An endearing, delightfully charming personal memoir about living in one of the most famous, unique and culturally significant bookstores in the world: "Shakespeare and Company" in Paris.
Virtually everybody (maybe with the exception of the likes of Donald Trump, I guess) would have heard of this mythical bookstore located in the beguiling heart of beautiful Paris, on La Rive Gauche of the Seine River, an area historically known as one of the foremost cultural and artistic parts of the city, a neighborhood where the likes of Picasso, Matisse, and Hemingway once lived.
An area where, like in most of central Paris, you can breath and savour the sophistication, elegance, rich cultural history and a tradition of active, democratic (if occasionally hot-headed) political awareness and activism, so characteristic of what I personally consider the most beautiful City in the world, and the city that most deeply represent the richness of the cultural traditions of old Europe.
A city for which my affection is rekindled every single time I have the privilege to visit its beautiful galleries, museums, bookstores, and to stroll along its elegant boulevards, delightful parks, and the romantic bridges and banks of the Seine, all punctuated by architecturally magnificent palaces and beautiful monuments representing a constant reminder of the remarkable history of this extraordinary city.
Shakespeare and Company has a very particular history, being not just a famous bookstore but also a place of sanctuary and refuge for penniless aspirant writers and artists, and a center of radical cultural and political activism.
Its complicated, generous, eccentric and utterly fascinating owner, George Whitman, provided free accommodation inside the store to all sort of intriguing and unique characters: the only requirements were to be culturally active and love books, to read a given quota of books, and to occasionally help in some of the activities of the store. His objective was to create a socialist utopia strongly tinged with a deep, abiding love for culture in all of its manifestations, and an almost fetishistic affection for books.
The author of the book describes his memorable life experience when guest of Shakespeare and Company. An experience that saves him from himself and that provides an opportunity for re-thinking the values and decisions of his own life.
The owner of the shop, George Whitman, has been rightfully appointed in 2006 "Officier dans l'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres" by the French government, for his unique and important contribution to the cultural life in France. Sadly he died at the age of 98, after a meaningful life lived to the full, but thankfully he is survived by his daughter who is trying to preserve (albeit in a more polished and less ruffled and chaotic manner) the rich tradition of this unique bookstore.
From the author's words: "though far from perfect and rife with idiosyncrasies, George, with all the hope and optimism of a child, still believes he can change the world and the people he takes in at his store. In an age when it is so tempting to be cynical, this is enough to make him a hero in my eyes".
George's words: "people all tell me they work too much, that they need to make more money. What's the point ? Why not live on as little as possible and then spend your time with your family or reading Tolstoy or running a bookstore ? It does not make any sense!"
“Be not inhospitable to strangers,” reads a sign that stands at the entrance of the bookstore “lest they be angels in disguise.”
Highly recommended. An absolute must-read for anybody who has ever fallen in love with Paris and who has a personal fetish for books, who still believes in a humane alternative to the "greed is good" philosophy of the rotting and primitive model of unfettered, unregulated capitalism that still survives in few countries, and who puts higher priority to culture, intelligence and education over money and power.