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Recent Posts
- The man who gave Paris 50 fountains
- Postcards of a Working River
- Baltard’s Children
- An Unbuilt Bridge and the Allure of Paris
- The further adventures of the Nurse Who Wore Pearls
- I’ll meet you on the passerelle Debilly
- The forgotten fashionista
- The Jardin Mabille and the origins of the can-can
- A parachute in the Parc Monceau
- The chariot on the Champs-Elysées
- The Twelve Fleas of Christmas
- What a croque
- The Mystery of the Missing Suspension Bridges of Paris
- A French family in wartime
- The Other Great Nineteenth-Century Tower of Paris
- A virtual walk through old Paris
- The Technology of Compassion
- On reaching 100 – blogs, that is
- Lost (and found) in translation
- Everyday Hats of Paris
- Ticket to ride
- The art and purpose of the colonne sèche
- In Search of Lost Time
- Finding Typewriter History in Paris
- Le Bazar de l’Hôtel de Ville
- Berthe Morisot, an artist ahead of her time
- Richard Ewen: A Texas Artist Whose Watercolours Capture Paris
- Lighting the City of Light
- The meaning of two wheels and a motor in Paris
- The bouquinistes and the photographer of shadows
- Food, drink, and lodging in Paris postcards
- Connaissez-vous Paris?
- A most unusual water system keeps Paris clean
- A walk in the snow
- How I learned to stop worrying and love Wikipedia
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Monthly Archives: May 2011
Rattled in Raspail (adventures in banking)
In 1910, Stephen Leacock wrote a short story called, “My Financial Career,” which began with the words, “When I go into a bank I get rattled. The clerks rattle me; the wickets rattle me; the sight of the money rattles … Continue reading
Posted in Paris travel
Tagged American Express, Banking in Paris, Banque de France, Boulevard Raspail, Stephen Leacock
10 Comments
Traces of tragedy on a quiet street
Not many people walk the length of the rue Jean Goujon in the 8th arrondissement. Either they are strolling along the river, or gazing at the likes of the Christian Dior boutique on avenue Montaigne (fashion central), the next street … Continue reading
Signs of Paris
On the first day of our first shared trip to Paris, signs such as this made me realize we were walking through history. We had bought the makings of a picnic lunch, which we ate on a park bench. We … Continue reading
Cheap eats
The very first time we went to Paris as a couple, we took along a book called Cheap Eats in Paris by Sandra Gustafson. This was in the days before the Internet and iPhones made restaurant recommendations easy to find, … Continue reading
Posted in Paris food
Tagged C.R.O.U.S., Centre Régional des Oeuvres Universitaires et Scolaires, Cheap Eats in Paris, Cheap Sleeps in Paris, commensality, congregate dining, CROUS, Malakoff, Morgan Spurlock, Parc des Buttes Chaumont, Sandra Gustafson, Sudent cafeterias in Paris, Super Size Me, tripe à la mode de Caen, workingmen’s café
2 Comments
