In the third portrait of his series Great Parisian Neighborhoods,
award-winning raconteur John Baxter takes readers on a dazzling
excursion of Montparnasse.
By the IACP Award-winning author of the national bestseller The Most
Beautiful Walk in the World, MONTPARNASSE reveals the history and
present delights of the iconic neighborhood that is best associated with
the vibrant 1920-30s-era Paris--a romantic time and place evoked in
Hemingway's memoir A Moveable Feast and Henry Miller's Tropic of
Cancer. From the first meeting of Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald to
their friendship's bitter conclusion; from the courage of the anti-Nazi
resistance to the clubs where German generals partied; from the
attempted murder of Samuel Beckett to the rise of Josephine Baker to
stardom; from the high life of the Coupole and the Cafe du Dôme to the
bawdy music halls of rue de la Gaité; no Paris quarter has witnessed
more tumultuous events than Montparnasse.
In a ground-breaking reappraisal of this most glamorous of Paris's
districts, Baxter looks beyond the nostalgia to the secret history of
Montparnasse, a district where desire effaced memory and every taste
could be satisfied--even those which were unexpressed. If, as Oscar
Wilde suggested, all good Americans went to Paris when they died, it was
Montparnasse that brought them back to life.