France Books


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France Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

France
Jeanne Guyon: An Autobiography
Published in Paperback by Whitaker House (1997-03)
Author: Jeanne Guyon
List price: $12.99
New price: $4.98
Used price: $2.58

Average review score:

A Life Devoted to God
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-01
Excellent message about God's workings in the life of Madam Guyon. This follower of God allowed nothing to stop her pursuit of intimacy with her Savior.

One of my favorite
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-25
One amazing women of God. So inspiring and poignant. You will find answer to many of the struggles within. Highly recommend for those who seek deeper intimacy with God.

Autobiography of16th Century mystic Jeanne Guyon
Helpful Votes: 39 out of 40 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-24
This book is a must read for the true seeker. It tells the story of one woman's quest for union with God and the persecution she went through, the closer to the light she got. She was introduced at a young age to 'inward' prayer which changed her life dramatically. She was an inspiration to many, rich and poor. She wrote a small book explaining the 'silent' prayer and was persecuted terribly for it. But the more she was persecuted the more she was drawn by God to Himself.

France
Jenny Lind and Her Listening Cat
Published in Hardcover by Random House Childrens Books (1961-06)
Author: Frances Cavanah
List price: $8.95
Used price: $18.00
Collectible price: $17.98

Average review score:

This is a Wonderful Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-28
I found this book in my school library in third grade. I used to sign it out every week. I liked it so much that the librarian gave it to me. It is a wonderful story about a very famous singer. It is great for younger children (3rd grade and up) and even older ones. I still read and enjoy it today. I would definetly recommened it, especially if yoiu enjoy singing.

A Great Book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-28
I read this book when I was little and loved it. It is a heart-warming tale of a young girl who loves her little cat and loves to sing to it. One day while singing to her cat she is heard and offered lessons. It is actually a true story of Jenny Lind. A great book!

A treasure for children who love music:
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 1999-08-04
I still have my childhood copy of this book; ironically, I have grown up to become a singer, but it was the Listening Cat that captivated me as a girl. Wonderful and simple recounting of the early life of Jenny Lind, the Swedish Nightingale; excellent exposure to biographical information in an entertaining format.

France
Joan of Arc and the God of the Bible
Published in Paperback by iUniverse, Inc. (2006-07-27)
Author: Chris Snidow
List price: $14.95
New price: $9.37
Used price: $9.32

Average review score:

Highly recommended!...Fascinating!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-31

Highly recommended! Chris Snidow's book, "Joan of
Arc and The God of the Bible" is fascinating!
Irrespective of whether the reader is Catholic, Protestant,
or agnostic, I believe that their understanding of Joan of
Arc will be greatly affected by this book, if not entirely
changed. The pedestrian view of her, influenced
predominently by Hollywood, is not the Jeanne d'Arc of
history, as this book will attest. Her personal testimonies,
well documented throughout the text, coupled with the
author's unique insights, shed light on one of the most
mysterious and intriquing characters in European history. If
it were possible at Amazon.com, I would have given this book
4 and 1/2 stars. My criticism is that there was not enough
of it! Now that my appetitie has been whetted, I feel
motivated to go to the library to learn more about Joan, her
trial and what motivated her betrayal.

Terence Moeller --
Author of Dramas of Kalalau

Great book for a deeper understanding of Joan of Arc's true motivation!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-14
Joan of Arc's last words were "Jesus, Jesus, Jesus!" as she was overcome by the flames and died. Anyone who has seriously studied her life knows that serving Jesus, her God, was her primary mission in life. Chris Snidow has created a wonderful book that explains Saint Joan's life in reference to Jesus and the Bible. Chris has done an amazing amount of research about Joan and how her life closely resembles other prophets of the Bible like Moses, Abraham, Paul and even Jesus.

I highly recommend this book as one that everyone should read who is serious about learning the truth about Joan's true motivation. There are many biographies that cover the life of Joan of Arc but Chris's approach is unique in that he focuses on explaining HOW Joan of Arc was able to do what she did. Joan of Arc and the God of the Bible is well written and flows easily along in the 15 chapters that include:
1. Joan of Arc - "Daughter of God"
2. The God of the Bible
3. What Time Is It?
4. The Call
5. Prayer is the Center Post
6. The Sign
7. A Lifelong Pilgrimage
8. Obedience (Blessed Cussedness)
9. Persecution
10. A Warrior God?
11. Prophecy and Miracles?
12. "If you love me..."
13. Joan's France?
14. Summary Review
15. God is Gracious
Each chapter is highly documented with appropriate scripture references to support Chris's conclusions. In the final analysis, this book is as much about God as it is about Joan of Arc, which is exactly how it should be since Saint Joan of Arc is truly "a shining star that points the way to the Father of all light."

Joan's Inner Strength
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-10
Obviously with the title Chris has used, it is no surprise that the book delves into the spiritual aspects of Joan's life. Let me give you a brief summary.

The 146 pages are divided into 15 chapters and 2 appendices. The book links Joan's story with hundreds of Bible verses. Some of the most interesting chapters (for me) are:

Chapter 4 compares Joan's call by God to the calls of various Bible characters and notes the many similarities.

Chapter 6 compares the signs Joan used to authenticate her call with the signs used by various Bible people. Chris lists 14 similarities of Joan's mission as compared to the earthly mission of Jesus.

Chapters 7 and 8 compares Joan's commitment to serve and obey God with similar commitments made by those called by God in the Bible.

Chapter 9 lists 18 similarities of the persecution of Joan with the persecution of Jesus.

For those of you interested in comparing Joan's battlefield actions with those of the Bible, chapter 10 is for you.

Chapter 11 Joan's prophecies and other miracles in her life are discussed at great length in this chapter.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone searching to know more about Joan's "inner strength."

France
Josephine Baker: Image and Icon
Published in Hardcover by Reedy Press (2006-05-01)
Authors: Bennetta Jules Rosette and Tyler Stovall
List price: $35.00
New price: $34.30
Used price: $63.59

Average review score:

Impossible to Put Down
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-27
"The life and shocking story of the icon who danced her way to fame and infamy in Paris."

beautiful book from a very interesting exhibit
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-18
I used this book for a class I taught about Josephine Baker. The images collected here give such a good representation of Ms. Baker's life, and the three long essays in the book helped me understand her better. I would love to see this exhibition personally, but since I can't do that the book makes a good substitute. La Baker was quite a woman!

Incidentally the recently released DVDs of her movies are interesting too.

Josephine Baker: A Life to Remember
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-11-29
The life of Josephine Baker is one of the most incredible success stories in American history. Born into a poor but vibrant district of St. Louis, as a child she took her first steps toward becoming an incredible dancer by dancing in the streets for pennies. At age 13, she ran away to join a traveling road show, and at age 16 was the star dancer of a show that toured the country. She moved to Paris to join a musical review called La Revue Négre. So great was her success that, at age 20, she was the toast of Paris, and soon after, the toast of all Europe.
Ernest Hemingway said of her "(she is) ...the most sensational woman anybody ever saw. Or ever will. Tall, coffee skin, ebony eyes, legs of paradise, and a smile to end all smiles." Baker even took lessons in dancing from the great ballet master Balanchine who, as it turned out, learned more from her than she from him!
Josephine Baker, Image and Icon is a tribute to this incredible African-American who had little or no formal education, but earned her place in history through sweat and perseverance and an incredible talent. It is a book made beautiful by the images of Baker herself, as shown by original theatrical posters, photographs, drawings, prints and paintings of Baker made by some of the most celebrated artists of the period. The book is a rich profusion of color and movement, much like the dancing for which Baker was celebrated.
The book had its origin in the mind of the Director of the Sheldon Art Galleries in St. Louis, Olivia Lahs-Gonzales. After two years of searching for art and ephemera that would best show the life and times of Baker, Gonzales mounted an exhibition at the Sheldon Art Galleries by the same name, with exhibits drawn from collections public and private across the United States and Europe.* The book itself was the natural outcome of what was shown at the gallery.
In the book, Josephine Baker and her life and times is further defined by three scholarly and highly readable treatises. Bennetta Jules-Rosette, the author of "Two Loves: Josephine Baker in Art and Life," writes of the inventing of the image of Baker and the preserving of her as an icon. Olivia Lahs-Gonzales offers a commentary on Baker in the context of the modern woman. Tyler Stovall, author of "Paris Noir, African-Americans in the City of Light," describes Paris and the Jazz Age, and the place of Baker in the black Montmartre.
Baker not only danced and sang her way into the hearts of Paris, Europe and the world, but capitalized on her fame by taking on other tasks, such as combating racism in all its aspects. She adopted 12 children of all races and religions--her "rainbow tribe"-- and installed them in an immense French chateau. And, most incredibly, she took on the dangerous role of a courier in the French underground during the Nazi occupation, for which she received the French Légion d'Honneur.
If there ever was a book that defined and embodied its subject in its pages, it is Josephine Baker in Art and Life. It is a book that belongs in the library of everyone who loves Americana in its finest manifestation.

*The exhibition has now moved on to the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, where it remains until March 18, 2007


France
The Journey
Published in Paperback by Bookstand Publishing (2007-08-26)
Author: Frances Bennett
List price: $18.95
New price: $18.95

Average review score:

Southern Pioneers Come To Life
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-10-25
Laura Ingalls Wilder watch out! Frances Bennett has picked up where your family left off. In the late 1890's, the Stegall family traveled with a caravan of covered wagons ... from North Carolina to Southern Arkansas. They settled on some land that the family still owns today. "The Journey" describes in beautiful and sometimes frightening words the adventures, pain and suffering, and ultimate joy the family experienced over the following decades. Frances Bennett has brought The Journey to life with her exceptional storytelling skills.
Thank you, Frances Bennett.

The Journey by Frances Bennett...southern settlers
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-05
This is a wonderful story of how a young couple from North Carolina traveled by covered wagon in 1899 to the southern Arkansas wilderness and established their homestead near the Ouachita River. Based on facts revealed during childhood to the author by her grandmother, Bennett weaves an intriguing fictional account of how the Stegall family made the journey and then contributed to the settling of this area. Adventure, curiosity, bravery, work, patience, endurance, pride, loyality, integrity, friendship, community, family, love, longing, hope, sorrow, disappointments, and joy are just some of the words that came to mind as I read this compelling novel. This book is a wonderful way to learn not only the day to day life of our pioneering families, but is a study in the character and characteristics of this hardy breed of people who came west years ago and established the rural communities that are now a part of the history of America.

This is an enriching book that is also ideal for younger readers curious about how communities came into existence in more primitive times.

"The Journey" by Frances Bennett
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-21
"The Journey" is one of the most interesting books I have read in a long time. When I received the book I began reading and could not put it down until I finished it. This book is fiction but based on real life information the author got by questions she asked her grandmother. Imagine traveling all the way from North Carolina in a covered wagon to homestead in Southern Arkansas. The book is full of the dangers that were incurred, but also the joys of traveling in a wagon train.

I wish I had asked my ancestors about their early lives, and I'm glad Frances did. It was just a few generations back that our forebears lived as described in the book. This book was a joy to read and you will find it great reading.

Brent Patterson

France
Journey Through the Ice Age
Published in Hardcover by University of California Press (1997-11-03)
Authors: Paul G. Bahn and Jean Vertut
List price: $45.00
Used price: $31.00

Average review score:

Wonderful, factual, unbiased.....
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-05
After a brief overview of the "oldest art in the world" and a discussion of the caveats associated with the term `art' as applied to extinct cultures Bahn describes the problem of taphonomy where knowledge of another older culture is shaped by the survival of artifacts. He also discusses the problem of controlled and limited access to ancient sites, as well as the use of modern photography to capture and transmit information about these sites to a larger audience.

Next, Bahn discusses different kinds of ice age art, which he categorizes as: 1) parietal art which takes the form of wall paintings and sculptures, floor tiles, and other large relatively immovable blocks of stone on which "signs" have been worked. Wall art can be incised, sculpted (additive or subtractive), or painted. 2) portable art which takes the form of figurines, musical instruments, tools, weapons, pottery, and other items that could be easily carried. Surviving portable items are generally made of ivory, bone, or ceramic clay or some other relatively durable inorganic substance.

Bahn then describes how analysts attempt to date ice age material. At one time, scientists believed ice age art could not be dated because it was either inorganic or the methods available for dating organic material were clumsy and destructive. Recent improvements in dating techniques have changed that. For example, charcoal (an organic substance) was frequently used by ice age artists to create the black outlines seen in many wall paintings. For years, scientists thought the black paint was manganese dioxide, an inorganic substance. Since only a pinprick of paint is now required for radio carbon analysis, scientists have been able to test the black paint, discover it was carbon based, and date it.

The book is filled with wonderful technical material as well as plenty of stylistic and other material of interest to art historians. I most appreciated the section that reviewed the various theories about "Why" ice age art was created. Was it art for art's sake? Was it the work of hunters practicing sympathetic magic? Was it a fertility ritual? Bahn pretty much dismisses these theories with practical observations about their shortcomings. What he does not dismiss is the creation of the ice age art for mythical purposes associated with healing rituals. Parietal ice age art is located inside dark passages near water. Often this water derives from warm springs. Sometimes the water flows from dark passages into the daylight. Often, mysterious markings that correspond to the seasons and the moon can be found at the entryways to cave chambers. Does this circumstantial evidence point to ritual undertakings that involved a Mother Goddess?

compared to Randall White's "Prehistoric Art"
Helpful Votes: 17 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2006-07-22
I wasn't sure whether this book or "Prehistoric Art: The Symbolic Journey of Humankind" by Randall White would be better, so I bought them both.

It turns out that they are both excellent books. Both are loaded with color photographs of artifacts famous and less well-known. Both have scholarly, informative text, considering anthropological and historical contexts, the techniques and materials used by the artists, the history of the study of prehistoric art, and plenty of cautious speculation about the functions the art had to its artists' communities.

They are organized quite differently: Bahn's moves from topic to topic: chapter 7 is on portable art, chapter 8 on rock shelters and cave art, chapter 9 on outdoors art, and so on. But White's book has a regional arrangement: chapter 4 is on Western Europe, chapter 5 is on Central and Eastern Europe and Sibera, chapter 6 is on Africa, the Near East and Anatolia, and so on.

Obviously you can see that White's book has more of a global focus than Bahn's. In fact, Bahn's third chapter deals with prehistoric art outside of Europe; in every other chapter he focuses on European art, especially the caves.

Although Bahn's book devotes a chapter to "Portable Art" such as jewelry and miniature statues (including the famous "Venus figurines"), White's book has a far superior coverage. On the other hand, Bahn has better coverage of interesting issues such as how to reproduce prehistoric art for public enjoyment, dating issues, and forgeries.

If you are primarily interested in European cave art and will be content with a glance at the rest of the world, then Bahn's book is better for you. Personally, although Bahn deals with some interesting issues that White neglects, ultimately I prefer White's global perspective; further, I appreciate his introductory comments about modern Western art and cultural assumptions, and consideration of what might be universal in human art.

Incidently, when it comes to books about art, for some reason I prefer hardcover to paperback; and at this time White's book in hardcover is available at great discount on Amazon, making it almost as inexpensive as Bahn's.

So, my preference is clear. However, I want to emphasize that despite my partiality to White's book, they are certainly both excellent, and I do not think one of them is clearly, inherently better than the other. It just depends on what you are looking for.

Journey Through the Ice Age
Helpful Votes: 44 out of 46 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-27
As an artist whose work is inspired by the cave paintings of Lascaux, I am always on the lookout for new books about the prehistoric cave art of Europe. This book is a delightful addition to my collection. I should caution that I approach books like this strictly from a layman's and artist's point of view, as I have a limited background in archeology.

Before I read this book, I'd always considered the cave art of Lascaux as the "birthplace of human art" (which was how it was presented in most of my art history courses at school.) Now I realize that the artists of that period are actually almost exactly halfway, timewise, between the earliest evidence of prehistoric art, and the art of today. Each new discovery of prehistoric cave art seems to push back the "birthdate" of human art a few tens of thousands of years.

Rather than focusing on a single cave site, this book is a more comprehensive treatment of Ice age art, discussing caves across Europe, with references to caves in Russia and China. It presents a more complete treatment of all aspects of these caves, discussing anthropological characteristics of the people who created the art, similarities and differences in the artwork, theories about their signicance(mostly debunked here), forgeries, history of the caves' discovery, etc. The photographs are excellent, and many are of paintings and objects I've never seen before. The writing, though comprehensive, is also entertaining and engaging, a good read. I enjoyed this book immensely.

This book is unique to me for several reasons. First, the wonderful photographs not only feature the more widely known paintings inside the caves (referred to in the book as "parietal art" or wall art), but also the artifacts found in conjunction with the paintings--"portable art". I found more photographs of such objects than in any other book I've read. Many are of artifacts I've never read about before.

Also, almost every possible theory ever presented to explain these paintings and artifacts is examined--and most of them debunked. Somehow, this is reassuring to me as an artist--although it would be exciting to understand more about the purpose of the art, it is also satisfying to realize that there is still no encompassing theory about why these amazing paintings and artifacts were created. Their mystery is still profound, intact and untouched. The various theories and conjecture throughout the years about these caves, argues the author, clearly reveals more about US, as modern people, than it does about the cultures that created the cave art. We overlay our desires, prejudices and blind spots onto the art, and for the last 150 years, observers have tended to "find" what they are looking for in the paintings.

There is a whole chapter devoted to fakes and forgeries of Ice Age art, a subject I find fascinating. My favorite phrase in this chapter is a caption of a photograph (p. 81)"...the dot and plantlike sign near the dreadful hand stencil appeared after the first photographs were taken."

In summary, I would recommend this book to anyone interested in archeology, cave paintings, art history, and art.

France
Kant after Duchamp
Published in Unknown Binding by MIT Press (1999)
Author: Thierry de Duve
List price:

Average review score:

For the French Post-Structuralist Lover
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-11
If you have a background in French critical theory, arising from the 1970's, this book will be a totally fascinating one. If not...you may be baffled, find the book not what you expected, and get angry that you've spent this much money on a work you can't understand. Be forewarned. That having been said, Thierry de Duve is one of the most outstanding contemporary art theoriticians writing today. His slant on Duchamp and Duchamp's impact on subsequent modern/contemporary art is without parallel.

Subliminal
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-29
A difficult question posed and a difficult answer given. In struggling with two of the most influential personnas in our culture, De Duve does himself, and aesthetics good. Long and convoluted (to the extreme of working out a symbolic logic of Duchamp?) this is nonetheless a great book

Kant was a Lutheran
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 17 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-07
What's missing in this marvelous book is a discussion of Kant's Lutheran religious aspect. Most philosophers treat him as a secular philosopher, but he wasn't. The assault on Christianity by the entire left has seemingly eclipsed the fact that all of the great 19th century thinkers were Lutherans: Kant, Hegel, Kierkegaard, of course, but also Nietzsche (who was raised as a Lutheran and whose seventeen prior generations of father, grandfather, etc., had been Lutheran pastors), Marx raised in a Lutheran household, and so on.

What Duchamp does is knock out the otherworldly purposiveness that Kant claimed for art. Thierry de Duve aborts the seriousness of his discussion by neglecting the theological dimension of Kant's inquiry.

However, this is still a great book albeit a limited one, as he could have gone further to the heart of the culture wars by contrasting the Sadean nature of the surrealist enterprise with the Christian nature of the Kantian.

France
The King's Women (Onyx)
Published in Paperback by Signet (1993-12-01)
Author: Dinah Lampitt
List price: $5.99
Used price: $0.90
Collectible price: $10.00

Average review score:

Well researched Historical Fiction with a splash of romance.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
A well reasearched novel that made me interested in reading more about the time period and subjects in this book. Not a cheesy romance novel as title and cover may suggest. You have to use a bit of your brain but I found the story quite fulfilling and am glad I read it. I felt like I learned something.

History Revisited
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-04-05
This book is like no other I have read. It entwines history with spirituality and is so accurately researched one might wonder why it wasn't used in history class. This book has changed my life! It has given me a whole new outlook on everything and everyone. I am planning my journey to France, which will no doubt be a life-changing experience! The gilt-edged paperback cover might throw some readers off as to the content, but don't let that stop you. This is no typical romance novel. This book is a true heart-gripping historical masterpiece from the first page until the very last, and will have you thinking about it for a very long time afterwards!

Best history lesson outside a classroom.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1997-07-16
Look past the ditzy title of this novel and you'll find a painstakingly-researched, lovingly-detailed , fast-paced tale of a kingdom saved by a female warrior. I took this book with me on holiday and stayed cooped up in the hotel finishing it rather than go sightseeing. Yes, it's that involving. The book even launched me on a Joan of Arc pilgrimage to Rouen. Take the conspiracy theories with a grain of salt, have an unsurpassed read, and emerge to impress your friends with random details about 15th century France

France
Knopf Guide: Restaurants Of Paris (Knopf Guides Restaurants of Paris)
Published in Paperback by Knopf (1994-08-09)
Author: Knopf Guides
List price: $25.00
New price: $3.95
Used price: $0.40

Average review score:

Great Guide to Historical Restaurants
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-22
I like the Knopf Guides in general for their luxurious illustrations, diagrams and their tangental information.In this guide such things as typical menus, historical data, elaborate diagrams (such as the fold out of Train Bleu) and literary references make it more than a guide indeed it properly sits on the nightstand as grist for exciting dreams of historical Parisian Gastronomy.

The culinary companion to the Knopf Paris book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2003-01-21
If you read my review of the general Paris book, you know that I think it is the best, but the restaraunt/hotel information in the back of that book is dated, well here is the fix for that. Unfortunately I only had this book on one trip, my last, over the pond, however if you wanted to have dinner at a new and fascinating place every afternoon and night, this is what to use. My mom, an art deco fan, used this book to find the perfect restaraunt. I used it to find a restaraunt built into a 1000 year old basement, not to mention fois gras vendors! This book is worth every penny, as so much in Paris revolves around meals, and the meals and folks in the restaraunts are so interesting, you in fact, need this book. While large portions of France have lost their Catholicism, they still have one universal religion: FOOD! Pick this book up, a Bible!

You will get hungry just reading it!
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1999-03-07
Richly illustrated book including descriptions of famous restaraunts as well as the history of the Paris restaurant scene.

I am leaving for France again this week and I can hardly put the book down.

France
La Bâtarde
Published in Paperback by Riverhead Trade (1997-07-01)
Author: Violette Leduc
List price: $14.00
New price: $5.99
Used price: $0.84

Average review score:

If you love relentless self-consciousness
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 1998-11-05
Violette Leduc invented her own poetics of solitude. Her writings are the ravings of a mad schoolgirl, feverishly and sensually neurotic, and achingly romantic. As unhappy as Violette claims to be, you want to be her, to have her heights of perception, and to desire as intensely as she does. If you like it light and breezy, skip this writer. But if you like to take that queasy peek behind the mask, this is for you.

Homosexuality, passion, love, desire, but self-absorbed
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2003-02-28
Despite all of the desire that flows in and out of these pages, La Batarde does not gratify. Leduc refuses to stoop to pander to panting hearts - she simply gives you words of poetry to describe her ugliness, her love affairs, small joys and solitude. And yet, she is not all poetry. She is experimental, and is relentless is driving forth her need to tell you about what a horrible being she is - and yet in the end, you find that you feel not only sympathy but a aching heart when she falls and rises again.
From her childhood trials in provincial France, to her affairs with her classmate Isabelle and her teacher Hermine, to her forced departure to Paris (for being found out with her affairs with the music teacher), to her discovery of Gabriel, to her abortions and black-market activity during World War II, the character that Violette portrays herself is no saint, but in refusing to give herself some pride she emerges as a martyr - of fate (being born with, as she says, an ugly nose). There is no question about her ugliness - even de Beauvoir is reputed to have made fun of her behind her back. Yet this woman must have had charisma, for designers gave her clothign to wear and show off on the streets. A contradiction, this woman was, and this quality of hers is very much shown to the reader in her autobiography.

Exquisite tapestry of memories
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-31
From her early beginnings with a distant mother to her activities during World War II in the black market, Violette Leduc opens her life to us in stark detail. On her journey to find her voice and become a writer, she experiences life to its fullest and darkest extents. From her love affairs with women to her failed marriage to her adoration of a gay man, she explores her seemingly tragic life to show us the beauty in every molecule of life. Definitely not a slow read, this memoir proves Leduc's mastery of expression and whets the reader's appetite for more self-spelunking.


Books-Under-Review-->Recreation-->Outdoors-->Hunting-->Foxhunting-->Associations and Clubs-->Europe-->France-->85
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