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May 2003 - Hemingway's Paris
Ernest Hemingway moved to Paris with his wife Hadley in 1921. He worked there as the European correspondent for the Toronto Daily Star, while making connections with writers and artists and striving to become a published fiction writer. In his book A Moveable Feast, published posthumously in 1964, Hemingway recounts his experiences during those years in Paris and writes about the people he met. While his prose is exuberant and nostalgic, it gives little insight into Paris and the French. Rather, the book is largely about how Hemingway reacted emotionally to the city. It gives amusing anecdotes about a number of the quite odd people (most of whom were American) that he encountered and befriended.
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Paris Insights Newsletters for 2010
September 2010 - Another Jewish Paris
August 2010 - An Interview with Dante James
July 2010 - A Visit to an Herb Shop
June 2010 - Le Lapin Agile: A Cabaret for Traditional French Songs
May 2010 - American Students “Ain't Misbehavin'” in Seine-Saint-Denis
April 2010 - Spoken Word in Paris
March 2010 - Clocks and Clock Faces - Paris-style
February 2010 - A Taste for Truffles
January 2010 - Julhès - A Parisian Food Emporium
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