Sunday, May 8, 2016

GOOD NEWS ABOUT "I FELL FOR PARIS" THE BOOK

         



                                                       Copyright May 2015         Photo Credit: VAC


                                       "DISCOVER HOW ONE LITTLE GIRL REALIZED HER DREAM"
"This is a travel book like none you have ever read before. It's a guide to the do's and don'ts in Paris. Whether art lover, priest, scientist, or shopping addict...If you've ever wanted to visit Paris, THIS IS THE BOOK TO READ.
"It is also a touching story of family ties rewoven. See the City of Light through the eyes of a woman who waited 50 years to see her beloved Paris. Go on an armchair adventure!" 
                                                              
Finally published it! The first copy went to Writer's Digest Annual Book Contest. The deadline was May 2nd. I am praying to win the Grand Prize. That would send me to New York City, to the Annual Writer's Digest Convention, all expenses paid.

It would give me entre' to industry sources, editors from major publishing houses who might be interested in re-publishing "I FELL FOR PARIS" on a much broader scale. That would include marketing and business help they provide to the Grand Prize Winner.

Last time I entered a Writer's Digest contest was back in 2001. I entered a magazine article called, "What the World Needs Now".  It got an "Honorable Mention" out of 19,000 peoples' entries. I guess that wasn't too bad. But I finally got up the courage to enter my new book.


                          



Since I entered the contest, and Writer's Digest has first printing rights on the book, that means that I can't post it on Amazon Kindle e-books until at least October, when I find out whether I won the contest or not. However I have an order with a publishing company for a small number of books. I will have to sell them at $15.99 each just to break even.

And everyone I tell says, "Oh, you'll have to give me a copy."

 Well I would love to give away copies but just can't do it financially yet. The books will soon be available though - on two new websites, I FELL FOR PARIS.COM   and  WWW.COLEENCLARKAUTHOR.COM.

About two-three months and these sites (and books) should be available.

I am planning some book signings for either summer or fall. Stay tuned to find out where and when. You can buy the book right in the store. I will even sign it for you!

Also be watching for books TWO and THREE:

"REACH UP HIGHER"    and   "BACK TO THE WOMB, BUTTERFLY"  

                                       ALSO IN PROGRESS!


Those two books I will be able to put on Amazon.com Kindle e-books since I'm not planning on entering them into any contests. You will also be able to buy them  on the above two websites (in purple) and links from this blog as well.

So hang tight! It will be available soon. Don't hold your breath! Okay then, go ahead!

Till next T-I-M-E - I still love Paris! But I love America even more. I pray God blesses and protects both nations.     
Photo Credit: CC 2016

Sunday, May 1, 2016

WHY WOULD TIME TRAVEL BE IN A BOOK ABOUT TRAVEL?


Why would Time Travel be in a book about TRAVEL?        

Well time travel IS a form of TRAVEL - isn't it? What's not to like?

If you are going to do something you might as well do it right. I guess I go a little to extremes. But if I am going to do something, then I am going to do it all the way!

This might not seem to be about Paris. But TRUST ME...IT IS...EVENTUALLY.

Ever since I was a small child I have been fascinated by the concept of time. I remember at the age of eight holding two mirrors together. One was a decorated, handheld boudoir-type mirror. The other was my mother's round magnifying mirror that she used for make-up or tweezing eyebrow hairs. When I held the two mirrors together, slanted, I could see the reflection of one mirror repeated endlessly in the other mirror, like a never-ending corridor. It made me think of a tunnel of time.
                                                                     Copyright 2016                Photo Credit: C. Clark

Also as a little girl, I found that the hours seemed to drag endlessly on. I was never bored. I always read books, or sang or drew. But the hours always seemed endless, even when my family was having fun. Sometimes I would return to pondering the subject, trying to gauge the speed of the passage of time depending on various activities I was doing, to see if there was any difference.

I observed the passage of time and sometimes even consciously measured it, seeing if I had an interior clock. I found out I did. By the time I was an adult, I could sometimes set this interior clock to waken myself at an exact time I desired. But I never relied on it as an every day alarm. When I grew up into a "responsible" adult...well that's all RELATIVE - isn't it? I usually fell back on a mechanical clock. Until everyone started using their cell phones as mini-computers. Now alarm clocks have become almost obsolete.

But growing up in the 1960's as a child, I often pondered things most kids probably don't. I was always wondering about the curtain between this world and the next dimension. Why did ghosts seem to appear to people in real life accounts, after loved ones had died? I also wondered why the science fiction of yesterday always became the science of today.

I expected science to cure all the ills in the world. I also expected technology to eventually do what seemed impossible presently. Just like flying cars and time travel.

One day, when I was about ten years old, I remember standing below the brown, wooden stairwell in our small, two story house where I grew up. I was playing with a balloon brought home from a party, no doubt.

 Focusing on the principle of propulsion and how the balloon was propelled by the flux of air out of the open hole of the balloon as I let it fly, I watched. Over and over again I blew up the balloon and let it zoom ceiling-ward. Suddenly I imagined the principle of a vacuum, which was exactly the opposite of what I was observing. I wondered if propulsion could occur from a vacuum as well? Or if a force could be derived from it to move objects somehow?

When "Back To The Future" the movie came out I was in 7th Heaven. Both of my all-time fantasies fastened together all in one tremendous story. I loved it! Flying cars and time travel all in one delicious Delorean package!

I read numerous science fiction novels over the years.  (Funny, I rarely read fiction nowadays. It's mostly alternative news and scientific journals. I gave up on the mainstream media years ago.)

Science fiction gave me a picture of what could be. Yet somewhere in the back of my mind was the idea that science fiction writers actually gave present day scientists ideas from which to spring their goals and experiments.

Take for example the Star Trek "Enterprise". Scientists HAVE been using some of its aspects to model ideas of warp drive. That's just one example.

Rod Serling was my first sci-fi love. Then came Ray Bradbury and Robert Heinlein. But first and foremost is and always will be Gregory Benford. He wrote TIMESCAPE, a novel about backward messages in time due to a now half-proven particle called a "tachyon".

                                GREGORY BENFORD'S NOW CLASSIC "TIMESCAPE"


WHAT ARE TACHYONS?                   TACHYONS EXPLAINED MATHEMATICALLY  *

        

When I would hear a jet's loud boom over head I would always ask myself, "If scientists have broken the "sound barrier" then why can't they break the "light barrier"?

                                 
                                                                     Copyright 2016                         Photo Credit: C. Clark

I didn't understand Einstein's theory of relativity until early adulthood. But once, working temporarily at a major pharmaceutical firm, in the computer programming department, I tried discussing the theory of General Relativity with college grads around me, and not a single one could intelligently discuss Einstein's major accomplishment.

Despite the fact that most physicists believe the Speed of Light is constant, and doesn't change I always told myself that Einstein was wrong. The speed of light CAN CHANGE. It's all relative! No pun intended! Scientists have since found out that the speed of light is variable, although most people haven't read enough on the topic to even realize it.

"Tachyon searches could be produced from high-energy particle collisions," * as in the Large Hadron Collider, on the border between France and Switzerland.

This is even more pertinent since CERN has discovered the elusive "God Particle" - the Higgs Boson. And one of CERN's leaders has been publicly recorded as saying they want to open "portals" between dimensions. Now, isn't that a tad dangerous? Could be...

          A PORTAL OPENS IN THE SKY ABOVE SWITZERLAND

          CERN SCIENTISTS HOPE TO OPEN PORTAL TO PARALLEL UNIVERSE

           HOW CERN PLANS TO USE THE LARGE HADRON COLLIDER TO OPEN PORTALS...

       

When my son Victor was a child I found the inexpensive way to treat him to a "day at the movies" was to go to the afternoon matinee. My son and I shared the joy of watching all three  BACK TO THE FUTURE films together over the years. But I will never forget the feeling of horror in the pit of my stomach when the license plate from Doc's Delorean whirled on the railroad tracks. Time Traveling car smashed to pieces - never to fly again. I almost cried. My flying car died!

Victor loved the first movie so much that as a young boy he memorized large portions of the script. He and I would say the dialogue back and forth together just for fun. He would play Marty and I would play Doc. Of course, I had always wanted to be a scientist. Only natural!

That movie became the launching pad for my research into a variety of developing technologies over the years that could fit the bill of making time travel come true. 

On one hot summer's trip to Universal Studios in Orlando, I rode the "Back To The Future" ride six times in a row. Why? Well I DID love the ride. But that wasn't the reason. I was obsessed with writing down the names of all the books on Time Travel on the bookshelves in the alcove-holding room, right before passengers hopped onto the ride's cars. It took six rides to have enough time to get most of the pertinent titles and authors written on a park brochure.

From childhood to adulthood I constantly tried to keep up with accounts of as many developing technologies as possible, hoping to find some bearing on the time space continuum. Being a naturally extremely curious individual, I paid attention to even the most esoteric developments. Loving to read made this pure delight, anyway. My desire to time travel grew!

Beginning in the year 2000, having purchased my first computer, I doubled up on my research. I started reading about any scientist researching any discipline that could even faintly touch  aspects related to the time space continuum. Scientific paper after paper became one stepping stone after another. 

I knew from my research that "black ops" were a fact. Edward Snowden's revelations about governmental black ops projects paid for with American tax dollars, were anti-climactic after what my studies had revealed: Anti-propulsion vehicles, the Casimir Effect, Closed Time-Like Curves, Frame Dragging...

      EDWARD SNOWDEN UNCOVERED MASSIVE GOVERNMENT SECRETS, INCLUDING EXISTENCE OF "BLACK OPS"

No wonder it is said that there is at the minimum $300 million missing from Pentagon accounting books. One Pentagon official admits they could actually hide $48 B-i-l-l-i-o-n (on secret projects) and the American public would be none-the-wiser.

            THE PENTAGON MUST CERTAINLY BE HIDING SOMETHING!


Why is it portholes are being observed opening up in the skies around the world, along with some other mighty strange phenomena? 

Charles Bennett, working at IBM with lasers in the 1980's made entanglement breakthroughs in Quantum Computing that may have cracked the time-space barrier wide open! In 2009, a photograph next to his picture on his IBM stats from the 1990's shows a very distinct porthole opening up in the skies above the trees...near his laboratory???  

 READ MY BOOK: "I FELL FOR PARIS" FOR MORE INFO! (IT WILL BE AVAILABLE SOON ON THE TWO WEBSITES AT THE END OF THIS ARTICLE.)


Why too, would a porthole open over the sky above Tromso, Norway, in 2009, the very day that an American president was in that region to collect his Nobel Peace Prize? Happenstance? Helpenstance? Or Frankenstance?


There is an area in the region of Paris where time slips are said to occur, near a famous palace. Two individuals with impeccable credentials experienced what appeared to be a time slip phenomenon about a hundred years ago. The follow up research they did made their separate testimonies about the incident seem absolutely credible. People have tried to debunk their stories. But I have always trusted academics. Okay...well until recently with the Common Core Curriculum...that kind of finished it for me.


                                       THE MOBERLY-JOURDAIN INCIDENT


But my father's sisters were school teachers and college professors, so they have always been role models for me. So I tend to trust what they have to say. That is why I am convinced that I must return to Paris. For scientific purposes. To perform an experiment. To see if the two Oxford academicians' experience can be duplicated under the right conditions.

When I travel...I really plan to t-r-a-v-e-l. Until next T-I-M-E....I still love Paris!


www.ifellforparis.com   and www.coleenclarkauthor.com sites COMING SOON!




AH CHERI - MON PARIS DELICIEUSE! Part I

                                          Copyright 2015                                                       Photo Credit: C.Clark

So often unenlightened Americans say...I wouldn't go to Paris because I would never eat frog legs! At least several people have said that to me when I told them I wanted to go to Paris!


Frog legs are not on the top of my menu agenda, either. However, there are lots of other foods in Paris to love without ever having to venture near amphibious waters!


My opinion has always been framed by the knowledge that Le Cordon Bleu cooking school, the most famous in the world, originated in Paris. Le Cordon Bleu chefs always seemed to win top honors and always were connected with Michelin Stars. The top chefs had a record of attending Le Cordon Bleu at least as far back as I can remember. The words "Three Stars" and "gourmet" always seemed to go hand in hand with Le Cordon Bleu. I dreamed about it for years.


Both of my Pennsylvania German grandmothers were tremendous cooks. Grandma Yocum specialized in pies, doughnuts, schnitzel, among other dishes. After all she had twelve children to cook for! And she far preferred her old coal stove to her electric any day of the week.


My mother's mother excelled in every dish there could possibly be. When her family wanted candy - it was home-made! Far be it from Grandma Miller to buy a bag of manufactured potato chips. No! No! No! She made her own in a little wire rack. They had to be the crispest, freshest, heavenly potato chips on earth.


And pot pie...not the kind with vegetable- filled chicken gravy covered with a pastry topping. Grandma Miller made hand-rolled, thick square noodles, cooked fresh in a chicken gravy stewing for hours from a chicken carcass. Nothing could be wasted in Grandma Miller's kitchen. Her custards were divine. Her cakes and frostings ethereal. Her roast beef, pork roast, fried chicken, mashed potatoes, freshly grown garden vegetables...and oh yes...her dandelion salad with hot sweet and sour bacon dressing, prepared me for a romance with food that I thought was native only to the French.


When I lived in Florida, I was impressed by the fine building where the Art Institute of Ft. Lauderdale sat, knowing it was a cooking school But, while managing an office park in Miami, where I had heard that the first Le Cordon Bleu in America would be situated, I was ecstatic! I even thought about quitting my commercial property manager job and becoming a chef....pastry chef that is! My dream lasted as long as it took me to find out that each year's course was about $25,000.


But I did get to tour the facility as soon as it was built, then up and running. I could hardly breathe as I was led on a private tour, past the classrooms, past kitchens and past the pastry! And what pastry! Glorious spun-sugar creations of all colors and shapes sat atop the crème-de-la-crème of cakes! The chefs tall hats made me so jealous! I wanted to be on the other side of the glass, artfully designing pastries too beautiful to eat.


So the years whirled by. After spending a decade and a half in South Florida, I finally migrated to the Midwest. Downhome cooking there. Since the local penchant entails sauerkraut and cabbage-laced sandwiches, I felt quite at home. Though I had never heard of chili served with cinnamon rolls before.


Then my son entered the scene with the offer to knock my number one bucket list item off the charts! To go to Paris. Yes. I wanted French pastries! Every last one I could get my chubby, chocolate covered hands on! The trip was my Mother's Day gift of 2015. The second-best gift I've ever been given in my life by the first best gift given to me by God - my son!


I went to Paris with very little money. Making only about ten dollars an hour in the hurting American economy after having been a commercial property manager, was very humbling. Worst of all, I had to go to Paris with limited funds. But I did try to find the best pastry shops I could in the area of Paris which we stayed: The First Arrondissment.


By some amazing miracle of God I had gotten my first small income tax rebate check in many years. It was way under a thousand dollars. But it was just enough to have a little spending money, taxi and ticket fares, not to mention a few treats.


My son had been sweet enough to book us into a four star boutique hotel right down the street from the Louvre, on Rue des Pyramides. Hotel Lumen, right by Passage d'Eglise and L'Eglise Saint Roch. Great breakfast buffet.


 If I ever get to go to Paris again and haven't yet become the best-selling, rich writer which I dream of being...if I can't stay at George Cinq (The Four Seasons) then I will gladly stay at L'Hotel Lumen just for their gourmet breakfast buffet, if not for the jazz bands that play every Tuesday and Thursday. Café Oscar with a view of the rear doors of L'Eglise St. Roch provided the parade of everyday Parisian life which I was so eager to observe.



My favorite bakery was the one we found the very first day on the Rue St. Honore. Yannick Martin. That was where I lost my English-speaking virginity. Yes I became a va-va-voom, French speaker! After years and months of practicing my French, the sweet, young bakery man took my order with a pleasant smile, knowing that I was making my best effort to be understood. I adhered to custom and said "Hello" or rather "Bonjour" first. Then we started negotiations for his objects of beauty. Soon to fulfill my heart's and mouth's desires.

                                                        Copyright 2015                                                  Photo Credit: C. Clark

Would it be strawberry napoleons? Chocolate custard-filled tarts? Lemon sponge cakes? Mille-fuilles? Rum soaked babas? Or simple French croissants? Wait. Did I say simple? I meant butter-laden, crisp yet delicate-layered delights. Yes. That's what I meant to say.


But for our first meal in mon cher Paris, I ordered us both sandwiches that looked like American hoagies, submarines, grinders - according to whatever part of the United States you live in. Unlike in the U.S. they come without mayonnaise. With or without butter are the choices. With or without vegetables -meaning lettuce, tomato, etc. Then of course with or without meat. The order was a success! We ate our crispy-crunchy bread filled with sumptuous meat and enjoyed the sun-laced Paris morning on the steps of the Church of Saint Rock.


Men, women and children rode by on scooters. Not motor scooters. Not roller blades as one would see in South Beach, Florida. The kind of manual motor scooter I rode on as a child in the 1960's. Grown men rode them...okay...young men. Muscular young men unafraid of broken bones.


One mother helped her little girl lift her scooter up the steps of the church as they climbed them to attend the service in what became the most exquisite edifice I had ever seen. My son and I enjoyed the light breeze, which explained why the French always wear their scarves. We settled back to try to overcome our jet lag while the hotel next door prepared our rooms.

Our first day in Paris the sky drizzled rain. We scooted out and around the raindrops. Went to a bookstore selling English books. I bought a brand new French dictionary to replace my tattered LaRousse of thirty years usage. But oh....I found a book on how to make French pastries. I recently changed apartments and can't find the box it is in, but I will update this entry with the title as soon as I find it! I figured having a book teaching me how to make patisserie was far more productive than spending years trying to gather the $25,000. to take the Le Cordon Bleu course!

Macarons are the first thing I want to learn to make. After I practice on some of the other recipes, I plan to have a ladies' tea party, for my friends here in the United States. I had to sell my beautiful rose-covered tea set when I was out of work in Florida. I had bought it especially for the purpose of inviting my friends to a real English-style tea! Consisting of course of not scones and watercress sandwiches - but French pastries! But since then I've cobbled together a variety of pretty china cups by keeping an eagle eye out for them at the Good Will store.

One thing I long to learn to make is Charlotte Russe. Ever heard of it? The recipes I have read for it over the years didn't seem to match what I viewed as the finished production from a famous hotel.

When I worked in downtown Houston, over thirty years ago, I used to go to Le Meridian Hotel on occasion. They had a remarkable French bakery where they had the most amazing treat called "Charlotte Russe". It was shaped like a pie, but almost tasted like cake. If memory serves, there were ladyfingers around the edges, a sort of creamy raspberry filling. The company I worked for in downtown Houston often ordered them for employee birthday parties. I believe you could order them in different flavors - but my favorite was the raspberry filling! So that would definitely be something to serve at my tea party.

But back to Paris mes amis!

The first evening my son and I happened by a very famous cafe. The name rang a bell in my head: Cafe de La Paix. I sort of thought it was a famous landmark. But I didn't know until I got home to the States and looked it up that so many famous French writers used to hang out there: Guy de Maupassant was one - you know the famous French short-story writer?

Copyright 2015             Photo Credit: V.A.C.


Turns out that Cafe de La Paix is also a French national historic site. A radio studio once inhabited the restaurant where a program "This Is Paris" was broadcast to the U.S.A.

                                                 https.://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cafe_de_la_Paix


Again I tested my less than confident French-speaking wings. The waitress understood me fine when I ordered Monte Cristo sandwiches for my son and I. Catch was - I didn't quite understand her, at first. When I asked for water she kept mentioning a man named Gus. I finally figured out she was asking if I wanted the water carbonated or not. I laughed at myself for taking a few seconds to get it. Our meal was okay. Noting stupendous. Very expensive.

It was appropriate to have eaten at the Cafe of Peace our first night in Paris. My son and I had been apart for many years - filled with either discord or empty silence. As we walked back to the L'Hotel Lumen my eyes filled with grateful tears, matching the falling rain around us. My son and I could be close again. I was so happy.


STAY TUNED FOR PART II OF "AH CHERI - MON PARIS DELICIEUSE!








Sunday, December 13, 2015

FRANCE AND AMERICA - UNITED BY PAIN THIS CHRISTMAS





America shares the same aching heart as France. Two most beautiful countries in the world are now joined in the tragic sorrow of having the upcoming holidays overshadowed by deep pain.

                                                Paris Massacre: At Least 128 Die In Attacks

 But we will not bow to evil. We are determined that we shall go on and celebrate this time of the One and only Lord's birth this holiday season.

If I were somehow able to spend Christmas in Paris I would not spend the time in sight-seeing or shopping. I would spend the precious time spreading hope.

Recently, in both nations, groups of people enjoying recreational time were suddenly surprised by bloody attacks driven by an unnatural ideology. Paris and San Bernardino are healing from their gaping wounds. But they will not forget. They will not stop trying to ferret out the evildoers. Even if it takes until next Christmas. Or every Christmas hereafter

                         San Bernardino Shooting              San Bernardino Shooting Suspect

The threat of terror will not erase my desire to return to Paris! I will not allow deranged individuals masquerading under the guise of an insatiably-devouring-mock-religious label to stop my trek to the most beautiful city in the world.

For those criminal, psychotic minds to savage the beauty of my beloved Paris is a hideous ravishment. To put their bloodied hands on the Loveliest Lady of Light - the City Paris - is like the worst horrible nightmare. Now they have gone too far!


People will go about their normal lives without fear! The terrorists will not achieve their goal! Their  ultimate in foolish effrontery will be foiled.


Is it only history scholars who realize that a few hundred thousand invading hordes took over both the Byzantine and Persian empires within the space of twenty years in the 700's? Invaders often subjugate a land through quiet conquest, especially if the natives offer little or no resistance.


Sadly, the memory of 9/11 is but a dim shadow in the memory of many Americans. Laid back, apathetic American citizens have not even reacted as forcefully as the French. Do we say "I am American"?  as the French have said "Je suis Charlie" ?   No. It is time for us to wake up!



Now mindfully aware, Paris will go on. The City of Light cannot be besmirched or darkened by an unjust philosophy of attack.



I will personally take every opportunity given me to return to Paris again and again!



 I will go and visit Bataclan Concert Hall, the cafes Le Petit Cambodge, Cafe Bonne Bierre, La Belle Equipe Bar, Le Carrillion Bar, Le Comptoire Voltaire, and Le Stade France.



                   Paris Attacks - What Happened



 Not for entertainment nor sight-seeing. Rather, I would commemorate the victims who were simply out that night in a free country. They should have been able to take an enjoyable respite from the work week, as people everywhere like to do. I will pray for the families of these victims. But I pray most of all that neither Paris nor America will ever have to suffer these atrocities again!

Having tasted her honeyed sweetness last May, Paris's fragrance lingers in my senses. The most unbelievable experience of my life in recent memory was to set my feet on French soil. That soil will not be muddied by evil demons masquerading as men - if my prayers are heard in the highest of heavens!

From the time I was a toddler I dreamed of the beauties of Paris. God Himself put that love of Paris in my soul.

Even though I am not a native French person, I will continually tout the breathtaking beauties of Paris. If you are a writer, an artist, a chef, or a creative person of any depth, you will not fail to fall in love with the creative atmosphere of this most splendid place, no matter in what era you live.

My dream of peeking through Paris shop windows at Christmas, while my boots make footprints in the snow, will someday come true!

No terrorist will torment me, nor tell me that I cannot visit the loveliest landscape on Earth.

Perhaps the inhabitants of France and of America will take time out from either their mourning or their holiday celebrations to devote worship to that Babe-in-a-manger who became the Savior of all mankind.

May peace light your holiday season San Bernardino.

May a blanket of peace like white, cleansing, falling snow envelope Paris this Christmas. Let her light shine forever from the church tops as the Bells of Christmas ring, reminding us that hope, love and beauty still live on!


CLICK ON LINK BELOW TO HEAR MOST BEAUTIFUL CHRISTMAS CAROL!

           Cantique de Noel Placido Domingo

Thursday, September 3, 2015

WANT TO GO SHOPPING WITH ME IN PARIS?

Hey - Want To Go Shopping With Me In Paris? Pack your bags. Mine are waiting right inside my front door.

Heck yes! There's a flight that leaves Omaha tomorrow morning at 7:00 a.m.  It would get us into Paris the following day day at 6:10 a.m. We could split the 65.00 euro cab fare to the hotel. It's only abut $1400. per person round-trip. Are you game?

I can book us hotel rooms too. Would you rather stay at L'Hotel Lumen? Or Hotel Regina? They are both right down the street from the Louvre. Hotel Regina is closer though. Personally, I'd stick with L'Hotel Lumen. They put on the best gourmet breakfast spread. And the jazz two nights a week is amazing!

                        See the Reviews For Hotel Lumen

                                                     Copyright May 2015    Photo Credit: Coleen Clark

Forget about the dirty sidewalk. It's clean inside. That's what counts!

                                                                         
Both hotels are in the 1st Arrondissement on the I'le de la Cite'.  Having been the heart of the ancient city called Lutecia, it's not only the historic center of the city - it dates back to 52 B.C.   Put on your most comfortable walking shoes and I'll show you around. Got any "Five Hour Energy", anyone?

                       1st Arrondissement - one of twenty! 

If you go to the left out the door of Hotel Lumen, you will eventually come upon Fred Joaillier, Cartier, Piaget, Louis Vuitton. A little farther, down Rue de Papaune, near the Place Vendome, we will see Boucher, Harry Winston, and Alfred Dunhill.

If we go the other direction out of L'Hotel Lumen, to our right, we could go straight down Rue des Pyramides, pass quite a few stores, also to my liking. Dress shops, perfume and jewelry stores, an amazing scarf shop called "Refletions de Paris". The scarves are all prints of famous artists: Picasso, Rembrandt, Monet, and many others.For the price, they are pretty nice, around 40. euros each.

 We would continue by a beautiful flower shop, a tea and chocolate shop - Sebastian Gaudard. I couldn't resist, that wonderful shop that also sells Madeleines and marmalades as well. Sidewalk cafe's dot the street, and catty-corner is the Hotel Regina. Beautiful wide doors make this hotel immediately recognizable.
                               
                                          Hotel Regina - Check it out!

Half way across the street (Rue des Pyramides) is Joan of Arc's golden statue, covered with flowers while I was there. (She deserves them!) Then across the corner from the sidewalk cafe "Carrousel", the corner entrance to the Tuileries and a little further, the glass Pyramid entrance to the Louvre.

One cup of cafe' au lait at Cafe Carrousel will set you back six euros, and then the waiter gives himself a three euro tip...but if you're in the mood for people-watching it's a prime location. See and be seen.

                   
                                          Copyright May 2015                              Photo Credit: Coleen Clark

I know some great restaurants in the area. Even a little cafeteria where you can eat a wonderful meal for only about ten euros. It's right down the Rue de Rivoli, running parallel to the Tuileries gardens.

                                         Copyright May 2015                                Photo Credit: C. Clark


I know all the shops in the area. Cheap ones and expensive. I am not sure I can afford the up-scale ones. But we could go look. Right? If you can afford it, I'll just help you pick out what ever you want to buy.

If you want souvenirs you are in the right spot. Lots of shops. One of my favorites though was MachuPichu. A convivial French gentleman sells the most beautiful Gobelin  tapestry pillow covers there. I agree with him. He sells them for less than the cost of these works of art, elsewhere. I still want the blue and gold fleur-de-lis cases. At least two. That was Napoleon Bonaparte's trademark symbol, inscribed on his emperor's cape and on many other surfaces. I just love the fleur-de-lis and the royal blue!
                                          Copyright May 2015                                 Photo Credit: C. Clark


                                          Copyright May 2015                          Photo Credit: VAC

If we continue on through the Tuileries gardens and out through to the other side, we can head down the Champs- Elysees. It is a mile and a half walk...at least you won't have to go to the gym this week. That will take us all the way to the 8th Arrondissement. The Champs-Elysees is lined with all the luxury stores of the world. Impressive!

I didn't get to buy this amazing perfume I fell in love with.
Hermes' Eau d'Orange

 It's in all the bathrooms at L'Hotel Lumen. It is Hermes' signature fragrance...the one they started their entire perfume line with. A gender neutral fragrance called "Green Orange Water", or L'Eau  d'Orange Vert, it has mossy, dusky undertones skirting around orange blossoms.. It costs about sixty bucks online, but it's probably cheaper in the shops. And we would get reimbursed for the VAT tax. So that would be cool, right?

                                          Copyright May 2015                                            Photo Credit: C. Clark

I would love to show you the Tuilleries gardens right outside the Louvre...that awesome once palatial home of many former kings of France, and now the greatest museum in the world.

                                          Copyright May 2015                           Photo Credit: C. Clark

You know...the artist who's pictures I wanted to see the most I couldn't get to, on the days I visited the Louvre. The Fragonard exhibit was under construction until May 20th, a week after I had gone home. Just my luck. But now it's open and we could go take a look at his amazing artwork.

My favorite of his, "A Young Girl Reading" isn't there. It's in the Washington, D.C. National Gallery of Art, but we'll save that for another trip.

A Young Girl Reading By Fragonard

But we can go see my next favorite of his, "The Bolt", a visual story of seduction, steamy tossed-aside sheets, and a lover that won't let his amour get away. Hey that was very hot in the 1700's...and I daresay it invokes some great fantasies even today in the 21st.

The Bolt by Fragonard

There's always MacDonald's down the street the other direction if you want to eat cheaply. The Coca Cola in Paris is really good! Much stronger than the American version.


                                         Copyright May 2015                                 Photo Credit: C. Clark
                             

And you should see the Paris Opera House! Would you believe they have a huge portrait of Charlize Theron from her ad campaign for J'Adore perfume?  I think it is very cool!

                                          Copyright May 2015                                                    Photo Credit: VAC

I'd just love to show you the gold-laced gates leading up the broad path from the Tuileries to the Champs Elysees. The whole scene is just so beautiful...

Okay...then...you can always wait for my book to come out on Kindle eventually - probably not until October 2016. 

You will however be able to purchase the book directly from links on this site very soon, or on my upcoming websites:  WWW.IFELLFORPARIS.COM      and    

                              WWW.COLEENCLARKAUTHOR.COM

It will be any day now. I have an order into a printer for a limited number of copies of the book.

In the electronic version, eventually on KINDLE, you can link to great photo's and websites that will give you more information about each topic. So please be patient a little longer. I'll let you know as soon as I have it on-line and we'll go walking down the Champs Elysees, in the merry, merry month of M....oh yeah - It's September.

But the weather's still nice. Checked last night. It was 70 degrees Fahrenheit. Not a cloud in sight. Hope you'll find delight in "I Fell For Paris". Soon soon soon. Will let you know dear friends!

P.S.
Some of the photos are mine and some of them my great photographer son took. You will see many more in the book.




Copyright @May 2015

Friday, August 7, 2015

PEPE LEPEW MIGHT HAVE STUNK BUT SURELY IT WAS A LOVELY FRENCH PERFUME!

I was just a toddler. But I giggled every time I saw Pepe LePew trying to kiss a girl skunk. Such metaphors those cartoons invoked. I realize now. Isn't it the skunks who try to kiss alllll the girls? Just like Georgie Porgie, he probably made them all cry, too. But I was too little to know that then.


                       

Warner Brothers' cartoons always had those hidden sub-themes that enabled adults to watch and enjoy them too, just like the kids.

I grew up believing that girls, skunks or not, were supposed to act coy when a boy tried to kiss them. And that being French must be romantic. Funny how little children's minds work. They absorb everything.

Then, watching re-runs of the movie Gigi with my mother and hearing Maurice Chevalier sing "Thank Heaven For Little Girls" made me like Mr. Chevalier's French accent, and any mention of Paris.



You realize of course, the famous writer Colette actually wrote the story behind Gigi, right? I've always wanted to steal Colette's name! She died before I was ever born.

                                            Colette - The Famous French Writer

So began my love affair with Paris though at the age of three these notions were just  forming. I didn't realize I was falling in love. With a city I couldn't imagine. A country that drew my thoughts like a magnet.

From that time on, any mention of France or Paris made me obsessively search out any detail that my eyes or ears could find on what seemed like the most exotic, romantic place on Earth.

To hear the story of my longing to get to that famous city - and the answer to whether I finally realized my dream - READ MY BOOK I FELL FOR PARIS! On Kindle E-Books later this month.

    I   FELL FOR PARIS by COLEEN CLARK