In May 2014, my friend, Avery, and I took a Literary Road Trip across Massachusetts. We visited the homes of Edith Wharton, Louisa May Alcott, Emily Dickinson and Nathaniel Hawthorne. My favorite literary home was The Mount in Lenox, where Edith Wharton lived for ten years. Author of the well-received The Decoration of Houses (1897), she designed and decorated the house herself. Set in the Berkshires, the estate’s grounds and gardens are just as lovely as the elegant home. I took many photos during our pleasant afternoon, including these pictures of Edith’s library and garden.

Clarissa stands in front of her floor to ceiling bookshelves. Behind her, a cheerful fire crackles in the grate. A persistent rain taps at the windows, but the softly lit room is warm and cozy.
Drawing her cardigan sweater more closely around her narrow shoulders, she lets her gaze sweep across her library. Catching a glimpse of her weary countenance reflected in the glass doors that open out onto her veranda, she sighs and combs her elegantly manicured fingers through her disheveled silver bob. After three weeks traveling around New England to promote her newest cookbook, she is back home at last.
As the library door swings open with a gentle squeak, Clarissa turns to smile at her secretary, who sets a tea tray on a low table in front of the fire. The tantalizing scent of cinnamon drifts across the room.

“Hello, Lydia. Something smells delicious,” Clarissa says.
“Cook tried out your new recipe for cinnamon buns.” Lydia takes a seat by the fire and smooths her wool skirt over her knees.
“Cinnamon buns remind me of Christmas morning,” Clarissa remarks.
Lydia laughs, pouring two cups of tea. “The tour went well?”
“Yes, yes. The audience in Brattleboro was particularly enthusiastic.” Clarissa joins the younger woman and accepts a cup of tea once she is settled in her favorite William Morris wingback chair. “Everyone seems to be a baker there.”
As she sips her tea and chats with Lydia, Clarissa gazes around the snug room once again. Content to be back among her books, she looks forward to spending the rainy afternoon with a good novel.
