Sunday, April 1, 2012

Paris Literary Map: 30 Attractions for Book Lovers

Paris Literary Map
A Literary Map of Paris
(Click to Enlarge)
Click here to see all locations on Google Maps


Aside from anything bookish, I also love everything Parisian so I was excited to put together this literary map of Paris. It wasn't easy - took me an entire day! - but I had fun working on it! From quaint old bookstores to libraries, cafes, museums, 'literary' hotels and even famous author's houses, it's every bibliophile's dream tour of Paris :-)  If you're a book lover visiting this most romantic city, this is a great place to start!


How to use the map above:  Each literary spot has a star that marks its location on the map. The number corresponds to the description in the list below.  Click on the title of any description for more information.


For the locations' complete addresses, click here to see it on Google Maps.




Bookstores and Booksellers




1. Les Bouqinistes
Along the river Seine by the Pont Neuf or the left bank you'll find one of the most iconic spots in Paris - Les Bouqinistes - or the Parisian used and rare booksellers.  Stretching for over a mile from Pont Neuf to the Left and the Right bank, these Parisian booksellers have marked the city for over 300 years.  Boasting of over 200 independent stalls carrying up to 400,000 new, used, rare and collectible books and magazines, these book stalls are sure to delight any booklover with a truly unique Parisian experience.


2. Shakespeare and Company
Situated at the heart of the city, at the Latin Quarter near the Seine and offering a view of the Notre Dame, Shakespeare and Company is a booklover's paradise.  A delightful combination of nostalgic charm and modern thought, the bookstore is a haven for Parisians as well as English readers and writers.  They have a large collection of English books and a staff who all speak Fluent English and who will be glad to help you find whatever book you are looking for, and then recommend some.


3. Village Voice
The Village Voice is an English-language bookshop in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the heart of literary Paris. Since 1982, we have promoted the books we love, those that seem essential to a better understanding of the world we live in, and have hosted readings by some of the most important contemporary authors.
The Village Voice is an English-language bookshop in Saint-Germain-des-Prés, the heart of literary Paris. Since 1982, we have promoted the books we love, those that seem essential to a better understanding of the world we live in, and have hosted readings by some of the most important contemporary authors.




4. Tea and Tattered Pages  
A quaint bookstore filled to the brim with mostly English and second hand titles.  It may be a little off the beaten track but it's well worth the journey because while you browse you'll be served English tea, scones and carrot cake in a charming tea room.




5. The Red Wheelbarrow
The name of this English bookstore was taken from one of the poems of William Carlos Williams, an American poet of the first half of the 20th century. The Red Wheelbarrow - the bookstore - according to their website THE English bookstore in Paris, is offering an enormous selection of titles in English in a space where every square centimeter is used up for books.





Libraries




6. Bibliotheque Nationale de France
Undoubtedly one of the most beautiful libraries in the world, it is the repository of all that is published in France.  It boasts of over 10 million volumes and manuscripts.  Its oval reading room, shown here, is one of the most photographed libraries in the world. 






7. American Library in Paris
Established in 1920 as a private non-profit association, the American Library in Paris has grown to become the largest English-language lending library on the European continent. Open to all, the Library serves as a center for literature, learning, culture, and community.






Literary Cafes and Restaurants




8.  Les Editeurs  
Popular among artists and businessmen alike, Les Editeurs goes to great lengths to describe itself as café, restaurant, library, bar and salon de thé.   It is intended for writers – there are more than 5000 books on hand and it has floor-to-ceiling windows through which you can watch the Germanopratin goings-on. Breakfasts and Sunday brunch are big here. 



9.  Cafe de Flore
The Café de Flore, at the corner of the Boulevard Saint-Germain and the Rue St. Benoit, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, has long been celebrated for its intellectual clientele. The classic Art Deco interior of all red seating, mahogany and mirrors has changed little since World War II. Like its main rival, Les Deux Magots, it has hosted most of the French intellectuals during the post-war years.




10.  Les Deux Magots
Once the rendezvous of the literary and intellectual élite of Paris, Les Deux Magots is now a popular tourist destination. Its historical reputation is derived from the patronage of artists and young writers such as Ernest Hemingway. Other patrons included Albert Camus and Pablo Picasso.




11. Cafe de la Mairie
Where Ernest Hemingwway wrote The Sun also Rises.  This was also Henry Miller's favorite Paris cafe where he would sip his morning cafe and look at the "fat belfries" of St-Sulpice, as noted in his classic Tropic of Cancer






12.  The Hemingway Bar
The Hemingway Bar at Ritz, where Hemingway lived for a time, is not only laden with history, it is a genuine cultural treasure trove.  Conversations flow around the talented Colin Fieldís original cocktails in the bar's genuine decor, complete with its leather armchairs. Elected Best Bar in the World by Forbes Magazine in 2001, the Hemingway Bar is a unique place where refinement and conviviality exist side by side.


13. Manga Cafe
Decorated in vivid comic strip black, white and red, this is Europe's first and most successful manga cafe serving French manga junkies - the second biggest market outside Japan. 






14. Le Fumoir
Popular among artists and businessmen alike, this elegant restaurant boasts of a 3,000 volume candle-lit reading room. 








15. Le Cafe-Livre
A charming cafe-bookshop where you can enjoy a drink or browse through any of the thousands of books.  Walls lined with volumes, leather armchairs and carefully placed wine bottles all make for a wonderfully quiet place to curl up and read.






Museums and Author's Houses




16. Maison de Victor Hugo
French author Victor Hugo (1802 - 1885) lived on the second floor of this building where he wrote most of Les Miserables and many other works. The house, Hutel de Rohan-Guemenee, is the largest on the place des Vosges, and in 1903 it became a museum of his life, with portraits and memorabilia.  




17. Mason de Balzac
Home of French novelist Honoré de Balzac. Of the many houses where he lived, this is the only one still standing. 






18.  Chateau de Monte Cristo
The home and park of Alexandre Dumas. Stroll the grounds and visit the chateau for a glimpse into the writer's world as revealed through paintings, engravings and reproductions.










19. Ernest Hemingway's First Apartment

Ernest Hemingway lived here when he moved to Paris shortly after his marriage. He began a career as a novelist where he wrote The Sun Also Rises, A Farewell to Arms, and For Whom the Bell Tolls.  While in Paris he also visited Ezra Pound and Gertrude Stein. Both Pound and Stein were to be a very great influence on Hemingway's style of writing.




20. Bust of Antoine de Saint Exupery
See how the author of The Little Prince looked like while taking a leisurely stroll at the Tuileries Gardens.










21. Natalie Clifford Barney's Literary Salon
Natalie Clifford Barney was an American expatriate who opened a literary salon that gathered many literary figures. These included Joyce, TS Eliot, Ezra Pound, F Scott Fitzgerald and Truman Capote.  




22. Musee de la vie Romantique
The museum's collection offers a glimpse into the French writer George Sand's private life, including her furniture, jewels and portraits.










23. Gertrude Stein House
Gertrude Stein was an American writer, poet and art collector who spent most of her life in France. Her most critically acclaimed work was Three Lives










24. Richard Wright's House 
Richard Wright was an African-American author of novels short stories, poems, and non-fiction. Much of his literature concerns racial themes, especially those involving the plight of African-Americans during the late 19th to mid-20th centuries.  To escape the growing racial pressures at home, he moved to Paris where he met authors and intellectuals who treated him as a writer first, and black second. 




Bars and Theaters




25. Spoken Word Paris
Open mic. Performance poetry. Stand up. Monologue. Stories. Beat poetry. Spoken word. English. French. Your own original texts. Old texts from Rimbaud to Dr Seuss, Beowulf to Gil Scott-Heron.  Make the words come alive.






26. Maison de la Poesie
Live poetry performances showcasing the best of contemporary French poets like David Lescot and Leslie Kaplan, and occasionally international ones such as Leeds-born Tony Harrison.  








27. Culture Rapide
Watch poets compete against each other by reading original works for judgement.  Originated in Chicago, this poetry slamming is in English every other Monday, and in French every Tuesday.  Poets come from a hodgepodge of French and English speaking countries including Quebec, Senegal, Congo, Lebanon, and Morocco, and even from Africa, Vietnam and China.






Literary Hotels




28. Hotel Pont Royal
Stay at the Pont Royal, home to a long literary tradition, and immerse yourself in literary and artistic Paris. Camus, Sartre and Joyce checked into this Left Bank hotel, as has García Márquez. It is a few steps away from the literary elite's haunts, the Café de Flore and Les Deux Magots.








29. Hotel D'Alsace (L'Hotel)
This left bank Paris hotel provides the ultimate levels of comfort and a chic ambiance for your city break in Paris, close to a choice of metro stations and within walking distance from elegant shops, boutiques and typical Parisian cafes. 


30. Le Pavillion des Lettres
Paris’s new Pavillon des Lettres takes the spirit of literature to heart, and also pays homage to Voltaire himself, along with 25 other writers who were the inspiration for this chic hotel on a quiet street in the Eighth Arrondissement. It boasts 26 rooms each named after a different writer, with quotations from their work stenciled on the walls. 


31. Apostrophe Hotel 
Designed around a simple idea, the Apostrophe hotel tells a story around traces of human intelligence around writing in all its forms. It is filled with letters and colors. In the category of “Balneo rooms” in the Apostrophe Hotel, the alphabet room calls for reading and literature in all its forms. 




Literary Festivals


32.  Paris en Toute Lettres
This is Paris' annual literary festival where diverse fiction is showcased in readings, performances, workshops, concerts and projections by authors, actors and musicians.

5 comments:

  1. Wow such an impressive compilation.....one of the most comprehensive I've seen... many many thanks!

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  2. Wonderful! Thank you very much!

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  3. WOW! Makes me want to go to Paris even more!

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  4. I am SO BUMMED I didn't see this before our trip there last June! I am OBSESSED with books AND with Paris -this is perfect. Thanks so much for putting it together!

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    1. Hi T!

      Well the nice thing about Paris is that whatever you do it's still wonderful, even if you didn't have anything planned. Hope you had a blast! :-)

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