My French Book List for 2008


Why French books? Mostly because I’m enamored with France, though I’m not entirely sure why. I began to learn the language in high school, and slowly began to absorb the culture, cuisine, and history of this fascinating place. On a trip to France after college, my fate was sealed: it was all better than I had imagined. I couldn’t get over the history and romance of the land. To stand in the Cathedral at Chartres which dates back to the 12th century, to walk through the gardens at Versailles, the halls of the Louvre, the vineyards of the Loire Valley, the beaches at Normandy — it was all breathtaking. I realize that every nation has its flaws and dark places, but I simply choose to love France. I appreciated this piece from Crunchy Con about his unreasonable love of France:

My love affair with France began when I was a little boy, not even old enough to read, and I listened to my elderly great-aunts tell tales of serving as Red Cross nurses in Dijon during the Great War. Aunt Hilda was seized by a Frenchman on the Champs-Elysees when the armistice was announced, and he kissed her madly. She pretended to be scandalized 60 years later. I thought it was amazing. Just think! The old ladies sat me on their leather couch in their cabin and showed me their photo album from France in the war, and I was in heaven.

I will not read all these books in 2008, I just know it. This is an ambitious list for a busy mom like myself, with so many other things to keep up on, but this is the Year of French for me, and my book list for the year is comprised entirely of books about France, the French, set in France, by a French author, or anything a Francophile would love. Without further adieu ado, here is my list of great French books – in English- (well, I hope they’ll be great…I’ll review them as I go), an eclectic mix of serious, light, and historical books. But for the acclaimed French classics, like Madame Bovary or The Count of Monte Cristo, go here.

1. Suite Française by Irène Némirovsky. This is the one book on my list that I’ve read already. I just finished it last week, and will review it shortly. Wow. Here is a piece of the review from The Washington Post’s Book World:

This extraordinary work of fiction about the German occupation of France is embedded in a real story as gripping and complex as the invented one. Composed in 1941-42 by an accomplished writer who had published several well-received novels, Suite Française, her last work, was written under the tremendous pressure of a constant danger that was to catch up with her and kill her before she had finished.

Irène Némirovsky was a Jewish, Russian immigrant from a wealthy family who had fled the Bolsheviks as a teenager. She spent her adult life in France, wrote in French but preserved the detachment and cool distance of the outsider. She and her husband were deported to Auschwitz in 1942, where he was gassed upon arrival and she died in the infirmary at the age of 39. Her manuscript, in minuscule and barely readable handwriting, was preserved by her daughters, who, ignorant of the fact that these notebooks contained a full-fledged masterpiece, left it unread until 60 years later. Once published, with an appendix that illuminates the circumstances of its origin and the author’s plan for its completion, it quickly became a bestseller in France. It is hard to imagine a reader who will not be wholly engrossed and moved by this book.

2. A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle. There are many books in this genre of American/Brit type of adventurous person who leaves it all behind to live in France, renovate a house, or open a restaurant. This is the beginning of the explosion of the genre, and from what I hear, a fabulous read. From Amazon.com:

Who hasn’t dreamed, on a mundane Monday or frowzy Friday, of chucking it all in and packing off to the south of France? Provençal cookbooks and guidebooks entice with provocatively fresh salads and azure skies, but is it really all Côtes-du-Rhône and fleur-de-lis? Author Peter Mayle answers that question with wit, warmth, and wicked candor in A Year in Provence, the chronicle of his own foray into Provençal domesticity.

3. Fields of Glory by Jean Rouaud. Set in the Loire Valley, this book has been beautifully translated from French; it’s the story of three generations and the memory of the battlefields of WWI. From Library Journal:

This book represents a dialog between two generations seemingly far apart: three elderly veterans of the post-World War I era from the French lower Loire Valley and their grandchildren. Set in the 1950s, the novel is mainly a journey through the memories of grandfather, grandmother, and Aunt Marie, which reach as far back as battlefields near Ypres and Verdun–the “fields of glory.” The memories are narrated from the perspectives of the grandchildren, whose initial boredom and impatience with the nostalgic stories from another era progressively become affection and understanding for the psychological urge to remember and be remembered. Rouaud was unknown even in France until he won the Prix Goncourt 1990, France’s highest fiction honor, for this novel.

4. The Diary of a Country Priest by Georges Bernanos. First published in 1937, this is the story of a young Catholic priest in an isolated French village, and his diaries of his faith and failures. From Amazon.com:

In this classic Catholic novel, Bernanos movingly recounts the life of a young French country priest who grows to understand his provincial parish while learning spiritual humility himself. Awarded the Grand Prix for Literature by the Academie Francaise, The Diary of a Country Priest was adapted into an acclaimed film by Robert Bresson. “A book of the utmost sensitiveness and compassion…it is a work of deep, subtle and singularly encompassing art.”

5. Blame it on Paris by Laura Florand. This is pure fun, ladies! American girl goes to Paris for study abroad, meets French boyfriend, ends up staying in France. Who doesn’t like a little French fairy tale? From Booklist:

Southern belle Laura is perfectly happy to spend her time as a graduate student in Paris gorging on chocolate, complaining about rude locals, and eschewing any sort of romance. Enter Sebastien, a cute waiter-aspiring graphic artist. What starts as a crush turns into a full-fledged relationship, and soon Laura is contemplating staying in Paris, and maybe even marrying. What follows is a sometimes hilarious and sometimes ridiculous adventure involving four weddings, two in rural Georgia and two in France. Florand’s romance relies heavily on cultural stereotypes and misunderstandings to set up humorous situations. Ultimately, it’s how well Laura and Sebastien’s families take to each other, and to helping the newlyweds, that generates the sweet surprise. This is a fun, frothy tale for anyone who has ever conjured up a dashing foreigner to sweep her off her feet.

6. God Still Loves the French by Marc Mailloux. Written by an American missionary with a deep passion for the French and a desire to share God’s love with them. From Stevan Horning, Reviewer:

Although Mailloux paints a bleak picture of France’s modern soul, he cherishes the hope that God’s power and grace continues to create beautiful souls in the spiritual desert that is France today. Proof of God’s effective love emerges mainly in the cameo portraits Mailloux gives of people he has seen convert from darkness to light. He writes with consistent humor, sprinkling each page with witty observations. No doubt he cultivates a light-hearted hope in order better to endure the exasperations of a twenty-year effort in that resistant mission field. He now broadcasts, teaches, and preaches to French-speaking Haitians, Quebecois, and Caribbean Islanders. An easy but thought-provoking read, full of truth. I have never seen another book on this subject.

7. Things Hidden Since the Foundation of the World by René Girard. What I really wanted to read by René Girard was a book published fairly recently in Italian, Verità o fede debole. Dialogo su cristianesimo e relativismo (Truth or Weak Faith: Dialogue on Christianity and Relativism). It’s about what Girard believes is a coming Christian Renaissance. But I can’t find the book in English. So I’m going to read this one instead. Girard presents the idea that human culture is based on a sacrifice as a way out of the mimetic, or imitative, violence between rivals. Here’s a quick review of Things Hidden. You can read an excellent interview with René Girard here.

Girard is a French anthropologist and has been called one of the most influential intellectuals of our time. For a man with outspoken Christian views, it’s amazing to me that he’s held in such high regard in French intellectual circles, and has even been named to the Académie française.

8. A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway. Time-travel to Paris in the 1920s – great art, beautiful women, literary icons. From Amazon.com:

In the preface to A Moveable Feast, Hemingway remarks casually that “if the reader prefers, this book may be regarded as fiction”–and, indeed, fact or fiction, it doesn’t matter, for his slim memoir of Paris in the 1920s is as enchanting as anything made up and has become the stuff of legend. Paris in the ’20s! Hemingway and his first wife, Hadley, lived happily on $5 a day and still had money for drinks at the Closerie des Lilas, skiing in the Alps, and fishing trips to Spain. On every corner and at every café table, there were the most extraordinary people living wonderful lives and telling fantastic stories.

9. French Women Don’t Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano. We all know the French paradox, and this book will enlighten us all, I’m sure! From Amazon.com:

Author Mireille Guiliano is CEO of Veuve Clicquot, and French Women Don’t Get Fat offers a concept of sensible pleasures: If you have a chocolate croissant for breakfast, have a vegetable-based lunch–or take an extra walk and pass on the bread basket at dinner. Guiliano’s insistence on simple measures slowly creating substantial improvements are reassuring, and her suggestion to ignore the scale and learn to live by the “zipper test” could work wonders for those who get wrapped up in tiny details of diet. She sympathizes that deprivation can lead straight to overindulgence when it comes to favorite foods, but then, in a most French manner, treats them as a pleasure that needs to be sated, rather than a battle to be fought.

10. My Life in France by Julia Child and Alex Prud’Homme. From Publishers Weekly:

With Julia Child’s death in 2004 at age 91, her grandnephew Prud’homme (The Cell Game) completed this playful memoir of the famous chef’s first, formative sojourn in France with her new husband, Paul Child, in 1949. The couple met during WWII in Ceylon, working for the OSS, and soon after moved to Paris, where Paul worked for the U.S. Information Service. Child describes herself as a “rather loud and unserious Californian,” 36, six-foot-two and without a word of French, while Paul was 10 years older, an urbane, well-traveled Bostonian. Startled to find the French amenable and the food delicious, Child enrolled at the Cordon Bleu and toiled with increasing zeal under the rigorous tutelage of éminence grise Chef Bugnard. “Jackdaw Julie,” as Paul called her, collected every manner of culinary tool and perfected the recipes in her little kitchen on rue de l’Université (“Roo de Loo”). She went on to start an informal school with sister gourmandes Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle, who were already at work on a French cookbook for American readers, although it took Child’s know-how to transform the tome—after nine years, many title changes and three publishers—into the bestselling Mastering the Art of French Cooking (1961). This is a valuable record of gorgeous meals in bygone Parisian restaurants, and the secret arts of a culinary genius.

11. Wine & War: The French, The Nazis, and the Battle for France’s Greatest Treasure by Donald Kladstrup. The Nazis’ looting of treasures went far beyond the works of art most of us are familiar with. From Library Journal:

Husband-and-wife journalists and contributors to Wine Spectator, the Kladstrups recount the dangerous and daring exploits of those who fought to keep France’s greatest treasure out of the hands of the Nazis. Whether they were fobbing off inferior wines on the Germans, hiding precious vintages behind hastily constructed walls, sabotaging shipments being sent out of France, or even sneaking people out of the country in wine barrels, the French proved to be remarkably versatile when it came to protecting their beloved wine. The authors craft a compelling read that shifts back and forth between individual tales of bravery, including those of five prominent wine-making families, and the bigger story of how World War II affected the French wine industry.

12. The Many Lives & Secret Sorrows of Josephine B. by Sandra Gulland. The French Revolution comes to life, with Josephine Bonaparte center stage. From Amazon.com:

Since completing high school history, few of us have managed to keep straight the details of the French Revolution. Beyond suggestions of eating cake and the effectiveness of the guillotine, this sordid time period has remained–for many–somewhat obscure. Now, through the novel The Many Lives and Secret Sorrows of Josephine B., not only do we learn of the many differences between Robespierre and Rousseau, but we gain insight into the marriage of one of history’s greatest political couples: Napoleon and Josephine.

Standing beside the charismatic Napoleon, Josephine’s own importance and fascinating history have often been overshadowed. In a fictionalized account of Josephine’s diaries and her correspondence, author Sandra Gulland has shed light on Josephine’s pre-Napoleon life. This, the first of three books about Josephine, covers her childhood in Martinique, her first marriage, the birth of her children, her life during the revolution, and her marriage to Napoleon.

13. Murder in the Marais by Cara Black. A little French mystery to top off my list! This is the first book in the series starring detective Aimée Leduc, set in modern day Paris. From Publisher’s Weekly:

The initial installment of a projected series of mysteries set in Paris, this standout first novel introduces dauntless private investigator Aimée Leduc. The French-American, whose specialty is computer forensics, is confronted with a seemingly mundane task: to decipher an encrypted photograph from the ’40s and deliver it to an old woman in the Marais (the historic Jewish quarter of Paris). When Aimée arrives at the home of Lili Stein to present the photo, however, she finds the woman dead, a swastika carved into her forehead. Thus begins a thrilling, quick-paced chase involving neo-Nazis, corrupt government officials and fierce anti-Semitism. With the help of her partner, René, a computer hacking expert, Aimée uncovers tantalizing clues relating to German war veteran Hartmuth Griffe, the Jewish girl he saved from Auschwitz, a French trade minister and other enigmatic figures. But the data Aimée and René come up with only takes them so far. In order to understand the true motive behind the killing, Aimée must delve into history, confronting older residents of the quarter who’d prefer she leave the past alone. The suspense is high as she fraternizes dangerously with the enemy, even becoming briefly involved with an Aryan supremacist. Black knows Paris well, and in her first-rate debut she deftly combines fascinating anecdotes from the city’s war years with classic images of the City of Lights.

Are there any other Francophiles/bibliophiles out there who’d like to join me in reading any of the books listed here? I’d love some company along the way – we could have a cyber book club of sorts.

For more Thursday Thirteen lists, go here.

Technorati Tags: , , ,

tm-horz-banner

16 Responses

  1. mrs darling February 21st, 2008 at 11:18 am

    I read a Year In Provence and just loved it!

  2. Robin February 21st, 2008 at 11:52 am

    Many years ago I used to speak fluent French, going so far as to have taken courses in medieval French literature (things like Gargantua et Pantagruel in the original medieval French) in college. Sadly, it all went straight out of my head when I moved to Israel and learned Hebrew. These days it’s a stretch for me to order dinner :(.

  3. pussreboots February 21st, 2008 at 11:54 am

    The Hemingway book is on my TBR. Happy reading.

  4. Sue February 21st, 2008 at 12:17 pm

    I want to read Suite Francaise and French Women Don’t Get Fat (I think I might have to argue with the title of that book though since I come from a French Canadian family where some women are chubby – including me!)

  5. Jane February 21st, 2008 at 2:16 pm

    You are ambitious. I wish I was more fluent in French. It is Canada’s other language, but we don’t really use it much out here in the West. My gramma lent me the mini series of A Year in Provence, I think. I will have to actually watch it soon!

  6. Nicholas February 21st, 2008 at 5:14 pm

    I love France, though in a certain jaded moments I sometimes think it is wasted on the French. I ma very lucky that my parents took my sister and me to France every summer from when I was 4 years old, so I was at home with the language from an early age. Since I moved across the pond, France has become less accessible, but I can’t wait to make another visit. I enjoyed A Year In Provence very much.

  7. David Porter February 22nd, 2008 at 10:18 am

    My first visit to your site and enjoyed myself a bunch.

    Thanks!

  8. Melanie February 22nd, 2008 at 8:26 pm

    Most certainly an interesting list.

  9. Sandra Gulland February 23rd, 2008 at 5:58 am

    Great list, great blog, great aspirations! (And of course I’m enormously pleased to see Josephine B. included.)

  10. Jen February 23rd, 2008 at 2:56 pm

    Mrs. Darling, I’m glad to hear the good report on Year in Provence! Let’s compare notes when I’m done!

    Robin, how sad your French is gone! But seeing as it’s nothing like Hebrew, I can understand how your brain would dump it! How exciting to be in Tel Aviv, I’d love to hear more about how you ended up there.

    pussreboots, hey, I’ll let you know when I start A Moveable Feast, and maybe you’ll even do a giveaway of that book. :-)

    Sue, you won’t be disappointed with Suite Française. And yes, the French Women Don’t Get Fat book – that phrase has many women up in arms!

    Jane, I’ve heard the movie of Year in Provence was great; when I’m done with the book, I’ll have to get my hands on it. Yes, you’re in a part of Canada that doesn’t have much need of French, but Oregon is even a more unlikely place!

    Nicholas, how wonderful that you had the opportunity to visit France so often! Laughing at the phrase that France is wasted on the French!! I know what you mean.

    David, I’m glad you enjoyed browsing over here! I love your new site, and as you can see, it’s now in my sidebar!

    Melanie, I agree, I find the list interesting! Let’s just see if I get through it all in a timely manner!

    Sandra, WOW, my first visit from a FAMOUS person!!! I can’t believe the amount of research you’ve put into the Josephine Trilogy – practically 4 decades! I forgot to mention above that the book I listed is the first in the trilogy. And it looks like the next one is about to come out! I look forward to reading all of them. Thank you so much for commenting here.

  11. e-Mom February 24th, 2008 at 11:12 pm

    Oops! Nearly missed this post. You’re prolific, and I’ve been spending time away from the computer. Keeping up with you is a (wonderful) challenge. Soo… a little bit of France ahead for vous/tu? I’ve loved France with equal passion for years, ever since living in Montreal as a child. I keep “French Women Don’t Get Fat” in my kitchen. Sensible advice. Eat smaller portions!

    Au Revoir, for now.

  12. Pollyvousfrancais March 1st, 2008 at 7:35 am

    What a great list! I thought I “knew” most of the Francophile books out there, but this list gives me new ways to go spend precious book euros at here Brentano’s in Paris.

    I loved “French Women Don’t Get Fat,” but it gets odd comments from French people here.

    Julia Child’s book has been #one on my must-reads, so I’ll start with that.

    Merci,
    Polly

  13. Cindy Swanson March 6th, 2008 at 12:04 pm

    Great list! Here’s a fiction book you MUST read: “Let Them Eat Cake,” by Sandra Byrd. I think you’ll love it!

    I also am enamored with French things. I have a bathroom that decorated with all Paris and France-related stuff.

    Visit my TT when you get a moment!

  14. Laume March 18th, 2008 at 6:05 pm

    I’m a new Francophile (after quick visit to Paris two years ago and falling in love with… the food, the art, the language, etc.) and I’ve been finding and reading a hodge podge of French related books as well. I love Cara Black’s Aimee Leduc series – I just finished the most recent paperpack and I think I’ll have to pop for the hardcover of her most recent book.
    Laura’s Blame it on Paris is a sweet delight – and did you know that it’s not fiction – it’s the story of how she met her husband.
    I liked French Women Don’t Get Fat but found it was a bit “rich” for me. I’d like to read her second book French Women Through the Seasons.
    You might also try Diane Johnson, I read one of hers, Le Divorce.
    I also loved a small book – A Writer’s Paris by Eric Maisel
    And don’t forget about French films! I better not get started.

  15. Jen March 18th, 2008 at 7:02 pm

    e-Mom, you got it, “eat smaller portions.” That’s the real trick of the French. That and actually preparing their own food.

    Pollyvousfrancais, what are the odd comments on “French women don’t get fat?” Let me know what you think of Julia Child’s book!

    Cindy Swanson, thanks for the recommendation, I’ll have to add that to my list. I’m well into 2009 already!!

    Laume, I agree, “French Women Through the Seasons” looks very good. Oh, the book by Eric Maisel, that also has me interested!

  16. Teddy & Lyon May 4th, 2010 at 6:36 am

    Hello,
    We are 5th grade students from MICDS in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. We just completed a computer project about France for the upcoming World Cup in South Africa. We would love it if you can look at it and give us some feedback.
    Use the link below:
    http://micdsworldcupguides.wikispaces.com/France
    Thanks,
    Teddy and,Lyon

RSS feed for comments on this post

Comment