Your calls always answered within 5 rings.
First class service particularly when addressing the cancelled flight issue and sorting alternative flights. All dealt with in the most professional, efficient manner. Edward Scudder is an outstanding representative. I would never use any other company.
Excellent service and hassle free travel
Good service
Sean was very helpful and very efficient at sending over information
Professional as always
Fantastic service from Wayne as always
Leah is always very helpful.
It all went perfectly. Many thanks.
There was an issue with the hotel room which was promptly resolved.
The staff have been very co-operative, especially Jordan. Kept me well informed.
Great hotel. Good taxi service both ways.
Everyone very helpful, especially Scott
Glacier Express trip is worth considering for other customers. Either before the ski season (everything is open) has ended on 1st May or one month later when the spring flowers are in full bloom. Glacier Express was the best train trip I have had.
Really helpful, great communication, so easy to book
Huge thanks to Tania
Noah, your team were great but Ryanair and Stansted very crowded every inch of the way there and back. Is that a reputation the airport and airline have in common?
Your guys always go the extra mile. Thank you
Great holiday once again. Well done DialAFlight.
I gave a brief outline of what I would like to do in Spain, and received excellent recommendations for flights and hotels, both of which turned out to be superb
Special thanks to Matt Power
As usual, Jack's team were brilliant. He's amazing. So very helpful and kind. Just recommended him to a friend . . . . another one !!!
Fabulous service.
Simon Pitman provided superlative customer service and is a credit to your company.
The DialAFlight team provided us with a dream one week break in Paphos. Thanks to Simon and the team.
Always very efficient
We can rely on Reece to get us a good deal and make all the arrangements that work successfully for us
Great job Gavin
Sam was amazing - great service and always attentive
Happy with service. Thank you
Thank you Oscar we had such a great holiday
The capital has a long history of providing inspiration to novelists, playwrights and poets. Here are a few ideas for days out to help you learn more about your literary idols while exploring the places where they spent time.
William Shakespeare
The Bard famously divided his time between Stratford-upon-Avon and London, where he founded the Globe Theatre. Start your day at the National Portrait Gallery, where you can see the only portrait of Shakespeare likely to have been painted from real life.
Afterwards, head to Shakespeare’s Globe at Bankside to take an exhibition tour or watch one of the great man’s plays.
Getting there: The National Portrait Gallery is a short walk from Leicester Square (Northern and Piccadilly lines) and Charing Cross (Bakerloo and Northern lines). Catch bus route 15 from nearby Trafalgar Square to St Paul’s Cathedral for a picturesque ten-minute walk over the Millennium Bridge to Shakespeare’s Globe.
Charles Dickens
The much-loved novelist was an active social critic and based many of his books on observations of London life.
For a trip with a twist, head to the Charles Dickens Museum in Doughty Street, Bloomsbury. Housed in the Dickens family’s historic home, the museum’s collection includes the author’s desk and handwritten drafts of his books.
Follow this up with a visit to his final resting place at Poet’s Corner in Westminster Abbey, where more than 100 famous writers are buried.
Getting there: The nearest stations to the Charles Dickens Museum are Russell Square (Piccadilly line) and Chancery Lane (Central line). For Westminster Abbey, catch the Central line catch the Piccadilly line from Russell Square to Green Park and change on to the Jubilee line for Westminster. Alternatively, catch the Central line from Chancery Lane and change for the Jubilee line at Bond Street.
Mary Wollstonecraft
Not to be confused with her daughter Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, who wrote Frankenstein, Wollstonecraft is perhaps best known for her book A Vindication of the Rights of Woman. Stop by Dolben Street in SE1 to see a blue plaque marking where Wollstonecraft lived and wrote after arriving in London from Ireland.
To see Mary’s tombstone, travel north to the graveyard at St Pancras Old Church.
Getting there: Dolben Street is a short walk from Southwark station (Jubilee line). For St Pancras Old Church, catch the Jubilee line to Green Park and change on to the Victoria line for King’s Cross St Pancras. It’s a short walk to the churchyard.
William Blake
Poet, painter and key figure of the Romantic period, Blake lived in London for the majority of his life.
Begin your day with a visit to the Blake room at Tate Britain. Here you can see paintings, prints and drawings in his original style. Then visit Bunhill Fields where Blake is buried. In 2018 a new gravestone was placed here to mark his exact resting place.
Getting there: The nearest Underground station to Tate Britain is Pimlico (Victoria line). From Pimlico, catch the Victoria line to Euston and change for the Northern line to Old Street. It is then about a five-minute walk to Bunhill Fields.