Book review: Delving into the glory and shame that is ‘the impossible city’ of Paris

In 'Impossible City' Simon Kuper does a great job in conveying why Paris is a city that is impossible to embrace and impossible to resist
Book review: Delving into the glory and shame that is ‘the impossible city’ of Paris

Kuper peers deep into life of the central arrondissements, an area packed so tight that it is 'afflicted by permanent cabin fever': Parisians spend their lives 'trying to have private conversations in cafés while sitting six inches from the next table' or 'trying to keep their toilet visits and orgasms silent'.

  • Impossible City: Paris in the Twenty-First Century 
  • Simon Kuper
  • Profile Books, £18.99

Already a subscriber? Sign in

You have reached your article limit.

Unlimited access. Half the price.

Annual €120 €60

Best value

Monthly €10€5 / month

BOOKS & MORE

Check out our Books Hub where you will find the latest news, reviews, features, opinions and analysis on all things books from the Irish Examiner's team of specialist writers, columnists and contributors.

More in this section

Scene & Heard

Newsletter

Music, film art, culture, books and more from Munster and beyond.......curated weekly by the Irish Examiner Arts Editor.

Cookie Policy Privacy Policy Brand Safety FAQ Help Contact Us Terms and Conditions

© Examiner Echo Group Limited