« London Belongs to Me (again) - part three | Main | Breathing spaces »
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Bella Bathurst: Sound: Stories of Hearing Lost and Found (*****)
Patti Smith: Woolgathering (*****)
Helen Dunmore: Birdcage Walk (****)
Philippe Sands: East West Street (*****)
Julian Barnes: Levels of Life (*****)
Mary Hocking: Welcome Strangers (*****)
Mary Hocking: Indifferent Heroes (*****)
Mary Hocking: Good Daughters (*****)
Cathy Rentzenbrink: The Last Act of Love: The Story of My Brother and His Sister (****)
Brian Sewell: Sleeping with Dogs: A Peripheral Autobiography (****)
Martin Doerry: My Wounded Heart. The Life of Lilli Jahn 1900-1944 (*****)
Rachel Cooke: Her Brilliant Career: Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties (*****)
Lauren Liebenberg: The Voluptuous Delights Of Peanut Butter And Jam (****)
Bruce Springsteen: Born to Run (*****)
Edward Stourton: Diary of a Dog-walker: Time spent following a lead (****)
Nik Cohn: Yes We Have No: Adventures in Other England (****)
Alice Ozma: The Reading Promise: 3,218 nights of reading with my father (****)
Sara Wheeler: Travels in a thin country: Journey Through Chile (****)
Christina Lamb: House of Stone: The True Story of a Family Divided in War-Torn Zimbabwe (*****)
Kate Adie: Nobody's Child (****)
Keggie Carew: Dadland: A Journey into Uncharted Territory (*****)
Daniel Klein: Travels with Epicurus: Meditations from a Greek Island on the Pleasures of Old Age (****)
Ben Judah: This is London: Life and Death in the World City (****)
Maggie Gee: My Animal Life (****)
Richard Ford: Independence Day (*****)
Richard Ford: The Sportswriter (*****)
Julian Barnes: Arthur & George (*****)
Lloyd Jones: Mister Pip (*****)
Andrew O'Hagan: Our Fathers (****)
John McGahern: Memoir (*****)
Ayaan Hirsi Ali: Infidel (****)
Joan Bakewell: Stop the Clocks: Thoughts on What I Leave Behind (****)
Elizabeth Jane Howard: Marking Time (Cazalet Chronicles) (****)
Hanya Yanagihara: A Little Life (*****)
Rose Elliot: I Met a Monk (*****)
Pete Hamill: Why Sinatra Matters (*****)
Don McCullin: In England (*****)
J M Coetzee: Disgrace (****)
Kate Gross: Late Fragments: Everything I Want to Tell You (About This Magnificent Life) (*****)
Jean Lucey Pratt: A Notable Woman: The Romantic Journals of Jean Lucey Pratt (*****)
Don McCullin: Unreasonable Behaviour: The Updated Autobiography' (*****)
Patti Smith: M Train (*****)
Jane Smiley: Golden Age (Last Hundred Years Trilogy) (*****)
Julia Blackburn: Thin Paths: Journeys in and around an Italian Mountain Village (*****)
Jane Smiley: Early Warning (Last Hundred Years Trilogy) (*****)
Maureen Waller: London 1945: Life in the Debris of War (*****)
Esther Freud: Mr Mac and Me (*****)
Ceridwen Dovey: Only the Animals (*****)
Judith Flanders: The Victorian City: Everyday Life in Dickens' London (*****)
Liz Smith: Our Betty (***)
Lori Lansens: The Girls (****)
Andrew O'Hagan: Personality (****)
Roma Tearne: Brixton Beach (****)
Helen Walmsley-Johnson: The Invisible Woman: Taking on the Vintage Years (****)
Colin Thubron: In Siberia (*****)
Philip Marsden: Rising Ground: A Search for the Spirit of Place (*****)
Hilary Mantel: Wolf Hall (*****)
Anissa Helou: Levant: Recipes and memories from the Middle East (*****)
Ian McEwan: The Children Act (****)
Wallace Stegner: Angle of Repose (*****)
Tahir Shah: In Arabian Nights (*****)
Valerie Martin: Property (****)
Henry Marsh: Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery (****)
Richard Ford: Canada (****)
Judith Flanders: The Making of Home: The 500-year story of how our houses became homes (*****)
Jane Shemilt: Daughter (***)
Kitty Aldridge: Cryers Hill (****)
Your photos show small shops facing the street, with residences upstairs. This model, also greatly evident in Paris, is something Americans never figured out.
Instead, we generally prefer to segregate our living space from our working space. The result is soulless urban areas that are deserted after working hours, and cookie cutter residences that are deserted during the workdays.
I particularly love your reference to "retail therapy". I intend to appropriate your term the next time I need new shoes.
Posted by: Weeping Sore | 20 September 2009 at 08:09 PM
Oh, I love those elegant old arcades and shop fronts, too! I always find myself wondering about the lives of those people who first opened a shop there.
And that cheese shop definitely looks worth a visit!
Posted by: Jay | 20 September 2009 at 10:50 PM
As someone who has only been able to dip in and out over the years, I'm learning so much about London from this series of posts. But I am familiar with these two shops and that perfume (which was worn by some character in a novel I read many years ago and I just had to seek out. As you do).
Posted by: Liz | 21 September 2009 at 09:18 AM