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Paris to the Moon by Adam Gopnik
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Paris to the Moon

by Adam Gopnik

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1,361142,728 (3.7)36
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Random House (2000), Hardcover, 352 pages

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Tags:Paris, Americans, France, loc dnba
Recently added bydudes22, malypom, annbury, Jcambridge, nfleet, jpb232, private library, cameronbr, kwaiyung
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Parts (about his wife being pregnant and their everyday life in Paris) were good, but most of it (about restaurants and museums in Paris) I found sort of tedious. ( )
  bobbieharv | Jun 24, 2009 |
While reading this book on the Subways of New York, I felt as if I knew Paris, even though I'd never visited. Once I finally made it there last summer, my comfort level was immense, and the beauty of the city was subtly awesome. This book prepared me for a visit to the great metropolis in ways which other books cannot. ( )
  jiles2 | Jun 14, 2009 |
Paris To the Moon isn't exactly a quick, easy read, as the stories it collects were originally printed as essays in The New Yorker and are wonderfully dense. Adam Gopnik moved with his wife to Paris shortly after their son was born, and stayed for the next five years, through the turn of the century and the birth of their daughter. Each chapter addresses its own topic, from finding an apartment to French politics, to high couture, to raising a son in a culture and surroundings in which his own parents are not entirely comfortable themselves.

This book captivated me, and is partially responsible for rekindling my own urge to spend some serious time not only in the City of Lights, but in the rest of France. Gopnik is witty and eloquent and captures perfectly the charm that I imagine Paris to have, all while patiently exploring and navigating the many differences between his native culture and that of his adopted city. ( )
  alynnk | Feb 24, 2009 |
Cute memoir of an American writer/father in Paris navigating life there, while raising a small child. ( )
  rfewell | Jan 27, 2009 |
Gopnik trying to get take-out New York-style is pretty great. Mixing humour with identity and family, this book is heartwarming. ( )
  pkim | Nov 1, 2008 |
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Adam Gopnik

Eugenio Donato

Paris to the Moon

Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0375758232, Paperback)

In 1995 Gopnik was offered the plush assignment of writing the "Paris Journals" for the New Yorker. He spent five years in Paris with his wife, Martha, and son, Luke, writing dispatches now collected here along with previously unpublished journal entries. A self-described "comic-sentimental essayist," Gopnik chose the romance of Paris in its particulars as his subject. Gopnik falls in unabashed love with what he calls Paris's commonplace civilization--the cafés, the little shops, the ancient carousel in the park, and the small, intricate experiences that happen in such settings. But Paris can also be a difficult city to love, particularly its pompous and abstract official culture with its parallel paper universe. The tension between these two sides of Paris and the country's general brooding over the decline of French dominance in the face of globalization (haute couture, cooking, and sex, as well as the economy, are running deficits) form the subtexts for these finely wrought and witty essays. With his emphasis on the micro in the macro, Gopnik describes trying to get a Thanksgiving turkey delivered during a general strike and his struggle to find an apartment during a government scandal over favoritism in housing allocations. The essays alternate between reports of national and local events and accounts of expatriate family life, with an emphasis on "the trinity of late-century bourgeois obsessions: children and cooking and spectator sports, including the spectator sport of shopping." Gopnik describes some truly delicious moments, from the rites of Parisian haute couture, to the "occupation" of a local brasserie in protest of its purchase by a restaurant tycoon, to the birth of his daughter with the aid of a doctor in black jeans and a black silk shirt, open at the front. Gopnik makes terrific use of his status as an observer on the fringes of fashionable society to draw some deft comparisons between Paris and New York ("It is as if all American appliances dreamed of being cars while all French appliances dreamed of being telephones") and do some incisive philosophizing on the nature of both. This is masterful reportage with a winning infusion of intelligence, intimacy, and charm. --Lesley Reed

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:50:50 -0500)

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