Reviews
This brilliant, beautifully written essay is the finest book I have ever read about Paris. Ever . Thank you, Luc Sante., "The elevation of the obscure and the overlooked, the discarded or hidden or marginal, to artistic status or cultural prominence has become a cottage industry for artists and writers of late, but as an anti-ghostbuster, Sante is in a class by himself . . . the pleasures to be had from the fruits of his research are considerable . . . [ The Other Paris 's] great virtue is to send the reader down investigative paths of his own." --Molly Haskell, The New York Times Book Review "'The city,' [Sante] insists, '--compact and curled within itself, a labyrinth--had to be played like a game.' This is an idea--I'll admit it--that I love, not just in regard to Paris but also to the very essence of urban life . . . Sante is highlighting the law of unintended consequences, which brings us back to dérive again. Throughout "The Other Paris," he invokes the figure of the fl'neur , which is to say the one who walks to connect to the city through the soles of his or her feet . . . Here, we see the sneaky genius of The Other Paris , which, like Low Life , conceals the complexity of its structure, masquerading as a popular history . . . until it reveals that it has been about circling all along." --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times "This brilliant, beautifully written essay is the finest book I have ever read about Paris. Ever . Thank you, Luc Sante." --Paul Auster "Nowadays, the old, crowded, swarming, surly cities are at least half-forgotten. But in this great chronicle, Luc Sante recalls when Paris was rougher, when the poor, the tough, the unregulated, the underworld, thrived there; maybe the city was also less rough, in that there was room for nearly everyone all the way down the social ladder. Hanging over The Other Paris is the contemporary curse that perhaps hit Paris first, of cities that have become bland transnational stopping places for the privileged. Magisterial as ever, Sante returns us to the flavor, texture, savor, shouts, and clashes of the bygone city." --Rebecca Solnit " The Other Paris is a heartbreaking spectacle, immense in intellectual and political scope and emotional reach. Peopled by crooks and movie stars, gamblers and thinkers, the world's premier city of dreams is rendered, through Luc Sante's fine hand, historian's eye, and poet's heart, into a place we hardly knew-a world of hitherto unknown mysteries and realities. A grand journey in an epic work." --Hilton Als "Sante's knowledge of the voluminous Paris literature is prodigious . . . Sante's great gift is his ability to draw on the 'verbal photography' of previous writers to send the reader back in time." --Arthur Goldhammer, Bookforum "Sante vividly captures this 'other' Paris . . . The Other Paris is immersive and enjoyable. The abundant pictures are fascinating." --Sarah Grant, Booklist "'We have forgotten what a city was,' Luc Sante provocatively writes about Paris. By the last chapter of this absorbing book, we are convinced. Washerwomen and ragpickers, bohemians and clochards, anarchists and apaches , all play their part in this alternative urban history. This is not the Gay Paree of Maurice Chevalier, though he too makes an appearance." --Witold Rybczynski "All who love Paris will love this book." -- Kirkus Reviews, Praise for Low Life "A tour-de-force . . . [Sante] has a novelist's eye for detail and an aesthete's taste for anecdotes . . . Low Life is unquestionably a book that can be read for instruction about New York as well as for pleasure." -David Rieff, The Times Literary Supplement, "The elevation of the obscure and the overlooked, the discarded or hidden or marginal, to artistic status or cultural prominence has become a cottage industry for artists and writers of late, but as an anti-ghostbuster, Sante is in a class by himself . . . the pleasures to be had from the fruits of his research are considerable . . . [ The Other Paris 's] great virtue is to send the reader down investigative paths of his own." --Molly Haskell, The New York Times Book Review "'The city,' [Sante] insists, '--compact and curled within itself, a labyrinth--had to be played like a game.' This is an idea--I'll admit it--that I love, not just in regard to Paris but also to the very essence of urban life . . . Sante is highlighting the law of unintended consequences, which brings us back to dérive again. Throughout "The Other Paris," he invokes the figure of the fl'neur , which is to say the one who walks to connect to the city through the soles of his or her feet . . . Here, we see the sneaky genius of The Other Paris , which, like Low Life , conceals the complexity of its structure, masquerading as a popular history . . . until it reveals that it has been about circling all along." --David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times "This brilliant, beautifully written essay is the finest book I have ever read about Paris. Ever . Thank you, Luc Sante." --Paul Auster "Nowadays, the old, crowded, swarming, surly cities are at least half-forgotten. But in this great chronicle, Luc Sante recalls when Paris was rougher, when the poor, the tough, the unregulated, the underworld, thrived there; maybe the city was also less rough, in that there was room for nearly everyone all the way down the social ladder. Hanging over The Other Paris is the contemporary curse that perhaps hit Paris first, of cities that have become bland transnational stopping places for the privileged. Magisterial as ever, Sante returns us to the flavor, texture, savor, shouts, and clashes of the bygone city." --Rebecca Solnit " The Other Paris is a heartbreaking spectacle, immense in intellectual and political scope and emotional reach. Peopled by crooks and movie stars, gamblers and thinkers, the world's premier city of dreams is rendered, through Luc Sante's fine hand, historian's eye, and poet's heart, into a place we hardly knew-a world of hitherto unknown mysteries and realities. A grand journey in an epic work." --Hilton Als "The good news is that Sante is a formidable guide to the Parisian past at ground and underground level . . . Sante ends his book with a hymn to fl'neurie , this lazy meandering pursuit of truth, drink and other goals, like the literary archaeology of a city that's no longer there. Following his path is worth the inevitable hangover." --David D'Arcy, San Francisco Chronicle "Sante's knowledge of the voluminous Paris literature is prodigious . . . Sante's great gift is his ability to draw on the 'verbal photography' of previous writers to send the reader back in time." --Arthur Goldhammer, Bookforum "Sante vividly captures this 'other' Paris . . . The Other Paris is immersive and enjoyable. The abundant pictures are fascinating." --Sarah Grant, Booklist "'We have forgotten what a city was,' Luc Sante provocatively writes about Paris. By the last chapter of this absorbing book, we are convinced. Washerwomen and ragpickers, bohemians and clochards, anarchists and apaches , all play their part in this alternative urban history. This is not the Gay Paree of Maurice Chevalier, though he too makes an appearance." --Witold Rybczynski "All who love Paris will love this book." -- Kirkus Reviews, "This brilliant, beautifully written essay is the finest book I have ever read about Paris. Ever . Thank you, Luc Sante." --Paul Auster "Nowadays, the old crowded, swarming, surly cities are at least half-forgotten. But in this great chronicle Luc Sante recalls when Paris was rougher, when the poor, the tough, the unregulated, the underworld, thrived there; maybe the city was also less rough, in that there was room for nearly everyone all the way down the social ladder. Hanging over The Other Paris is the contemporary curse of cities that perhaps hit Paris first, of cities that have become bland transnational stopping places for the privileged. Magisterial as ever, Sante returns us to the flavor, texture, savor, shouts, and clashes of the bygone city." --Rebecca Solnit " The Other Paris is a heartbreaking spectacle, immense in intellectual and political scope and emotional reach. Peopled by crooks and movie stars, gamblers and thinkers, the world's premier city of dreams is rendered, through Luc Sante's fine hand, historian's eye, and poet's heart, into a place we hardly knew-a world of hitherto unknown mysteries and realities. A grand journey in an epic work." --Hilton Als "Sante's knowledge of the voluminous Paris literature is prodigious . . . Sante's great gift is his ability to draw on the 'verbal photography' of previous writers to send the reader back in time." --Arthur Goldhammer, BookForum "Sante vividly captures this "other" Paris . . . The Other Paris is immersive and enjoyable. The abundant pictures are fascinating." -- Booklist "'We have forgotten what a city was,' Luc Sante provocatively writes about Paris. By the last chapter of this absorbing book, we are convinced. Washerwomen and ragpickers, bohemians and clochards, anarchists and apaches, all play their part in this alternative urban history. This is not the Gay Paree of Maurice Chevalier, though he too makes an appearance." --Witold Rybczynski "All who love Paris will love this book." -- Kirkus Reviews, 'We have forgotten what a city was,' Luc Sante provocatively writes about Paris. By the last chapter of this absorbing book, we are convinced. Washerwomen and ragpickers, bohemians and clochards, anarchists and apaches, all play their part in this alternative urban history. This is not the Gay Paree of Maurice Chevalier, though he too makes an appearance., The Other Paris is a heartbreaking spectacle, immense in intellectual and political scope and emotional reach. Peopled by crooks and movie stars, gamblers and thinkers, the world's premier city of dreams is rendered, through Luc Sante's fine hand, historian's eye, and poet's heart, into a place we hardly knew-a world of hitherto unknown mysteries and realities. A grand journey in an epic work., A tour-de-force . . . [Sante] has a novelist's eye for detail and an aesthete's taste for anecdotes . . . Low Life is unquestionably a book that can be read for instruction about New York as well as for pleasure., Nowadays, the old crowded, swarming, surly cities are at least half-forgotten. But in this great chronicle Luc Sante recalls when Paris was rougher, when the poor, the tough, the unregulated, the underworld, thrived there; maybe the city was also less rough, in that there was room for nearly everyone all the way down the social ladder. Hanging over The Other Paris is the contemporary curse of cities that perhaps hit Paris first, of cities that have become bland transnational stopping places for the privileged. Magisterial as ever, Sante returns us to the flavor, texture, savor, shouts, and clashes of the bygone city.