Inspiration, Travel

A Remarkable Tourist Attraction in Paris

Paris cemetery, scultpture, memorial to Holocaust
Père Lachaise Cemetery Memorial photo by C. Sunderman

I woke to thoughts of France, perhaps because it’s Bastille Day. I miss long walks through Paris.

Twelve years ago I made a promise to myself that someday I’d stay in Paris for a month so I could enjoy my time instead of rushing through seven or nine days as I had twice before. Close to three years ago I spent a month in France with my friend Amada.

This might sound morbid, but this morning I pictured walking through Pere Lachaise Cemetery which was close by to the apartment we rented. Over two million people have visited this site, so I guess we weren’t so morbid after all.

This two-century-old cemetery is a remarkable place to visit. We spent several hours in this burial place where the famous, infamous, and ordinary people lay.

flickr photo of Pere Lachaise Cemetery
Flickr photo of Pere Lachaise Cemetery

Shady chestnut trees lined the lengthy winding cobbled promenades where the dead lay buried. A scenic walk through the hilly cemetery seemed an unlikely attraction, but we wanted to visit the tombs of writers, composers, singers and holocaust victims.

There are so many twists and turns in this place that a map is necessary to find the over 100 notables buried over the 110 acres.

The works of art in this city of the dead surprised me. The magnificence of stone and granite buildings mesmerized. Marble columns, mosaic tiles, and stained glass windows decorated tiny mini-chapels over tombs.

Some of the tombs appeared new as they were so well taken care of by family, estates or fans. Other tombs were in decay, blackened with soot and overrun with ivy. Jim Morrison’s gravesite was unexpectedly plain but enlivened by souvenirs, flowers, melted candles and tons of graffiti on the adjoining cement slabs.

During the walk towards the top of Pere Lachaise, I almost forgot I was in a cemetery as there are thousands of trees, plants, and hundred’s of scultpures. A black cat darted across gravesites while ravens circled treetops.

The view from the top of the hill is well worth the climb.

Eiffel Tower, Pere Lachaise cemetery, Paris
View of Eiffel Tower from Père Lachaise Cemetery

 

I think Paris is calling. Again.

 

 

 

 

Inspiration, Writing

Ten Writers Who Were Coffee Fanatics

writer's tools, notebook, laptop, coffee
Morning Ritual-www.alvaradofrazier.com

Coffee and writing go hand in hand like dark chocolate and Cabernet—at least for me.

If I’m lucky, my son makes a pot of coffee before I get up in the morning. I’m lucky one out of ten times.

I start my morning with two big mugs of coffee which is four regular cups. This stimulates my creativity and motivation (or maybe I just get hyper) but the java gets me through a couple or three hours of writing and reading.

So, it didn’t surprise me that many famous writers are also coffee lovers.

Louisa May Alcott said,

I’d rather take coffee than compliments just now.

Albert Camus contemplated,

Should I kill myself, or have a cup of coffee?

Voltaire had a reputation as a coffee lover by allegedly drinking 40 cups of coffee a day mixed with chocolate (fanatic). Voltaire said about coffee,

“Nothing would be more tiresome than eating and drinking if God had not made them a pleasure as well as a necessity.”

Not to be beaten by Voltaire, Honore de Balzac drank up to 50 cups of coffee a day—fanatic:

Coffee is your ally and writing ceases to be a struggle.

T.S. Eliot quote, coffee lover
T.S. Eliot quote on coffee-www.alvaradofrazier.com

 

Abigal Reynolds, who writes Jane Austen inspired novels, wrote:

I like my coffee with cream and my literature with optimism.

Here’s a writer who needs his coffee:

That’s something that annoys the hell out of me—I mean if somebody says the coffee’s all ready and it isn’t. J.D. Salinger

If you’re an American in England take a pound of coffee with you. According to Christopher Fry:

“Coffee in England is just toasted milk.”

Now here’s an author, Joseph Finder, who’s suspicious of those writers who don’t drink coffee:

I don’t get people who don’t like coffee and I distrust writers who don’t drink it.

And lastly, my favorite quote:

Gertrude Stein quote, coffee
The wonders of coffee-Gertrude Stein quote

 

Now it’s time for my second mug of coffee. Have a joyful week.