The Masqueteers of Paris

The Masqueteers of Paris

By Anne Swardson Starting today, masks are required on French public transportation, part of the transition out of our 56-day coronavirus lockdown. Based on what I’ve seen recently, many Parisians have a case of wardrobe malfunction. “Judging by how they wear their...
Liberté Scaring the People

Liberté Scaring the People

By Anne Swardson The country that reluctantly accepted one of the strictest set of coronavirus lockdown rules in the Western world now is nervous about living without them. France begins phasing out its 49-day “confinement” Monday and details of the new regime have...
A Few Precisions on Frenglish

A Few Precisions on Frenglish

By Anne Swardson I came back to the apartment the other day and said very excitedly to my husband, “I got controlled! But it was OK, I had my attestation.” He knew exactly what I meant: I had gotten checked by the Paris cops and had the right form on my cell phone to...
French Resistance

French Resistance

By Anne Swardson In France, there are some rules that must be obeyed and others that can be ignored. The trick for non-natives is to figure out which is which. Owners of some of the small shops in my neighborhood, and elsewhere, must know something I don’t. Two weeks...
Papa, Please Pass the Fromage

Papa, Please Pass the Fromage

By Anne Swardson Walking down a small street in my neighborhood the other day, I heard a sound that took me back decades: the noise of silverware clinking on a plate. Through the open windows, I could hear lunch. Three lunches, from three separate apartments. The...
Kind Hearts and Coronavirus

Kind Hearts and Coronavirus

“In no country of the world has the principle of association been more successfully used or applied to a greater multitude of objectives than in America.” Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America, 1835 By Anne Swardson Tocqueville published those words a year after...

Pin It on Pinterest