The title of this book is a misnomer – as it is, for the most part, about the expatriate colony in Paris – and most of them English-speaking. But, it is interesting how Paris was an international magnate attracting Americans, Russians, and Spaniards. It helps to make a great city like Paris even more pre-eminent to have this international influx.
The stories around these personages are fascinating – like Sylvia Beach of “Shakespeare and Company” bookstore, Picasso, Dali, Gertrude Stein, and a demented James Joyce it seems to me. Many stayed in France even after the German occupation in 1940. France had become home for them.
There is a second-hand feeling to the writing – most of it is gathered from other sources. Nevertheless for a Francophile, like me, it is interesting.
A few other notes:
The headquarters for the French military was Chateau Vincennes, not Chateau Versailles. Why is there a picture of a German tank on a snowy Parisian street with the caption “German tank entering Paris” when this entire chapter is devoted to the collapse of France in the summer of 1940?