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Old Oct 14th, 2005 | 02:39 PM
  #21  
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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.
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Old Oct 14th, 2005 | 02:51 PM
  #22  
 
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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
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Old Oct 14th, 2005 | 03:19 PM
  #23  
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&quot;The Lost King of France&quot; by Deborah Cadbury,
&quot;A Ladies'Paradice&quot;and&quot;The Belly of Paris,&quot; by Zola,
Anthing by MarcelPagnol. Peter Mayle.&quot;The Boss Dog&quot; &quot;Two Towns in Provence&quot;and &quot;Long ago in France&quot;
By MFK Fisher,
Anythinf by Colette,
&quot;Window on Provence&quot;by Bo Niles,
&quot;The Fly Truffler&quot;and &quot;Luminous Debris&quot;
by th late Gustaf Sobin,
&quot;Clochmerle&quot; (hard to find) a funny Burgundy tale.
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Old Oct 16th, 2005 | 03:16 AM
  #24  
 
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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 &quot;Life in a Postcard&quot;, 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 &quot;The Man who Married a Mountain&quot; which is all about the Pyrenees.

masses to pick from
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Old Oct 16th, 2005 | 03:52 AM
  #25  
 
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Hi cigale try ClochEmerle, it should be easier to find! ;-)
coco
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Old Oct 16th, 2005 | 07:27 AM
  #26  
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Hi coco, I have, and read Clochemerle by Gabriel Chevallier. It's spelled with the E.
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Old Oct 16th, 2005 | 11:03 AM
  #27  
 
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If you read The Lady and the Unicorn by Tracy Chevalier, it is interesting to see the real tapestries in Paris at the Musee National du Moyen-Age. It is interesting, even if you don't read the book!!
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Old Oct 29th, 2005 | 05:33 PM
  #28  
 
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I loved the Josephine Bonaparte trilogy by Sandra Gulland. I think the first wone is called Tales of PAssion, Tales of Woe. I was hooked.
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Old Oct 29th, 2005 | 10:16 PM
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Le Grand Meaulnes, by Alain Fournier, is a very moving, coming-of-age novel; you have to be in the right mood for this &quot;atmospheric&quot; work.
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