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Shakespeare and Company by Sylvia Beach
Shakespeare and Company by Sylvia Beach













Shakespeare and Company by Sylvia Beach

Intending to study French literature, one day she discovered Adrienne Monnier’s bookshop, Maison des Amis des Livres, on rue de l’Odeon. Sylvia Beach moved to Paris in 1916 after duty as a Red Cross nurse during WWI. She died in her beloved Paris in 1962 at the age of 75 Eliot, Ezra Pound, Gertrude Stein, and Samuel Beckett. In 1956 she wrote a memoir of the store with wonderful descriptions of the cultural and literary life of Paris filled with first-hand reminisces about such giants as Ernest Hemingway, D.H. Beach was interned for 6 months during the war, hiding her books in the vacant apartment upstairs. Shakespeare and Company remained open after Paris fell to the Nazis, but was soon forced to close. Beach was an integral part of the American expatriate scene in Paris during the interwar period and the store survived the Great Depression thanks to the generosity of several wealthy patrons. and England, she found a French typesetter who could not read English. When the book’s explicit sexual passages prompted censorship concerns in the U.S. Beach and her bookshop became famous in 1922 when she published James Joyce’s groundbreaking novel Ulysses. The two women became lovers, living together for 36 years until Adrienne’s suicide in 1955. Her business flourished, requiring more room so she moved her English language bookstore across the street from Monnier’s French one. However, given the exchange rate starting a business in Paris proved more feasible, so she opened Shakespeare and Company, the first English lending library and bookstore in France. Charmed by the store and the woman, Beach dreamt of one day opening a shop like it in New York.

Shakespeare and Company by Sylvia Beach

“Fitting people with books is about as difficult as fitting them with shoes.”















Shakespeare and Company by Sylvia Beach