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Recommended reading for a visit to France

Recommended reading for a visit to France

Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 12:19 PM
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Non-fiction: any of the volumes in which Janet Flanner's "Letters from Paris," originally written for the New Yorker, are compiled. The volume called "Paris Was Yesterday" covers the 1920's and 1930's; later decades are covered in several volumes, all called "Paris Journal."

At Home in France, by Ann Barry. Yet another book about a non-French person and her house in France (this one in SW France), but it's worth reading even if you've already read the Peter Mayle books because the author is (in my opinion, anyway) much less annoying than Peter Mayle.

Fiction: The Rose Grower, by Michelle de Kretser. A lovely novel about a provincial family's experiences during the French Revolution.

To piggyback on hanl's suggestion of reading Zola, I'd suggest starting with The Masterpiece, which describes the life of a struggling artist in Paris, and contains some beautifully written passages describing the walks the artist takes through Paris.
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 12:20 PM
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Way back in the 1950s when the New York Herald Tribune was stll publishing, a regular columnist was Art Buchwald. They were hilarious vignettes of his experiences while in Paris. You should read "I'll Always Have Paris: A Memoir".
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 12:30 PM
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'City of Darkness, City of Light' is a wonderful novel about the French Revolution by Marge Piercy. Educational and entertaining at the same time. My husband and I are in the midst of reading 'The Count of Monte Cristo' right now. It is 1400 pages but very engrossing. And of course there is always the incomparable 'A Tale of Two Cities.'
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 12:45 PM
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"Perfume" by Patrick Suskind set in a 17th century paris and the wonderful novel by Simone de Beauvoir "Mémoires d'une jeune fille rangée" which I read almost every year and which depicts the heart and soul of the Montparnasse area 8it is de Beauvoir's early autobiography (from her childhood to her twenties till her relationship with Sartre)
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 12:49 PM
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ECLECTIC SELECTION OF FRENCH BOOKS

The Collected Traveler: Paris....collected by Barrie Kerper...this is one from the author's great series...she also has one written about Provence....she has included great articles...terrific bibiography...A-Z practicalities! Barrie would make a terrific fodorite!!

Between Meals, An appetite for Paris...A.J. Liebling

Me Talk Pretty One Day ...... Davis Sedaris Group of short stories ..."difficulty learning the language...his near-impossibilitiy of translating the culture" Very funny!!

Paris Out of Hand (a wayward guide)
...Karen Elizabeth Gordon....an artistic surreal guide!!

Food Lover's Guide to Paris....Patricia Wells

Quiet Days in Clichy...written by Henry Miller....Photographs by Brassai...one of my favorite!!~




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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 01:16 PM
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Le Divorce by Diane Johnson. Peter Mayle's fiction is actually very enjoyable, I think (Chasing Cezanne, Hotel Pastis, etc.)
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 02:58 PM
  #27  
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In my opinion, Victor Hugo's Les Miserable and Hunchback of Notre Dame should be required reading for anyone going to Paris. Have a wonderful trip!!
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 03:47 PM
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Bailey... You mentioned Henry Miller...I would add the "Diaries of Anais Nin" to the recommended reading list.
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 04:06 PM
  #29  
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Well, à chacun son gout. I loved Paris to the Moon and thought On Rue Tatin was one of the most joyless accounts I'd ever read by someone living in France. Someone who knows the author once told me she suffers from depression, and I thought the book demonstrated that amply.

Others I've enjoyed are French Dirt, A Place in Normandy, Paris Dreambook, A Corner in the Marais, Puligny-Montrachet: Journal of a Village in Burgundy, At Home in France, and Travelers' Tales: France.
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 04:23 PM
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Just read "The Da Vinci Code", set in modern-day Paris and centered around the Louvre. Talk about a page turner, I read the first page and just waved goodby to my husband - I was a goner!!!!
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 05:39 PM
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I thought of a few more, all non-fiction:

Celestine: Voices from a French Village, by Gillian Tindall. Social history of a French village (more interesting than that makes it sound), that grew out of the author's discovery of some old letters hidden in a house she was living in, and her attempts to find out more about the woman the letters were written to.

The Englishman's Daughter, by Ben Macintyre. True story of a group of English soldiers who were hidden by French villagers after becoming separated from their regiments in WWI. (The Englishman's Daughter is the title the book was given when it was published in the US; the UK title was A Foreign Field. I guess the US publishers thought Americans wouldn't get the reference.)

The Piano Shop on the Left Bank, by Thad Carhart. American writer living in Paris decides to take up piano lessons. Interesting even if you've never played the piano, fascinating if you have.

Also, has anyone read Cara Black's mysteries set in Paris (Murder in the Marais, Murder in Belleville, Murder in the Sentier, and Murder in the Bastille)? I've heard good things about them, but haven't gotten around to reading any of them yet.
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 05:51 PM
  #32  
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For Provence: "Window on Provence"by Bo Niles, "Two Towns in Provence"by MFK Fisher(one of my fav writers)
Lot: "From here you can almost see Paris"
Brittany: "A Horse of Pride
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 06:18 PM
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As previously mentioned, Ina Caro's Book is excellent. Also, Henry James' book, "A Little Tour in France" is fun to read, about his train tour in the late 19th century. I love the French novelists, like Balzac, Stendal, de Maupassant, etc. - especially Balzac. Read "Cousin Bette" and "Pere Goriot", both great. I recently read a biography of Simone de Beauvoir, which was wonderful. I doubt very much that you want to read Marcel Proust's "In Search of Lost Time" (6 volumes, takes forever!)- but terrific insight into French society during his time back in the beginning of 20th century. But definite a project to read. Balzac, Zola, and Stendal are more fun!
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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 06:45 PM
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I absolutely loved this book about the Paris flood in 1910 (It really makes the watermarkings on the quai seem real). It is the second part of a trilogy, and I would encourage you to read the first one, just to know where the characters are coming from. But the description of the water level being at the bottom of the bridges and of the train tracks at Orsay, plus some of the descriptions of La Grande Jatte. Here's a website: http://www.readinggroupguides.com/gu...ter-author.asp

A non-fiction book that I like better than Gopnik's (maybe because it deals with an earlier Paris) is Pulitzer Prize winner Stanley Karnow's Paris in the Fifties, a memoir of sorts: he arrives as a student and ultimately works for Time Magazine. http://hallbiography.com/general/142.shtml

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Old Aug 5th, 2003 | 08:28 PM
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Blaise Cendrars "To the End of the World" Perhaps the greatest and least well known of the "lost generation" writers in Post WWI Paris. This is a grand look at the fabulous and twisted underbelly of Paris.
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Old Aug 6th, 2003 | 04:58 AM
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I don't think anyone mentioned French Toast, Harriet Welty Rochefort's book about french culture -- hilarious and insightful.

Yvone Lenard has written a couple books on Provence that are similar in theme to Mayle (experiences of buying a house in Provence, food, etc.) but in a much different style. She includes recipes in each chapter.

Almost French is a great story of an Australian girl adapting to life in Paris with her French boyfriend.

Children of Light is a novel about a woman that finds peace by returning to her memories of a hut in Provence.

And, French Dirt by Richard Goodman is the story of his garden in the south of France -- super if you're into gardening. Interesting look at small village life even if you're not.

Happy reading!
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Old Aug 6th, 2003 | 05:28 AM
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Ooh -- I forgot Sandra Gulland's trilogy about Josephine Bonaparte.
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Old Aug 6th, 2003 | 05:38 AM
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Mont Saint Michel and Chartres, by Henry Adams, is a classic, and a must-read if you're thinking of visiting either or both of those places.

The real-life Henry Adams is a character in a novel called Panama, by Eric Zencey. It's a historical mystery, set in France in the 1890's (when Adams was in France, working on "Mont Saint Michel and Chartres&quot that deals with the scandal that arose from the collapse of the French plan to build the Panama Canal (hence the somewhat misleading title). It's a little slow-moving as a mystery, but it's good on atmospheric descriptions of Paris in the 1890's. (LVSue's recommendation of The Knowledge of Water, which is a very similar book, reminded me of it.)

The Visitable Past, by Leon Edel (the Henry James biographer), a memoir about Edel's experiences as an American soldier in WWII, has some interesting chapters about Paris just after the liberation.
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Old Aug 6th, 2003 | 06:44 AM
  #39  
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Only in the last several years were these two marvelous books by Zola translated into English.
"The Ladies Paradise"
"The Belly of Paris"
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Old Aug 6th, 2003 | 07:29 AM
  #40  
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I give a second (or a third or fourth or whatever) to Polly Platt's books (although "French or Foe" is more about French culture and "Savoir Faire" is more about the nuts and bolts of travel there) and Ina Caro's (her method will give you a new way to think about travel, starting with the oldest and moving to the newest sites rather than the more typical city by city or neighborhood by neighborhood type of tourism most of us practice). Also, I recently read a good review in the New York Times for new books "Joie de Vivre: Simple French Style for Everyday Living" by Robert Arbor ("party memoir, part instructional manual" according to the review&quot and for "Sixty Million French People Can't Be Wrong" by Jean-Benoit Nadeau and Julie Barlow ("more anthropological than literary as the aimed to find historic, geographic and linguistic reasons for French behavior&quot. These books sound like they will give you some insight into France before you go and something to bring back with you even after your trip is over.
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