Houseboat on the Seine

A Memoir

Biography & Memoir
Cover of the book Houseboat on the Seine by William Wharton, Harper Paperbacks
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: William Wharton ISBN: 9780062278357
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks Publication: February 26, 2013
Imprint: Harper Paperbacks Language: English
Author: William Wharton
ISBN: 9780062278357
Publisher: Harper Paperbacks
Publication: February 26, 2013
Imprint: Harper Paperbacks
Language: English

The title brings to mind a luxury vessel on the most glamorous river in the world, but readers expecting to learn about the high life in France will be in for a surprise. In this charming memoir, painter and novelist Wharton (Birdy) instead gives us literally the nuts and bolts of building a houseboat, along with generous dollops of humor and local color. As a struggling artist in Paris with his schoolteacher wife and four children, Wharton decided to build his own boat after visiting that of an acquaintance in the mid-1970s. He recounts the family's adventures in making their dream come true. They gave up their Paris flat and moved onto the boat, which docked 12 miles downriver from Paris at Le Port Marly. There they spent the next 25 years adding the finishing touches. The most poignant moment comes at the wedding of oldest child, Kate, aboard ship. The author reminds us that she, her husband and their two children were to perish in 1988 in an Oregon fire, a tragedy he recounted in Ever After. Some readers might have preferred learning more about life aboard the boat than about the details of building it, but this work will satisfy Wharton devotees and Francophiles alike.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

The title brings to mind a luxury vessel on the most glamorous river in the world, but readers expecting to learn about the high life in France will be in for a surprise. In this charming memoir, painter and novelist Wharton (Birdy) instead gives us literally the nuts and bolts of building a houseboat, along with generous dollops of humor and local color. As a struggling artist in Paris with his schoolteacher wife and four children, Wharton decided to build his own boat after visiting that of an acquaintance in the mid-1970s. He recounts the family's adventures in making their dream come true. They gave up their Paris flat and moved onto the boat, which docked 12 miles downriver from Paris at Le Port Marly. There they spent the next 25 years adding the finishing touches. The most poignant moment comes at the wedding of oldest child, Kate, aboard ship. The author reminds us that she, her husband and their two children were to perish in 1988 in an Oregon fire, a tragedy he recounted in Ever After. Some readers might have preferred learning more about life aboard the boat than about the details of building it, but this work will satisfy Wharton devotees and Francophiles alike.

More books from Harper Paperbacks

Cover of the book The Digital Mom Handbook by William Wharton
Cover of the book The Hollow Man by William Wharton
Cover of the book The House of Fame by William Wharton
Cover of the book First Women by William Wharton
Cover of the book Feeling at Home by William Wharton
Cover of the book Half of What You Hear by William Wharton
Cover of the book What She Saw by William Wharton
Cover of the book 300 Days of Sun by William Wharton
Cover of the book The Ninth Wife by William Wharton
Cover of the book Don't Call Me Princess by William Wharton
Cover of the book Unlatched by William Wharton
Cover of the book Peace, Love and Healing by William Wharton
Cover of the book Antiquity by William Wharton
Cover of the book Too Close by William Wharton
Cover of the book Zodiac Station by William Wharton
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy