美国亚马逊巴黎优选

超级便宜 $0.99 优秀的 巴黎:一个爱情故事;回忆录 美国亚马逊Amazon

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这是一本写给所有曾在巴黎或爱上巴黎的人以及所有曾经心碎或生活被颠覆的人的回忆录。

在这本非常诚实的回忆录中,获奖记者兼杰出作家卡蒂·马顿讲述了一个关于爱情、失去和失去后的生活的充满激情和浪漫的故事。巴黎是这个感人至深的故事的中心。在她人生的每个阶段,巴黎都为马顿提供了美丽和兴奋,而现在,在她的丈夫理查德·霍尔布鲁克突然去世后,巴黎为她提供了一个重新开始的机会。

马顿通过对与她结婚 15 年并育有两个孩子的彼得·詹宁斯 (Peter Jennings) 和与她找到了持久爱情的理查德 (Richard) 的亲密而细致的描绘,生动地描绘了她在洪流中冒险的生活。历史。 《巴黎:爱情故事》鼓舞人心且充满人性,将感动每一代人。

卡蒂·马顿是多本书的作者,其中包括《人民公敌》、《国家书评人协会奖》入围作品和即将上映的电影的主题,以及《纽约时报》畅销书《隐藏的力量》等。她是一位屡获殊荣的前 NPR 和 ABC 新闻记者。她住在纽约市。

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Customers say

Customers find the book interesting, beautiful, and easy to read. They also say it’s well-written, honest, and insider knowledge. Readers describe the book as chock-full of interesting stuff and deeply engaging. Opinions differ on the story quality, author quality, and talent. Some find it superb and memorable, while others say it’s not compelling.

Paris papa from the text of customer reviews

Reviewer: J. Lyda
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Honesty and vulnerability shine through
Review: I purchased this audio book after seeing Kati Marton interviewed on Charlie Rose. Her interview, which includes her infidelity, was so honest and human that I simply had to know more about her. The beginning of the book can put one off if you have never been to Europe, have an attitude about France, or have a thing about ‘elites.’ It does come off as very much ‘me, me, me.’ My guess is this quality is related to Marton’s love of life and of Paris, her innate exuberance, and her skill with words (she is an accomplished author.) At times the book feels like a travelogue, and this is because she has lived a very international life (she was born in Hungary and was an overseas coorepondent). Her two great loves – Peter Jennings and Richard Holbrooke – were true ‘internationals’ themselves, particularly Holbrooke. This is the life she has lived, with all the glamor, people, squalor, fatigue and jet-lag. She describes it all quite well.I was most touched by the last parts of the book. This morning I re-listend to the last 3 chapters of the audio book (when she learns that Peter Jennings was dying of lung cancer to the closing of the book). I was moved tremendously by her sensitivity, her awareness of self and others, and her courage. After Holbrooke’s death she returns to Paris, a source of many of her childhood memories, and her descriptions of Paris and Parisians are not only beautiful, but are informative. I am bit of a traveler myself but have never felt I knew Paris. Her simple descriptions of buying bread, going to the pharmacy, and jogging in this huge city have taught me more about what makes Paris special than any history or travel book could. The reader of the audio book did a wonderful job, and I could have believed it was Kati herself speaking to me. A remarkable book, by a remarkable woman, about remarkable people who have shaped our world of today. Five stars for me.

Reviewer: Louise G.
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A good read and well written.
Review: When I bought this book, I actually thought I was buying a novel because of the cover and name of the book. However, because it is well written, I continued to read what is actually a memoir of the author’s life and marriages of two well-known people. I also enjoyed the backdrop of events that I well remember in history, such as the Hungarian uprising in 1956 and the student riots all over the world in 1968.

Reviewer: Bricktop
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Intelligent memoir by an engaging writer
Review: I went ahead and bought this book although I’d read a few of the reviews on here before hand; I suppose I went ahead with it because I enjoy Paris as much as the next person and found the people involved interesting, and I enjoy reading about diplomacy. I had read an excerpt in a magazine that didn’t seem objectionable in any way. Sooo…I read the book in one afternoon and thoroughly enjoyed it. Found it inspirational, even. Kati Marton didn’t strike me as arrogant or self-aggrandizing, rather, I found her to be describing her life, and the people in it, with grace and charm. That she is a very accomplished, well-educated and well-traveled woman might intimidate some, and perhaps for some that was the rub. After all, this is a memoir about *her* life. The people in the book are part of her milieu. How else would she go about describing them? Yes, she’s very confident, and with good reason–she’s done some really interesting things in her life–the book covers her student days at the Sorbonne, her early years as a foreign correspondent for ABC news, some the discrimination she encountered at ABC (it was the 70’s after all), her marriage to Peter Jennings, their divorce and her subsequent remarriage to Richard Holbrooke, one of the greatest diplomats of our time. And then, of course, his untimely death and her reaction to it. Somehow in the middle of all that, she wrote several well-received nonfiction books. If you enjoy reading about intelligent, confident and accomplished women, you will probably enjoy the book. I did, and it’s on the NY Times bestseller list, so others must have as well. I think the bad reviews on here represent a very vocal minority.

Reviewer: Ellyn Taylor
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A good, enjoyable, easy read
Review: This was an easy book to read. Like many others commenting here, I finished it in two days –two very enjoyable days, I might add. But the book is not finished with me; despite all the criticisms in the preceding reviews, I find myself continuing to think about many aspects of this book, which I believe is full of useful insights and life-lessons.Imagine trying to write a book about your unusually exciting life when that life involves two now-deceased famous, high-powered men, your sister, your grown children, your parents and your lovers, among other people, living and dead, whose concerns for their own privacy you wish to honor.While many reviews here are critical of what they refer to as a general superficiality when it comes to the nitty-gritty of many of Kati’s relationships, I developed a growing admiration for a woman who, in fact, cared more about the privacy of so many people in her life than she did about her book’s ultimate success. Far from being self-centered, Kati shows herself to be a most considerate and loving author–a rarity in the highly competitive book world. (Read the Acknowledgments: “I could not have gotten through the year following Richard’s death, nor written this book, without my children’s… loving support. It was essntial for me that they read and approve of this work, as they, and their father, are part of the narrative.”) So much for egotism.Now for the book itself: Aside from being a great romp through (and reminder of) good Parisian restaurants, neighborhoods, streets and inns [I made lists], sights, sounds and smells, as well as through a more adult understanding of some literary giants, it is chock full of very interesting stuff because it is true, and therefore overflowing with the immediacy of history.The Hungarian Revolution? After reading this I looked it up on Wikipedia to refresh my memory and to try to place Kati’s experience and that of her parents in accurate historical context. The secret they kept from her all those years really brings the history of that period home with a vengeance.There is also great truth about the way life can completely fall apart in an unexpected instant, causing one’s whole world to come crashing down. Some reviewers here commented on the lack of mention of personal friends. This is not true, in a careful read, although their privacy is also clearly being protected in some cases. What also appears to come through, as the reader enjoys glimpses into Waldorf Astoria dinner parties hosting the likes of the Clintons, Carolyn Kennedy, and assorted movie stars, is the wayso many of these folks seem to be around when famous husbands are around, but also seem to melt away (not all of them, apparently) when life and lifestyle change.We also get a glimpse into the personality of a vulnerable young woman so in love that she cannot stop trying to make better something that will never be better, regardless of whether she works at all, or works at home, or gives up work entirely. The part in which she travels 7 hours through a dangerous snowstorm just to be with Jennings, only to have him cold-shoulder her all weekend because she had dinner with the men who drove her [at least, that’s her version], before rushing home to him, is very illuminating, as is the part where she crosses dangerous borders just to surprise and be with him. . .and finds herself unable to return the way she came, whether by car, plane or camel.What’s it like to be a TV reporter, ready at a moment’s notice to pack up and go–as quickly as possible– to any part of the world where the latest news is happening? Some people, like Kati, appear to have thrived on it. I think this memoir paints a picture of that lifestyle quite clearly.I plan to read Kati’s other books after having read this one.

Reviewer: Mr. G. J. Fisher
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: A love story to her brilliant diplomat husband, Richard Holbrooke, but most of all a love story to Paris. Her love of this most romantic of city is overwhelming and if you have never visited, will tempt you sorely. May i say, i visited Paris on many occasions and it never failed. There are more beautiful cities in the world, there are many which might even look more romantic, but Paris is still unique. Marton writes well, and you will also fall in love with her reading the book.

Reviewer: Barbara Wadman
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: It was beyond my wildest expectations! It was so full of incredible emotion, as well as starling and amazing pieces of history and the people taking direct part in all of it, that I was nearly overcome with delight at the whole book. I never wanted it to end.I would recommend it to anyone interested in history of the 20th Century as well as all people who delight in fabulous love stories.

Reviewer: Francine
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: I’m a complete sucker for autobiographies. This was well written. I wish it could have been longer.

Reviewer: dude62
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This was a book club read for me. It was readable, but a self-indulgent take on Paris and the life of the author Kati Marton who married two of American’s most influential men. If it’s a love story in France you’re after though, I’d recommend Weak at the Knees as a far more enjoyable story.

Reviewer: Lindy
Rating: 2.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Didn’t get very far with this biography.

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