We've only just gotten around to reading Paula Fox's excellent essay Paris: 1946 in the current Paris Review, in which she beautifully describes the gray, uncertain days of postwar Paris. She captures the city so perfectly, with all its ineffable sadness, that we feel like we just stepped off the plane.
When I had a few francs, I spent them at a café on the Place de Longchamps, a block or so from my pension, where I could order a glass of Beaujolais and a plate of string beans in vinaigrette for the equivalent of fifteen cents. At the lunch hour, I could see through large clear windows people strolling along streets and sidewalks, carrying baguettes. One end of the loaf was always missing, bitten off and eaten by its purchaser, who wanted the pleasure of its freshness, or simply because it was there, a Parisian habit.
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