Referenced In

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"Oh, Lydgate! he is not my protege, you know; only I knew an uncle of his who sent me a letter about him. However, I think he is likely to be first-rate—has studied in Paris, knew Broussais; has ideas, you know—wants to raise the profession."

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"Lydgate did not mean to be one of those failures, and there was the better hope of him because his scientific interest soon took the form of a professional enthusiasm: he had a youthful belief in his bread-winning work, not to be stifled by that initiation in makeshift called his 'prentice days; and he carried to his studies in London, Edinburgh, and Paris, the conviction that the medical profession as it might be was the finest in the world; presenting the most perfect interchange between science and art; offering the most direct alliance between intellectual conquest and the social good."

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"The only pleasure he allowed himself during the latter part of his stay in Paris was to go and hear music."

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"Papa is sure to insist on my singing. But I shall tremble before you, who have heard the best singers in Paris."

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"You are a sort of circumnavigator come to settle among us, and will keep up my belief in the antipodes. Now tell me all about them in Paris."

Middlemarch
by George Eliot

"“A letter addressed to the Poste Restante in Paris within the fortnight would hinder him, if necessary, from arriving at an inconvenient moment.”"

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"when he opened the door to his apartment in Paris and set his bag on the floor and closed the door, when he poured himself a glass of whiskey and opened the drapes and saw the usual view,"

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"On the plane back to Paris, Pelletier began to think, inexplicably, about the Berthe Morisot book he’d wanted to slam against the wall…"

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"In Paris, Pelletier went looking for them on the Internet, with excellent results."

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"Pelletier, Espinoza, and Norton traveled from Paris to Mexico City, where El Cerdo was waiting."

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"Five years after she left, Amalfitano heard from Lola again. The letter was short and came from Paris. In it Lola told him that she had a job cleaning big office buildings. It was a night job that started at ten and ended at four or five or six in the morning. Paris was pretty then, like all big cities when everyone is asleep."

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"busy as he was with his affairs in Berlin and Paris"

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"When he asked for Halder’s address, the girl replied, 'He lives in Paris,' with a sigh."

2666
by Roberto Bolaño

"Death surprised him in a Paris hospital, asleep on a bed of roses."

Westworld
by Michael Crichton

"Arlette’s from Paris, France."

Rising Sun
by Michael Crichton

"“But Jim,” the producer said. “The lead tonight was Paris fashions and the Nakamoto party. That's human interest stuff.”"

Jurassic Park
by Michael Crichton

"Paris is a theme park,' he once announced, after a vacation, 'although it's too expensive, and the park employees are unpleasant and sullen."

State of Fear
by Michael Crichton

"The first incident took place in Paris, in May of 2004."

State of Fear
by Michael Crichton

"PARIS NORD SUNDAY, MAY 2, 2004 12:00 P.M."

State of Fear
by Michael Crichton

"They may already have killed a researcher in Paris. We’re awaiting data. But the French authorities can be…slow."

How I Found Livingstone
by Henry M. Stanley

"I am directed by Earl Granville to acknowledge the receipt of a packet containing letters and despatches … delivered to her Majesty's ambassador at Paris for transmission to this department;"

"A week ago they elected the prior of the Carthusian convent at Paris in his room, and two fathers were now on their route to apprise him of their choice, and to salute him General of the Carthusians."

"While I resided in Paris, John Ledyard, of Connecticut, arrived there, well known in the United States for energy of body and mind."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Figure of Marco Polo traced from a copy in the Berlin Library and associated with the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"from the poem in ten cantos, Luciniade, by Sacombe, of Carcassonne (Paris and Nîmes, 1790)."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"in the Album of Villard de Honnecourt, an architect of the 13th century, which was published at Paris in 1858."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"… Professor Gaston Paris, in answer to Mr. Jacobs, writes (Poèmes et Lég. du Moyen Age, p. 213): … and in the Rev. de Paris."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Quoted in introd. to Messir Gauvain, etc., edited by C. Hippeau, Paris, 1862, pp. xii.–xiii."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Dr. Birdwood saw at the Paris Exhibition of 1867 samples of frankincense solemnly labelled as the produce of Mount Lebanon!"

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"MS. Paris Library, 7367 (now Fr. 1116)."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Paris 4 7 1 ... ..."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Paris Bib. nationale, No. 7367 (now Fr. 1116) French …; Paris Bib. de l’Arsenal, No. 5219 French"

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"1824. The Publication of the most valuable MS ... by the Soc. de Géographie of Paris."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"…in his Mémoires Relatifs à l’Asie. Paris, 1824."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"See (Dupré de St. Maur) Essai sur les Monnoies, &c. Paris, 1746, p. xv; and Douet d’Arcq, pp. 5, 15, &c."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Tedaldo was still in Paris on 28th December 1269 before eventually departing for the Holy Land."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"[1] Industries anciennes et modernes de l’Empire chinois. Paris, 1869, pp. 145, 149."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"[2] Résumé des principaux Traités chinois sur la culture des mûriers et l’éducation des vers à soie, Paris, 1837, p. 98."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"[4] Relations des Musulmans avec les Chinois (Centenaire de l’Ecole des Langues Orientales vivantes, Paris, 1895, p. 17)."

The Travels of Marco Polo
by Marco Polo, da Pisa Rusticiano

"Paris, appearing in several entries (e.g., entry 7, entry 13, entry 29)."

The Day of the Locust
by Nathanael West

"There was no back to the building and he found himself in a Paris street. He followed it to its end, coming out in a Romanesque courtyard."

Devil in a Blue Dress
by Walter Mosley

"I had spent five years with white men, and women, from Africa to Italy, through Paris, and into the Fatherland itself."

Devil in a Blue Dress
by Walter Mosley

"Her dress was the simple blue kind that the French girls wore when I was a GI in Paris."

Play It As It Lays
by Joan Didion

"After Cannes he seemed to be in London, and after that in Paris again, where he appeared on television discussing the auteur principle."

Angle of Repose
by Wallace Stegner

"Mr. Prager has been appointed one of the commissioners to the Paris Exposition."

Angle of Repose
by Wallace Stegner

"Mexico was my Paris and my Rome."

Angle of Repose
by Wallace Stegner

"Morelia isn’t Paris, but it is gorgeously picturesque."

East of Eden
by John Steinbeck

"“Did you ever think, Charles, that we’ve got enough money to do anything we want to do? We could go to Europe, we could walk around Paris.”"

East of Eden
by John Steinbeck

"‘But isn’t that silly?’ … ‘We could go to Paris and to Rome or to Jerusalem. I would dearly love to see the Colosseum.’"

East of Eden
by John Steinbeck

"The Germans were not stopped. In fact, they had taken the initiative again, driving methodically toward Paris, and God knew when they could be stopped—if they could be stopped at all."

The Dharma Bums
by Jack Kerouac

"The police are going to swoop down and arrest us all and not only that but we're all going to be questioned for weeks and weeks and maybe even years till they find out all the crimes and sins that have been committed, it's a network, it runs in every direction, finally they'll arrest everybody in North Beach and even everybody in Greenwich Village and then Paris and then finally they'll have everybody in jail, you don't know, it's only the beginning."

Fat City
by Leonard Gardner

"Hammoudi hat gerade sein Medizinstudium beendet und eine Stelle im besten Krankenhaus von Paris bekommen."

City of Night
by John Rechy

"And Paris, that magnificent city of statues, glowed for me as if lighted by heaven itself."

City of Night
by John Rechy

"“Shit, man, Im going to Paris,” I heard Sonny say to him, turning for affirmation to the two scores hes been with."

The Barbarian Nurseries
by Héctor Tobar

"“No, we’re in Paris!” interrupted the voice of a man."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"On the slip of paper was her name and address in the thirteenth arrondissement of Paris, this fellow traveler who had never joined the Communist Party, and thus was unlikely to be surveilled."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I wrote the first of my letters to Man’s aunt in Paris."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I had reported all the gossip about these vanquished soldiers to Paris, and knew what they did (or, in many cases, did not do) for a living."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I had taken photographs of the funeral with my Kodak, the images later dispatched to my aunt in Paris"

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I was still awake when he went to sleep, leaving me with the latest letter from my Parisian aunt."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I later pocketed that napkin and sent it to my Parisian aunt, the sketch depicting a headquarters platoon, three rifle platoons, and a heavy weapons platoon..."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"All this information had been packaged into a parcel dispatched to my Parisian aunt."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"…as I had reported to my Parisian aunt."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I wrote to my Parisian aunt that a moment of silence fell on the table as we absorbed this idea and as the waiters returned with our cocktails."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"my Parisian aunt had replied and the invisible words that gradually became visible were succinct. Don’t come back, Man had written. We need you in America, not here."

The Sympathizer
by Viet Thanh Nguyen

"I inspected the ticket, and that evening I wrote my Parisian aunt."

The Maltese Falcon
by Dashiell Hammett

"Then it appeared in Paris at just about the time that Paris was full of Carlists who had had to get out of Spain."

Golden Days
by Carolyn See

"Sitting in a park in Paris, France Reading the news, and it sure looks bad."

Golden Days
by Carolyn See

"I’ll go further and say that after several short trips to Paris, Madrid, Rome, I realized that I’d been going in the wrong direction; the further east you got the further back in you were."

Golden Days
by Carolyn See

"And when we’d gone to the opera in Paris as students, he’d worn a sweater and every other man there wore a tie!"

Golden Days
by Carolyn See

"Then, with the exaggerated panache of a Parisian dandy, he reached over, plucked one away from the crumbling concrete, held it up against the drizzling poisoned rain to wash away the ash, and with a hideous sucking noise that I remember even now, removed it, protesting, from its shell and sent it sliding to its own Armageddon."

The Sellout
by Paul Beatty

"Some unions, like that of Tel Aviv and Berlin, Paris and Algiers, Honolulu and Hiroshima, are designed to signal an end to hostilities and the beginning of peace and prosperity; arranged marriages in which the cities learn to love one another over time."

The Sellout
by Paul Beatty

"That like Paris has the Eiffel Tower, St. Louis the Arch, and New York an insanely huge income disparity, Dickens would have segregated schools."

The Sellout
by Paul Beatty

"Erecting fake schools like the ghetto was some sort of phony Paris complete with railway stations, Arc de Triomphes, and Eiffel Towers built during World War I to fool the German bombers."

State of Fear
by Michael Crichton

"Paris, Le Bourget 1757–1995"