(11/5/2021)
The Paris Bookseller by Kerri Maher gives one an opportunity to view literary Paris in the twenties and thirties. We get to observe up close and personal Joyce, Hemingway, Pound, Stein and more of the luminaries who made Paris their home in the 1920's. We get to know Sylvia Beach, who ran the bookstore, Shakespeare and Company and was the first publisher of Ulysses. Sylvia's backstory is centered around her desire to do something meaningful with her life. She struggles with her family dynamics. We learn about her aloof father and her mother, who often suffered from depression. Never confident in any of her relationships, she finds happiness with Adrienne Monnier. It takes courage for her to finally acknowledge her sexuality and to be comfortable about it. All of her strength, however, was spent helping James Joyce get Ulysses published and finding a way to sell it to the public. One is left wondering what their relationship really was, but Joyce and Beach relied on each other and often came to each other's rescue. While enjoying this scholarly visit with some of literature's greatest author, we also see the growth and maturity of Sylvia, who truly becomes her own person. This book was a delight both by way of history and by way of character development.