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Paris when it sizzles
REVIEWS BY MICHELLE JONES
The last time I saw Parisall right, the only time I saw Pariswas a few years ago in April. It was neither warm nor cold, which meant I had no chance of packing the right clothes, and it rained seven of the eight days I was there. None of that mattered; all was just as it should have been. Drinking hot chocolate at Angelina's, walking home in the rain after a 21-sample cheese-tasting, or watching street vendors sell Eiffel Tower trinkets under the real thing, Paris was wonderful. This spring, two books give readers the chance to live or relive the dream of spending Aprilor indeed any timein Paris.
Paris is to haute cuisine as it is to haute couture. Understandably, Gourmet has featured stories about the city since the
magazine's inception. Many of these essays have been collected in Remembrance of Things Paris: Sixty Years of Writing From
Gourmet. Far from consisting only of food storiesthough the pieces on particular restaurants, chefs or dishes are, well, scrumptiousthe writings are also portraits of the city itself, its inhabitants and those fortunate enough to land assignments there. They range from Don Dresden writing about how chefs and customers alike cope with the cream and butter shortages of postwar Paris to Joseph Wechsberg (author of several pieces in the book) writing about the lost joy of walking through the city. But food is the main topic of Remembrance of Things Paris and reading it on an empty stomach is probably not a good idea.
Foodies and fashionistas aren't the only ones attracted to the French capital, as demonstrated by the wide assortment of
writers found in Americans in Paris: A Literary Anthology, edited by Adam Gopnik. This fascinating collection is arranged chronologically starting with pieces by influential thinkers such as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Jefferson, Abigail Adams and Thomas Paine. Popular culture is represented by a Cole Porter lyric, an F. Scott Fitzgerald short story and a piece by modern dancer Isadora Duncan. James Baldwin writes of spending Christmas in a Paris jail, while James Weldon Johnsonhead of the NAACP in the 1920swrites of experiencing equality for the first time during a 1905 visit. The variety of people represented in the bookfrom Mark Twain to Elizabeth Bishop to M.L.K. Fischer, for exampleand the wide spectrum of their experiences gives Americans in Paris a broad appeal, making it accessible to an audience beyond that of Francophiles and lovers of literature.
Both these books are good for reminiscing about or anticipating a trip to Paris. Read them from a comfortable chair at home, during a transatlantic flightor at a small café table in the city itself.
Remembrance of Things Paris
By Ruth Reichl
Random House, $24.95
400 pages, ISBN 0679643095
Americans In Paris
Edited by Adam Gopnik
Library of America, $40
656 pages, ISBN 1931082561
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