In 1951, George Whitman opened a bookshop-commune in Paris. George, 92, still runs his "den of anarchists disguised as a bookstore," offering free, dirty beds to poor literati, cutting his hair with a candle and gluing the carpet with pancake batter. More than 40,000 poets, travelers and political activists have stayed at Shakespeare and Company, writing or stealing books, throwing parties and making soup or love while living with George's generosity and fits of anger. Illustrious guests include Henry Miller, Anaïs Nin, Jacques Prévert, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs, Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, James Baldwin and Richard Wright. Welcome to the makeshift utopia of the last member of the Beat Generation.
RIP
newhigh2008 1 month ago
and yes, he was a skinflint Yankee New Englander. (to make real new england clam chowder you tie a string around a clam and dunk it in hot water a few times).
arcataberry 2 years ago
well, he was always nice to me and allowed me the great privilege of sleeping on one of the lumpy beds many decades ago. there's no place like S & Co. in the world.
arcataberry 2 years ago 2