I need to know you more intimately. Show me what you have.
I
visited Italy, Florence and Pisa specifically, with Cindy Tambourine in the summer of
2005. It was a brief trip for an award Cindy had won through her employer. It
was made even briefer when our flight leaving Dulles airport in suburban
Virginia was delayed, thereby making us late for our connection through
Frankfort, Germany.
We had to take a variety of hop-scotch flights to get to
Florence and we were eight hours later than originally planned. We had enough
time to put our bags in our room, do a presto-chango cleanup, and dress for an
evening cocktail party. At that point, other than a brief bit of airline
catnapping, we had been up for about 28 hours. We never caught up on this
three-day trip and we moved through it in a catatonic funk. We learned a
valuable lesson: plan plenty of time on international trips for the unexpected
to happen.
Also, we learned, always start with a brand new roll of film (or go digital). Evidently this roll didn't take kindly to too many trips through the X-Ray machines so our photos didn't fare any better during our trip to Florence than we did.
A
year later when traveling to Vienna, we added a day on both ends. Naturally, all
flights were on time, so we just enjoyed being relaxed and comfortable spending
our couple extra days. One we spent walking around Vienna
and the other we took
a train down to Maribor, Slovenia
and enjoyed the offerings of that picturesque
little city.
Now
I’m looking forward to returning to Italy. Part of the trip will be
accompanying family as we travel around the major cities: Rome, Venice,
Florence, and Vatican City. I’ve decided to add an additional week to ten days
and travel around other parts of Tuscany and Umbria. Even though the trip is
months away, I’m getting excited. It never hurts to plan ahead.
So,
what am I doing to plan? Well, first, I’m following a model of my good friend,
Kaye Wilkinson Barley, who before her trip to Paris, read probably every
book ever written about the City of Light. (Here along with everything else Kaye read those years, you'll find at Meanderings and Muses all of the Paris books she inhaled during 2017 and 2016 https://bit.ly/2GqLe3M https://bit.ly/2EvpocR ). I can not read that fast.
I’ve
added a number of books on Italy to my library, though, from Barron’s Italian
Vocabulary to Frances Maye’s Bella Tuscany. I’ve finished Maye’s Under the
Tuscan Sun and Tim Park’s experiences riding the rail lines of Italy: Italian
Ways, and I’ve read Elizabeth Gilbert’s Eat, Pray, Love, primarily for the first
third of the book about her experiences in Rome (although I did finish the
entire book). I’m currently reading Michael Tucker’s (he of LA Law fame) book:
Living in a Foreign Language, his memoir of his and his wife, Jill Eikenberry’s,
experiences owning a home near Spoleto, Umbria. I’m also reading Donna Leon’s (author
of the Commissario Guido Brunetti mysteries) My Venice and Other Essays. You
can see a few others in the photo attached. One I have on the Mt. TBR that I
will not likely read is Gibbon’s The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. That
can wait until another time. Here is my Italian Collection so far.
Do
you have any suggestions for reading on/of Italy? I’d be interested in seeing them.
I’ll
write future pieces on decisions about transportation, boarding, sightseeing,
food and wine, and whatever else comes to mind.
Ciao!
Buon Natale!
2 comments:
I love this. My reading suggestions? Frances Mayes, Frances Mayes, Frances Mayes! AND, for you to have a GREAT trip! Take loads of pictures and tell us all about it. xxoo
I will indeed, Kaye! Yes, the good camera will go along on this trip.
Post a Comment