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Women's Fiction
Paris Out of Hand

Paris Out of Hand

List Price: $22.95
Your Price: $15.61
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 0 stars
Summary: Please browse over the great reviews:
Review: "Karen Elizabeth Gordon may have created a ctiy that's more entertaining than the real Paris...this, small, red wonder captivates from the start." ---Gabrielle C. Mitchell, The San Francisco Chronicle ////////// "It is like taking-no, being given-a drug(Alice-in-Wonderland style)and falling down a hole(in this case, the Metro)...it's a beautiful thing, this book, with its red cloth cover, collage and quotes and little red satin ribbon to mark your place lest you fall asleep and dream, in your armchair, of Pairs." ---Susan Salter Reynolds, The Los Angeles Times ////////// "To the immortal health of Karen Elizabeth Gordon's, Paris Out of Hand, the most entertaining non fiction book I've read all year. Her delirium of prose stands out among the year's best fiction, too." ---George Myers Jr., The Columbus Dispatch

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: AN ABSOLUTE DELIGHT
Review: A great "guide" to Paris for those who have been there, and for those who've not (like me). The hotel guide was by far the best of the "guide sections." The cover, showing the Eiffel Tower upside down is the best clue as to the book's contents. I look forward to the day when my my travels will include Paris and the "Cafe Conjugal" I will be sending a copy of this book to a dear friend...who teaches High School French... for her birthday in January. Congratulations to all of the authors!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Is it a guide? Is it a novel? No! It's a work of art!
Review: Curiously, my local bookshop stocks this wonderful book in the "Travel" section. From the cover with the inverted Eiffel Tower to the hilarious "hotel features" icons, even the least adventurous armchair traveller can deduce that this is indeed a unique tourist guide. It is a guide of sorts: taking the Parisians on at their own game it transforms a city known for its absurdities into a whimsical looking-glass world where nothing is as it seems. Bantock's incredible illustrations and the feast of found images adorn the author's intoxicating prose. She lets us peek at the acidic comments written in the guestbooks of fictional hotels. Her cafes reek of gitanes and hallucinogenic pseudo-reality. Paris Out of Hand is a one-off classic, and my only complaint is that the type fades far too quickly from the cover with the inevitable constant handling. I've bought several copies and given them all away as gifts. Now I'm getting one for myself.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Weird, weird fun
Review: Paris through the Looking Glass is the only way I can describe this book. It is set up exactly like any tourist guide book, and it took me a few pages to catch on that this book has nothing to do with the real Paris. The general style of the humor is reminiscent of Edward Gorey, but it is original, and not a Gorey knock-off. I liked it better than Gorey, although like Gorey, it cloyed just a smidgen toward the end. Also just slightly reminiscent of the more fanciful "Sylvia" cartoons. Great fun, though, and I laughed out loud all the way through. A great gift for anyone who spends more time down the rabbit hole than in the real world.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dreams Guaranteed, Nightmares Extinguished
Review: There's a reason why this little book is subtitled "a wayward guide." The inverted Eiffel Tower on the cover should be a warning to those of faint imagination, that this book is not your father's Fodor Guide. Rather, Paris Out of Hand, is a handy guide to the hotels with fold-down balconies, volume controls on the phones for those who don't speak French, and turn-down services which leave a fish on your pillow. It is full of helpful French phrases, so you will never be caught short not knowing how to ask: "Do you come to this noctambupark often? Are the bats given annual rabies shots?" ("Venez-vous souvent a ce noctambuparc? Est-ce que les chauves-souris recoivent leurs piqures de rage annuelle?") It is loaded with delightful factoids such as: "Some Parisians don't have sheepskin covers for car seats, but drive around with live sheep in the laps. Thus 'Revenons a nos moutons!' is also the cry of the man roaming the levels of the parking structure in search of his bleating Peugeot." It's liberally illustrated with wondrous and slightly mad collages as fascinating as the prose.

If you cherish journeys of the mind, then this book is for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dreams Guaranteed, Nightmares Extinguished
Review: There's a reason why this little book is subtitled "a wayward guide." The inverted Eiffel Tower on the cover should be a warning to those of faint imagination, that this book is not your father's Fodor Guide. Rather, Paris Out of Hand, is a handy guide to the hotels with fold-down balconies, volume controls on the phones for those who don't speak French, and turn-down services which leave a fish on your pillow. It is full of helpful French phrases, so you will never be caught short not knowing how to ask: "Do you come to this noctambupark often? Are the bats given annual rabies shots?" ("Venez-vous souvent a ce noctambuparc? Est-ce que les chauves-souris recoivent leurs piqures de rage annuelle?") It is loaded with delightful factoids such as: "Some Parisians don't have sheepskin covers for car seats, but drive around with live sheep in the laps. Thus 'Revenons a nos moutons!' is also the cry of the man roaming the levels of the parking structure in search of his bleating Peugeot." It's liberally illustrated with wondrous and slightly mad collages as fascinating as the prose.

If you cherish journeys of the mind, then this book is for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dreams Guaranteed, Nightmares Extinguished
Review: There's a reason why this little book is subtitled "a wayward guide." The inverted Eiffel Tower on the cover should be a warning to those of faint imagination, that this book is not your father's Fodor Guide. Rather, Paris Out of Hand, is a handy guide to the hotels with fold-down balconies, volume controls on the phones for those who don't speak French, and turn-down services which leave a fish on your pillow. It is full of helpful French phrases, so you will never be caught short not knowing how to ask: "Do you come to this noctambupark often? Are the bats given annual rabies shots?" ("Venez-vous souvent a ce noctambuparc? Est-ce que les chauves-souris recoivent leurs piqures de rage annuelle?") It is loaded with delightful factoids such as: "Some Parisians don't have sheepskin covers for car seats, but drive around with live sheep in the laps. Thus 'Revenons a nos moutons!' is also the cry of the man roaming the levels of the parking structure in search of his bleating Peugeot." It's liberally illustrated with wondrous and slightly mad collages as fascinating as the prose.

If you cherish journeys of the mind, then this book is for you.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Beautiful, Intriguing. . .
Review: This book is a georgous book, from its looks (plush cover, ribbon bookmark, illustrations) to its content. It describes a slew of fictional places (and a few non-fictional) creating a surrealistic, dreamlike landscape. As nice as it is, this isn't a sit down and read sort of book, more of a coffee table type, wonderful to flip through and see what you find.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Beautiful, Intriguing. . .
Review: This book is a georgous book, from its looks (plush cover, ribbon bookmark, illustrations) to its content. It describes a slew of fictional places (and a few non-fictional) creating a surrealistic, dreamlike landscape. As nice as it is, this isn't a sit down and read sort of book, more of a coffee table type, wonderful to flip through and see what you find.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Seductive, surreal and humourous
Review: This imaginary guide to Paris is full of surreal imagination that will just make you smile. Helpfully divided up into sections on hotels, restaurants, the nightlife, sights, etc., you'll read about places and services you've never dreamed of! What a shame, they don't really exist! Peppered thoughout the text are helpful French expressions translated into English such as "Do you have a ladder so I can reach your airmail clerk suspended from the ceiling?" You can read some guest comments for the hotels which of course, are also bizarre, and learn about special services such as a kidnapping service or a food tasting service (so you don't get poisoned). The book has some quotes from real people too and the lavish artwork gives it an other worldly feel. It will transport you immediately to a wonderful alternative reality Paris.


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