Books re: France?
#21
Original Poster
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 398
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Wow, thanks for all the suggestions and comic relief! Looks like I'll be busy.
No, I do not read French. I'm trying to learn to speak it though. For some reason, not quite taking to it like other languages. A little more effort might do the trick : )
Thanks for the link on the thread. I couldn't think of the phrase to put in for the search.
No, I do not read French. I'm trying to learn to speak it though. For some reason, not quite taking to it like other languages. A little more effort might do the trick : )
Thanks for the link on the thread. I couldn't think of the phrase to put in for the search.
#22
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 1,099
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I'd suggest one I recently read before our trip to Paris last month <i>A Tale of Two Cities</i> by Charles Dickens. It's about London and France shortly before and during the French Revolution. It'll make some of the older sights very interesting.
Jules
Jules
#23


Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 43,742
Likes: 4
"The Lost King of France" by Deborah Cadbury,
"A Ladies'Paradice"and"The Belly of Paris," by Zola,
Anthing by MarcelPagnol. Peter Mayle."The Boss Dog" "Two Towns in Provence"and "Long ago in France"
By MFK Fisher,
Anythinf by Colette,
"Window on Provence"by Bo Niles,
"The Fly Truffler"and "Luminous Debris"
by th late Gustaf Sobin,
"Clochmerle" (hard to find) a funny Burgundy tale.
"A Ladies'Paradice"and"The Belly of Paris," by Zola,
Anthing by MarcelPagnol. Peter Mayle."The Boss Dog" "Two Towns in Provence"and "Long ago in France"
By MFK Fisher,
Anythinf by Colette,
"Window on Provence"by Bo Niles,
"The Fly Truffler"and "Luminous Debris"
by th late Gustaf Sobin,
"Clochmerle" (hard to find) a funny Burgundy tale.
#24
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 8,159
Likes: 0
Perfume from Provence, by lady Fortescue is delightful.
Susan Loomis has a follow up- who doesn't these days- called Tarte Tatin.
There's another of the same sort of genre called "Life in a Postcard", and a very good book based in the Bearn by Celia Brayfield called Deep France.
For fiction look for Fred Vargas, and Sebastien Japhisot, and Simenon... No-one has mentioned Joanne Harris and her set of very fine books.
I've just finished "The Man who Married a Mountain" which is all about the Pyrenees.
masses to pick from
Susan Loomis has a follow up- who doesn't these days- called Tarte Tatin.
There's another of the same sort of genre called "Life in a Postcard", and a very good book based in the Bearn by Celia Brayfield called Deep France.
For fiction look for Fred Vargas, and Sebastien Japhisot, and Simenon... No-one has mentioned Joanne Harris and her set of very fine books.
I've just finished "The Man who Married a Mountain" which is all about the Pyrenees.
masses to pick from
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Jeannie
Europe
13
Feb 18th, 2003 05:28 AM


try ClochEmerle, it should be easier to find! ;-)

