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In brief - Paris: The Secret History

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  • In brief - Paris: The Secret History

    FT WEEKEND MAGAZINE - BOOK REVIEWS: In brief - Paris: The Secret History

    Financial Times; Sep 02, 2006
    By Natalie Whittle


    Paris: The Secret History

    by Andrew Hussey

    Penguin £25, 512 pages

    Where Peter Ackroyd left off with London: The Biography, Andrew Hussey
    picks up with Paris: The Secret History, another obsessive history
    tour, teeming with arcane, colourful detail. Hussey's project is to
    show that Paris is not, and never has been, a city in stasis: its
    staid, glamorous image has always had a dirtier, more complex
    counterpart.

    Although it's hardly a secret that Parisians like sex and
    insurrection, Hussey has an abundance of research to show how these
    tastes evolved. The 18th-century boom in bookshops, for example,
    begins Parisians' fondness for pornographic writing: all classes could
    read erotica as a "sexual aperitif" before seeking gratification out
    on the street.

    Literary figures are important players in Hussey's underbelly history,
    huddling together in cafes, wandering the streets for inspiration and,
    in the case of Balzac, taking the dawn air while his debt collectors
    were still asleep. We meet other kinds of outsiders too, from
    prostitutes, peddlers and sans-culottes to the "apache" street gangs
    of the 1900s. There are also the many immigrants who have shaped
    Parisian life. (It was a pair of Armenians who opened Paris's first
    coffee-serving cafe.)

    Hussey has an obvious passion for the city and what makes it tick, and
    The Secret History is an excellent introduction to its many sordid
    mysteries
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