
7 of the best bookshops to visit in the UK
With summer bringing Independent Bookshop week to UK shores, we're celebrating bookstores that are well worth travelling to. From a hilltop spot in York to a cool cafe hangout in London's East End and far beyond, we've selected independently run shops that continue to draw book-lovers to towns and cities across the UK and Ireland. Many of these have been recognised by the Independent Bookshop of the Year award, past or present, and all are lovely places to linger over a good read, graphic novel or open mic night, before exploring the local area — complete with a travel tip from each bookseller. 1. Falmouth Bookseller, Cornwall
With its broad collection taking in fiction, natural history, children's stories and current affairs, plus a selection of local interest books, this port town indie offering has something for everyone — including a 'study' with co-working desks and an upstairs cafe selling local Yallah Coffee and giant pasties from Stones Bakery.
Bookseller tip: Manager Eloise Rowe recommends taking a walk around the point to sheltered Castle Beach. 'Enjoy a brilliant cake at Castle Beach Café and dip your toes in the crystal-clear water under the castle.' 2. Far From The Madding Crowd, West Lothian
In the Scottish market town of Linlithgow, this much-loved bookshop occupies one of the handsome Georgian buildings flanking the high street. Describing itself as an 'indie bookshop with a bit on the side', it offers a strong selection of Scottish titles, along with a bothy for quiet reading, poetry evenings and a shop bunny called BB.
Bookseller tip: Manager Sally Pattle says, 'Visitors should walk up to the Grange from the east end of the loch, where you'll find the best views over Linlithgow Palace, the loch and the gleaming golden spire of St Michael's Parish Church.' Bookshop by the Sea is the host and founder of Aberystwyth Poetry Festival (6-8 June) and also holds children's storytelling sessions, book clubs and music nights. 3. The Bookshop by the Sea, Ceredigion
This seaside spot is the host and founder of Aberystwyth Poetry Festival (6-8 June) and also holds children's storytelling sessions, book clubs and music nights. Settle into the corner armchair with a detective noir by locally schooled novelist Malcolm Pryce, or have afternoon tea in the pretty courtyard.
Bookseller tip: Owner Freya Blyth says, 'The seafront, with its colourful Victorian houses, has the best sunsets, sometimes accompanied by starling murmurations. The nearby National Library of Wales is worth a visit for its rare books.' 4. Little Acorn Bookstore, Derry
This former Georgian house, the largest indie bookshop in Ireland's northwest, is a temple to words of all kinds, from the reclaimed schoolteachers' chairs signed by hundreds of authors, actors, directors, broadcasters, musicians and artists to the 25,000-strong book collection and a typewriter museum that opened last summer.
Bookseller tip: Owner Jenni Doherty says, 'On the banks of the River Foyle, Derry is a vibrant, welcoming place; a walled city of pride and personality. Walk the walls, talk to all and fall in love.' 5. Wave of Nostalgia, West Yorkshire
Located in the Brontë sisters' hometown, Haworth, this hillside spot specialises in fiction and non-fiction written by or about inspiring women. There are also titles on nature, the environment and inclusivity, plus gifts such as suffragette greetings cards, feminist T-shirts and homemade children's clothes.
Bookseller tip: Owner Diane Park recommends lifting your eyes from the page to enjoy the panorama: 'The view from the top of our hill takes in a winding cobbled street with many independent shops, bars and restaurants, opening out onto moors scenery that inspired the Brontës.' Catering to its name, Barter Books offers visitors the chance to exchange paperbacks within its rail station setting. Photograph by Barter Books Ltd 6. Barter Books, Northumberland
A curio collection of second-hand books stacked up in an old Victorian railway station in Alnwick is the setting for this cathedral-like shop where you'll find a model railway strung between bookshelves. Bring paperbacks to exchange, have a bacon butty in the Station Buffet cafe or head to Paradise, an ice cream parlour in the former stationmasters' office selling local Morwick Dairy scoops and sundaes.
Bookseller tip: Founding director Mary Manley suggests: 'Head west out of Alnwick through Northumberland National Park to Kielder Observatory. First, take Kielder (Forest) Observatory Road to see one of artist James Turrell's brilliant Skyspace installations, found worldwide, and spend some time looking up through its oculus at the sky above; then, go another half mile to Kielder Observatory to watch the nighttime sky through a telescope (book head).' 7. Bàrd Books, East London
This local hangout has a curated collection of literary fiction, canonical classics and poetry. Browse over a masala chai and a pastry from the cafe or a rum-based Hemingway spritz in the garden, and return for tarot readings, authors in conversation and open mic nights.
Bookseller tip: Manager Kristin Griffin says, 'We're located near Victoria Park. With weekend markets and green space aplenty, it's the perfect place to sprawl out with a new book.' Independent Bookshop Week 2025 took place 14-21 June. Published in the June 2025 issue of National Geographic Traveller (UK).
To subscribe to National Geographic Traveller (UK) magazine click here. (Available in select countries only).
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National Geographic
5 hours ago
- National Geographic
The story behind pavlova, the dessert that sparked an international rivalry
This article was produced by National Geographic Traveller (UK). Sweet as it tastes, this much-loved dessert has a bitter history. As is the case with both hummus and hamburgers, the pavlova's birthplace is hotly disputed, with Australia and New Zealand each claiming credit for the idea of crowning towers of billowing meringue with clouds of snowy cream and tumbling fruit. Regular shots are fired back and forth across the Tasman Sea, most recently when a Kiwi energy company 'declared war' by installing an advert at Auckland Airport baggage reclaim stating: 'Home is where the pavlova was really created'. Reactions on the other side of 'the ditch' were outraged: 'Nice of them to promote tourism to Australia' was one online comment. The feud goes all the way to the top, as then Kiwi prime minister Jacinda Ardern discovered when she arrived in Melbourne to find a DIY pavlova kit in her hotel room — prompting her partner to question whether this represented a 'sense of humour or diplomatic incident'. King Charles must have been unaware of the simmering controversy when he boldly praised Sydney's 'world famous cuisine … whether it's smashed avo, a pav or a cab sav' in a speech at the city's Parramatta Park last year. Yet, in truth, the pavlova's precise origins are shrouded in mystery. It was almost certainly named for the great prima ballerina Anna Pavlova, from St Petersburg — probably to celebrate her hugely successful 1926 tour of Australia and New Zealand. This wasn't uncommon practice at the time; peach melba was invented at London's Savoy Hotel to pay tribute to the Australian soprano Dame Nellie Melba, while Britain's Garibaldi biscuit honours the Italian revolutionary, who was given a rapturous welcome on a visit to these shores. Such was the vogue for sprinkling stardust over a menu that, at the height of Pavlova's career, you can find mention of sponge cakes, layered jellies and 'a popular variety of American ice-cream' all bearing her name, too. Although the meringue number is now the last pavlova standing, at the time it was simply a rebranding of an existing dessert — a fixture in the patisserie repertoire long before Anna pirouetted onto the world stage. Food historian Janet Clarkson suggests 'neither Australia nor New Zealand invented the meringue, because the meringue was invented before they were'. And while many trace meringue's origins to 18th-century Switzerland, in Clarkson's blog, the Old Foodie, she dates the first recorded recipe to the 1604 collection of a Lady Elinor Fettiplace. The pavlova's precise origins are shrouded in mystery. Photograph by Hannah Hughes Annabelle Utrecht, a Queensland-based writer, has devoted the past decade to digging into the history of the pavlova, prompted by an online argument with a Kiwi acquaintance. In the course of their research, the pair discovered that by the 18th century, 'large meringue constructions incorporating cream and fruit elements could be found in aristocratic kitchens across German-speaking lands, so the thing we call a pavlova today is actually more than two centuries old'. Naturally, everyone wanted a slice of this noble pie, and recipes began to appear: the vacherin, a meringue bowl filled with whipped cream or ice cream, fruit and syrup-infused sponge cake, often credited to the 19th-century French chef Marie-Antoine Carême; the baked alaska; the German schaum ('foam') torte. Even English writer Mrs Beeton includes a meringue gateau, filled with macerated strawberries and whipped cream, in her 1861 recipe collection. It therefore seems likely that the pavlova probably arrived in both New Zealand and Australia with European immigrants long before Pavlova herself. Of course, few dishes spring fully formed from nowhere, but when did the idea of a meringue topped with cream and fruit begin to be known as a 'pavlova' — or a 'pav', if you speak Antipodean? The earliest mention of something resembling the modern pavlova labelled as such can be found in the 1929 New Zealand Dairy Exporter Annual, contributed by a reader, although this version seems to have been layered more like a French dacquoise. The next-earliest, from the Rangiora Mothers' Union Cookery Book of Tried and Tested Recipes, of 1933, is also Kiwi. Australia's first claim to the dish dates from 1935, when Herbert 'Bert' Sachse, the chef at Perth's Esplanade Hotel, was asked to come up with something new for the afternoon tea menu. Manager Harry Nairn apparently remarked that his creation was 'as light as Pavlova', and the legend was born. However, one of Sachse's descendants contacted Helen Leach, a culinary anthropologist at the University of Otago, to suggest their ancestor may have confused the dates, given Pavlova's death in 1931. And in a 1973 interview, Sachse himself explained his creation was an adaptation of a recipe from Australian Woman's Mirror magazine, submitted by a New Zealand resident. When questioned by Australian newspaper The Beverley Times, the 'silver-haired great grandfather' mused that he'd 'always regretted that the meringue cake was invariably too hard and crusty, so I set out to create something that would have a crunchy top and would cut like a marshmallow'. This, according to Utrecht's Kiwi research partner Dr Andrew Paul Wood, makes Western Australia-born Sachse unusual among his countrymen: 'I think the Australian meringue is crunchier … the New Zealand one is more marshmallowy inside,' Wood told The Sydney Morning Herald's Good Food guide. In her 2024 book Sift, British pastry chef and cookery book author Nicola Lamb writes that adding cornflour to the meringue base, as both Sachse and the New Zealand Dairy Exporter Annual reader suggest, 'helps promote [this] marshmallowy, thick texture'. For maximum squishiness, however, Lamb recommends shaping the mixture into a tall crown, 'as it's more difficult for the heat to penetrate the thick meringue walls'; if you prefer crunchy all the way through, go for a shallow bowl shape. Whatever texture you choose, once the meringue has cooled completely it's generally filled with whipped cream — usually unsweetened, given the sugar in the meringue, although it may be flavoured with vanilla — and then your choice of fruit. Australian cultural historian Dr Carmel Cedro agrees with Wood that not only do the two countries disagree over the correct texture for a pavlova, but on appropriate toppings. 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Inspired by the architecture of the building itself, it features white meringue sails atop perfect spikes of whipped cream and Italian meringue filled with passion fruit curd. When it comes to pavlova, it seems, there's one for every taste. Although the caviar and cranberry number recently dreamed up by a firm of Polish fish farmers might prove the one pav neither Australia nor New Zealand wants to claim as their own. The pavlova's birthplace is hotly disputed, with Australia and New Zealand each claiming credit for the idea of crowning towers of billowing meringue with clouds of snowy cream and tumbling fruit. Photograph by Hannah Hughes Where to eat pavlova in Australia and New Zealand Cibo, Auckland Hidden away in a former chocolate factory in Parnell, Cibo has been described as one of Auckland's best-kept secrets, although it's still won numerous awards over the past three decades. There are usually at least two pavlovas on offer: a fruit version (classic strawberry and kiwi, for example) and one with salted caramel, peanut and chocolate dust. Floriditas, Wellington When The Sydney Morning Herald praises a New Zealand pavlova, the dessert has to be doing something right — although this much-loved bistro doesn't make things easy for itself. Instead of the classic recipe using white caster sugar, Floriditas opts for brown sugar, which is damper and more temperamental, but which gives the meringue base a deeper, richer flavour. Fruit varies with the seasons, from strawberries in summer to tamarillos in autumn. Ester, Sydney Forget hovering anxiously in front of the oven to ensure your snowy meringue doesn't take on even the merest hint of tan — at this Sydney neighbourhood joint (which comes highly recommended by Nigella Lawson) they char them in a wood-fired oven at a toasty 600C. 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Photograph by Hannah Hughes Recipe: Helen Goh's summer berry pavlova To celebrate summer, I've chosen a mix of berries with a touch of passion fruit as a nod to the dessert's Antipodean roots — but feel free to use any in-season fruit. Serves: 8-10 Takes: 2 hrs 5 mins plus cooling Ingredients For the meringue250g egg whites (6-8 eggs, depending on size)½ tsp cream of tartar400g caster sugar2 tsp vanilla extract1 tsp white vinegar2 tsp cornflour pinch of salt


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