Paris Was Yesterday
On sale
4th December 2003
Price: £10.99
Selected:
Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781844080267
‘Gave New Yorker readers a witty guide to the minutiae of life abroad’ JAMES CAMPBELL, GUARDIAN
‘Cafe Society described from the best table in the place, by a writer with rare and vivid gifts’ ROBERT LACEY
‘Lively and witty . . . fascinating escapist entertainment’ LEEDS GUIDE
In 1925, Janet Flanner began writing a fortnightly ‘Letter from Paris’ for the nascent New Yorker. Her brief: to tell New Yorkers, under her pen name of ‘Genet’, what the French thought was going on in France, not what she thought.
Paris Was Yesterday is a collection of those letters written in the 1920s and 1930s, surely one of the most fascinating periods in the city’s history and it reads like an Arts Who’s Who. Flanner saw it all and knew everyone (or at least all about them), and there are tidbits galore about the likes of James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Isadora Duncan, Diaghilev, Gertrude Stein, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Picasso and Marlena Dietrich.
Witty, catty, literary and unashamedly gossipy, it’s a lively portrait of the thriving cultural life in Paris between the wars. In the brilliantly entertaining style she made her own, Flanner mixed high and low culture to devastating effect.
‘Cafe Society described from the best table in the place, by a writer with rare and vivid gifts’ ROBERT LACEY
‘Lively and witty . . . fascinating escapist entertainment’ LEEDS GUIDE
In 1925, Janet Flanner began writing a fortnightly ‘Letter from Paris’ for the nascent New Yorker. Her brief: to tell New Yorkers, under her pen name of ‘Genet’, what the French thought was going on in France, not what she thought.
Paris Was Yesterday is a collection of those letters written in the 1920s and 1930s, surely one of the most fascinating periods in the city’s history and it reads like an Arts Who’s Who. Flanner saw it all and knew everyone (or at least all about them), and there are tidbits galore about the likes of James Joyce, Ernest Hemingway, Isadora Duncan, Diaghilev, Gertrude Stein, Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald, Picasso and Marlena Dietrich.
Witty, catty, literary and unashamedly gossipy, it’s a lively portrait of the thriving cultural life in Paris between the wars. In the brilliantly entertaining style she made her own, Flanner mixed high and low culture to devastating effect.
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Reviews
Janet Flanner's dispatches on Parisian literary and social scenes gave New Yorker readers a witty guide to the minutiae of life abroad
Lively and witty...fascinating escapist entertainment
Lively and witty . . . fascinating escapist entertainment
Cafe Society described from the best table in the place, by a writer with rare & vivid gifts. Make yourself comfortable and order up a dry martini
If you'd like to feel that you are in Les Deux Magots, or Cafe Fleur, listening to Sartre or Cocteau; if you'd like to hear the gossip about the gendarmerie asking Marlene Dietrich to leave Paris because she had the audacity to wear trousers in public or if you'd like to meet James Joyce in The Shakespear & Company Book Store; if you'd like to attend one of Gertrude Stein's intellectual discussions & meet her companion, Alice B. Toklas, then this book is for you