Please welcome the wonderful Vonnie Davis to my blog! I'm so pleased to have Vonnie here, not only because she's going to tell us about her fabulous book, but also a little bit about a very interesting Parisian store. The pictures are to die for...talk about inspiration!
Welcome, Vonnie!
I’m always amazed
at and incredibly lucky over the delightful people I meet online. A few weeks
ago, I met Rosanna when I won a copy of her book, THE SELKIE. Emails were
exchanged and before we knew it, we were scheduled to guest blog on each
other’s blog. How exciting because it gives me a chance to meet her readers and
to share my latest release.
I love that Rosanna
is a librarian. Libraries and bookstores are my favorite haunts.
There’s a delightful
bookstore in Paris called Shakespeare and Company. It sits on the Left Bank,
within steps of the Seine and in view of the Notre Dame Cathedral. When we were
in Paris, Calvin insisted I had to see it. He claimed it was the most unusual
bookstore in the City of Light. I wasn’t prepared for the maze of narrow
hallways leading to more alcoves of dust-covered books.
This Paris
institution has an interesting background. Shakespeare and Co. was first opened
at another location by Sylvia Beach, an American expatriate, in 1918. During
the 1920’s, it was the gathering place for writers of the “Lost Generation” -- Ernest
Hemingway, James Joyce, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Man Ray and Ezra Pound. During
this period, the store was the epicenter of Anglo-American literary culture and
modernism in Paris. It is featured in Woody Allen’s movie “Midnight in Paris.”
When the Nazis
occupied the city, the store was closed down and never re-opened until another
American, George Whitman, opened a bookstore in 1951 in a building that was
once a monastary. Later he renamed his English-language bookstore Shakespeare
and Company in tribute to Sylvia Beach. This store became a focal point for
literary culture in bohemian Paris.
Now here’s where it
gets really interesting to me. Whitman, in his youth, had hiked his way through
Central America and Europe. He was deeply touched by the generosity of citizens
who opened their humble homes to him and shared all they had. This universal-family-ideology
stuck with him and, as a result, he opened his bookstore to starving artists
and writers. The bookstore includes sleeping facilities, with 13 beds, and
Whitman claimed as many as 40,000 people have slept in the shop over the years.
His only requirements were that his guests, whom he called “tumbleweeds”, read,
work at their art/writing and help out in the bookstore for two hours a day.
A delightful book, Time Was Soft There: A Paris Sojourn at
Shakespeare and Co. by Jeremy Mercer, tells of a writer’s month living in
the famed bookstore. Imagine! Free room and board in Paris. Granted one had
little privacy. Bathroom privileges were on a scheduled basis. You had to be up
and moving about when the store opened. But this is Paris, y’all!
Here’s the book’s
description that reinforces what I’m sharing about the place. “Wandering through Paris's Left Bank one day, poor and
unemployed, Canadian reporter Jeremy Mercer ducked into a little bookstore
called Shakespeare & Co. Mercer bought a book, and the staff invited him up
for tea. Within weeks, he was living above the store, working for the
proprietor, George Whitman, patron saint of the city's down-and-out writers,
and immersing himself in the love affairs and low-down watering holes of the
shop's makeshift staff. Time Was Soft There is the story of a journey
down a literary rabbit hole in the shadow of Notre Dame, to a place where a
hidden bohemia still thrives.”
While in
Paris, we visited the bookstore several times. We bought a copy of Antoine de
Saint ExupĂ©ry’s The Little Prince, mostly
to get one of the bookstore’s famous “Kilometer Zero” stamps inside the front
cover. There is a plaque in the ground in front of the store called “kilometer
Zero” that is considered the official center of Paris.
Regular
activities that occur in the bookshop are Sunday tea, poetry readings and
writers’ meetings. George Whitman died there at the age of 98, nearly a year
ago. His daughter, Sylvia Beach Whitman, now runs the shop and continues to
allow young writers to live and work in the store.
So, of course, I
had to include a scene at Shakespeare and Company in my romantic suspense, MONA
LISA’S ROOM. Because my heroine Alyson Moore has unwittingly foiled a
terrorist’s bombing attempt, she’s been placed under the protective custody of
French agent, Niko Reynard. They’ve argued outside Shakespeare and Company and
are now inside the store. Niko’s looking for a little gift as a making-up
gesture to his charge, who is pretty upset with him…
“Where
are you from?” Niko detected an Aussie accent.
“Australia.
Brisbane. I’m here to experience Paris, study art and do a bit of poetry
writin’.” Eddie’s eyes were scanning the shelves. “Ah, here we go, mate.” He
climbed a stepstool to reach what he was after. Turning, he leaned down to hand
the two books to Niko.
“Thanks. Sketches of Parisian Rooftops and Sketches of Gardens of Paris.” He
quickly scanned through the pages. Aly would love these.
Eddie
hailed a greeting at two men, dressed in suits, when they entered and ambled
through the narrow store, quietly talking as they climbed the few wooden steps
to the next section.
Niko
briefly glanced at them before flipping the books over to check the prices.
“I’ll take all three.” He waited for the total and paid his bill. “Wrap them
please so my lady friend can’t see them. They’re a surprise.”
“Oh,
lucky her. I just love…”
Suddenly,
screams followed by loud thumping and books falling filled the bookstore. Niko
sprinted in the direction of the high-pitched shrieking, gun in hand. He
bounded up the steps and rounded the corner. “Aly! Aly! What the hell.”
He
skidded to a halt. One of the well-dressed men he saw entering the store
earlier was on the floor, books covering most of his body. His companion was
staggering, holding his hands over his eye and screaming like a banshee as
blood ran down his face.
In
the corner stood a pale and trembling Aly, her frightened blue eyes dominated
her face. “They…they grabbed me! Said they’d kill me if I resisted. I…I karate kicked
them.” She swallowed, obviously trying to gain control. “Kung…kung-fooed the
hell out of them, too. And…and…”—she pointed to the screaming man still on his
feet—“I think I poked his eye out with one of my stilettos.”
Niko
ran a hand down his face, keeping it over his mouth to hide the smile. What a piece of work. He wanted to
laugh. He wanted to hug her. And damned if he didn’t want to shake the
daylights out of her for stepping out of his sight. Hadn’t he told her to stay
with him?
“You
okay?” Niko’s gaze swept over her, looking for injuries. He fought the urge to
pull her to him and embrace her until her trembling stopped. Frankly, if he
were honest, his nerves weren’t the greatest right this moment, either. When he
heard her scream earlier, cold fear did a free-fall straight through his
system.
Some
professional he was. While buying books, Aly had to defend herself. His gaze
took in the shambles. By the looks of things, hell if she hadn’t done a damn
fine job. “Answer me! Did one of these bastards hurt you? Are you okay?”
“I…I
gotta pee.” She was shaking violently. No doubt going into shock. Today’s
events finally took their toll.
“I’ll
show her to the dunny,” came the Aussie accent behind him. “Ain’t no wonder
she’s gotta use the loo. The woman beat the bullocks out of the blokes, she
did. Gobsmacked ’em, I’ll wager. Shall I call the police or will you?”
“I am
the police. Counterterrorism unit.”
View the Book Trailer:
http://bit.ly/MonaTrailer
BUY
LINKS:
THE WILD ROSE PRESS (digital) -- http://bit.ly/MonaLisaDigital
THE WILD ROSE PRESS (paperback) -- http://bit.ly/MonaLisasRoom
AMAZON (paperback) -- http://amzn.to/QQZGyD
AMAZON (eBook) -- http://bit.ly/MonaLisasRoomeBook
FIND ME ONLINE AT http://www.vonniedavis.com
BLOGGING AT http://www.vintagevonnie.blogspot.com
Welcome to my blog, Vonnie!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Rosanna! I'm thrilled to be here. You've got a lovely blog. Let me ask your readers to share their favorite bookstore or do they prefer to haunt libraries?
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