Village Voices

Village Voices
Author: Odile Hellier
Publisher: Seven Stories Press
Total Pages: 447
Release: 2024-09-24
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 164421380X

A celebration of the legacy of the Village Voice bookshop in Paris, founded by Odile Hellier in 1982—a hub of social life and a refuge for artists, writers, and anglophone literary life for over three decades until it closed in 2012. “My entire sense of Paris centers on Odile and the bookshop.” —Richard Ford "For literature lovers, it’s a feast." —Publishers Weekly ­ In July of 1982, on a quiet boulevard just off the bustling Boulevard Saint-German, Odile Hellier opened the Village Voice Bookshop. Over the next three decades, the blue-shuttered shop would become one of the most famous English-language bookstores in Paris—a vivacious hub for artists, writers, and a haven for anglophone literary life. After the its closing, Odile found herself with hundreds of tapes of various talks given at the bookshop by the greatest artists of their generation. These voices from the past were the spontaneous exchanges of literary and cultural icons such as Susan Sontag, Margaret Atwood, Don DeLillo, Allen Ginsberg, Toni Morrison, Michael Ondaatje, Jim Harrison, Barry Gifford, Adrienne Rich, David Sedaris, Amy Tan, Edmund White, Art Spiegelman, and Stephen Spender, all of whom were drawn to Odile’s tiny bookstore on Rue Princesse. This carefully curated historical archive is an enduring conversation across time, and a memoir of one woman’s beloved store. “… when you squeezed into the narrow event space on the Voice’s upper floor, French and international book lovers mingled with Parisian editors and publishers, shared a glass of wine, a new discovery, a heretical opinion, and took the conversation outside to the sidewalk of the Rue Princesse, for another shared pleasure: an unguilty cigarette.” — Livia Manera, The New Yorker “A stroll from rue de l’Odéon, Les Deux Magots or the Luxembourg Gardens, the hanging sign reads Village Voice: Anglo-American Bookshop. The narrow door and window frames are painted Greek island blue… Lingering a while in front of the window display, you’ll want to dive inside, into an ocean of story.” —Hazel Rowley, Bookforum

Celestine

Celestine
Author: Gillian Tindall
Publisher: Random House
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2013-07-31
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1446485714

When Gillian Tindall discovered a cache of tightly folded letters in a deserted house in central France, recently emptied of 150 years of a family's possessions, she uncovered the obscure and moving life of one woman, Celestine Chaumette. This is Tindall's brilliantly original recreation of the vanished world of a French village.

Village Voices

Village Voices
Author: Marie-France Boyer
Publisher:
Total Pages: 107
Release: 1999
Genre: Travel
ISBN: 9780500019450

In modern France, village life revolves around the school, post office, shops, and railway stations--centers where people meet to exchange news and gossip. This visual distillation of village life in France features the viewpoints of the young adults who help keep the villages viable and thriving. 145 illustrations, 135 in color.

Village Voices

Village Voices
Author: Perle Møhl
Publisher: Museum Tusculanum Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1997
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9788772893440

Based on 18 months of fieldwork, this book investigates the everyday mechanisms of co-existence and continual creations of individual and social identities within the village of La Brumaire and its surrounding hamlets.

Afghan Village Voices

Afghan Village Voices
Author: Richard Tapper
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 528
Release: 2020-06-25
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0755600878

Afghanistan in the 20th century was virtually unknown in Europe and America. At peace until the 1970s, the country was seen as a remote and exotic land, visited only by adventurous tourists or researchers. Afghan Village Voices is a testament to this little-known period of peace and captures a society and culture now lost. Prepared by two of the most accomplished and well-known anthropologists of the Middle East and Central Asia, Richard Tapper and Nancy Tapper-Lindisfarne, this is a book of stories told by the Piruzai, a rural Afghan community of some 200 families who farmed in northern Afghanistan and in summer took their flocks to the central Hazârajât mountains. The book comprises a collection of remarkable stories, folktales and conversations and provides unprecedented insight into the depth and colour of these people's lives. Recorded in the early 1970s, the stories range from memories of the Piruzai migration to the north a half century before, to the feuds, ethnic strife and the doings of powerful khans. There are also stories of falling in love, elopements, marriages, childbirth and the world of spirits. The book includes vignettes of the narrators, photographs, maps and a full glossary. It is a remarkable document of Afghanistan at peace, told by a people whose voices have rarely been heard.

Village Voices

Village Voices
Author: Niyi Osundare
Publisher:
Total Pages: 86
Release: 1984
Genre: African poetry (English)
ISBN:

Afghan Village Voices

Afghan Village Voices
Author: Richard Tapper
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 529
Release: 2020-07-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 0755600851

Afghanistan in the 20th century was virtually unknown in Europe and America. At peace until the 1970s, the country was seen as a remote and exotic land, visited only by adventurous tourists or researchers. Afghan Village Voices is a testament to this little-known period of peace and captures a society and culture now lost. Prepared by two of the most accomplished and well-known anthropologists of the Middle East and Central Asia, Richard Tapper and Nancy Tapper-Lindisfarne, this is a book of stories told by the Piruzai, a rural Afghan community of some 200 families who farmed in northern Afghanistan and in summer took their flocks to the central Hazârajât mountains. The book comprises a collection of remarkable stories, folktales and conversations and provides unprecedented insight into the depth and colour of these people's lives. Recorded in the early 1970s, the stories range from memories of the Piruzai migration to the north a half century before, to the feuds, ethnic strife and the doings of powerful khans. There are also stories of falling in love, elopements, marriages, childbirth and the world of spirits. The book includes vignettes of the narrators, photographs, maps and a full glossary. It is a remarkable document of Afghanistan at peace, told by a people whose voices have rarely been heard.

Twice Orphaned

Twice Orphaned
Author: Catherine Irwin (Ph. D.)
Publisher: Center for Oral and Public History California State Ty Fulle
Total Pages: 336
Release: 2008
Genre: History
ISBN: