A murderous weekend

Cara Black

As we said our good byes at a bus stop, the successful American mystery writer, Cara Black, stumbled back, “Wait! your mother-in-law lives near Nohant, Mary Kay told me. I’m dying to go to George Sand’s house and I’m in town until Thursday. Are you up for an adventure?” Two days later I found myself alone on a dark autumn morning, driving through France with a woman I’d only known for twenty minutes. A stranger who spends her life plotting murder.

Maison George SandDuring our introduction over coffee, I asked Cara where she’s from and discovered that we’d been neighbors in San Francisco. She’d carpooled with my close friend (also a successful author) Allison Bartlett and she knows my aunt (you guessed it) Victoria Zackheim. Our connection was feeling spooky…

The sun just started to rise as we headed out of Paris. Three hours later, Cara’s ears were ringing from the incessant jabbering of her chauffeur (yes, moi) we pulled up to Mama French’s door in Chateauroux and whisked her off to lunch. Cara is intrigued by the rumours of withcraft and traditional healers in the Berry region. Over lunch she couldn’t resist peppering our hostess with questions… Was it true? Had she ever known of a witch? Solicited the services of a healer?  Mama French’s face went white and her mouth closed tight as a button. When Cara excused herself from the table Mama Fr leaned over and whispered that all those stories give the Berrichons a bad reputation in France. It was NOT a discussion to be had with outsiders, especially not in public and certainly not with published authors who may include that kind of damaging information in thier 15th mystery novel! We left our meal full of food, but without any leads.

Screen shot 2013-10-30 at 12.04.57 PMAs we drove along, Cara told me more about Amiée Leduc, her Parisian private detective who wears three inch heels, flashy nail polish and drives a pink Vespa as she solves morbid crimes in every quartier of Paris. I learned how to find the most mysterious crime scenes and plot the most gruesome murders.

Eglise George Sand NohantWe arrived in the tiny hamlet of Nohant, eerie bag pipe music wafting through the deserted square as we visited the graveyard and a church with wide ropes draped to the side, perfect for ringing the church bells, or hanging a man. George Sands home was lovely, but creepy, everything left intact, exactly as it had been when she died in 1876, despite living there herself, until 1971!

Chateau SarzayA small detour and we found ourselves visiting the privately owned medieval fortress of Sarzay where the owner has spent the past thirty years rebuilding the chateau, stone by stone, filling it with taxidermed animals and ancient weaponry. I think Cara’s knees went weak as we entered the Salles des Gardes, and there, spread out on a table the size of my living room was a collection of killing devices centuries old. There were no rope barriers, no supervision. Just a mystery writer, a photographer and an unlimited opportunity for gore.

The weather had been unseasonably warm, but the blue summer skies suddenly turned a vivid yellow, then black. Without warning, torrential rains start to pour down we found ourselves scrambling to descend the 14th centurywinding staircase, with narrow, uneven steps and without any light. There was a scream as a pigeon swooped past, a gasp as a step was missed. Outside, we made a mad dash for the car and headed into the prematurely early night to find our lodgings.

Screen shot 2013-10-30 at 12.08.12 PMThe rain turned to hail, pelting our windshield faster than the wipers clear our view. Large, swampy drainage ditches that lined the road made pulling over impossible. The GPS led us through twisting, hilly lands getting us to Vigoulant where we followed the sign pointing to the Moulin de Barre. We drove up the hill. And up and up, without seeing a single sign of life. A large tree branch (or was it a tree?) had fallen and barred the road. Cara ran put into the pitch black of the night and was relived to find that is was a light branch, easy to remove. The trees started to form a low, narrow canopy and tall grasses grew between the wheel ruts in the mud. The mud? We’d gone beyond the roads and were now on a narrow chemin. We called our hosts, made a u-turn and headed back down the hill where our host Geoff stood under an umbrella with his flash light to guide us in. We hadn’t noticed any lights because sometime during the day, someone had ripped the light fixture from their sign. Was it intentional? Had they known we were coming?

to be continued…

Lucky 13

by the Brazilian Ethos

by the Brazilian Ethos

Da Vinci, Picasso, Mehdi Ben Cheikh. I believe the art world has a new genius. Not in the traditional way, because Monsieur Ben Cheikh is not an artist, he runs the Paris art gallery Itinerrance, which specializes in Street Art. But he has created a modern masterpiece, ideal for the digital age.

In an interview, comparing street art to the 100 yr old cubist movement, the 38 year old, Tunisian born galleriest spoke of needing to create a new venue for street art, which, he asserts, doesn’t really belong in a gallery, or a museum. He is not wrong. He is so convinced of the need for alternative venues that he was able to convince the Mairie of the 13th arrondissement to lend him a housing project that had been vacated by its tenants and will be torn down Nov 1. Then he convinced 100 street artists from across the globe to come and do their thing in the 4500M2, 9 story, 36 apartment building.

The result is phenomenal and word spread quickly. After two weeks, the lines were 5 hours long, then 7 and by the time I arrived at 8:30 on a brisk autumn morning they were predicting a 9 hour wait. Visitors had been there since 5am for the 10am opening, using abandoned couches and found furniture to make the wait more comfortable. There were families with young children, grandparents, teens and hipsters of every color and every social background. Guards were helping the handicapped get to the front of the line where they have priority.

Screen shot 2013-10-28 at 1.34.48 PMLike the artists who participated, journalists from across the globe showed up, gathering in a small park near the entrance. An unusually chatty and punctual local press arrived; nobody was going to risk missing this experience and we were all giddy in anticipation.  An elderly lady with a crutch approached a guard, yelling at him about the line and how it was destroying her neighborhood; notebooks came out, pens scribbling down the conversation. This had been her home and she did not like seeing the swarm of humanity at what had once been her doorstep. She came every morning to yell at the guards and collect her mail.

Screen shot 2013-10-28 at 1.29.57 PMThere was a loud uproar when the press agent opened the doors for 45 lucky journalists. We were told we’d have one hour, not one second more, to visit the entire project. We rushed up all 9 flights to the sound of frantic foot steps, laboured breathing and comments about needing to join a gym. In instant contrast, there was total silence on the landing of the 9th floor; no matter how in shape we were, the art had taken everyone’s breath away.

Screen shot 2013-10-28 at 1.28.51 PMIts hard to explain the sensation. It isn’t merely street art, this is a carefully curated collection featuring the best graffiti artists in the world and they were given an extraordinarily rare opportunity, which inspired some truly incredible art. Unlike a museum, or a gallery YOU ARE IN THE ART. It is above you, below you and all around. The colors are rich and saturated. The light was dim, streaming in from random windows and the occasional spot. The mood became reverential. I think every one of us was completely awestruck as we rushed from room to room, some of us taking photos, other notes and the lucky few who were just taking it all in.
The time limit created an internal frenzy; we wanted to see it all, but needed to absorb it, to. I recognized some of my favorite graffiti artists from exhibitions at the Cartier Foundation and the Musée de la Poste; local boy C215 who pochoir-ed in some crazy cats, and the Brazialian Ethos with this playful bright scenes. Some of the artists have something to say. There were hommages to other great artists and authors, commentary on urbain decay, studies on the definition of home, or graffiti’s place in the world today. Other works were just about the beauty of the image.

At 10am exactly, I was on the rez de chaussez, ready to go, but there was more. I should have known, they’d gone down the basement, using reflective paint under black light. A large cow head loomed over the space like an ancient deity. There were abandoned strollers, body parts, a street sign. I walked out into the daylight trembling. I had been an integral part of a work of art for the last 55 minutes, and somehow, it had changed me. Created a gentle shift in my soul, like a true masterpiece.

There is a movement to save this work of art. I am against that. This is a home for people who would otherwise not have a home and it is for the greater good. I do hope the gallery saves some of the work. A wall here, a bathtub there. But I suspect that Monsieur Ben Cheikh will stay true to his original mission and let it go up in dust. Geniuses are like that. Able to stick with a vision.
There are more photos on my Facebook Page

If you’d like to learn more about the project and see some videos, click here

Lil’ Robert

Screen shot 2013-10-23 at 10.15.19 PMThe UK has the OED, the US has Noah Webster, and France? Le Petit Robert. Every year I wait expectantly as this leading French dictionary brand prepares to release its list of new words for the year.  The list is always an interesting reflection of the times, peppered with words popular in specific regions of France, including slang, words like courriel that the Québecois invent in an attempt to keep French uniquely French, a lot of words from the English language and now, a fair whack of high tech terms. The Regional words usually mean nothing to me, while the Quebecois ones crack me up. It may have made into the dictionary, but absolutely no one in France sends a courriel. They send “mail” because email would have had to be spelled imail, and that would have caused problems with Apple. Which is mind boggling. An entire nation  inadvertently intimidated by a tiny little company in Cupertino, CA.

Last year we earned such elegant terms as cougar and vuvuzuela, with a whip and a wrap to keep things spicy. But mostly, it was about technology, with the terms nerd, flashcode, microblog, texter and tweet. We also got a snack; donut.

This year, some one was hungry, because we now have amaretto, cupcake, gravlox, jello and pannacotta. A really fun new one is Belgitude; to act like a Belgian. Of course, this is only funny in France, where the Belge are the butt of most jokes. I’m guessing that countless articles about the actor Jean Dujardin inspired oscarisé, which is pretty bold since even Hollywood is to modest to invent a word like “oscar-ized”! Staying with film, Woody Allen’s neurotic film characters may have been the inspiration behind psychoter, or to worry about nothing.

On frantic a Saturday, as I deal with a BHV delivery that never arrived, while the mail lady rings the bell asking me to buy a Christmas calendar and the cat coughs up a hair ball, Mr French may came up behind me, rub my shoulders and whisper the new word calmos in my ear. And sometimes M’s stories about where she’d like to go for the evening strike me as a little chelou, slang for louche, which is French for suspicious. There is also the trendy branchouille which is something just a bit too branché (trendy), so now there is a trendy word for saying too trendy that got so trendy they’ve put it in the dictionary!

The List

Screen shot 2013-10-21 at 2.24.58 PMYesterday, through the bizarre-atude that is the internet, I landed on an old article in Le Figaro listing the 100 things every Parisian should do at least once in Paris. Intrigued, I printed it out and head for #26, a café at “my” Café de Flore, where I sit writing this, scrunched between a very chic Parisienne and her actress daughter, and two ebullient Italians. At 13h30, the Parisiennes are having their morning coffee, the Italians wine.

My mind wandered to Miami, where I once found myself having to spend the day alone with a woman I hardly knew. My husband was a lawyer, hers a doctor and they were best friends, bound in friendship by a neurotic, Montreal Jewish upbringing. The woman and I took my rental car down to Key West and rented scooters, touring the island without helmets. Knowing that the very idea of our adventures would strike fear in our husbands’ hearts, we relished the moment! Scooters without a helmet would strike nothing in a Parisian, but according to Number 1 on Le Figaro’s list, locals get that same living-on-the-edge sensation by eating at a museum restaurant, without visiting the museum. Such rebels !

The categories themselves are pretty revealing. First and foremost, where to splash out on a gourmet delight! Then comes what to do when you’re in love, when you’re free, nightlife, culture and finally, things to do when you’re feeling blue, a common state of affairs in a city that puts so much emphasis on love. There is a miscellaneous category, which ends at 100, but the official list goes on to include 8 other activities, because, well, following the rules, even if its the writer himself who sets the rules, is just so unFrench!

The list inspires me… I start checking off what I’ve done; 66 activities, which include getting refused from the über chic night club Castel, missing my stop at Michel-Ange Molitor and having to do a major detour, finishing a book while sitting in the chairs in the Luxembourg gardens, and of course, running in the Tuilleries Gardens as dawn.

There are 9 that I’d never dream of, like paying 80€ for a roast chicken at L’Ami Louis or sharing a large steak for two at La Tour de Montlhéry, Chez Denise at six o’clock in the morning! I have, as the French say, passé l’age for that one.

Screen shot 2013-10-21 at 2.22.25 PMWhich means there are 25 things in Paris I’m now tempted to do. Mr French and I have not tried 3 of the 7 romantic things to do, which gives me some great ideas for how to greet him when he gets back from China next week! Its too late for him to order a cocktail the color of my eyes at the Ritz Hemingway bar before it closes, which leaves carving our names somewhere in Paris (they specify the catacombs) and getting a room for an hour, or three, at a love hotel.

I was surprised to see a visit to Deyrolle, the taxidermist, was not on the list, nor was anything even remotely related to fashion. I’d also have added a merry-go-round ride at the foot of the Eiffel Tower, demonstrating in a manif’, ice skating at the Hotel de Ville, the Champs Elysées Christmas market, and cycling the Canal Saint Martin on a Sunday. And a café at Flore? My n’est plus ultra at Flore is a flute of champagne with their cracked pepper kettle chips. Les Berges de la Seine didn’t exist when the list was compiled, so I’ve let that one slide.
Now I’m anxious to attack the 22 must do’s I haven’t done….a serious film festival, a pétanque game on the Canal Saint Martin, and making my hair stand on end at the Palais de la Découverte. So, next week I’m off to try and accomplish as many must do’s as possible in one day… wish me merde* !

*French for good luck.

Click here for… THE LIST Its in French, but its pretty easy to decypher. I’d love to hear what you’d add, what you’ve done and what you’d have left off!!!

Stepping on out…

SInce I was training for the 20km as I ran around from Palais to Musée during Paris Fashion Week, my feet got a tad sore and I developed something of an obsession for footwear… seeing all those torture chamber heels made my feet feel much better, and maybe gave me a bit of shoe envy. There are some gorgeous pieces out there this season.

I love the stappy lace up heels I saw in different variations. There were flowers galore and I think that next season everyone is going to be talking about lucite, because see-thru is definitely back. Saw it on these shoes, but also handbags and even a few dresses (yikes!).

 

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(almost) there!

Screen shot 2013-10-14 at 2.54.25 PMLast week I mentioned training for a marathon as I ran around like a mad woman for Paris Fashion Week. I wasn’t being poetic. I was actually training for a half marathon these past few weeks.

Every summer Mr French and I go to Hossegor and every summer for the past five years, he has prodded me into running around the lake with him. At first, I’d run 100 meters, then walk 100 meters, then bitch, moan and whine a bit before running a little further. I hated it. Every step of it. It makes you sweat, it hurts, its boring and I felt foolish as lame people in leg braces would whizz by running faster than I could imagine.

Then last winter I met a women who was planning to run a half marathon around Mount Kilamanjaro. An excuse to go to Africa? Not that I really need one, but I was inspired. I was going to train to run a half marathon and do it in Africa. It felt like destiny. I started running more and more, still hating every moment of it. I joined a team run by a fancy sneaker brand and the coach scoffed; if I didn’t start doing intervals, I’d never be able to run a half marathon. What were intervals? Another coach scoffed; I was almost too late to start training for a race that was an entire year away!!! Reports came back from the race. It sounded dangerously disorganized and I lost interest.

I was still running about 6km three days a week, just to stay healthy, and unbeknownst to me, a seed had been planted. This summer at Hossegor, for the first time ever, I was excited to run. I wanted to run the 6km around the lake, then a few extra km up the canal, and while we were at it, why not twice around the lake? By the time we came home my 6km runs were now 8-11km and I was enjoying the challenge.

Screen shot 2013-10-14 at 2.54.47 PMI looked online to see what it would really take to train for a half marathon. Shape.com had a fantastic schedule, 12 weeks and I’d be good to go. On closer inspection, I realized I was already well into the program. I only needed 7 weeks. Wanting to keep my routine to my schedule, I decided I’d run the 21.1km that is a half marathon on my own, in Paris on Oct 13.

People told me I was nuts. Wait for a race, my friends said. My father worried, Mr French was plotting out a route that would allow him to follow me. And then someone mentioned that the 20km de Paris was Oct 13. I could run a (almost) half marathon with 30,000 folks, which put everyone else’s mind at ease and totally freaked me out.

I didn’t see this run as a big deal. I had already run 16km on my own, why would I need so much support for 20km? But yesterday I headed to the Trocadero, picked up my dossard and was ready to go.

It was gorgeous out and the time seemed to fly a quickly as teh cobbled road under my feet. For the first time ever I ran 10km in under an hour. As I ran, I thought of a blog post I’d read about a runner who does it for the medals. She loves collecting those medals and I started to scoff, but had to stop myself as I realized that I do it for the shirts, which is the same thing. Ever the fashion monger, I loved wearing my Parisienne shirt as I ran to the base of the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco and along the reservoir in Central Park. I can’t wait to wear the flaming pink, Eiffel Tower decorated shirts this spring as I run along Lake Michigan in Chicago.

Screen shot 2013-10-14 at 3.05.45 PMAt 16th km I was in new territory. I’d never run this far before in my life. I started feeling heavy headed, sound was muffled and my ears felt stuffed. “This is odd…” I thought to myself as I looked at my heart monitor. Oops! Not so odd… My running heart rate is usually 168-172 and should never go above 180. It was at 201! I slowed down to a brisk walk, frustrated that I wouldn’t be breaking any more personal records that day, but happy to see my heart rate come down immediately. I finished the event with my eyes glued to the monitor, only looking up once. And just as I looked up, there he was, Mr French on the sidelines cheering me along. It was perfect timing, after all!!!

And so I completed my first (almost) half marathon.

Friday@Flore

The fashion buyers, shoppers and trend setters have all packed up and headed home for the season, but my mind is still on fashion week and the trends I spotted there. Beyond plaid, the fashion world seems to have gotten the blues. And not just any blue, but a pure, bright, nearly but not quite electric blueScreen shot 2013-10-11 at 10.31.25 AM.

 

 

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The end. And yes, that’s flesh you’re seeing under that there skirt. Très risqué Mademoiselle, but if I had her shape, I’d be tempted to show it off, too!

Ubuntu & Doctors without Borders

Screen shot 2013-10-03 at 1.36.54 PM

Last Christmas I posted a daily Advent Calendar of gift ideas that were a tad quirky, and tried to avoid blatant materialism. First up on my list was a donation to the Ubuntu charity foundation which supports kids living with AIDS in South Africa. Several days later I added Doctors without Borders. My love for travel, for Africa and for young kids makes these charities natural choices and I am a major fan.

So imagine my excitement when I heard that The Girls Guide to Paris was launching a new magazine and they were using the event as an excuse to host a charity gala cocktail for both of these organizations! Almost as good, I was asked to write about my adventures in Africa for an upcoming article!!!

The gala is tonight folks, and since they want to give everyone the chance to participate, they are holding a raffle with prizes that include a Perrin bag, and a five night stay on the Ile Saint Louis in Paris!  Prizes also include an invite to the gala, but the drawing is at the event, so I’m not sure how that is supposed to work. Happily, I don’t care, because its not about the prizes. Its about helping kids across the globe get the care they need, so I am IN!!!

If you’d like to join me, click here
https://www.everribbon.com/ribbon/view/14327

Merci!

10 reasons I’ll never be a Parisienne

…even though I really, really want to!

1/ My smile. Not only is it rather large and somewhat goofy, but I’ve got big white teeth and it inevitably pops up spontaneously at the worst moments, like when I spot Inès de la Fressange at a cocktail party, and I should stay cool about it, but can’t help grinning like some kind of psycho stalker.

2/ Can’t smoke tobacco. Sorry, never have and never will. Its dirty and disgusting and kills the taste buds, which would have serious consequences for my chocolate habit.

3/ Will never appreciate Foie Gras. Its not a moral issue and I am not so worried about the gaggles of geese who line up to be gavé-ed, but the stuff just tastes like fat to me. The “gras” should have tipped me off.

4/ My bones are too big. Which is a Cleopatra, Queen of Denial way of saying I am just too fat. Have always been too fat and will never been thin enough to be mistaken for a local fille.

5/ I LIKE wearing bulky, thick fleece sweat pants. They are comfortable, even if they do make my ass look as large as the Louvre. So why most most Frenchmen get to come home to a neatly pressed, fully coiffed, high heeled Madame? Mr French gets slobby me.

6/ Too much hair. I don’t know if its the water, genetics, or perhaps all the cigarette smoke, but Parisiennes have thin, straight hair that looks absolutely perfect when twisted into a messy blob at the nape of their necks. When I do that, I look like Cousin Itt on a bad hair day.

7/ I don’t complain enough. I am not being judgmental here, it is a well known regional pass time. My Little Paris made a video about it and there is a popular t-shirt that reads, “I heart nothing, I’m a Parisienne“. Clearly these folks have never spent a winter in Montréal, or a summer in San Francisco, or they’d realize, they’ve got nothing to complain about!

8/ I like to work. The French like holidays. Nothing wrong with vacations, but when your kids get a 2 week break every 6 weeks AND 2 months off for the summer holidays, well, it makes you wanna scream, au secours!!! And I’m not even going to start on les grèves...

9/ I kind of think its ok to eat when you’re hungry. I am not talking constant grazing, but I suspect if it was ok to have a little snack at the heure du goûter Parisiennes might smile a bit more and complain a bit less. It doesn’t have to be fattening, an apple a day…

10/ Did I mention that damn smile of mine?

Headed North

Before moving to Paris I’d fantasize about cycling the city’s cobble-paved streets on a traditional Dutch bike, trench coat and middie skirt batting the wind as my red pumps hooked carelessly onto the wide pedals. That was circa 2000. Now the ugly, clunky, but oh-so-practical Velib’s are available with pedals that unabashedly murder a girl’s shoes, yet sensibility has won out and I am often seen struggling along in whatever happens to be the outfit du jour. I still live the dream from time to time, finding it especially rewarding when men turn their heads, and their handle bars, ending in near fatal accidents.

But that’s during the week. On weekends Mr French keeps me in check. I get serious about my cycling and we head out on some pretty great adventures. Sunday’s adventure began with lunch on the terrace at La Cantine de Quentin where an ageless, artsy crowd mixes with senile old locals and young families to enjoy tradition French cuisine with an original twist, like the steak tartare served with finely minces mushrooms instead of fries. Or the lentil salad with a foie gras chantilly. Delicious.

a pizza truck outside the Fishing Cat ballroom - I've kept the finger in the frame, it's so vintage!

I know that doesn’t sound like serious cycling, but a girl’s got to eat (and maybe enjoy a glass of rosé). Soon enough we were off, heading north up the Canal St Martin to the Canal de l’Ourcq, with its 25 km of reserved cycling path beginning within the city of Paris, running along the Canal, through the lively La Vilette area with its museums, parks and astounding mirrored geodesic dome. At the city outskirts the scenery starts getting very industrial, very quickly, with cement plants and train yards and fantastically graffiti-ed abandoned warehouses.

A picnic break

At one point, among lawn and poplars, a group of very talented taggers was hard at work tagged as they partied to rap music and bbq-ed a picnic to share with another group of fans; severly disabled adults with their caretakers and souped up wheelchairs. Turns out these taggers have been tagged by the city of Bobigny and they were being sponsored to beautify the area. They were doing were doing an astounding job and were remarkably cool to visit with.

The canal was alive: barges went past, Canauxrama boats sped by and trains clamoured along – everyone was on the move. There was a mini-shanty town,  temporary espresso bar, the Chat Qui Peche guinguette, kayaks on loan, and many, many other sportsmen cycling, running, or blading along.

16km later we came to the Parc de Sevrans and its gunpowder museum. Yes, Virginia, there is a gunpowder museum. There is also a teaching farm, apiculture center and a climbing wall, but we were pretty tired by now, so it was time to head back, pedaling directly into the wind the entire 16km to La Villette, before heading home. I can’t say we minded that it was the final match of the Euro Cup Sunday night, providing us with the perfect excuse to sit at home, acting like couch patates. Two happily exhausted souls.

RESTAURANT/ La Cantine de Quentin

52 rue Bichat, 10e /  01 42 02 40 32/ (M) Jacques Bonsergent

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