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The Paris Bookseller The Paris Bookseller by Kerri Maher
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The Paris Bookseller Quotes Showing 1-28 of 28
“Not every star is like the étoile polar, chérie. Some are more elusive, more subtle. But they are no less brilliant, no less important.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“It is possible to serve without losing oneself.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Perhaps it’s because our Joyce doesn’t blame Gerty for Leopold’s arousal that the episode is so troubling to some readers?”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Was that greed or ambition? Was there a difference?”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Anyone who read that much, had to be given to empathy.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Joyce's...writing is so far above the head of someone like Sumner, that I'm sure he can't help but hate it, because he's just smart enough to realize, he doesn't understand it.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Censorship is not commensurate with democracy. Or art.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“More voices speaking against injustice strengthens the cause. More is always better in that way. And I'm sure you would say something different. You are you, not Pound or Spire.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“I hold it true, whate’er befall; I feel it, when I sorrow most; ’Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“What is it Tennyson wrote in his ‘Ulysses’? ‘Tho’ / We are not now that strength which in old days / Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are.’ ”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“That summer she’d noticed a dramatic uptick in the number of conversations about aches and pains among her friends. It used to be that only Joyce complained endlessly about his eyes. But recently, Mrs. Joyce added her voice to the chorus, with fretting about her cycles; Larbaud complained about his joints, Bob about his back, Fargue about his lungs.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“speak to her mother. But she felt strange talking to her, even silently, in her mind. So she sat down near the flowers, putting her hand on the cool dirt that was already sprouting grass, and thanked her mother again. Then she sat for a long while, as she wished she had done with her mother when she was alive, as the day ended and the moon rose in the sky.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“the quarter, then through the Jardin du Luxembourg, her eyes filling with the showy colors and delicate textures of midsummer petunias, begonias, and roses. Among those planted beauties, she found the flower merchant she was looking for, a toothless woman named Louise who’d lost both sons in the war, whom Adrienne had introduced Sylvia to years before, instructing her to buy flowers only from her. Her cart near the palace was small, but she always carried the finest, longest-lasting blooms. Eleanor’s favorite were pink peonies, which were copious in late spring, not midsummer, but miraculously Louise had a single bouquet of them that evening. “They grew slowly, in the shade,” she explained, when Sylvia marveled at their presence. Then she hailed a cab, one of her mother’s favorite luxuries, and enjoyed the little tour of Paris she got from the open window: past the Sorbonne and then over the Seine on the Pont de Sully with Notre-Dame Cathedral just to her left, then northeast and circling the Place de la Bastille, all the way into the twentieth arrondissement, where Père Lachaise Cemetery sprawled leafy and green, with arcades of trees shading countless gray tombstones, temples, and memorials. The light had turned silver by the time she got out of the car and passed through the break in the high stone walls that encircled the cemetery. The place was something of a maze, and even though she’d been there for the burial just a few weeks before, Sylvia feared she might not be able to locate her mother’s small grave. Fortunately, though, she found it with no trouble. I’m never lost in Paris. Thanks to you, Mother. She set the peonies down on the earth before the stone with her mother’s name and dates of birth and death, then felt a breeze ruffle her hair and cool her neck. Breathing as deeply as she could, she wondered why, precisely, she’d come. To deliver the flowers, of course. What she wanted, desperately,”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“But that stifling July evening, as the sun set fire to the sky and a flaming golden light flooded the rue de l’Odéon and Sylvia sat with the correspondence from her sisters and father in her shop that was empty of customers because everyone had gone to the seaside, she thought, Lost means gone, or unable to find. It struck her that her mother had indeed been lost; she was always trying to get back to her dream of Paris, and unable to get there to stay; and it was more than Paris as a city, it was Paris as a concept of the bright, beautiful life she’d always wanted to lead, and felt she had led for a brief moment thirty years before. Sylvia had found her dream, and was living it—but that was thanks in large part to the money, books, and love her mother had sent her in the last decade. Odeonia would not be possible without Eleanor Beach. Can it go on without her? Can it go on without Joyce? Am I enough to sustain this dream? Or am I, too, lost? The questions made Sylvia feel restless, like she needed to do something. If she’d been in Les Déserts, she’d have gone outside to chop some wood, then marinated in the exhausted twinges of her shoulders and arms the rest of the evening. It was getting late, but there were still hours of sun left in the long Paris twilight, so Sylvia shuttered her store and walked briskly on the busy sidewalks”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“for all its appalling longueurs, Ulysses is a work of high genius.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“We’ve all been in quite a state,” Sylvia observed to Adrienne after one especially maudlin dinner, where everyone drank too much to medicate one ill or another. “Do you think we’re getting old?”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“All tragedies contain a gift.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Peut-être,” Adrienne responded noncommittally, and Sylvia was amazed—as she often was—at Adrienne’s je ne sais quoi, her ability to command attention and then wave it off, as if she didn’t need to keep it, for there was plenty more where it came from.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Cu cât experiențele sunt mai interesante, cu atât atragi oameni mai interesanți.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
tags: p-135
“Shrugging, she said, “It was never for me.” “If you could let it go so easily, I guess that was true.” “You’ll never let it go.” “Never. It’s the only thing.” “Shakespeare and Company is my thing.” Saying it out loud, it felt right and true. It was her thing. And it was her thing. “Thankfully for the rest of us.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“It is my absolute honor and pleasure,” she said, meaning every word. She’d taken a gamble, and it had been the right one. It had all been worth it. This moment, this book, this writer, this city. Stratford-on-Odéon. Odeonia. Her very own mythical Ithaca.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Don’t be. You put your whole heart into this, as did Monsieur Joyce. We do not always have control over our hearts.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Adrienne shrugged. “You plan for more exciting moments.” “But the best ones are unplanned.” “It might seem that way, but it’s not true. Ernest didn’t come to Shakespeare by chance. He came because of the experience you provide American writers in Paris. He’d heard of you. The more experiences you provide, the more interesting people you’ll attract.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Anyone who read that much had to be given to empathy.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Of course not,” Larbaud replied, unruffled. “It took your American Revolution to stir ours, after all, and ours was much longer in coming. I only mean that there is an ebb and flow to these things. Rebellions cannot be controlled and cannot be forced. They take hold in their own time.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“compliments were enough, but they weren’t. She wanted to do something, wanted Shakespeare and Company to be more than a diversion. Wanted Margaret and Jane to be seen as more than filthy Washington Squarites. Wanted Ulysses to have as broad an audience as possible. So many things to want. Just two years ago, she’d wanted a bookstore. Now she had it and she wanted more? Was that greed or ambition? Was there a difference?”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Well, in my family, Cyprian was always the one looking for attention. And she got it. I was jealous sometimes, but had nothing to offer the world like she did. I would occasionally bask in her reflected glory, but I’m really more comfortable in the background. But in the shop, I feel I can have both—to be in the background, but also have one of my accomplishments noticed.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller
“Gertrude nodded. “I toyed with the idea once myself, I admit. But I prefer writing sentences to selling them.” “Owning a bookstore is much more than selling sentences. It’s putting the right sentences into the right hands.” Like Michel, who’d loved the Whitman and come back for more. Sylvia was inching him ever closer to Joyce, Eliot, Williams, and other important new writers.”
Kerri Maher, The Paris Bookseller