The Secret Life of France

Wonderful book full of insights and anecdotes about life with the French. Using her own personal experiences of over 20 years living in France Lucy Wadham provides an insiders look on how things work here and leads us on a journey through the French moral maze, and examines French attitudes to a range of subjects from marriage and adultery to work and race relations.

 

The Flea Markets of France

From villages in Southwest France to the city of lights a visit to a flea market can be the highlight of a trip to France including a lively encounter with everyday French culture, an exciting way to spend a few hours, and a chance to pick up a unique souvenir. The Flea Markets of France is the indispensable tool for getting the most out of your visit, whether you’re a first-time visitor or an experienced shopper. Conversational and comprehensive, this guide will tell you everything you need to know about exploring markets all over France. Descriptions of more than thirty markets and their specialties, as well as practical advice on visiting them, is augmented by notes on regional items, tips on bargaining and collecting, a glossary of relevant French phrases, and a useful rating system which gives an overview of each market.

Much more than a simple listing of French flea markets, Sandy Price’s suggestions of things to do nearby, places to eat, food specialties of the area, and local amenities are complemented by bits of history and cultural observations.

 

French Women Don’t Sleep Alone

Jamie Cat Callan in her new book “French Women Don’t Sleep Alone” gives readers a personalized, guided tour through the corridors of French love. Just as we’ve learned to stop torturing ourselves with fad diets and have relearned the art of eating, this witty, insightful, and candid book strives to show American women how to cultivate and enjoy the pleasures of love, romance, and marriage. According to Callan French women believe that the gift for attracting men has nothing to do with beauty, work, or even motivation. On the contrary says Callan, French women’s love lives are romantic, sensual, playful, and intense. They conduct their relationships with the same unique sense of originality and artfulness that they choose their clothes and accessories. 

Jamie Cat Callan presents and signs her new book “French Women Don’t Sleep Alone: Pleasurable Secrets to Finding Love,” Wed. Sept 16, 7:30pm, WHSmith – 248, rue de Rivoli – 75001 Paris – M°Concorde

 

Unexplored Paris

As all habitués know, Paris is a world unto itself, an endless labyrinth that never seems to exhaust the curious. No surprise then to find that there is a publisher, Editions Parigramme, that survives by producing nothing but books on the city. They’ve been doing it for more than a decade now and show no signs of slowing down; this year alone has already seen the appearance of more than twenty new titles, on topics as varied as poems about Paris, the city’s best bars/bakers/gardens/walks/restaurants, being a young mother here, design, contemporary art, excursions with small kids… Alas, for the hardened Anglophone, they are all in French, though a wonderful guide like Les Patisseries de Paris shouldn’t cause too many problems to anyone with a true love of éclairs au chocolat and palmiers and a basic grasp of the language of Molière and MC Solaar. Continue reading “Unexplored Paris”

Footprints in Pairs

A few streets, a few lives… this new book is half history and half a personal family autobiography, Author Gillian Tindall, a master of miniaturist history, tells ordinary stories of the ordinary lives of five generations of her family while revisiting Paris’s Latin Quarter evoking all the resonances of the Left Bank – students and artists, garrets and cafés, music halls and courtesans. Tindall’s writing makes much of an unknown person or single situation while staking out a particular territory in idiosyncratic non-fiction that is brilliantly evocative of place.

 

A Certain…Je Ne Sais Quoi

Author Charles Timoney recently discussed his new book  ‘A Certain…Je Ne Sais Quoi: The Ideal Guide to Sounding, Acting and Shrugging Like The French” at Smiths Paris Bookshop. Timoney, who has lived and worked in France for 25 years, told his audience that he learned quickly that his ‘O Level French’ was scarcely enough to cope with life here. He noted  “Even if you did understand what was being said, there was always that key word that you didn’t understand…and that was to say nothing of all the words that don’t mean what you think they mean in French.” Continue reading “A Certain…Je Ne Sais Quoi”

Madame de Maintenon

This book tells the tale of the secret wife of Louis IV, Francoise d’Aubigne, who during her lifetime managed to make her way from desperate poverty to a brilliant salon life in Paris and the centre of power at Versailles. Married at fifteen to forty-two-year-old Paul Scarron, tragically disfigured and scandalously popular poet of the burlesque, Francoise encountered in her husband’s famous salon all the brilliant, beautiful, comic and tragic characters of the seventeenth-century’s glitterati. After his death she led the life of a merry widow among her friends in the Marais quarter of Paris, before being chosen by the King’s mistress, Athenais de Montespan, as governess for her growing brood of royal batards. Leaving the pleasures of the Marais behind her, Francoise began a new life at court, first at the genteel palace of Saint-Germain, then at the King’s fabulous new folly of Versailles. Continue reading “Madame de Maintenon”

For Liberty and Glory

This book by James R. Gaines tells the story of the French and American Revolutions in a single, thrilling narrative that shows just how deeply intertwined they actually were. Their leaders were often seen as father and son, but the relationship of George Washington and the Marquis de Lafayette, while close, was every bit as complex as the long, fraught history of the French-American alliance, of which they were also the founding fathers.