Belle Époque
The Belle Époque was France’s golden age, an era of glamour and reinvention. This collection captures its energy through City of Light, City of Shadows, Gabriele, and In Montmartre. Discover artists like Monet in The Restless Vision and iconic figures in The Man in the Red Coat. These books explore the cafés and salons that shaped modern Paris. Perfect for readers drawn to art, history and the spirit of a dazzling era.

City of Light, City of Shadows - Mike Rapport
From the wrought ironwork of the Eiffel Tower to the flourishing art nouveau movement, the Belle Époque is remembered as a golden age for Parisian culture. Beneath the veneer of elegance, however, fin de siècle Paris was a city at war with itself. In City of Light, City of Shadows, Mike Rapport uncovers a Paris riven by social anxieties and plagued by overlapping epidemics of poverty, political extremism, and anti-Semitism. Weaving together these stories of splendour and suffering with the fabric of the city itself, the book offers a brilliant account of Paris's Belle Époque - revealing the darkness that suffused the City of Light.

Gabriële - Anne Berest, Claire Berest
The year is 1908, the height of the Belle Epoque, and a brilliant, young French woman named Gabriële, newly graduated from the most elite music school in Europe, meets a volcanic Spanish artist named Francis. Following a whirlwind romance, they marry and fall headlong into a Paris that is experimenting with new forms of living, thinking, and creating. Soon after marrying Francis, Gabriële meets Marcel, another young artist, five years her junior. Soon, Francis, Marcel, and Gabriële are all three involved in a fervent affair that will change the course of art history and redefine the avant-garde. Francis Picabia, Marcel Duchamp, and Gabriele Buffet - the protagonists of this brilliantly imagined “true novel” - are vividly reimagined by the Berests.

Monet - Jackie Wullschlager
In the course of a long and exceptionally creative life, Claude Monet revolutionised painting and made some of the most iconic images in western art. Misunderstood and mocked at the beginning of his career, he risked everything to pursue his original vision. Jackie Wullschläger's enthralling biography, based on thousands of never-before translated letters and unpublished sources, is the first account of Monet's turbulent private life and how it determined his expressive, sensuous, sensational painting.

In Montmartre - Sue Roe
The real revolution in the arts first took place not, as is commonly supposed, in the 1920s to the accompaniment of the Charleston, black jazz and mint juleps, but more quietly and intimately, in the shadow of the windmills - artificial and real - and in the cafés and cabarets of Montmartre during the first decade of the century. The cross-fertilisation of painting, writing, music and dance produced a panorama of activity characterised by the early works of Picasso, Braque, Matisse, Derain, Vlaminck and Modigliani, the appearance of the Ballet Russe and the salons of Gertrude Stein. In Montmartre is the fascinating story of the birth of Modernism in Paris.

The Man in the Red Coat - Julian Barnes
In the summer of 1885, three Frenchmen arrived in London for a few days' shopping. One was a Prince, one was a Count, and the third was a commoner, who four years earlier had been the subject of one of John Singer Sargent's greatest portraits. The commoner was Samuel Pozzi, society doctor, pioneer gynaecologist and free-thinker - a scientific man with a famously complicated private life. Pozzi's life played out against the backdrop of the Parisian Belle Epoque. The beautiful age of glamour and pleasure more often showed its ugly side: hysterical, narcissistic, decadent and violent, with more parallels to our own age than we might imagine.