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Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris
 
 
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Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris [Hardcover]

Graham Robb
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Picador; First Edition / Second Impression edition (1 April 2010)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0330452444
  • ISBN-13: 978-0330452441
  • Product Dimensions: 16.4 x 6 x 24.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 160,725 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Graham Robb
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Product Description

Review

'Robb's last book was the eye-opening The Discovery of France. He has come up with an ingenious idea for his new work - a history of Paris from 1750 to the present, telling its story through some of its most colourful, eccentric and emblematic citizens.'
--Sunday Times

`Ingenious...Marvellously entertaining, boundlessly energetic and original...This book is the sort of triumph that we have no right to expect to come from anyone in the steady way that Robb's masterly books come from him.' --Philip Hensher, Daily Telegraph

`Robb writes beautifully, and possesses the novelist's ability to think himself into another's head...If you delight in the historical equivalent of finding a tiny restaurant frequented only by locals - the information that phosphorus was discovered by a would-be alchemist searching for the philosopher's stone in his own urine, or that Murger spied for Tolstoy, or that there are pagan altars beneath Notre Dame - then Robb will sate your appetite.'
--Evening Standard

'Spectacular... There are so many delights in this book... Robb's dealings with truth, fantasies, possibilities and coincidences are part of the pleasure of this roller-coaster ride around the past of Paris.'
--Gillian Tindall, Literary Review

`Graham Robb's new book is so richly pleasurable that you feel it might emit a warm glow if you left it in a dark room. Essentially it is a collection of true stories, culled from Robb's insatiable historical reading and lit by his imagination. He has the passion of a naturalist displaying a wall of rare butterflies or a cabinet of exotic corals, but his specimens are all human and walked the streets of Paris at some point between the French revolution and now...[A] generous and humane book.' --John Carey, `Book of the Week', Sunday Times

`There is much of the architect in Graham Robb. He creates huge, substantial works but also has the eye, ear and word for the detail... What new can there be said about Paris and its inhabitants? The answer to that is: 436 pages of narrative, one chronology, 17 pages of notes, 31 illustrations and a finely drawn map. It adds up to a triumph. Parisians is ambitious in scale, precise in language and inspired in its conception and realisation...Parisians is a worthy addition to the catalogue of a writer who may just be the most original, most accomplished non-fiction writer of his generation...An exhilarating ride. The reader looks back in wonder. A Paris of fresh allure arises from the mist of time. Robb has built something substantial, something formidable.' --Sunday Herald

`Following [Robb's] last hugely successful book, The Discovery of France, he returns to the capital and shows us that the Eiffel Tower, the Louvre, the Café de Flore and Montmartre are the merest sideshows in a darker, stranger, more fragmented history, sprinkled with mystery and magic...Every chapter contains a surprise, written up in a rich and supple prose...This is a deeply engrossing, ingenious and rewarding book...I thought I knew Paris well. But Graham Robb has shown me, quite chillingly, that I hardly know it at all.' --Rupert Christiansen, `Book of the Week', Sunday Telegraph

`Like countless historians before him, Graham Robb begins this book by lamenting the fact that the agitated history of Paris is so rich and dense as to make giving a full account all but impossible. Wisely, he does not even attempt this. Instead, displaying the inventiveness that marked his previous books on France (most notably his recent bestseller The Discovery of France), he sets out to tell the history of the city, from 1750 to the present day, as a series of stories, all based on fact and including tales from adulterers, policemen, murderers, prostitutes, revolutionaries, poets, soldiers and spies. His aim is to reveal the personality of the city...The great and daring trick Robb pulls off is to make the familiar so unfamiliar that in every sense it is like seeing the city anew. In this, he admirably fulfils his boldest stated aim - to renew for the writer and reader "the pleasure of thinking about Paris".' --Observer

`Enjoyable...entertaining...Robb imagines, novelises and even cinematises his Parisian vignettes'
--Financial Times

`In his introduction he writes "The sight of a heavy porte-cochère closing on an inner courtyard seemed to be a characteristically Parisian sight." The 19 episodes which follow are the literary equivalent of those oblique, enigmatic spaces beyond ordinary view...Mr Robb has a beautiful prose style. Although he is writing non-fiction his approach is always elliptical and often inconclusive as he sifts clues wondering where they may lead. When it works the result is magical and surreal.' --Daily Express

`[Robb] writers beautifully, and possesses the novelist's ability to think himself into another's head...Marvellously evocative.' --Scotsman

`A treasure trove of historical journeys in Paris...Paris has never been so fascinating.'
--Psychologies

`Robb describes his latest offering as "an adventure history", and with good reason. Rather than attempting a conventional biography, he takes the reader on a dizzying exploration of 400 years of Parisian history...Deliciously serendipitous...Robb may be a fine historian, but he can also spin a rattling good yarn...Again and again the author's dazzling descriptive skills and ability to conjure up a moment act like a mini time machine, placing the reader seemingly in the middle of events until now dimly grasped at...Robb ambitiously weaves together a geographical and historical entity out of a disordered jumble of seemingly disconnected parts...The scale and ambition is immense...As audaciously written as it is meticulously researched. Robb is both a fine historian and, above all an enthusiast for his subject.' --Book of the Week, Daily Mail

`The virtues of fiction are evoked from the beginning and practised throughout...With his ninth book, Robb confirms his reputation as our leading non-academic interpreter of France. Not that he lacks academic rigour; but it lies discreetly behind a non-academic joyfulness. The French used to celebrate Richard Cobb as le grand Cobb; and perhaps it isn't too early to hail his successor as le grand Robb...Robb's eye is quirky, amused and très British...This is a continuing adventure, and you really should read it for yourself.'
--Julian Barnes, London Review of Books

'Reading Graham Robb's highly enjoyable and original book I was irresistibly reminded of my own first adventure in Paris... All I can say is I wish I'd had Graham Robb's Parisians to guide and inspire me. This is a book which can be heartily recommended to all those going to Paris for the first time, as well as frequent travellers... Full of gripping detail.' --Antonia Fraser, Mail on Sunday

'Fascinating... a romantic, narrative history of a subtle, eclectic and circuitous kind... In bringing his skills as a literary critic and biographer to bear on the history of France, and now Paris, Robb has revolutionized historical writing on the cusp between fiction and non-fiction.' --Times Literary Supplement

`A bustling study of Paris from 1750 to the present ingeniously told through its most vibrant characters.'
--Sunday Times

'[Robb] writes with the thoroughness and accuracy of an historian, but with the playfulness of a novelist... I wouldn't be surprised if its author is now being hailed as "le grand Robb".' --Country Life

'Graham Robb uses 19 vignettes stretching from the last years of the ancien regime to the riots of 2005, to provide a fascinating, alternative portrait of the City of Light.' --Sunday Telegraph

Review

"'An extraordinary journey of discovery that will delight even the most indolent armchair traveller' Daily Telegraph 'A superior historical guidebook for the unhurried traveller, and altogether a book to savour' Independent" --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I was hooked on Parisians from the first page, and found it difficult to drag myself away from the many amazing true stories from the history of this marvellous city portrayed in its pages. Graham Robb uses a style of writing which gradually places a story together,keeping the reader ever so slightly in the dark and leading him/her on, so that quite often the twist of the tale does not become apparent until the final page of the chapter (see the true story of the Count of Monte Cristo, for example). The tale of the alchemists, the tableaux in Notre Dame, and the splitting of the atom was particularly intriguing, although I had to read it twice in order to appreciate all the nuances. The only chapter I found totally baffling concerned Juliette Greco; so perhaps I'll have to read it a couple more times!
I'm looking forward to reading more of this author.
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26 of 28 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
I read the reviews in last Sunday's newspaper and shied off buying this book in favour of Hazan's book The Invention of Paris. I was really put off by the Hazan book as the maps are non existant or poor sketches and with all the names of the streets flying round at odd angles to the descriptions on any page I was totally confused - even though I used to live in Paris! And so I went back and bought Robb's book. Thank goodness. Here is something I can read and enjoy. The nuggets of history are beautifully framed, paced and recounted as if to a friend. Thank you for another delightful book - I should not have lost faith and should have bought Parisians first!
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
Robb is rapidly establishing himself as the 'must-read' writer on France and the French. His latest book certainly merits the glowing criticisms it has received in the literary press: it is quirky, infornative and entertaining - what more can one ask of popular history? My one minor quibble is the rather misleading title in that it is only a partial history, starting as it does in the late 18th century. Let us hope that the earlier history is in the pipeline!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Why would I give this less than five stars?
OMG, oh, my goodness, why would I give this account of Paris' history anything less than five stars? The sub-title of the book sums it up; it really is 'an adventure history'. Read more
Published 5 months ago by G. D. Busby
A different view of Paris
I love this book as it has interesting little snippets and stories that aren't in the guidebooks. I have already read Graham Robb's book on French history and cartography and... Read more
Published 5 months ago by Pat Gibson
Not as good as The Discovery of France
Enjoyed this, especially the early stories. Some very evocative tales of old Paris and the people who lived there, told as little vignettes. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Amy J.
Finding out more about Paris....
This was bought as a present for my husband, who loves travel and history and we were also planning a long weekend in Paris, so very apt. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Biondina
Original, erudite, but sometimes difficult to read
This book consist of a collection of historical essays, all in some way connected with Paris. They are original and show great erudition. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Peter
Trop vite
I am all for an idiosyncratic take upon the quirky fact but this view of Paris appears a rush job and, paradoxically enough, a mite too calculated. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Christopher Hawtree
Parisians by Graham Robb
Parisians: An Adventure History of Paris

Not for everyone. For those interested in Paris, a very quirky history of some of it's most (and least) famous characters. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Garrincha
Parisians, a book that fizzles out
Graham Robb's "Discovery of France" was a superb book, intellectually rigorous, full of ideas and the product of enormous hard work. Simply Parisians is mediocre follow up. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Stewart Murray
Unretainable!
I couldn't get a grip on this book at all! Robb is trying to tell us stories set in Paris but I am at odds with his prose. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Professor Halfpickles
Disappointing
I absolutely adored 'The Discovery of France' (see my review) and was therefore so keen to read this book that I didn't wait for the paperback to come out. Read more
Published 19 months ago by Josquine
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