"Elegant, entertaining and occasionally brilliant... As this book powerfully demonstrates, French history is nothing if not built on paradox and contradiction. Most importantly, Robb reminds us why France still matters." Observer
Section - i: List of Illustrations Section - ii: Maps Section - iii: Itinerary Chapter - 1: The Undiscovered Continent Chapter - 2: the Tribes of France, I Chapter - 3: The Tribes of France, II Chapter - 4: O Òc Sí Bai Ya Win Oui Oyi Awè Jo Ja Oua Chapter - 5: Living in France, I: The Face in the Museum Chapter - 6: Living in France, II: A Simple Life Chapter - 7: Fairies, Virgins, Gods and Priests Chapter - 8: Migrants and Commuters Unit - INTERLUDE: The Sixty Million Others Chapter - 9: Maps Chapter - 10: Empire Chapter - 11: Travelling in France, I: The Avenues of Paris Chapter - 12: Travelling in France, II: The Hare and the Tortoise Chapter - 13: Colonization Chapter - 14: The Wonders of France Chapter - 15: Postcards of the Natives Chapter - 16: Lost Provinces Chapter - 17: Journey to the Centre of France Section - iv: Epilogue: Secrets Section - v: Chronology Section - vi: Notes Section - vii: Works Cited Index - viii: General Index Index - ix: Geographical Index Acknowledgements - x: Acknowledgements
Graham Robb was born in Manchester in 1958 and is a former fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. He has published widely on French literature and history. His 2007 book The Discovery of France won both the Duff Cooper and Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prizes. For Parisians (2010) the City of Paris awarded him the Grande Médaille de la Ville de Paris. He lives on the English-Scottish border.
Exhilarating . . . With gloriously apposite facts and an abundance
of quirky anecdotes and thumbnail sketches of people, places and
customs, Robb, on brilliant form, takes us on a stunning journey
through the historical landscape of France
*Independent*
This splendid history of France mixes the rambling charm of a
traveller with a scholar's rigorous research . . . At once history,
psychogeography, itinerary and cabinet of curiosities, The
Discovery of France is an astute sociological catalogue of France's
changing idea of itself . . . It's [also] an extraordinary journey
of discovery that will delight even the most indolent armchair
traveller
*Daily Telegraph*
Robb's concise and fast-paced writing pedals along with never a
dull paragraph, as facts, events, characters and quotations flash
by . . . This book is an elegy to what has disappeared, a
retrospective exploration of that lost world. But the British love
affair with France makes this particular story special, and Robb,
from his two-wheeled vantage point, has made a dazzling and moving
contribution to a long tradition
*Sunday Times*
It is an astonishing, eccentric book that defies linear narrative
to detour, circle back, swerve and dodge between the centuries.
Robb carries the reader along on flawless prose, over France's
terra incognita, probing, discovering, and getting to know a
country still deeply at odds with itself. There is information in
this book to surprise even the most avid Francophile, and to
delight anyone who is even vaguely thinking of boarding the new
Eurostar
*The Times*
As an alternative view of French history it is a fascinating
diversion. Its real value lies in helping to explain why modern
France remains a centrally directed society that has adopted big
ideas and bloody ideals in order to create itself.
*Daily Mail*
It is beautifully written and truly eccentric, seeking out the
obscure or forgotten parts of a nation that - Robb argues
brilliantly - is still discovering itself.
*Times Literary Supplement*
Writing with humour but without condescension, with understanding
but without naivety, Robb brilliantly reconstructs a world we have
lost. There is hardly a page that does not contain a detail that is
illuminating, surprising or entertaining, and often all three.
*Sunday Telegraph*
Elegant, entertaining and occasionally brilliant . . . As this book
powerfully demonstrates, French history is nothing if not built on
paradox and contradiction. Most importantly, Robb reminds us why
France still matters.
*Observer*
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