Edinburgh — Where Writers, Worship, and Weathered Stone Meet

Edinburgh Castle taken taken by Jimmie Aaron Kepler in October 2024
Stop Three in a Grand Journey Through the World’s Most Memorable Destinations

Then northward to Edinburgh.

Some cities make their case in a hurry. They flash their lights, show off their skyline, and seem determined to win you over before you have even found your bearings. Edinburgh is not that kind of city. Edinburgh comes on slower than that. It rises through stone and mist like something remembered rather than merely visited. It feels less like a place you arrive at and more like a place you have somehow wandered into from the pages of an old novel, one with weather in it, and church bells, and a little sorrow, and a good many stories.

A City Built of Story

If London speaks in history and Paris in poetry, Edinburgh speaks in story.

Sir Walter Scott Memorial in Edinburgh

That may be the first thing I felt there. The city does not simply contain stories. It seems built by them. They live in the closes and alleyways. They hang in the air around old kirks and weathered stone. They climb the streets with you and settle beside you when the mist rolls in. Sir Walter Scott feels near at hand there. So does Robert Louis Stevenson. Muriel Spark is somewhere in the shadows. Ian Rankin seems never too far away. Edinburgh wears its literary soul so naturally that it never feels staged or polished up for company. It just feels honest.

Where Harry Potter and History Shake Hands

And then, of course, there is J.K. Rowling.

Edinburgh carries that association too, and it fits the city better than you might think. Rowling lived there while writing much of the Harry Potter series, and she finished the seventh book at the Balmoral Hotel. Walking through the city, it is easy to see why Edinburgh found its way into her imagination. Many people connect Victoria Street, with its curve and color and old-world feel, to the spirit of Diagon Alley. Whether it served as a direct model or simply gave shape and mood to the world she was building, you can surely understand the connection. Edinburgh has that sort of magic to it—not the waving-a-wand kind, but the older kind, the kind that comes from atmosphere, memory, and stone.

Attribution: The Balmoral Hotel, Edinburgh, Schottland. Taken by: W. Bulach, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

One of the moments that stayed with me most was finding the cemetery near the university, Greyfriars Kirkyard, where memory seems to lie heavy on the ground and the old stones lean like they are tired but still standing watch. There, among those graves, I saw the name Thomas Riddell, the real name on a headstone that so many connect with Tom Riddle, the villain in the Harry Potter books. Standing there, looking at that weathered name cut into old stone, I had one of those travel moments that catches a person off guard. Literature and place seemed to shake hands right there in front of me.

That sort of thing happens in Edinburgh.

Stone, Mist, and Memory

The city rises in stone and shadow. The castle stands above everything like an old guardian, watching over the rooftops and streets as if it has seen too much to be bothered by the passing centuries. The Royal Mile feels less like a tourist route and more like a long corridor of history, lined with memory, struggle, worship, commerce, and stories too numerous to name. Walking there, I felt as though I had stepped inside a historical novel and had been given permission to stay a while.

Every closet and alley seemed to hold something. A memory. A rumor. A prayer. A page from a book not yet written. That is Edinburgh’s gift. It does not hand itself over all at once. It lets you discover it slowly, one stone, one turn, one view, one hush at a time in a very old city.

There is beauty there, yes, but it is not the polished, easy kind. Edinburgh keeps its edges. The mist matters. The weathered buildings matter. The distant sound of footsteps on cobblestones matters. It all adds up to a city with gravity. A city with texture. A city that has lived long enough to know that beauty and hardship are often old companions.

Kirks, Cobblestones, and the Nearness of God

And, as in so many places I traveled, I found churches there too.

Church with castle on the hill in the background taken by Jimmie Aaron Kepler October 2024.

 

That always matters to me.

In Edinburgh, the kirks, cathedrals, steeples, and sanctuaries seemed stitched right into the city’s soul. They stood there as witnesses to centuries of longing, struggle, reform, prayer, and praise. They reminded me once again that no matter how far I had traveled, I kept finding evidence of God’s presence. Sometimes it was in a grand cathedral. Sometimes it was in a smaller church standing quiet along an old street. Sometimes it was in the hush inside a sanctuary, in the worn wood of a pew, in the upward reach of a spire, or in the simple truth that generations before us had built places to worship because they knew the soul needs somewhere to kneel.

For anyone who loves history, faith, and literature, Edinburgh feels almost sacred.

Not sacred because it is soft or sentimental. Edinburgh is neither of those things. It has too much stone in its bones, too much weather in its face, too much history in its walls. But it feels sacred in the way some places do when they hold the marks of humanity honestly. Our fear. Our faith. Our imagination. Our ambition. Our longing to write something, build something, believe something, or pray something that might outlast us.

That is what stayed with me.

Edinburgh is not merely a city you see. It is a city you feel. It settles over you slowly, like the mist itself. It gets into your imagination. It makes you think of old hymns, worn books, candlelight, graveyards, sermon echoes, and stories told in low voices while rain taps at the glass.

Some places entertain you.

Edinburgh haunts you a little.

In the best possible way.

And that is why it belongs on this journey.

Grace and Peace,
Jimmie Aaron Kepler, Ed.D.

Unless label otherwise, I took all the photos.

Did you enjoy this article? You can find more of Jimmie Aaron Kepler’s non-fiction books at NONFICTION and his speculative fiction books written as Jim Kepler at FICTION.

London — Where History Still Breathes

 

Big Ben taken by Jimmie Aaron Kepler

World’s most memorable destinations that I’ve visited

The first step in a grand passage through some of the world’s most memorable destinations that I’ve visited begins in a city that feels both deeply known and forever new.

London

Every great journey needs a fitting beginning, and for me this one begins in London.

There are cities that make a strong first impression, and then there are cities that seem to reach out from somewhere deeper, as if you have been moving toward them for years without fully knowing it. London has always felt that way to me. It is a city of grandeur, yes, but never the loud or showy kind. Its beauty is steadier than that. It rests in old stone, river light, Gothic towers, quiet parks, red double-decker buses, and the unhurried confidence of a place that has nothing left to prove.

London is the capital of the United Kingdom, the official name of the country, but those are only the facts of it. Facts tell you where a city sits on a map. They do not explain how it settles into the imagination.

What struck me most about London the first time I arrived in its heart was the strong and curious sense that I already knew it. Not completely, of course, and not in the way one knows a hometown or a street where one has lived. But I knew its mood. I knew something of its silhouette, its weather, its voice. I had met London long before I ever laid eyes on it. I had met it in books, in films, in history, in speeches from darker hours of the twentieth century, in old newsreels, and in stories that have shaped so much of the English-speaking world.

Literatures Impact on My Knowing London

Both as a child and in my adult reading life, London kept appearing. Sometimes it stood at the center of the story. Sometimes it appeared only for a chapter, a train platform, a street corner, a fogbound pursuit, or a scene that stayed with me long after the book was closed. The same has been true in film. Again and again, London has shown up not just as a backdrop, but as a living presence. 

London is one of those rare cities a reader can feel he already knows before ever setting foot there, and a good part of that comes from the writers who have walked us through it for years. 

Dickens gave us the London of Oliver Twist, Great Expectations, Bleak House, and Our Mutual Friend, full of fog, crowds, hardship, and human striving. 

Doyle gave us the gaslit streets and rooms of Sherlock Holmes, where Baker Street became as real in the imagination as any address on a map. 

Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray and his elegant plays opened the doors to another London altogether, polished and witty on the surface, but often hiding darker truths underneath. 

Stevenson’s Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde gave the city a haunted double life, while Stoker’s Dracula let London become the stage where old-world evil met the modern age. 

Ian Fleming made London part of the machinery of danger and intrigue in the James Bond novels, where clubs, offices, streets, and shadows all seemed to carry the scent of espionage. 

The residence on the left is where the late Sir Sean Connery, the first James Bond lived. In the below photo you can see the front entrance of the residence of his real life neighbor, Sir Roger Moore, who also played the part of James Bond. He lived in the white residence. Their front doors were around the corner from each other. Interestingly, across the street from Connery’s from door entrance was the grounds of Buckingham Palace.

Pictures of Sean Connery and Roger Moore’s homes in London

And J.K Rowling, through the Harry Potter series, made London magical in a new way, turning King’s Cross, hidden alleys, and secret doorways into places readers would forever look at differently. 

Taken together, these writers do something special: they make London feel less like a distant destination and more like a place we have already lived in through story, long before we ever arrive. I had already stood in its drawing rooms, crossed its bridges, entered its stations, and followed its shadows. By the time I finally came to London in person, it felt less like discovering a stranger and more like meeting, at last, a place I had known from a distance all my life.

London Feels Familiar

That may be one of London’s rarest gifts. It feels familiar even when it is new.

The city carries its history with remarkable ease. Westminster gathers together monarchy, Parliament, endurance, and national memory in one sweep of the eye. The Thames moves through the middle of the city with calm authority, as if it has watched the whole long story unfold and still intends to keep its own counsel. Big Ben, Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace, the old facades and spires and bridges—these are not merely landmarks. They are part of a living conversation between the past and the present.

And yet London never feels trapped in history. That is one of the things I admire most about it.

Live in Present Tense

For all its pageantry and weight, London lives very much in the present tense. The cafés hum with conversation. The bookstores offer refuge and invitation. The West End glows toward evening with its old theatrical magic still very much intact.

During my last stay, my hotel was in the West End which can be considered the Broadway of London.

The parks give the city room to breathe. Even the weather, with its drifting rain and silver light, seems woven into the character of the place. And the traffic—Lord bless it—moves with a stubborn, relentless determination that may be as revealing as any monument.

Look up, to linger, to notice the details

Walking through London, I found myself slowing down. Not only because a city like that deserves your attention, but because it quietly asks for it. London does not shout. It does not need to. It invites you to look up, to linger, to notice the details—a clock tower against the morning sky, the worn dignity of old stone, the movement of the river, the sudden stillness in the middle of a busy square. It is a city best received at more than a glance.

For a traveler, that makes London unforgettable. For a writer, it makes London dangerous in the very best way. It stirs the desire to take one more walk, fill one more notebook page, sit one hour longer in a café, and follow one more street just to see what waits at the end of it.

I have now been to London three official times, and each visit has met me with a slightly different mood. That is the nature of great places, I suspect. They do not stay fixed because we do not stay fixed. We arrive older, more observant, more grateful, more burdened, more hopeful, and the city seems to answer the person we are when we meet it. Yet every time I have visited London, one truth has remained the same.

History there is not dead.

It is not locked away behind museum glass or confined to plaques and guidebooks. In London, history still breathes. It moves through the streets, lingers in the architecture, rises in the bells, drifts along the river, and waits in the spaces between old stones and modern lives.

And if you slow down enough, you can hear it.

This is where the journey begins.

The picture of Big Ben was taken by me in October 2025. I also took the picture of the former residences of Sir Sean Connery and Sir Roger Moore.

Grace and Peace,
Jimmie Aaron Kepler