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Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Paris in July: Fresh Water for Flowers by Valerie Perrin



Every year, as part of Paris in July, I try to read a book by a French author. I should say, I try to read a book by a French author other than Antoine Laurain because I also read his books as a matter of course. I am not sure when this book crossed my path, but I have been saving it since I bought it to read for Paris in July. This book was a big hit in France and Italy, especially during the lockdown years. 

This central character of this story is Violette Toussaint. When we meet Violette she is working as the cemetery keeper, which comes with a small house where she welcomes visitors, keeps records of all the burials, cares for the numerous cemetery cats and where she has her beautiful garden.

Through a series of flashbacks we learn more about Violette's past. She was abandoned by her mother at birth and raised in the foster system where she learned that "girls in care are happy with very little", a mantra she has carried into her adult life. She left school but had received very little in the way of education, teaching herself to read by reading The Cider House Rules by John Irving over and over and over. 

She met handsome Philippe Toussaint when she was very young and working in a bar, and quickly moved in with him. Their relationship was very much built on physical attraction.  Philippe was very lucky to have Violette. She worked incredibly hard while he spent his time going on rides on his motorcycle for hours at a time, picking up other women and playing computer games.

Before she become the cemetery keeper, Violette and Philippe were employed as crossing keepers in a small town. Their job was to ensure that the level crossing gates were closed before each and every train came through. Violette in effect lived her life between each train. Once she moved to the cemetery she was still opening and closing gates, but only in the mornings and evenings, and in the mean time she builds her world through her friendships with the gravediggers, one of who is named Elvis, with the local priest who has a conflicted mind about one particular issue and how it pertains to his calling.

One day her equilibrium is disturbed when a man called Julien Seul turns up at the cemetery. His mother Irene has given instructions for her ashes to be kept at the grave of a man called Gabriel Prudent, and he has no idea why. Violette helps Julien to put his mother's story together. In turn, he uses his role as a policeman to try and push Violette to making some changes in her life. 

This was a very interesting book to read. Structurally, it is a bit all over the place. We get to hear Violette's story, but it is also interspersed with flashbacks. We then get Julien's story and his mothers story of her volatile love for the man whose grave she wishes to share. We also learn something of many of the people who are buried in the cemetery and occasionally we get Philippe's story as well. 

When I watch French film I often think that one of the strengths is that there is a variety of elements in the film. For example, even if a film is a comedy it will still have a section of sadness or despair or mystery. This book is like that. It would be easy to look at Violette and think that she had a terrible life  but in a way she is an apparently simple character with a very complex story to be told. She is also a woman who has learned how to find joy, even if it is by wearing a bright pink dress hidden under her grey coat. She is very content in her role and has built a close community around her and knows who she is.

There is also something of a mystery in the book. There is a major event which completely changes Violette's life. As I was reading I could feel the foreboding building, but I didn't know exactly why. And when it did happen, it was heartbreaking.  Afterwards, both Violette and Philippe try to figure out what exactly happened, but separately, emphasising how much their relationship is flawed.  

I loved that each chapter starts with a epitaph that might be left on someone's grave. Many of them are really lovely. There are so many examples throughout the book so here are just two. 


If a flower grew every time I thought of you, the earth would be one massive garden

What do you expect will become of me if I no longer hear your step, it is your life or mine that's going. I don't know. 


There are also some really beautiful passages throughout the book. For example, this passage which shows the pride Violette takes in her stewardship of the cemetery.


In April, I put ladybird larvae on my rosebushes, and on those of the deceased, to combat greenfly. I'm the one who places the ladybirds, one by one, with a little paintbrush, on the plants. It's as though I repainted my garden in the spring. As if I planted stairways between earth and sky. I don't believe in phantoms or ghosts, but I do believe in ladybirds. 


If I think about how I would sum this book up I would say that it is probably overly long and a bit too complicated with many characters and storylines. Ultimately though, it is an unusual and beautiful book about hope and despair, life and death and love that is built around a really fascinating main character. I would read another book by this author in the future.


I am sharing this review with Paris In July hosted by Words and Peace and the Books in Translation challenge hosted at The Introverted Reader.  At 483 pages, this book also counts as a Big Book of Summer

Rating 4/5




Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: Sunset colours

Welcome to this week's edition of Top Ten Tuesday which is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. This week's theme is Beach/Beachy Reads (Share books you’d take to the beach OR books that take place at the beach.)

I am going to twist the topic a little this week. I have read several books recently where the colours on the cover are pink, orange, yellow and red, the colours of a lovely sunset on the beach so I thought I would use this as my theme for this week. . Coincidentally these are also the colours of the Top Ten Tuesday logo. 




Love and Saffron by Kim Fay - I read this a couple of years ago and really enjoyed it. I still need to read her latest book! (My review)

The Alphabet Sisters by Monica McInerney - This was the original cover when this book first came out, and which I still have now. 

Eat Your Heart Out by Victoria Brownlee - This is my most recent 5 star read, and the most recent cover with these colours. (My review)

An Italian Wedding Adventure by Leonie Mack - I do enjoy this author's books and was glad I could find a cover that worked for this post. (My review)

Happy Place by Emily Henry - In my mind a lot of Emily Henry's books would suit this theme but it turns out they really don't!





A Sunrise Over Bali by Sandy Barker - Sunrise, sunset! Oh well. The colours worked. I have read a lot of Sandy Barker's books but I still need to read this series.

The Bittersweet Bakery Cafe by Catherine Greer - Read and loved this earlier this year! Even cooked a recipe from it. (My review)

One Day and Forever by Shari Low - I am about to read my next book by this author so I needed to add her to this list. 

Happily Ever After by Jane Lovering - I have read a few books by this author now and like the way she tells her stories. (My review)

Half Truth by Nadia Mahjouri - This is the colour as it gets darker and darker! Another great read from an Australian author! (My review)

Monday, July 28, 2025

This week...






I'm reading

I feel like I am in a bit of a reading frenzy at the moment! This is mainly because I am trying to get ahead with my review reading and library due dates. I also need to take a look at my Big Books of Winter and read something off there because I am probably a book or two behind with that list!

So what did I read this week?

I absolutely devoured Eat Your Heart Out by Australian author Victoria Brownlee. I think this was a case of right book at the right time as I just couldn't put it down. It was a 5/5 read for me, and because it is set in France I reviewed it as part of Paris in July

On Tuesday night I went to an author event for Jessica Dettman whose latest book Your Friend and Mine was released at the beginning of July. I had a big of a gap in my reading so I read it. This one is set in London. I liked it and plan to review the book in the next couple of weeks.

I finally finished reading Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett. I liked this book too and will read the next book in the series. I think this book suffered a little bit because I kept on putting it aside to read other things. 

When I was looking at my library due dates I was thinking I still had a couple of weeks to read The Summer Before the War by Helen Simonson, but it is a big book at nearly 600 pages so I have started that one.

I wanted to get all my review posts done for next week so over the weekend I prioritised reading those books. The first one I read was A Place in the Sun by Jo Thomas. This was another great read from her, and it made me want lasagne so that is what we are having for dinner tonight.

Yesterday I read One Snowy Day by Shari Low. I have only started reading Shari Low this year and I really enjoyed her book.

I did go to another author event last week and I have two coming up this week that I am looking forward to. I went to hear Lucy Sussex talk at my local library about the book she co-wrote with Megan Brown called Outrageous Fortune. It is a non-fiction book about a woman called Mary Fortune who was the first Australian crime writer. She was extremely prolific and had a long running crime series, and yet has basically been lost to history. The irony of her being a crime writer was that her son was a career criminal! It was a fascinating talk.

I'm watching


I went to the movies last week to watch Jane Austen Wrecked My Life again. I first saw it and really enjoyed it earlier this year. I wanted to write about it for Paris in July and so when I saw that it was on at the cinemas again I jumped at the opportunity to watch it again. I really enjoyed it the second time around too. I wrote about it here.

I mentioned last week that I went to the movies to see a Japanese movie called Grand Maison Paris. When I was writing my post about it for Weekend Cooking, I realised that the movie was actually a spin-off from a Netflix TV series called Grand Maison Tokyo. It features a lot of the same characters and is about a couple of Japanese chefs who want to open a French restaurant in Tokyo with the aim of being awarded three Michelin stars. I started watching the series on the weekend.

I also finished watching Gary Barlow's Wine Tour of South Africa. Over the last few weeks I have watched this series and also the one he did in Australia. They are both very easy watching, feature some amazing food and wine and some beautiful scenery.




Life

I forgot to mention last week that we went to see a musical called Here You Come Again which features the song of Dolly Parton. It was a lot of fun, and I have been hearing a lot of her songs in my head ever since. 







On Saturday we went to the National Gallery of Victoria which is an art gallery and saw the French Impressionism from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston exhibition which is currently on. We then had afternoon tea in the Tea Rooms. It was a lovely outing and I will have a Paris in July post up about it on Thursday. 

We then followed that up by going to see an 80's band at a local pub. It's the first time we have been to this pub and I have to say it was so nice to be able to go out and then be home in 15 minutes. Normally, if we are in the city it is half an hour or more to get home. We will go back and see some other shows there in due course. 

The big news in my world is that I finally got a job and I start next week, which is why I am trying to cram so many books and write the reviews for them this week. When I decided to resign from my last job I did so deliberately choosing to take some time off. However, it has taken a bit longer than I would necessarily have liked to get another job! I am definitely relieved and I am really looking forward to the new role


Posts from the last week


Top Ten Tuesday: Historical Fiction Novels Set in France
Paris in July: Eat Your Heart Out by Victoria Brownlee
Paris in July: Jane Austen Wrecked my Life
Paris in July: The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl
Weekend Cooking/Paris in July: Grande Maison Paris
Bestsellers Around the World: France



I've linked this post to It's Monday, what are you reading? as hosted by Book Date and Sunday Salon hosted at Readerbuzz

Sunday, July 27, 2025

Sunday Salon/Paris in July: Bestsellers around the world - France



Once upon a time I had an infrequent feature called Bestsellers Around the World. The idea was that I would take a look at the bestsellers list for that week and compare it to the Australian bestsellers list. It turned out it could be quite challenging and so despite my best intentions I haven't kept it going, although I do roll it out every now and again, particularly for Paris in July.It's not always easy to find current lists that are accessible but I try!

Here are the books the readers of France are reading at the moment based on the bestseller list at Sens Critique! Please note that according to the website the last time this list was updated was in May but it was still the easiest site to navigate when trying to collate a list







La Psy (Never Lie) by Frieda McFadden

La Femme de Menage (The Housemaid) by Frieda McFadden

Les Secrets de la femme de menage (The Housemaid's Secret) by Freida McFadden

Lakestone, tome 2 by Sarah Rivens

A retardement by Franck Thilliez
- The title translates to Delayed








La Prof (The Teacher) by Freida McFadden

L'Heure des predateurs by Giuliano da Empoli
- Title translates to Hour of the Predators

Norferville by Franck Thilliez

Interieur nuit by Nicolas Demorand
- Translates to Interior Night

La femme de meage voit tout by Frieda McFadden - I am not entirely sure which book this is. The title translates as The Cleaning Lady Sees Everything so maybe it is another edition of The Housemaid.


Some observations.

On the lists that I found that were up to date, Frieda McFadden is absolutely dominating the best seller lists in France. When I looked at the lists for Australia for this week, we had two books by her in the top 10 as well.

Franck Thilliez is an author who you consistently see on these lists. It did surprise me that there wasn't a Joel Dicker on the list for this year though.

Just outside the top ten is Maud Ankaoua. This author has had books on the bestseller lists for a number of years now, with the exception of 2024. Her tagline on her website is The novelist who brings us back to the essentials, which sounds like good reading to me.

Interesting, Anna Stuart has two books in the top 20 first with her book La Sage-Femme d'Auschwitz and then with La Sage-Femme de Berlin which have the English titles of The Midwife of Auschwitz and The Midwife of Berlin. Last year her Auschwitz book was number 1 on the list. Whilst there is obviously a strong interest in WWII history around the world, it is surprising to me that it is this author that has such consistently strong results in France. I am going to see if I can get some of her books to read.

When I look back on my previous lists, it is interesting to note that this is the first year since I started doing this 5 years ago that there has been no book by Virginie Grimaldi featured. I did enjoy the one book I read in English by her, so I will try and read more from her. There were also no books by Melissa da Costa whose books I haven't been able to find in English. She also regularly appears on this list.

On a couple of the other extended lists I found, Lucinda Riley's Seven Sisters series was doing very well.

Does anything on this list surprise you?



Saturday, July 26, 2025

Weekend Cooking: Grande Maison Paris


Last week I went to watch a Japanese movie that is set in Paris called Grande Maison Paris at a local cinema. I was actually very surprised to see this movie showing, but it turns out that this particular cinema complex shows quite a lot of foreign films, which is unusual for one of the big chains! Most of the films were Indian but I will keep an eye out to see what else they show as it was pretty easy to get to!

The movie opens when we see Japanese chef Natsuki Obana getting a phone call to tell him that he has maintained his two Michelin star rating. Whilst you would think that is something to be celebrated, he is devastated as he has been striving for years to get a very rare 3rd Michelin star for his Paris restaurant. If he had of been successful, he would have been the first Asian chef to achieve this in Paris. The chef is not the only person who is disappointed either. His team have worked very hard for him, and take the news badly.

Chef Obana and his team are cooking for a very fancy dinner and for various reasons a number of things go wrong. One of the guests is his main backer who subsequently calls him in and tells him that he is ending his lease, and that he has another chef lined up to take over the space. Obana makes a deal. If he can get a three star review from Michelin, he can stay. If he cannot, then the restaurant will close and he will return to Japan.

Obana leads a talented, multinational team in his kitchen, but he isn't always a great leader. He doesn't listen to the people around them, or their ideas and this soon leads to a clash with his sous chef, Rinko, which leads to her leaving the team. It turns out that Rinko is the one with the interpersonal soft skills and her leaving causes the team dynamics to change.

Part of the issue for the restaurant is that, being outsiders, it is often difficult for them to get the best ingredients from the suppliers. Often, they are are told that the best quality ingredients are only available to the top restaurants in the city which is very frustrating when you are trying to get to be one of those restaurants. Sometimes, the market traders pretend they cannot understand the orders. 

In reaction to the deal he has made, Obana determines that the only way that he is going to achieve what he is striving for is to be almost more French than the French, despite his team telling him that he should be using their uniqueness as a way to shine.

There are ups and downs as Obana is threatened with closure several times, with interpersonal relationships being strained and one of the team members bringing their personal issues close to causing a tragedy.

It is only as Obana begins to work with his team, instead of dictating to them, and brings more of himself and his team to the food that he is creating, that he begins to see what the possibilities might be for the future.

If you need no other reason to watch this movie, then watch it for the food porn! Oh my goodness, there is so much delicious looking and sounding food in this movie! Obviously, given that the storyline is about striving for that third star, we are talking very, very high end food, but the way that the dishes are put together on the screen, the cooking and plating sequences! So beautiful. It is probably best not to go and see this when you are hungry.

One of the key messages is about French cuisine itself, about how it continues to evolve into something new. Yes, there are the classics but there is also room for new ideas, concepts and tastes, as long as your get it right!

Interestingly, I have only just learned that this movie is actually a spin off from a very successful Japanese TV series called Grande Maison Tokyo. Learning this has given me an a-ha moment as there is a point in the movie where we see the Tokyo restaurant and I was a bit perplexed as to why that would be! It also explained a couple of the tangents in the movie which added some drama but I found myself wondering why it needed to be there. I am definitely going to see if I can find the TV show to watch!

I really enjoyed watching this movie, especially for the food elements, and I was cheering on the team from Grande Maison Paris right to the end!

I have watched several things over the last few months that have a French/Japanese crossover. I watched a movie called Umami which starred Gerard Depardieu as a French chef who nearly dies and decides to just disappear to Japan to look for an old rival. Another movie I watched was Sidonie in Japan about a French author who goes to Japan on a book tour and keeps on seeing the ghost of her husband. I also started watching a series on AppleTV called Fools Gold. I must get back to that and finish watching it. 


Here's the trailer for Grande Maison Paris






I am sharing this with Paris in July hosted by Emma at Words and Peace.

Weekly meals

Saturday - Chicken enchiladas
Sunday - Roast beef and vegetables
Monday - Pork chops, mash, broccoli and gravy
Tuesday - Out for dinner
Wednesday - Chicken Stir Fry
Thursday - Beef Casserole pie
Friday - Chicken and broccoli pasta bake






Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book reviews (novel, nonfiction), cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs, restaurant reviews, travel information, or fun food facts. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page

Friday, July 25, 2025

Paris in July: The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl

 




I am pretty sure that I heard about this book as part of last year's Paris in July. I bought it and then patiently waited for the right time to read, which ended up being last week!

We meet New Yorker Stella in Paris in 1983, her mother having just passed away. Stella's relationship with Celia St Vincent was difficult. Where Celia was flamboyant, Stella was quiet. Where Celia was the centre of society, Stella was a studious copy editor who preferred to live alone quietly. Needless to say, they clashed on many issues. When Celia dies, she leaves a small amount of money and an instruction. Go to Paris.

Usually she doesn't do what her mother says, but in this case she agrees and that is why she is in Paris. On her first day in Paris she is attracted to a small dress shop. The shop owner greets her as if she has been waiting for her and instructs her to buy a specific dress, which fits her as if it is made for her. However, when she hears the dress is 6000 francs she leaves the store. Eventually, however, she returns to the store where the owner gives her a deal. She can take the dress but she must then walk through the Tuileries to the Seine and then to the Pont des Arts, have champagne and oysters at Les Duex Magot an then go to the Musee du Jeu de Paume. After that, if she then wants to return the dress she can.

And so begin a series of events which change Stella's life in ways she can never imagine. She meets an older man called Jules who helps open her eyes to the joys of Paris, the sights, the sounds, the food and wine, the art and introduces her to many influential people, many of whom are real people from history.  Along the way he sets her on a search for someone she never expects to find...her father.

One of the places that Stella finds herself is at the legendary bookstore, Shakespeare and Co and she soon becomes a Tumbleweed, someone who lives in the bookstore in exchange for helping out occasionally. She first went to the store as she became interested in the life of Victorine Meurent and was looking for a book about her. Victorine was originally a model to many famous artists including Edouard Manet. She then disappeared from history which in itself an injustice given that she has become a painter and had her worked displayed at the famous Salon something which was extremely difficult to achieve as a women. Despite this success, it was believed that none of her paintings survived.  Now Stella is on the hunt to see if she can find any of Victorine's works. Being set in 1983 meant that Stella has to do old fashioned research like going to churches to find records, going to National archives etc. None of this just looking everything up on the internet.

As you might expect given that Reichl is a renowned cookbook writer, an editor, a restaurant critic and more, the food and wine related passages shine throughout this book, and there are a lot of them. Here's just one


Jules's wines were opened, decanted, fussed over. They both watched Olney take the first sip of the 1945 Romanee-Conti, his eyes growing wide as he held the liquid in his mouth. Then he took another, closing his eyes in pleasure. If he were a cat, she thought, he would be purring

She took a sip. And understood. She was drinking liquid rubies.

But they did not discuss the wine. When she remarked on it later, Jules shrugged. "What would we say? The wine spoke for itself. We were drinking time, drinking history, tasting the past. You can't talk about that, and only idiots would try."

Instead, they cooked. 


Stella goes from being someone who doesn't even think of food to someone who is brave and loves the experience of trying new things, some of which are probably outside the realms of what I would like to try myself. It turns out that, of course, she has an exceptional palette and food begins to becomes a huge part of her future. 

This is a bit of a kitchen sink book. If you think about any of the things that France is famous for it is in the book. Food and wine...check. Art...check. Literature...check. Iconic locations...check. 

So what stopped this from being a more enjoyable experience to me. It comes down to one chapter early in the book. In chapter 2 of the book, we hear about some childhood experiences that Stella had, and having read to the end, I am not sure why it needed to be there. Whilst I think it was meant to show that those experiences shaped the way that she lived her life in New York, just her difficult relationship with her mother would have been enough to explain it. It felt a bit manipulative to me, although I do acknowledge that this particular subject is something that I am a bit sensitive too.

So this was a bit of a mixed bag of a read for me. I enjoyed a lot of the book, but it was soured a little by some of the choices that the author made. 

I am sharing this review with Paris in July, with Weekend Cooking which I host, Bookish Books Reading Challenge hosted at Bloggin' 'Bout Books, with the Historical Fiction Reading Challenge which I host and with Foodies Read hosted at Based on a True Story. This is the eighth book I have read this year with the word Paris in the title!

Rating 3.5/5

Thursday, July 24, 2025

Paris in July: Jane Austen Wrecked My Life



I have seen quite a few French movies over the last 12 months, and enjoyed most of them. If you forced me to pick my favourite it would probably be Jane Austen Wrecked My Life. I first saw it at the French Film Festival earlier this year and the went to see it again this week just because I could!

The main character, Agate, lives with her sister and nephew in Paris and works in Shakespeare and Company bookshop along with her best friend Felix. She is a massive Jane Austen fan and can find a JA recommendation for any occasion. Agate is also a writer, albeit one with writers block. She has ideas for stories but she can't ever get past the beginning to get to the middle or the end. 

One day Felix reads the first couple of chapters of her latest story and thinks it is so good he sends it off as an application for Agate to attend the Jane Austen Residency Writers Retreat in England. The first Agate knows of it is when she receives the acceptance, which of course she initially refuses. Agate has quite a few anxieties, often for good reason, like not liking travelling in cars, and she hasn't had a sexual relationship for years.

Agate and Felix's relationship has always been platonic. She knows all his bad habits with women, but just before she gets on the ferry to go to England, they kiss. When she arrives on the other side of the channel, she is met by Oliver who just happens to be Jane Austen's handsome great-great-great-great nephew (I might have the wrong number of great's there but you get the idea!). However, Agate and Oliver get off on the wrong foot when Oliver makes it very clear that he thinks Jane Austen is overrated! 

At the retreat Agate and all the attending writers are encouraged to take inspiration however they can, whether it be wandering the gardens, or writing in the library. One of the main events of the retreat is that they all get to go to a ball dressed in era appropriate clothes. Initially the group are very much set in their individual ways, but gradually some of them begin to build connections. Can Agate find a way to break through her writers block and finally complete a story? And can she let down some of the walls she has built around herself? 

Along the way, there are a few unfortunate and funny incidents along with some great scenes talking about books and reading, a bit of a love triangle which ultimately is a nice romance, and it does show that the influence of Jane Austen is felt across the centuries and the world. 

The story is told in a mixture of both French and English. I thought it was a really lovely romantic comedy. Here's the trailer:








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