London has produced some of the most successful authors and provided the backdrop for many novels, so if you explore the capital's literary history, was perhaps the first address in a historic pub "I am the only Running Footman" - on Charles Street in Mayfair. This drink the 1749, once a popular meeting place for staff and to have inspired PG Woodhouse to create the fictional club "Junior Ganymede" for "honest men".
No visit to London iscomplete without a tribute to the most famous of all English authors, Charles Dickens, which can be conveniently done at Dickens House Museum at 48 pasty road. Here you can visit the rooms where Dickens lived with his family during a particularly productive phase of writing, when the author completed "Oliver Twist". The museum also houses the world's most important collection of material Dickens, where visitors can see the images, rare editions, manuscripts,Original furniture and many other products that affect the lives of the most popular of the Victorian era.
If all you can indulge a bit 'thirsty, why do not you a pint of beer in London's finest local watering hole Dickens' - "The Lamb of lamb." This publication is not only a meeting place for Dickens, but also the meeting place of the "Bloomsbury Group", a collection of novelist and essayist, whose work greatly influenced the literature of the time, and their subjectsoften focused on controversial areas of time, including feminism and sexuality.
For lovers of crime, 221b Baker Street is a must in London Literary Tour as the home of London's most famous detective Sherlock Holmes and his assistant, Dr. Watson, this address is known, the starting point for dozens of adventures detective duo.
Part testimony of a recent literary phenomenon, JK Rowling fans pay a visit to Kings Cross station. From hereMuggles can groped to find Harry Potter and co-Platform 9 and three quarters, from where the Hogwarts Express to take his school of wizards.
Bookworms, those looking to buy a piece of prose can pass through some of the thousands of new and used book stores, large chains such as Waterstones, Blackwell and boundaries that sit next to some of the most prestigious shops and hotels in London for the minor street shops, where books of the periodGone are stacked and waiting to be rediscovered.
The world is home to many famous writers, but nowhere else will find such a concentration of literary heroes, as found in London, so if you're really a lover of books, if the British capital, in any event on your list visit.