Fiction with setting in Paris?
#24
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 7,561
Likes: 0
The Murders in the Rue Morgue.
Simenon's Maigret series is being reissued in trade paperback. You can find other works by him in used bookstores or on Alibris or hpb.com, etc. And a good bit of his non-Maigret literature is published by the NYRB imprint.
Just about each of Alan Furst's books takes place in Paris at some bloody point except Dark Voyage. And there's this: http://magazine.fourseasons.com/trav...n_fursts_paris
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Three Musketeers
pick a Hugo
etc.
Simenon's Maigret series is being reissued in trade paperback. You can find other works by him in used bookstores or on Alibris or hpb.com, etc. And a good bit of his non-Maigret literature is published by the NYRB imprint.
Just about each of Alan Furst's books takes place in Paris at some bloody point except Dark Voyage. And there's this: http://magazine.fourseasons.com/trav...n_fursts_paris
The Count of Monte Cristo
The Three Musketeers
pick a Hugo
etc.
#25
Joined: Feb 2011
Posts: 9,171
Likes: 0
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0061791083/...=IUX5XZDNEZCSC
The Hotel on Place Vendome but the amazon page has a couple others that are very good. I gave you a mix of Novels.
The Hotel on Place Vendome but the amazon page has a couple others that are very good. I gave you a mix of Novels.
#26
Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 2,989
Likes: 0
HIKRCHICK,
I would heartily recommend the above suggestions:
Suite Francaise, Irene Nemirovsky (set during German occupation, WWII)
A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway (non-fiction)
A very old one, also during WW2 : Is Paris burning (Paris brule-t-il), depicting the insurrection and the subsequent liberation of Paris in summer 1944.
Also, have you seen the Woody Allen flick MIDNIGHT IN PARIS? That should really get you folks in the mood. Great scenery and a cute story. I would also suggest taking the PARISWALK "Hemingway Walk" which has become hugely popular after the film.
Enjoy Paris....
I would heartily recommend the above suggestions:
Suite Francaise, Irene Nemirovsky (set during German occupation, WWII)
A Moveable Feast, Ernest Hemingway (non-fiction)
A very old one, also during WW2 : Is Paris burning (Paris brule-t-il), depicting the insurrection and the subsequent liberation of Paris in summer 1944.
Also, have you seen the Woody Allen flick MIDNIGHT IN PARIS? That should really get you folks in the mood. Great scenery and a cute story. I would also suggest taking the PARISWALK "Hemingway Walk" which has become hugely popular after the film.
Enjoy Paris....
#27
Joined: Nov 2014
Posts: 281
Likes: 0
If you want fiction with a strong dose/perspective of the history of Paris, try Paris: A Novel by Edward Rutherfurd. I just started reading it last week ahead of my trip in two weeks. It's HUGE (my copy is over 800 pages), and a bit dense, but very interesting and keeps adding ideas of things to see / places to stroll.
Three Musketeers is a classic, and very Paris oriented. Count of Monte Cristo equally fun, but set in a myriad of places (although the climax occurs in Paris).
Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities is also a classic, set during the French Revolution. A modern telling of that time period is Hilary Mantel's A Place of Greater Safety (not IMO as good as her books on Thomas Cromwell).
Nonfiction with an Americans in Paris perspective besides Hemingway - The Greater Journey by David McCullough. Great research and well written, even though it's nonfiction it moves like fiction.
Three Musketeers is a classic, and very Paris oriented. Count of Monte Cristo equally fun, but set in a myriad of places (although the climax occurs in Paris).
Dickens' A Tale of Two Cities is also a classic, set during the French Revolution. A modern telling of that time period is Hilary Mantel's A Place of Greater Safety (not IMO as good as her books on Thomas Cromwell).
Nonfiction with an Americans in Paris perspective besides Hemingway - The Greater Journey by David McCullough. Great research and well written, even though it's nonfiction it moves like fiction.
#31

Joined: Oct 2007
Posts: 7,574
Likes: 6
Loved "Little Paris Bookshop" but only the first few chapters were in Paris.
Here's a good list:
Paris I love you, but your bringing me down
Paris Letters
Seven Letters from Paris
Lunch in Paris
A Paris Apartment
Paris: a love story
Paris Architect
Claude & Camillle
The Chocolate Thief
The Chocolate Kiss
The Chocolate Touch
My Paris Dream
The last time I saw Paris
Almost French
Paris my sweet
Buying a piece of Paris
Secrets of Paris
Look them all up on Amazon books and read a little of each story.
These are all memiors or those who have lived there or fiction---fun in a delightful setting. I loved walking the streets with all of the characters and remembering places that we have enjoyed.
I could probably come up with more as it's a favorite location of mine.
Here's a good list:
Paris I love you, but your bringing me down
Paris Letters
Seven Letters from Paris
Lunch in Paris
A Paris Apartment
Paris: a love story
Paris Architect
Claude & Camillle
The Chocolate Thief
The Chocolate Kiss
The Chocolate Touch
My Paris Dream
The last time I saw Paris
Almost French
Paris my sweet
Buying a piece of Paris
Secrets of Paris
Look them all up on Amazon books and read a little of each story.
These are all memiors or those who have lived there or fiction---fun in a delightful setting. I loved walking the streets with all of the characters and remembering places that we have enjoyed.
I could probably come up with more as it's a favorite location of mine.
#37
Joined: Feb 2014
Posts: 6,531
Likes: 0
Hi, you wrote, regarding your last visit to Paris:
"I'm sure a lot has changed in the past 30 years!"
Funnily, I was just reading the new David Downie book, called A Passion for Paris, and he wrote that "“the real Paris is of the mind, so it doesn’t exist and can’t age.” There is a fun truth to that. You might like reading his book, which is non-fiction in the vein of the Stones of Florence, not a crime series.
http://us.macmillan.com/apassionforparis/daviddownie
Plus, it often takes the form of a literary walking tour through the streets of Paris, so if you read some of these novels by classic French authors, the book identifies the houses and cafes where those authors wrote their books, and how they viewed these streets.
"I'm sure a lot has changed in the past 30 years!"
Funnily, I was just reading the new David Downie book, called A Passion for Paris, and he wrote that "“the real Paris is of the mind, so it doesn’t exist and can’t age.” There is a fun truth to that. You might like reading his book, which is non-fiction in the vein of the Stones of Florence, not a crime series.
http://us.macmillan.com/apassionforparis/daviddownie
Plus, it often takes the form of a literary walking tour through the streets of Paris, so if you read some of these novels by classic French authors, the book identifies the houses and cafes where those authors wrote their books, and how they viewed these streets.
#39
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 6,396
Likes: 0
Not non-fiction, but "The Piano Shop on the Left Bank: Discovering a Forgotten Passion in a Paris Atelier" by Thad Carhart is wonderful. It's a memoir written by an American who's living in Paris and finds an amazing world of people and music in a neighborhood storefront.


