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FRANCE BOOKS

Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

La France Gourmande: A Food Lover's Guide to French Fetes and Foires Written by Marolyn Charpentier. By Anova Books. The regular list price is $39.95. Sells new for $8.24. There are some available for $6.00.
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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

France: From the Air Written by Jean Louis Houdebine. By White Star Publishing. The regular list price is $14.99. Sells new for $8.95. There are some available for $8.23.
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1 comments about France: From the Air.
  1. I bought this book on a whim for my brother. He went to France with his new French-American wife and is now obsessed with it! Even though they took hundreds of pictures, none of them were "from the air". Before giving it to him for Christmas, I looked at every page. This book made me wish I could afford to travel the world! For now, I will settle for buying myself many "coffee table" books like this one!


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Starting a Business in France (Starting a Business - Cadogan) Written by John Howell. By Cadogan Guides. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $9.92. There are some available for $9.92.
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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

art-SITES PARIS (Art - Sites) Written by Sidra Stich. By art-SITES Press. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $1.99. There are some available for $0.57.
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2 comments about art-SITES PARIS (Art - Sites).
  1. Deftly edited by Fronia W. Simpson, Art-Sites Paris: Art, Architecture, Design is a superbly written and presented guide to the art and architecture to be seen while traveling among the many beauties of Paris. Subdivided by geographical region into numerous entries with the addresses and history of noteworthy sites, and enhanced throughout with black-and-white photography including 15 detail maps and city tour routes, Art-Sites Paris is an extensive, comprehensive, sophisticated, and thoroughly "user friendly" guide sure to keep the dedicated art and architecture lover busy sightseeing throughout an extended tour. If you intend on visiting Paris, begin your travel planning with Art-Sites Paris!


  2. If you are an art lover, this is a superb guide book to Paris. Cannot recommend this book highly enough.
    James


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Hemingway'S France Written by Winston Conrad. By Duane Press. The regular list price is $34.95. Sells new for $9.80. There are some available for $7.24.
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5 comments about Hemingway'S France.
  1. A book that will make you want to see Paris for the first time and check out the haunts of Hemingway, Fitzgerald and Piccasso. The book's narrative, photographs and illustrations, and use of quotations by Hemingway and his contemporaries, take the reader on a remarkably vivd tour of the writer's France.


  2. From Hemingway's early romantic days in the Lost Generation Paris of the 1920's, to his swashbuckling exploits in the French countryside and his liberation of the Paris Ritz Hotel during World War II, and to his troubled final years when he returned to Europe and France in a failed search for rejuvenation, it is clear that Hemingway truly loved France.

    With "Hemingway's France: Images of the Lost Generation," it is clear that Winston Conrad loves France as well. Conrad traveled extensively in France to gather the material for this book, and his passion for France and Paris (and of course Hemingway) are evident on every page as he attempts to show the reader why this country and city left such a grand impression on the biggest star of 20th century literature.

    Conrad writes a clear, thorough biography of Hemingway, with France serving as a common thread throughout, but the feature that makes this book stand out is the great number of rarely seen photos of Hemingway and friends. We see Hemingway demonstrating deep sea fishing gear in the late 1950's, we see him dressed in dapper travel attire as his driver prepares their car, we see him riding on the back of a sidecar motorcycle during World War II, we see him sitting on the windowsill of his Paris apartment in the late 1920's, we see him in a rocking chair with his infant son Bumby...and for the Hemingway fan who has seen it all, these "new" pictures are like seeing an old friend after a long time apart. Not only do we see him, but we are treated to views of Hemingway's France that give a clear and confirming image of all those wonderful settings that we find in Hemingway's books. Conrad, a photographer of obvious talent, shows us Hemingway's haunts as they appear today, and often contrasts his own beautiful color photos with the vintage black and white photos of the same haunts from Hemingway's day; it makes for an effective mix of nostalgia and immediacy.

    Conrad divides the book into nine chapters, each focusing on a different part of the French experience that today would be hard to discuss without mentioning Hemingway's name: The Literary Scene in Paris, Cafes, Restaurants and Nightlife, The Artists, Sports, The South of France, World War II, Bullfights, The Feast Moves On. All are well written, but the chapters on Hemingway's early years in Paris and later, his experiences as a combination soldier/journalist during the second World War stand out.

    A pleasant surprise comes in Chapter 4 ("The Artists") with the reprints of some of Gerald Murphy's paintings. Murphy, in most Hemingway and Fitzgerald biographies, always serves as a footnoted rich benefactor to the talented writers and painters in 1920's France. But he was also an accomplished painter, and Conrad shows us some of Murphy's wonderful paintings (particularly Cocktail), revealing a talent that if it were more widely known would certainly elevate him above his current footnote status.

    The usual cast of characters show up as well, with F. Scott Fitzgerald in a starring role before his crack-up, and his wife Zelda revealing in many pictures a nervous look that foretells her later mental disintegration. But the true star of this book is France itself. Hemingway always had a knack for selecting interesting places to live and for making those places his own, but of all the places he lived, Paris seemed to be the one that affected him most. It was the city of his earliest successes, and it was the city he chose to write about in A Moveable Feast, when at the end of his life he couldn't write about anything else. In between it was a city and country he could always return to for comfort, inspiration and excitement.

    Winston Conrad, in the final chapter, says "If Hemingway could come back to life for a day, he might very well elect to spend it in France." After reading this book it would be hard to argue that Hemingway would choose otherwise.



  3. France in the 1920s was home to some of the most groundbreakingly creative artists of the 20th century and included Pablo Picasso, George Braque, James Joyce, T.S. Eliot, Gertrude Stein, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, Cole Porter, Sergei Diaghilev, Sinclair Lewis, and Ernest Hemingway. Indeed, it was in his major work, The Sun Also Rises, which epitomized Paris during the jazz era and became one of the most powerful forces in this expatriate art colony's vortex of talent and experimentation. In Hemingway's France: Images Of The Lost Generation, Winston Conrad augments his informative text with contemporary color photography and a large collection of vintage black/white photographs to beautifully illuminate Hemingway's life during those "lost generation" years, during World War II, and his subsequent visits to France in the 1950s. Hemingway's France is "must" reading for all Hemingway fans, and for the non-specialist general reader with an interest in the writings, paintings, and poetry created in those turbulent times by the now legendary personalities of yesteryear.


  4. Owning this book is like owning a great piece of art, a priceless painting.

    This is a book Hemingway would wish he had written himself.

    Unlike so many books that have been published about this man in France in this era, this volume is evocative. All of the emotion associated with the people, places and things of that time in that place come through clearly, connecting to reader's hearts.

    This book is literature, art. The great painting Conrad has created is one where all the subtle nuances are on the canvas. EH is not allowed to dwarf the other extraordinary characters like Gerald Murphy. Everyone is portrayed evenly. There is a fullness, a deeper appreciation of these people and that time than one finds in other books. The things that are familiar to the reader appear to be new because they are drawn in the actual context in which they originally existed. Conrad has not reconstructed Hemingway's France. He has found it and brought us into it. We are with Hemingway, Gertrude, Pablo et. al.

    Hemingway beautifully remembered those people and that time in "A Moveable Feast," a favorite among devotees of Hemingway's work. To say Conrad's treatment is better than Hemingway's is a strong statement to make. It is a true statement.

    The photographs are extraordinary but no more extraordinary than the prose that accompanies the pictures. This slim volume is, as said, like a large oil painting accurately depicting the scene, capturing the action and mood, and evoking emotion in those who view the art.



  5. No writer has done more to further Paris' reputation as an artistic Mecca than Ernest Hemingway. In this wonderful photographic exploration of the mythical city, the reader gets to take a sightseeing trip through the places only previously glimpsed in fiction. The World War II photos are particularly interesting as they exposed me to something I hadn't previously seen -- Hemingway in full army garb.

    The author presents an excellent collection of photographs showing France in Hemingway's time and then today. A few modern photographs are contrasted against the past incarnations of the same places. Often the locations retain their quaint picturesque quality. The accompanying text is well written and informative. It does a workable job of presenting Hemingway, Piccasso, and Fitzgerald in the era that the photographs witness.

    An interesting tidbit in the text was the fact that American "starving artists" during the Lost Generation years were hardly starving. Because the dollar to franc exchange rate was so advantageous, a full 3 course meal with wine could be had for the equivalent of $.20.


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Village Walks: Provence: 50 Adventures on Foot (City Walks) Written by Georgeanne Brennan and Jim Schrupp. By Chronicle Books. The regular list price is $14.95. Sells new for $4.17. There are some available for $3.74.
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1 comments about Village Walks: Provence: 50 Adventures on Foot (City Walks).
  1. Each walk has only 1-2 paragraphs of information-- not nearly enough to really know what you are looking at and why. I guess if you have a big guide book too--where you can look up the importance or meaning of the stops on the walks--these cards at least provide you with a small map.


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

The Angel Tree: The Enchanting Quest for the World's Oldest Olive Tree Written by Alex Dingwall-Main. By Arcade Publishing. The regular list price is $25.00. Sells new for $5.95. There are some available for $0.54.
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1 comments about The Angel Tree: The Enchanting Quest for the World's Oldest Olive Tree.
  1. Food fans of the humble olive will find here not another predictable olive cookbook, of which several are on the market already, but a unique history of the olive tree and a documentation of the quest for the world's oldest olive tree. Strangely enough, a fender-bending encounter between landscape architect Dingwall-Main and a rich Frenchman in Provence led to this horticultural exploration, which could have been featured in our gardening section, but deserves coverage here for its fine focus on olive tree and olive growing history in France, Spain and other European nations. The Angel Tree is simply enchanting.


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

A Year among the Circassians: Volume 1 Written by J. A. Longworth. By Adamant Media Corporation. Sells new for $15.99.
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1 comments about A Year among the Circassians: Volume 1.
  1. I haven't started Volume 2 yet, but I plan to soon. Perhaps Yeltsin should have read this book.


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

Mediterranean Handbook: Ferry Routes, Islands and Ports Written by Jon Gorvett. By Trailblazer Publications. The regular list price is $19.95. Sells new for $7.69. There are some available for $11.90.
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1 comments about Mediterranean Handbook: Ferry Routes, Islands and Ports.
  1. I found this book quite by luck, hoping the title would truly indicate its contents. I have been wanting to plan a trip of travel across the Mediterranean from port to port, and this book is a splendid start for such a venture. Also, it is sufficiently rigorous and detailed-- probably because the author is a Fellow of the Royal Geographic Society.


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Posted in France (Monday, September 8, 2008)

French Vineyards: The Complete Guide and Companion Written by Michael Busselle. By Trafalgar Square. The regular list price is $24.95. Sells new for $23.95. There are some available for $2.00.
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La France Gourmande: A Food Lover's Guide to French Fetes and Foires
France: From the Air
Starting a Business in France (Starting a Business - Cadogan)
art-SITES PARIS (Art - Sites)
Hemingway'S France
Village Walks: Provence: 50 Adventures on Foot (City Walks)
The Angel Tree: The Enchanting Quest for the World's Oldest Olive Tree
A Year among the Circassians: Volume 1
Mediterranean Handbook: Ferry Routes, Islands and Ports
French Vineyards: The Complete Guide and Companion

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Last updated: Mon Sep 8 10:41:33 EDT 2008