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From Paris to Buenos Aires, you’ll want to settle in and raise a glass at these famous literary bars, notebook at the ready.

It’s true: saloons, pubs, clubs and other welcome watering holes tend to be magnets for writers. Perhaps these necessarily solo practitioners seek intellectual and social stimulation in the warm environs of a bar. Perhaps they’re there to observe, seeking material for their next great novel or essay. Perhaps they...just need a drink.

Around the world, a few long-standing establishments have drawn generations of writers – and have counted some of the most esteemed literary figures in history as regulars. Here are 10 famous literary bars at which you’ll want to settle in and raise a glass, notebook at the ready.

Tourists drink cocktails next to a sculpture of US novelist Ernest Hemingway at El Floridita, Havana, Cuba
Papa Hemingway looms large at historic El Floridita in central Havana © Adalberto Roque / AFP via Getty Images

1. El Floridita, Havana, Cuba

In continuous business for some two centuries, El Floridita is best known as a favorite haunt of famous Havana resident Ernest Hemingway. This bar in Cuba’s capital was most famous for its daiquiris; Hemingway, being a (famously thirsty) cocktail connoisseur, requested his with no sugar and double the rum. This became known as the Papa Doble – and is now El Floridita’s signature cocktail. Papa himself is memorialized as a life-sized statue at the bar. Throw back a couple of those daiquiris and you might actually believe that he is still there holding court with other members of his crew, such as Errol Flynn and Gary Cooper.

A couple dances in a bar
Famous Beat poets knocked back drinks inside San Francisco’s Vesuvio Café © Kris Davidson / ϰϲʿ¼

2. Vesuvio Café, San Francisco, USA

In San Francisco’s North Beach neighborhood, was a popular hangout for members of the Beat Generatio – including writers Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsburg and Neal Cassady – and in is conveniently located next door to the legendary City Lights Books, which was opened by Lawrence Ferlinghetti in 1953. Stroll through the pedestrian-only alley next to the welcoming bar and admire the colorful murals with poetry and quotes from literature. Then, channel your inner beatnik: order a Bohemian Coffee, climb the stairs to the second floor, and claim a seat that overlooks the bar below. This is where history was made. Dig it?

The interior of Café Tortoni, Buenos Aires, Argentina
The iconic Café Tortoni was a place intellectuals would come to see and be seen © Sandra Moraes / Shutterstock

3. Café Tortoni, Buenos Aires, Argentina

Café Tortoni drips with the faded glamor and stylish melancholy that pervades Buenos Aires. It’s perhaps the most famous of the city’s , a group of beautiful old cafes where sandwiches de miga (crustless sandwiches) and facturas (pastries) are served with considerable pomp by bow-tied waiters. Leading lights of Argentine arts and letters were known to congregate at Tortoni, including story-story master Jorge Luis Borges, poet Alfonsina Storni and great composer of the tango Carlos Gardel, who held court at a table by the front window. Today, the creative spirit lives on in a downstairs space where poetry readings, jazz jam sessions and tango performances regularly take place.

4. The Horse You Came In On Saloon, Baltimore, USA

Edgar Allan Poe visited many taverns in his lifetime, but is reckoned the last place that he drank before he died: a sign above the door even claims the spot as “Poe’s Last Stop.” Located in the Fell’s Point Historic District, this dive bar was founded in 1775 and is the oldest joint in Baltimore – as well as the only bar in Maryland to have operated before, during and after Prohibition. The place stays true to its name, with such details as barstools featuring saddle-shaped seats.

Patrons inside Café Louvre, with its high ceilings and Parisian-style flourishes
Alluring Café Louvre was a favorite haunt of Franz Kafka © Veronika Primm / ϰϲʿ¼

5. Café Louvre, Prague, Czech Republic

A Parisian-style café and billiard hall in Prague, Café Louvre first opened in 1902 and quickly became a meeting place for artists, writers and intellectuals. Among its patrons was the novelist and short-story writer Franz Kafka, who was a member of a philosophical circle that met here. Take the grand staircase up to the first floor, where you’ll be greeted by high ceilings and a luxurious interior that oozes belle-époque elegance. Closed and condemned in the Communist era as a “bourgeois” institution, it reopened in 1992 after the Velvet Revolution and quickly caught on again.

People dining at the famous cafe Les Deux Magots, Blvd St-Germain, Paris, France
Big ideas have taken shape at Les Deux Magots’ outdoor tables © Petr Kovalenkov / Shutterstock

6. Les Deux Magots, Paris, France

In the chic -ұ--ʰé neighborhood, this storied cafe is hardly bohemian these days. But while you’ll pay top euro for a café crème at Les Deux Magots, feeling the pull of intellectual history is well worth the premium. Starting in the late 19th century, leading literary lights have gathered at the sidewalk tables to smoke cigarettes, sip absinthe and exchange ideas here. Its roster of regular patrons has included the Surrealists, Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir, Pablo Picasso, James Joyce and other towering figures who turned Paris into a hub of world culture.

Patrons at the historic White Horse Tavern, West Village, New York City, New York, USA
Literary spirits loom large at New York City’s White Horse Tavern © Stephanie Keith / Getty Images

7. White Horse Tavern, New York City, USA

Walking around New York City’s West Village, you’ll see no shortage of wordsmiths tapping on their laptops in the area’s many coffee shops. They have big shoes to fill: the neighborhood has been a center of literary culture in the USA – and the entire world – since the 19th century. That legacy lives on at the historic White Horse Tavern, which has been in operation since 1880 and which first became a famous bookish hangout in the 1950s. A bit like the West Village itself, the White Horse’s current incarnation can draw a ritzy, fratty crowd. But as you sip a pint at its gorgeous carved-wood bar, it’s not hard to conjure the ghosts of hard-drinking poets Dylan Thomas and Delmore Schwartz, regulars whose ghosts are still said to haunt the joint to this day.

A historic alleyway lined in brick, just off a modern street
Out-of-the-way Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese is a crossroads of literary history © Arndale / Shutterstock

8. Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese, London, UK

Step into this subterranean pub, wedged in an alley off London’s Fleet St, and take a step back in time. Dating to 1538, Ye Olde Cheshire Cheese was reconstructed after the Great Fire of 1666. It was a favorite of Charles Dickens, who even alluded to the pub in A Tale of Two Cities. He was only one of the many writers who were regulars at the place: figures from Mark Twain to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle to PG Wodehouse also wet their whistles here. Sprawling over four floors, the pub features a series of lower-level chambers, cellars and tunnels that beg to be explored.

Visitors at the rotating bar at the Carousel Bar, Hotel Monteleone, French Quarter, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA
Grab a seat at the rotating Carousel Bar to hear a few stories – and maybe write one, too © Tim Graham / Getty Images

9. Carousel Bar, New Orleans, USA

The colorful Carousel Bar inside Hotel Monteleone in New OrleansFrench Quarter has drawn numerous writers seeking inspiration in one of the USA’s most atmospheric cities. Thanks to the patronage of such scribes as Truman Capote and Tennessee Williams, in 1999 it was even named an official “” by the United for Libraries. As they sip their Sazeracs, guests at the merry-go-round-like bar will make a full rotation every 15 minutes. Some writers, like Eudora Welty and William Faulkner, were so enthralled with the carousel that they wove it into their stories. You’ll likely be, too, as you enjoy live jazz music and a signature Vieux Carré cocktail.

10. Davy Byrnes Pub, Dublin, Ireland

It’s easy to draw up a list of bars where famous novelists have appeared. But what about one that makes an appearance in a famous novel? While the current incarnation probably wouldn’t be James Joyce’s kind of place, Davy Byrnes merits a stop on any bookworm’s tour of Dublin given its cameo in Joyce’s great novel Ulysses. In Chapter 8 of the modernist classic, protagonist Leopold Bloom stops in here for a Gorgonzola sandwich and a glass of Burgundy. These days, chips and pints are a more common order – except on Bloomsday (June 16), when Joyce obsessives retrace Bloom’s steps across Dublin, and the Gorgonzola sells out.

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