When I signed up for the Books on France challenge, I figured I’d manage the “un peu” level of three books before our trip in late May. But, I kept reading and reading. Some books were accidental picks for the challenge — novels I picked up for other reasons that turned out to be set in France. There were books I wanted to read before we went and books that I discovered I wanted to read while we were there. By the middle of the summer, I was on a roll, so I just kept going. In the end, I read 19 Books on France, six times my original goal plus one!

- Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
- Scarlet by Marissa Meyer
- French Women Don’t Get Fat by Mireille Guiliano
- The Gospel According to Coco Chanel by Karen Karbo
- Paris by Edward Rutherfurd
- Paris, My Sweet by Amy Thomas
- The Serpent and the Moon by Princess Michael of Kent.
- DK Eyewitness Travel: Paris
- Zarafa by Michael Allin
- Death in the City of Light by David King
- The Whole Fromage by Kathe Lison
- Julia Child Rules by Karen Karbo
- French Milk by Lucy Knisley
- Rose Under Fire by Elizabeth Wein
- The Perfume Collector by Kathleen Tessaro
- Brave Genius by Sean B. Carroll
- A Paris Notebook by C.W. Gusewelle
- Provence, 1970 by Luke Barr
- Minette’s Feast by Susanna Reich
Am I done? Who knows? I’m kind of addicted now. But my travel dreams for 2014 are to England, not France. We haven’t made plans, yet, but maybe in the fall. So, I suspect my focus will move across the Channel in 2014. Do you have books to recommend on England similar to the ones I read about France? Memoirs of expats, like Paris, My Sweet? Delightful novels that happen to be set there, like Scarlet? Intriguing histories, like Zarafa?

