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Christmas Lights and Carnevale: A Hilarious Winter Travel Memoir of Europe Adventures - Perfect for Holiday Reading & Travel Enthusiasts
Christmas Lights and Carnevale: A Hilarious Winter Travel Memoir of Europe Adventures - Perfect for Holiday Reading & Travel Enthusiasts

Christmas Lights and Carnevale: A Hilarious Winter Travel Memoir of Europe Adventures - Perfect for Holiday Reading & Travel Enthusiasts

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Description

Lost luggage and a missed train, but who cares? We’re in Spain!Six years ago Noor promised her grandma she would return to Italy, but this time she’s not coming alone. With her fiancé Andy, they’ll celebrate Christmas in Spain, shiver through Switzerland, Austria, Prague and put on costumes for the Carnevale in Venice. And of course, spend time with family and friends in Italy. It will be a magical adventure in a winter wonderland.Well, except for an unwelcome visit from ‘Mr. Flu’ and Venice flooding, but with Andy by her side they’ll have a happy holiday. Most of the time.★If you enjoy light-hearted and amusing travel memoirs, then grab your copy today!★Christmas Lights and Carnevale is the third book of Noor’s Travel Tales trilogy, but the books in this series can be read on their own and in any order. If you prefer to read them in order, start with ‘Big Cities and Mountain Villages’ and then read ‘Falafels and Bedouins’.

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
I thought this would be a fun read for Christmastime, learning about how the holiday is celebrated in different European cities. There is a bit of that, but the majority of the book is about Noor visiting her family in Italy. It’s just not very interesting and many of the conversations could have been summarized rather than drawn out. As a memoir for her family it might be fine, but I didn’t need to read about every last trip to visit Grandma. The strange part, though, was how some parts of the book were written in a combination of past and present tense. Sometimes even within the same sentence!If anything, read her much more interesting “Falafels and Bedouins,” but give this one a pass.
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