Penelope Rowlands
Goodreads Author
Website
Twitter
Genre
Member Since
February 2010
Penelope Rowlands hasn't written any blog posts yet.
More books by Penelope Rowlands…
“But there were endless rewards. There was a pervasive sense of adventure, that a surprise was just waiting to be discovered in the next encounter or at the end of the next street. There was the food, of course-even the banal cafe seemed to serve something exquisite-and the artistry with which it was all done, right down to the tiny scenarios in bread and chocolate that were unveiled fortnightly in our boulanger's window. I even came to appreciate-in memory, to bask in-the flirtatious comments made by men in the street, bending every rule in my postfeminist, Anglo-American playbook as I did so, seeing it all as just more joyous street theater in a city that was alive with it, especially in warm weather when everyone was out. I knew that I would remember all of it always, that Paris would be there forever in sharply delineated images,a pack of mental cards to be shuffled through, rearranged, anytime I liked.”
―
―
“Their expressions were like those caught by Renoir in the faces of The Daughters of Paul Durand-Reul, relaxed, proper, satisfied, slightly ingenue, the background filled with spring color. It was unreal, a garden party far removed from the Revolution that surged beyond the orchard walls. Here, aristocrats dined among white-gloved servants, as in a painting, while songbirds sang in the trees.”
― Paris Was Ours: Thirty-Two Writers Reflect on the City of Light
― Paris Was Ours: Thirty-Two Writers Reflect on the City of Light
“In Paris, I realized that the words the French use most are "decourage", "solitude", "ride".
The phrase inevitably used by men to reply is "Oui, mais non..."
What a foreign adventure is supposed to do: to make the mundane thrilling.
It may have been Gertrude Stein who wrote that to lead a life of any interest, one must first spend time in Paris. It is a place that defines and shapes like no other; its Aphroditic nature can overwhelm or inspire, but it can't leave you indifferent.
Regret, like desire, seeks not to analyze but to gratify itself. Proust”
― Paris Was Ours
The phrase inevitably used by men to reply is "Oui, mais non..."
What a foreign adventure is supposed to do: to make the mundane thrilling.
It may have been Gertrude Stein who wrote that to lead a life of any interest, one must first spend time in Paris. It is a place that defines and shapes like no other; its Aphroditic nature can overwhelm or inspire, but it can't leave you indifferent.
Regret, like desire, seeks not to analyze but to gratify itself. Proust”
― Paris Was Ours
Topics Mentioning This Author
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Around the World ...: France | 83 | 1527 | Jan 30, 2025 11:15PM | |
| Around the World ...: Free and Cheap E-Books | 695 | 7680 | Nov 03, 2025 07:34AM |






















