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Flirting with French - by William Alexander (Paperback)

Flirting with French - by  William Alexander (Paperback)
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Last Price: 10.29 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p><b>"A delightful and courageous tale and a romping good read. <i>Voila!</i>" --Mark Greenside, author of <i>I'll Never Be French (No Matter What I Do)</i></b> <p/> William Alexander is more than a Francophile. He wants to <i>be</i> French. There's one small obstacle though: he doesn't speak <i>la langue française.</i> In <i>Flirting with French, </i>Alexander sets out to conquer the language he loves. But will it love him back? <p/> Alexander eats, breathes, and sleeps French (even conjugating in his dreams). He travels to France, where mistranslations send him bicycling off in all sorts of wrong directions, and he nearly drowns in an immersion class in Provence, where, faced with the riddle of masculine breasts, feminine beards, and a turkey cutlet of uncertain gender, he starts to wonder whether he should've taken up golf instead of French. While playing hooky from grammar lessons and memory techniques, Alexander reports on the riotous workings of the Académie française, the four-hundred-year-old institution charged with keeping the language pure; explores the science of human communication, learning why it's harder for fifty-year-olds to learn a second language than it is for five-year-olds; and, frustrated with his progress, explores an IBM research lab, where he trades barbs with a futuristic hand-held translator. <p/> Does he succeed in becoming fluent? Readers will be as surprised as Alexander is to discover that, in a fascinating twist, studying French may have had a far greater impact on his life than actually learning to speak it ever would. <p/> "A blend of passion and neuroscience, this literary love affair offers surprise insights into the human brain and the benefits of learning a second language. Reading William Alexander's book is akin to having an MRI of the soul." --Laura Shaine Cunningham, author of <i>Sleeping Arrangements</i> <p/> "Alexander proves that learning a new language is an adventure of its own--with all the unexpected obstacles, surprising breakthroughs and moments of sublime pleasure traveling brings." --Julie Barlow, author of <i>Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong </i></p><p/><br></br><p><b> From the Back Cover </b></p></br></br><b>"A delightful and courageous tale and a romping good read. <i>Voila!</i>" --Mark Greenside, author of <i>I'll Never Be French (No Matter What I Do)</i></b> <p/> William Alexander is setting out to master the Art of French Speaking. In this entertaining amble through the French language and its colorful history, through linguistics and brain science, what Alexander discovers while <i>not</i> learning French is its own reward. <p/> "A blend of passion and neuroscience, this literary love affair offers surprising insights into the human brain and the benefits of learning a second language. Reading William Alexander's book is akin to having an MRI of the soul." --Laura Shaine Cunningham, author of <i>Sleeping Arrangements</i> <p/> "Reading <i>Flirting with French </i>motivates me to continue courting the language, no matter how often I'm stood up midsentence!" --Kristen Espinasse, author of <i>Words in a French Life</i> <p/> "Alexander proves that learning a new language is an adventure of its own--with all the unexpected obstacles, surprising breakthroughs, and moments of sublime pleasure that traveling brings." --Julie Barlow, author of <i>Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong</i> <p/> "Wry and warmhearted . . . A charming memoir by a passionate Francophile." --<i>Kirkus Reviews</i><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>"[Alexander] deals with a lot of pangs, yearnings and fears that readers, especially those around his age--57 when he set out to learn French--can identify with . . . The appeal of <i>Flirting with French</i> is not in the breathless descriptions of Paris or the bad puns in the chapter titles, but in the author's amiable dunderheadedness as he delves into the culture, with all its confounding contradictions." --<i><b>The New York Times Book Review</b></i> <p/> "While language learners are a natural audience for this book, there is no prerequisite. Anybody who liked Alexander's previous books or just likes to see an underdog try to beat the odds will enjoy this voyageur's latest adventure." --<i><b>Minneapolis Star Tribune</b></i> <p/> "Alexander presents himself as an apprentice, but the reader quickly discovers he is also a master teacher . . . Alexander even manages a highly readable gloss of Noam Chomsky's linguistic theory, a feat of intellectual distillation akin to 'Jacques Derrida for Dummies.'" --<i><b>The Wall Street Journal </b></i> <p/> "One of America's funniest writers . . . Très, très bien!" --<i><b>Counterpunch </b></i> <p/> "A charming memoir by a passionate Francophile . . . Alexander's love affair with French, he concludes in this wry and warmhearted memoir, has reaped unexpected rewards." --<i><b>Kirkus Reviews</b></i> <p/> "<i>Flirting with French</i> is hilarious and touching, all the way to the surprise ending. In this 'travelogue' about learning French, William Alexander proves that learning a new language is an adventure of its own--with all the unexpected obstacles, surprising breakthroughs and moments of sublime pleasure traveling brings." --<b>Julie Barlow, author of <i>Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong</i></b> <p/> "<i>Flirting with French</i> is far more than a fling; it's a deep love affair. A blend of passion and neuroscience, this literary love affair offers surprise insights into the human brain and the benefits of learning a second language. Reading William Alexander's book is akin to having an MRI of the soul. A surprise delight that will ignite desire in every reader." --<b>Laura Shaine Cunningham, author of <i>Sleeping Arrangements</i></b></p>-- "Review quotes"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p>William Alexander, the author of two critically acclaimed books, lives in New York's Hudson Valley. By day the IT director at a research institute, he made his professional writing debut at the age of fifty-three with a national bestseller about gardening, <i>The $64 Tomato.</i> His second book, <i>52 Loaves, </i> chronicled his quest to bake the perfect loaf of bread, a journey that took him to such far-flung places as a communal oven in Morocco and an abbey in France, as well as into his own backyard to grow, thresh, and winnow wheat. The <i>Boston Globe</i> called Alexander "wildly entertaining," the <i>New York Times</i> raved that "his timing and his delivery are flawless," and the <i>Minneapolis Star Tribune</i> observed that "the world would be a less interesting place without the William Alexanders who walk among us." A 2006 Quill Book Awards finalist, Alexander won a Bert Greene Award from the IACP for his article on bread, published in <i>Saveur</i> magazine. A passion bordering on obsession unifies all his writing. He has appeared on NPR's <i>Morning Edition</i> and at the National Book Festival in Washington DC and is a frequent contributor to the<i> New York Times</i> op-ed pages, where he has opined on such issues as the Christmas tree threatening to ignite his living room and the difficulties of being organic. Now, in <i>Flirting with French, </i> he turns his considerable writing talents to his perhaps less considerable skills: becoming fluent in the beautiful but maddeningly illogical French language. <br /><br /><br /></p>

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