Condé Nast Traveler

Condé Nast Traveler

13 Books That Will Transport You to France

Posted: January 5, 2024 | Last updated: January 5, 2024

<p>It's a truth universally acknowledged: Books can do wonders to frame and shape your adventures abroad. Delicious food writing might inspire a culinary course through <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/best-restaurants-in-mexico-city?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Mexico City</a>, or an exciting detective-noir might let you look at <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/best-things-to-do-in-new-york?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">New York</a> in a new light. But what about <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/galleries/2016-03-16/the-most-beautiful-places-in-france?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">France</a>, about whom so many songs have been sung, and plenty of poems penned? <em>Bien sûr, beaucoup de littérature signifie beaucoup de possibilités.</em> With that in mind, here are 12 France-related books that might inspire your next trip to the country, or simply shed light on its culture and people—a neat little reading list for <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/french-gift-ideas?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">someone who’s always dreaming about France</a> (or that annoying friend who slips French into casual conversation).</p> <p>While this reading list does skew so decadently French—<a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/in-paris-mastering-the-art-of-french-cooking-with-my-2-year-old-daughter?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">butter and wine</a> and <em>oui oui baguettes</em> ahead, naturally—that they’ll move you to book an <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/air-france-new-business-class-review?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Air France</a> ticket as soon as possible, a fair chunk of these are also just fabulous translations of French literary tradition more broadly, and illuminate how (a few, not all) French writers understand themselves and their country. And for the American francophile, there are books by <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/in-paris-apartment-swapping-allows-me-to-live-a-second-life?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">expats</a> and others who have immigrated to France—a field so wide and storied that it may as well be a genre in and of itself: Literary minds like Baldwin and Hemingway, food queens Julia Child and M.F.K. Fisher, and brilliant folks of today like Lauren Collins and Sutanya Dacres. <em>Allons-y</em>, and happy reading.</p> <p><em>All products featured on</em> Condé Nast Traveler <em>are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.</em></p><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

It's a truth universally acknowledged: Books can do wonders to frame and shape your adventures abroad. Delicious food writing might inspire a culinary course through Mexico City , or an exciting detective-noir might let you look at New York in a new light. But what about France , about whom so many songs have been sung, and plenty of poems penned? Bien sûr, beaucoup de littérature signifie beaucoup de possibilités. With that in mind, here are 12 France-related books that might inspire your next trip to the country, or simply shed light on its culture and people—a neat little reading list for someone who’s always dreaming about France (or that annoying friend who slips French into casual conversation).

While this reading list does skew so decadently French— butter and wine and oui oui baguettes ahead, naturally—that they’ll move you to book an Air France ticket as soon as possible, a fair chunk of these are also just fabulous translations of French literary tradition more broadly, and illuminate how (a few, not all) French writers understand themselves and their country. And for the American francophile, there are books by expats and others who have immigrated to France—a field so wide and storied that it may as well be a genre in and of itself: Literary minds like Baldwin and Hemingway, food queens Julia Child and M.F.K. Fisher, and brilliant folks of today like Lauren Collins and Sutanya Dacres. Allons-y , and happy reading.

All products featured on Condé Nast Traveler are independently selected by our editors. If you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

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<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> This gripping novel opens with a double murder of two children (not a spoiler, it’s literally on the first page) before going into the backstory of their bourgeois Parisian family as well as their nanny, who is under financial and mental duress. The book is less of a <em>whodunit</em> (the <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2018/01/01/the-killer-nanny-novel-that-conquered-france?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">source material</a> and the <a href="https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/561318/the-perfect-nanny-by-leila-slimani-translated-by-sam-taylor/9780143132172/">marketing copy</a> give obvious clues) than a <em>whydunit</em>, and author Leïla Slimani’s slick storytelling turns this bread-and-butter thriller premise into a deeply intelligent excavation of fraught themes like class, sexism, motherhood, and moral goodness. It was the most read book in France in 2016—that year, it sold 600,000 copies and won the prestigious Prix Goncourt—so, honestly, to read it is to participate in French culture. The text is efficient and propulsive (in both Sam Taylor’s English translation and Slimani’s original French), featuring sentences that will hold you in suspense until the very last page.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re already strapped into your seat on the plane because if you read this before boarding, you may become so enthralled that you miss your flight to Paris.</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “The baby is dead. It took only a few seconds. The doctor said he didn’t suffer. The broken body, surrounded by toys, was put inside a gray bag, which they zipped shut.”</p> $5, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Perfect-Nanny-Novel-Leila-Slimani/dp/0143132172/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

The Perfect Nanny, by Leïla Slimani translated by Sam Taylor

What it’s about: This gripping novel opens with a double murder of two children (not a spoiler, it’s literally on the first page) before going into the backstory of their bourgeois Parisian family as well as their nanny, who is under financial and mental duress. The book is less of a whodunit (the source material and the marketing copy give obvious clues) than a whydunit , and author Leïla Slimani’s slick storytelling turns this bread-and-butter thriller premise into a deeply intelligent excavation of fraught themes like class, sexism, motherhood, and moral goodness. It was the most read book in France in 2016—that year, it sold 600,000 copies and won the prestigious Prix Goncourt—so, honestly, to read it is to participate in French culture. The text is efficient and propulsive (in both Sam Taylor’s English translation and Slimani’s original French), featuring sentences that will hold you in suspense until the very last page.

You should read this when: You’re already strapped into your seat on the plane because if you read this before boarding, you may become so enthralled that you miss your flight to Paris.

The book’s opening lines: “The baby is dead. It took only a few seconds. The doctor said he didn’t suffer. The broken body, surrounded by toys, was put inside a gray bag, which they zipped shut.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> This short novel first published in 2017 as <em>Arrête avec tes mensonges</em> (literally, “stop with your lies”) was published as <em>Lie With Me</em> in the United States in 2017, where it was called “<a href="https://www.vulture.com/2019/05/lie-with-me-by-philippe-besson-metafiction-about-teen-love.html">this year’s <em>Call Me By Your Name</em></a><em>.</em>” The comparison is to be expected: Both books feature a romance between two young men in rural Western European settings in a bygone pre-AIDS era, narrated by a cerebral adult narrator trafficking in deep nostalgia and contemplating the impact of first love. Though the premise is familiar, Philippe Besson’s language is graceful (made a joy to read in English by the talented Molly Ringwald—yes, that Molly Ringwald) and his narration is inventive. In the text, his metafictional moves involve and implicate the reader, while challenging the ways storytellers remember past events and past lives. As a reading experience, it all feels unique and—I’m not sure how else to say it—supremely French.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re on a TGV, as the French countryside speeds past outside your window, contemplating if you want to let your life similarly pass you by.</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “One day—I can say precisely when, I know the date—I find myself in the bar of a hotel lobby in a provincial city, sitting in an armchair across from a journalist, a low round table between us, being interviewed for my latest novel, which recently came out.”</p> $12, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Lie-Me-Novel-Philippe-Besson/dp/1501197886/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Lie With Me by Philippe Besson, translated by Molly Ringwald

What it’s about: This short novel first published in 2017 as Arrête avec tes mensonges (literally, “stop with your lies”) was published as Lie With Me in the United States in 2017, where it was called “ this year’s Call Me By Your Name . ” The comparison is to be expected: Both books feature a romance between two young men in rural Western European settings in a bygone pre-AIDS era, narrated by a cerebral adult narrator trafficking in deep nostalgia and contemplating the impact of first love. Though the premise is familiar, Philippe Besson’s language is graceful (made a joy to read in English by the talented Molly Ringwald—yes, that Molly Ringwald) and his narration is inventive. In the text, his metafictional moves involve and implicate the reader, while challenging the ways storytellers remember past events and past lives. As a reading experience, it all feels unique and—I’m not sure how else to say it—supremely French.

You should read this when: You’re on a TGV, as the French countryside speeds past outside your window, contemplating if you want to let your life similarly pass you by.

The book’s opening lines: “One day—I can say precisely when, I know the date—I find myself in the bar of a hotel lobby in a provincial city, sitting in an armchair across from a journalist, a low round table between us, being interviewed for my latest novel, which recently came out.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> Think of Americans writing in France, and you’re likely to come up with a handful of names, one of which would surely be Ernest Hemingway. His memoir <a href="https://cna.st/affiliate-link/2rQwPprcmtWkDUEFYu5P8ud6D5bn5WvWA2qFqXALGANy7W3pNXGcJefQTc1pJkzRWVqMf7vtZM43aTwFG8Xc9JwTyLkBiubDzaXgMxDpkNtvb3SeVNHsAVL6TwfkCcha3bWr7bShFNdRZLjbUGxKpD686ttF9K8STaTWJ9DVFsxsHAo7fwdmARHEeico7utj1" rel="sponsored"><em>A Moveable Feast</em></a>, about his time as a struggling American journalist living in Paris in the 1920s, is perhaps the most often-cited text from the expats-in-France genre, but that was not his only book set in the country. <em>The Garden of Eden</em> takes place primarily along the Côte d’Azur and follows a couple who fall in love with the same woman and experiment with gender roles, presentation, and identities. This novel is an uncompleted work of Hemingway’s, published in 1986 by his literary executors, 25 years after his death. Though it’s hard to say what he ultimately intended for the story, chopped and screwed as it is, the book offers an unexpected side of the author’s oeuvre, in addition to place-writing that’s somehow both lush and sparse, making it an all the more thrilling read.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re in between research sprints on where to eat, stay, and play in the French Riviera (though <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/best-hotels-in-the-french-riviera?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">we’ve done part of that</a> for you, at least).</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “They were living at Grau du Roi then and the hotel was on a canal that ran from the walled city of Aigues Mortes straight down to the sea.”</p> $7, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Garden-Eden-Val-M/dp/B0CF4FM15M/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

The Garden of Eden by Ernest Hemingway

What it’s about: Think of Americans writing in France, and you’re likely to come up with a handful of names, one of which would surely be Ernest Hemingway. His memoir A Moveable Feast , about his time as a struggling American journalist living in Paris in the 1920s, is perhaps the most often-cited text from the expats-in-France genre, but that was not his only book set in the country. The Garden of Eden takes place primarily along the Côte d’Azur and follows a couple who fall in love with the same woman and experiment with gender roles, presentation, and identities. This novel is an uncompleted work of Hemingway’s, published in 1986 by his literary executors, 25 years after his death. Though it’s hard to say what he ultimately intended for the story, chopped and screwed as it is, the book offers an unexpected side of the author’s oeuvre, in addition to place-writing that’s somehow both lush and sparse, making it an all the more thrilling read.

You should read this when: You’re in between research sprints on where to eat, stay, and play in the French Riviera (though we’ve done part of that for you, at least).

The book’s opening lines: “They were living at Grau du Roi then and the hotel was on a canal that ran from the walled city of Aigues Mortes straight down to the sea.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> Jump ahead a few decades to the 1950s, after Hemingway’s and Gertrude Stein’s Lost Generation of artists hit Paris, and you’ll run into James Baldwin on the streets of Saint-Germain-Des-Prés (for a while, he lived at the <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/hotels/france/paris/hotel-verneuil-paris?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Hôtel Verneuil</a>, among other auberges in the city). While in France, Baldwin wrote his memoir <a href="https://cna.st/affiliate-link/2h8zKZvUAqv9ZGdPBBMCgc3ucFhn3FFRsivSjhQfLfnnqsCfuwqYYNiF7vij4qJB933H6XeRdb866WWnbkd9ydwpqsi5MFAgZXJkZiC2Qf8HGAfjJH6jTvPZinHnSkfZqSzuwMiqKjhTtgyETH9SfYjDPSA9wqSs6HwLkX5wZPn7g5ov9V" rel="sponsored"><em>Notes of a Native Son</em></a>, part of which examines American culture and identity from an expatriate perspective. However, the influence of his life in France is most keenly evident in his novel <em>Giovanni’s Room</em>, which tells the story of David, an American man in Paris grappling with his intense romantic and sexual feelings for Giovanni, an Italian bartender. It’s an ultimately, tragic story, and an early exploration of queerness, social alienation, and masculinity—groundbreaking when it was published in 1956, and a classic masterpiece of English literature today.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re craving a moody escape to Paris that leaves you heartbroken and questioning your personal morals (you know, for a bit of light reading).</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “I stand at the window of this great house in the south of France as night falls, the night which is leading me to the most terrible morning of my life. I have a drink in my hand, there is a bottle at my elbow. … I may be drunk by morning but that will not do any good. I shall take the train to Paris anyway.”</p> $14, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Giovannis-Room-James-Baldwin/dp/0345806565/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Giovanni’s Room by James Baldwin

What it’s about: Jump ahead a few decades to the 1950s, after Hemingway’s and Gertrude Stein’s Lost Generation of artists hit Paris, and you’ll run into James Baldwin on the streets of Saint-Germain-Des-Prés (for a while, he lived at the Hôtel Verneuil , among other auberges in the city). While in France, Baldwin wrote his memoir Notes of a Native Son , part of which examines American culture and identity from an expatriate perspective. However, the influence of his life in France is most keenly evident in his novel Giovanni’s Room , which tells the story of David, an American man in Paris grappling with his intense romantic and sexual feelings for Giovanni, an Italian bartender. It’s an ultimately, tragic story, and an early exploration of queerness, social alienation, and masculinity—groundbreaking when it was published in 1956, and a classic masterpiece of English literature today.

You should read this when: You’re craving a moody escape to Paris that leaves you heartbroken and questioning your personal morals (you know, for a bit of light reading).

The book’s opening lines: “I stand at the window of this great house in the south of France as night falls, the night which is leading me to the most terrible morning of my life. I have a drink in my hand, there is a bottle at my elbow. … I may be drunk by morning but that will not do any good. I shall take the train to Paris anyway.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> For those just starting to learn more about <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/julia-child-in-paris?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Julia Child</a> (or if you’ve already devoured the HBO Max series <em>Julia</em> like everyone else), it’s a good idea to start from the very end. Child and her grandnephew Alex Prud’homme collaborated on this autobiography before she died in 2004, and it was published posthumously in 2006. The book is a treat for any fan of Child’s: It’s a comprehensive and authoritative look at her life, featuring some very lovely archival photographs, an extensive chronology of her rise to icon status, and a supremely detailed index cataloging every person, place, ingredient, recipe, topic, and event discussed in the book.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re beginning your very first foray into the world of Julia Child and need a primer on the woman, the myth, the legend.</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “At five-forty-five in the morning, Paul and I rousted ourselves from our warm bunk and peered out of the small porthole in our cabin aboard the SS <em>America</em>. Neither of us had slept very well that night, partially due to the weather and partially due to our rising excitement.”</p> $10, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/My-Life-France-Julia-Child/dp/0307277690/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

My Life in France, by Julia Child with Alex Prud’homme

What it’s about: For those just starting to learn more about Julia Child (or if you’ve already devoured the HBO Max series Julia like everyone else), it’s a good idea to start from the very end. Child and her grandnephew Alex Prud’homme collaborated on this autobiography before she died in 2004, and it was published posthumously in 2006. The book is a treat for any fan of Child’s: It’s a comprehensive and authoritative look at her life, featuring some very lovely archival photographs, an extensive chronology of her rise to icon status, and a supremely detailed index cataloging every person, place, ingredient, recipe, topic, and event discussed in the book.

You should read this when: You’re beginning your very first foray into the world of Julia Child and need a primer on the woman, the myth, the legend.

The book’s opening lines: “At five-forty-five in the morning, Paul and I rousted ourselves from our warm bunk and peered out of the small porthole in our cabin aboard the SS America . Neither of us had slept very well that night, partially due to the weather and partially due to our rising excitement.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> All that said, if you love everything Julia Child, you must also allow M.F.K. Fisher into your life. Mary Frances Kennedy was perhaps the best American food writer—and one of the best American writers, full stop—working in the 20th century (our “poet of the appetites,” according to John Updike), having written 27 books in her long career, including the definitive English translation of Brillat-Savarin’s <em>The Physiology of Taste</em>. In this memoir of her three years in <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/where-to-eat-stay-and-play-in-dijon-france?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Dijon</a>, Fisher recounts arriving in the capital of Burgundy in 1929 with her new husband Al and her early lessons in French culture, food, and wine, flexing her sharp and evocative prose across 176 tight pages. You’ll breeze through her writing so quickly that you’ll be glad you have over 20 more books of hers to add to your list: For more French flavors, follow up with <a href="https://cna.st/affiliate-link/29CLTwheRZNbkfg8W7wRjEcikT3bLevA9Bw6xNdDkTfMLriAV4iYQ3nFxoVyzBVxKU45wFGWrAhjbqmjQtcuj7njHHqknBaDabUumJUAzwiTwHYZCfEdmUCyGiPtG47hWpkMbcJe4uH9Qcmdzbi3KoJqV9kRP11YVgq8P6qxF1ALf1" rel="sponsored"><em>Map of Another Town</em></a>, Fisher’s memoir of her time in Provence after World War II; for a more food-forward account of the Dijon years, try <a href="https://cna.st/affiliate-link/29CLTwheRZNbkfg8W7wRjEcikT3bLevA9Bw6xNdDkTfMLriAV4iYQ3nFxoVyzBVxKU45wFGWrAhjbqmjMRfm3TRgPUyPQ4nNo1Q1h55rGrkA6jLBzSWSp6P7J92Nouv7pEMid5G5jXZgmFYYT8DzsB7uyQVAGor88wUjYeGGfjmVk3" rel="sponsored"><em>The Gastronomical Me</em></a>.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’ve already cooked your way through Child’s <a href="https://cna.st/affiliate-link/ZxssCo8SeuM637EkXmusDo9DkD2RfeT8dWFLj5KCKZNSysgvKqizA5q3Ey8DgmgHLrBERbg2J9GjmydH3LGGSW2W2hHoL2BqTvzFV3c5Q12CRitpZQH6cbSS7H6h8jvP73f47JXPngVNTx4ovQcfXjtj6pzwCZfRWThys2Lj7CiP4XD9rx8w" rel="sponsored"><em>Mastering the Art of French Cooking</em></a> and need a new reading or food-related project to satiate your appetites.</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “Someone shrieked harshly to come in. Madame Ollangnier darted from the kitchen, which lay just beyond the dining room, under the first rise of the staircase. She had on a filthy apron, and I could hear someone rattling pans and chopping and beating.”</p> $11, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Long-Ago-France-Years-DESTINATIONS/dp/0671755145/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Long Ago In France: The Years In Dijon by M.F.K. Fisher

What it’s about: All that said, if you love everything Julia Child, you must also allow M.F.K. Fisher into your life. Mary Frances Kennedy was perhaps the best American food writer—and one of the best American writers, full stop—working in the 20th century (our “poet of the appetites,” according to John Updike), having written 27 books in her long career, including the definitive English translation of Brillat-Savarin’s The Physiology of Taste . In this memoir of her three years in Dijon , Fisher recounts arriving in the capital of Burgundy in 1929 with her new husband Al and her early lessons in French culture, food, and wine, flexing her sharp and evocative prose across 176 tight pages. You’ll breeze through her writing so quickly that you’ll be glad you have over 20 more books of hers to add to your list: For more French flavors, follow up with Map of Another Town , Fisher’s memoir of her time in Provence after World War II; for a more food-forward account of the Dijon years, try The Gastronomical Me .

You should read this when: You’ve already cooked your way through Child’s Mastering the Art of French Cooking and need a new reading or food-related project to satiate your appetites.

The book’s opening lines: “Someone shrieked harshly to come in. Madame Ollangnier darted from the kitchen, which lay just beyond the dining room, under the first rise of the staircase. She had on a filthy apron, and I could hear someone rattling pans and chopping and beating.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> For a more contemporary American-moves-to-Paris story pick up <em>Dinner for One</em>, the debut memoir of Sutanya Dacres, the host of <a href="https://www.dinnerforonepodcast.com/">the eponymous podcast</a>. Reeling from the sudden expiration of her marriage to The Frenchman (“let’s call him TFM for short,” she says) for whom she moved to France, she cooks her way through healing and back to joy while rebuilding her life in her Montmartre apartment. These pages are filled with equal parts optimism and realism, hope and loss, American glee and Parisian bite. It’s an absolute must-read.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re one slightly-mean email away from snapping and absconding to France in a last-ditch effort to fall back in love with your life (and it just might work).</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “The day I reached my breaking point started out like so many others since my husband had left four months earlier—wake up, get ready, and leave my apartment as quickly as possible. Decently sized by Paris standards, the 463-square-foot apartment faced south, overlooking a shared courtyard, with double-door windows that spilled sunlight into the bedroom and living room.”</p> $19, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Dinner-One-Cooking-Paris-Saved/dp/0778387151/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Dinner for One: How Cooking in Paris Saved Me by Sutanya Dacres

What it’s about: For a more contemporary American-moves-to-Paris story pick up Dinner for One , the debut memoir of Sutanya Dacres, the host of the eponymous podcast . Reeling from the sudden expiration of her marriage to The Frenchman (“let’s call him TFM for short,” she says) for whom she moved to France, she cooks her way through healing and back to joy while rebuilding her life in her Montmartre apartment. These pages are filled with equal parts optimism and realism, hope and loss, American glee and Parisian bite. It’s an absolute must-read.

You should read this when: You’re one slightly-mean email away from snapping and absconding to France in a last-ditch effort to fall back in love with your life (and it just might work).

The book’s opening lines: “The day I reached my breaking point started out like so many others since my husband had left four months earlier—wake up, get ready, and leave my apartment as quickly as possible. Decently sized by Paris standards, the 463-square-foot apartment faced south, overlooking a shared courtyard, with double-door windows that spilled sunlight into the bedroom and living room.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> Did you ever read <a href="https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2020/04/13/baking-bread-in-lyon?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">that story in <em>The New Yorker</em></a> from a few years ago, about a writer who moved to Lyon with his family and apprenticed with a baker named Bob (real name “Yves,” mais tout le monde l’appelait Bob), when it truth it was about diligence, humility, and the beauty of community-making? Did you know it was an adapted excerpt from Bill Buford’s latest memoir, published in 2020? This book chronicles his five years in <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/why-food-lovers-should-visit-lyon-this-fall?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">the French heartland</a> in pursuit of why we hold the culinary traditions of France in such high regard—both in our minds and our palates. Buford’s writing is passionate, endlessly curious, and meticulous (a scene of a pig’s butchering is intense, an explanation of the French visa process is illuminating), and this tome—clocking in at over 400 pages—will keep you satiated over multiple trips to Lyon, <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/my-favorite-airbnb-experience-bordeaux-sidecar?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Bordeaux</a>, <a href="https://www.cntraveller.com/article/marseille-france?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Marseille</a>, and elsewhere.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re looking to read an adventurous story, like an epic saga, but you’re also in the mood for a glimpse into the culinary world—something like “Odysseus, but in France.”</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “On a bright, chilly, autumnal afternoon in 2007, I met Michel Richard, a chef and the man who would radially change my life—and the lives of my wife, Jessica Green, and our two-year-old twins—without my quite knowing who he was, and in the confidence that, whoever he might be, he was someone I would never see again.”</p> $17, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Dirt-Adventures-Training-Looking-Cooking/dp/0307455807/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Dirt: Adventures in Lyon as a Chef in Training, Father, and Sleuth Looking for the Secret of French Cooking by Bill Buford

What it’s about: Did you ever read that story in The New Yorker from a few years ago, about a writer who moved to Lyon with his family and apprenticed with a baker named Bob (real name “Yves,” mais tout le monde l’appelait Bob), when it truth it was about diligence, humility, and the beauty of community-making? Did you know it was an adapted excerpt from Bill Buford’s latest memoir, published in 2020? This book chronicles his five years in the French heartland in pursuit of why we hold the culinary traditions of France in such high regard—both in our minds and our palates. Buford’s writing is passionate, endlessly curious, and meticulous (a scene of a pig’s butchering is intense, an explanation of the French visa process is illuminating), and this tome—clocking in at over 400 pages—will keep you satiated over multiple trips to Lyon, Bordeaux , Marseille , and elsewhere.

You should read this when: You’re looking to read an adventurous story, like an epic saga, but you’re also in the mood for a glimpse into the culinary world—something like “Odysseus, but in France.”

The book’s opening lines: “On a bright, chilly, autumnal afternoon in 2007, I met Michel Richard, a chef and the man who would radially change my life—and the lives of my wife, Jessica Green, and our two-year-old twins—without my quite knowing who he was, and in the confidence that, whoever he might be, he was someone I would never see again.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/in-spanish-speaking-countries-i-always-challenge-myself-to-date-the-language?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Language</a> is about connection. So what happens when, metaphorically, that gap feels too large to cross, or when there is an invisible wall between you and someone else? The delights, challenges, and intricacies of communicating with another person—these are the major themes of this memoir about learning the infamously finicky French language after moving to Europe (to <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/video/watch/on-the-shores-of-lake-geneva?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Geneva</a>, Switzerland, though the author ends up in Paris by the end of it). As evidenced by this fantastic book, Lauren Collins is a supremely intelligent and warm writer, as well as the master of kickers, those snappy and incisive sentences that close out a paragraph, or page, or chapter, whether it be about the monolingualism of American culture, why some cuts of meat in the US are unavailable at francophone butcher shops, or what it’s like to fall in love and build a family. If you’re someone committed to maintaining that year-long streak on <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/best-language-learning-apps?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Duolingo</a>, consider this the book for you.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re dating/married to a French-speaker and you need the motivation to learn a new-to-you language—and the hard-to-find words to describe your love</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “I hadn’t wanted to live in Geneva. In fact, I had decisively wished not to, but there I was. … The bell rang. Newlywed and nearly speechless, I cracked open the door, a slab of oak with a beveled brass knob. Next to it, the landlord had installed a nameplate, giving the place the look less of a home than of a bilingual tax firm.”</p> $16, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/When-French-Love-Second-Language/dp/014311073X/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

When in French by Lauren Collins

What it’s about: Language is about connection. So what happens when, metaphorically, that gap feels too large to cross, or when there is an invisible wall between you and someone else? The delights, challenges, and intricacies of communicating with another person—these are the major themes of this memoir about learning the infamously finicky French language after moving to Europe (to Geneva , Switzerland, though the author ends up in Paris by the end of it). As evidenced by this fantastic book, Lauren Collins is a supremely intelligent and warm writer, as well as the master of kickers, those snappy and incisive sentences that close out a paragraph, or page, or chapter, whether it be about the monolingualism of American culture, why some cuts of meat in the US are unavailable at francophone butcher shops, or what it’s like to fall in love and build a family. If you’re someone committed to maintaining that year-long streak on Duolingo , consider this the book for you.

You should read this when: You’re dating/married to a French-speaker and you need the motivation to learn a new-to-you language—and the hard-to-find words to describe your love

The book’s opening lines: “I hadn’t wanted to live in Geneva. In fact, I had decisively wished not to, but there I was. … The bell rang. Newlywed and nearly speechless, I cracked open the door, a slab of oak with a beveled brass knob. Next to it, the landlord had installed a nameplate, giving the place the look less of a home than of a bilingual tax firm.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> This epic novel consists of 576 pages dripping with pure drama, opulence, and artifice—a true <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/phantom-of-the-opera-airbnb?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">opera</a> of a story, as the protagonist and narrator known as Lilliet Berne would have it. Set in 19th-century Paris, Berne is a celebrated soprano who needs an opera written just for her, which would immortalize her in the canon. But when one is finally presented to her, she discovers she has been betrayed: It is clearly based on the true story of her life that she has kept secret. From there, Alexander Chee’s magnificent tour de force wheels between the past and present, recounting the truth of Lilliet’s origins and following her pursuit of the confidante who threatens to expose her.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re longing to be dressed in a voluminous gown of silk and taffeta, running through a Baroque palace like you’re in a glittering French <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/gallery/best-travel-inspired-scents?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">perfume</a> ad</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “When it began, it began as an opera would begin, in a palace, at a ball, in an encounter with a stranger who, you discover, has your fate in his hands. He is perhaps a demon or a god in disguise, offering you a chance at either the fulfillment of a dream or a trap for the soul. A comic element—the soprano arrives in the wrong dress—and it decides her fate.”</p> $10, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Queen-Night-Alexander-Chee/dp/0544925475/ref=sr_1_1?">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

The Queen of the Night by Alexander Chee

What it’s about: This epic novel consists of 576 pages dripping with pure drama, opulence, and artifice—a true opera of a story, as the protagonist and narrator known as Lilliet Berne would have it. Set in 19th-century Paris, Berne is a celebrated soprano who needs an opera written just for her, which would immortalize her in the canon. But when one is finally presented to her, she discovers she has been betrayed: It is clearly based on the true story of her life that she has kept secret. From there, Alexander Chee’s magnificent tour de force wheels between the past and present, recounting the truth of Lilliet’s origins and following her pursuit of the confidante who threatens to expose her.

You should read this when: You’re longing to be dressed in a voluminous gown of silk and taffeta, running through a Baroque palace like you’re in a glittering French perfume ad

The book’s opening lines: “When it began, it began as an opera would begin, in a palace, at a ball, in an encounter with a stranger who, you discover, has your fate in his hands. He is perhaps a demon or a god in disguise, offering you a chance at either the fulfillment of a dream or a trap for the soul. A comic element—the soprano arrives in the wrong dress—and it decides her fate.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> Sticking to <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/destinations/paris?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Paris</a> in the 19th century and all its gloriously bizarre truths, this historical novel offers a fictional story based on a very real event: “le bal des folles” (literally, <em>the ball of the mad women</em>), an annual gathering at the Salpêtrière Asylum, when the upper classes of the city would gawk at Salpêtrière’s wards: women cast out from society—many were sex workers, unwanted by their families, or mentally ill. In Victoria Mas’s captivating telling (rendered in crystalline English by Frank Wynne), an intelligent woman named Eugenie is handed over to Salpêtrière by her bourgeois family and meets Geneviève, a nurse who has forsaken faith for science. Their entwined narratives illuminate the double-edged life that the asylum offered Frenchwomen of that time and place: freedom under constraints.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re still longing for the fantasy of gallivanting in a grand gown, but you want the vibe to be a bit dark and Gothic, something grotesquely captivating</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “<em>3 March 1885</em> — ‘Louise. It is time.” With one hand, Geneviève pulls back the blanket that hides the sleeping figure of the girl. Curled up in a fetal position on the narrow mattress, her mass of thick, dark hair covers the pillow and part of her face. Lips parted, Louise is snoring softly.”</p> $8, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Mad-Womens-Ball-Novel/dp/1419757601/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

The Mad Women’s Ball by Victoria Mas, translated by Frank Wynne

What it’s about: Sticking to Paris in the 19th century and all its gloriously bizarre truths, this historical novel offers a fictional story based on a very real event: “le bal des folles” (literally, the ball of the mad women ), an annual gathering at the Salpêtrière Asylum, when the upper classes of the city would gawk at Salpêtrière’s wards: women cast out from society—many were sex workers, unwanted by their families, or mentally ill. In Victoria Mas’s captivating telling (rendered in crystalline English by Frank Wynne), an intelligent woman named Eugenie is handed over to Salpêtrière by her bourgeois family and meets Geneviève, a nurse who has forsaken faith for science. Their entwined narratives illuminate the double-edged life that the asylum offered Frenchwomen of that time and place: freedom under constraints.

You should read this when: You’re still longing for the fantasy of gallivanting in a grand gown, but you want the vibe to be a bit dark and Gothic, something grotesquely captivating

The book’s opening lines: “ 3 March 1885 — ‘Louise. It is time.” With one hand, Geneviève pulls back the blanket that hides the sleeping figure of the girl. Curled up in a fetal position on the narrow mattress, her mass of thick, dark hair covers the pillow and part of her face. Lips parted, Louise is snoring softly.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> Going a bit back further into history, this short but intense novel about the Great Revolt of 1173–1174 and its aftermath dives deep into the psyches of the historical figures at its center: Eleanor of Aquitaine and one of her sons, Richard the Lionheart, who also serves as the book’s primary narrator. True, the titular revolt concerns English monarchs, but to tell the story of 12th-century England is to also involve the territories of <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/galleries/2016-07-27/the-best-beaches-in-france?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Normandy</a> and <a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/story/brittany-france-eat-stay-play?mbid=synd_msn_rss&utm_source=msn&utm_medium=syndication">Brittany</a>, which today belong to modern France. That aside, Clara Dupont-Monod’s novel is a fascinating exploration of Eleanor’s motivations for conspiring with her sons and attempting to overthrow her husband, Henry II of England—and wonderfully translated from the original French by Ruth Diver, to boot.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re on holiday in France with your bickering family who can’t ever agree on the vacation’s itinerary—just to remind you that, hey, it could be a whole lot worse.</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “In my mother’s eyes, I see things that overwhelm me. I see vast conquests, deserted houses, and suits of armor. She carries a range within herself that condemns me, and forces me to be a better man. This evening, she comes to us. … It is with a soft voice, full of menace, that our mother commands us to overthrow our father.”</p> $17, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Revolt-Clara-Dupont-Monod/dp/1529402905/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

The Revolt by Clara Dupont-Monod, translated by Ruth Diver

What it’s about: Going a bit back further into history, this short but intense novel about the Great Revolt of 1173–1174 and its aftermath dives deep into the psyches of the historical figures at its center: Eleanor of Aquitaine and one of her sons, Richard the Lionheart, who also serves as the book’s primary narrator. True, the titular revolt concerns English monarchs, but to tell the story of 12th-century England is to also involve the territories of Normandy and Brittany , which today belong to modern France. That aside, Clara Dupont-Monod’s novel is a fascinating exploration of Eleanor’s motivations for conspiring with her sons and attempting to overthrow her husband, Henry II of England—and wonderfully translated from the original French by Ruth Diver, to boot.

You should read this when: You’re on holiday in France with your bickering family who can’t ever agree on the vacation’s itinerary—just to remind you that, hey, it could be a whole lot worse.

The book’s opening lines: “In my mother’s eyes, I see things that overwhelm me. I see vast conquests, deserted houses, and suits of armor. She carries a range within herself that condemns me, and forces me to be a better man. This evening, she comes to us. … It is with a soft voice, full of menace, that our mother commands us to overthrow our father.”

<p><strong>What it’s about:</strong> For more novels based in this era of Anglo-Franco history, pick up a copy of Lauren Groff’s <em>Matrix</em>, in which Eleanor steals the spotlight by being extremely beautiful and deliciously frightening. That said, this story revolves instead around Marie de France, a 12th-century poet about whom extremely little is known—which gives Groff plenty of room for a radical reimagining of Marie's life as the prioress of a royal abbey who grows to lead and protect a community of women, awakening to the world and all its sensations. This is Groff's writing at its most electric and sensual, giving us a book for all seasons. I implore you: Read it now.</p> <p><strong>You should read this when:</strong> You’re itching to read one of the greatest American writers working today take on a historical figure and give her story a feminist and inventive spin</p> <p><strong>The book’s opening lines:</strong> “She rides out of the forest alone. Seventeen years old, in the cold March drizzle, Marie who comes from France. It is 1158 and the world bears the weariness of late Lent. Soon it will be Easter, which arrives early this year. In the fields, the seeds uncurl in the dark cold soil, ready to punch into the freer air.”</p> $6, Amazon. <a href="https://www.amazon.com/Matrix-A-Novel/dp/B08X129G7X/ref=sr_1_1">Get it now!</a><p>Sign up to receive the latest news, expert tips, and inspiration on all things travel</p><a href="https://www.cntraveler.com/newsletter/the-daily?sourceCode=msnsend">Inspire Me</a>

Matrix, by Lauren Groff

What it’s about: For more novels based in this era of Anglo-Franco history, pick up a copy of Lauren Groff’s Matrix , in which Eleanor steals the spotlight by being extremely beautiful and deliciously frightening. That said, this story revolves instead around Marie de France, a 12th-century poet about whom extremely little is known—which gives Groff plenty of room for a radical reimagining of Marie's life as the prioress of a royal abbey who grows to lead and protect a community of women, awakening to the world and all its sensations. This is Groff's writing at its most electric and sensual, giving us a book for all seasons. I implore you: Read it now.

You should read this when: You’re itching to read one of the greatest American writers working today take on a historical figure and give her story a feminist and inventive spin

The book’s opening lines: “She rides out of the forest alone. Seventeen years old, in the cold March drizzle, Marie who comes from France. It is 1158 and the world bears the weariness of late Lent. Soon it will be Easter, which arrives early this year. In the fields, the seeds uncurl in the dark cold soil, ready to punch into the freer air.”

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The Gold List 2024

The Best Hotels and Resorts in the World: The Gold List 2024

By CNT Editors

The best hotels in Europe

Cashel Palace Hotel

Gold List hotels for £300 or less

Josun Palace, a Luxury Collection Hotel, Seoul Gangnam

The best beach hotels in the world

Round Hill Hotel and Villas

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  4. Where to Eat, Stay, and Play in Dijon, France—From Medieval Mansions to

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COMMENTS

  1. Where to Eat, Stay, and Play in Dijon, France

    The ancient city is throttling into modernity with a museum megaplex celebrating French food and wine, plus new restaurants, hotels, and cocktail bars.

  2. Condé Nast Traveler

    A stay at the Abbaye de la Bussière in Dijon suggests that monastic life isn't so bad after all. The setting alone is divine—an idyllic village in Burgundy with canals and poplars. The estate ...

  3. Road Trip: 3 Days in Burgundy, France

    Day Two: Today you're heading south to the heart of Burgundy. Stop 45 minutes in at the medieval hilltop town of Vézelay for a visit to the aptly named Vézelay Abbey and sweeping views of ...

  4. Michelin-starred restaurants in Burgundy

    In my rattling Citroën days, Dijon was a busy, engaging town, but doctrinaire pedestrianisation has made it less dangerous, therefore more antiseptic. ... More from Condé Nast Traveller. Eating & Drinking. Across the UK, restaurants are reviving a patisserie icon: the choux bun. By Toyo Odetunde. Eating & Drinking. The UK's Top New ...

  5. 8 road trips in France to take this summer

    A weekend break in Le Perche, Normandy. BY FERRY. Ferries from the UK to France depart from Dover, Plymouth, Portsmouth and Poole and dock in Brittany and Normandy. Travelling overnight is our recommendation, so you're rested for a day of driving once in France. Prices start at £190.

  6. France

    The cheapest time to go to Paris. This is the cheapest time to go to Paris, whether you're looking for romance, culture or a family adventure, here are our budget-friendly tips. By Sarah James. 24 October 2023. Find the latest stories about France, plus travel ideas, products, expert advice, and more from Condé Nast Traveller.

  7. Condé Nast Traveler

    Condé Nast Traveler is a luxury and lifestyle travel magazine published by Condé Nast.The magazine has won 25 National Magazine Awards. The Condé Nast unit of Advance Publications purchased Signature, a magazine for Diners Club members, for $25 million in 1986. The company used it as the basis for Condé Nast Traveler, led by Sir Harold Evans (1928-2020) in 1987, with a focus on literary ...

  8. The 10 Best Day Trips to Take in France

    For €7.50 ($8.86) you can visit the Hospices de Beaune, a medieval hospital with polychrome roofs and magnificent Gothic architecture visible from the moment you arrive in town. Aside from being ...

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  10. The best New York hotels for 2024

    With its thoughtful design and hospitality ethos, The Greenwich Hotel can't help but echo the old Italian-American saying: When you're here, you're family. Matt Ortile. Address: 377 Greenwich St, New York, NY 10013, United States. Make a reservation at Booking.com. Pinterest. Joe Thomas.

  11. 13 Books That Will Transport You to France

    13 Books That Will Transport You to France. Story by Matt Ortile. • 2mo. 1 / 14. ©Condé Nast Traveler. It's a truth universally acknowledged: Books can do wonders to frame and shape your ...

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  13. Condé Nast Traveler

    Dijon. Review: Vertigo Hôtel Photos. Amenities. Rooms. 42. Opened February 2015. Contact. 3, rue Devosge, Dijon 21000 ... Condé Nast Traveler does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or ...

  14. Condé Nast

    Condé Nast New York. 1 World Trade Center. New York, NY 10007, USA. Condé Nast London. The Adelphi, 1-11 John Adam Street. London, WC2N 6HT, United Kingdom.

  15. CN Traveller

    The website of Condé Nast Traveller magazine. Award-winning features full of ideas, insider destination guides and the most beautiful travel photography. Plus, fashion, beauty, A-List travel tips, and much more. An insider's guide to the world.

  16. Condé Nast Traveler

    Get the latest travel news, guides, tips, and ideas. See photos and slideshows of the most beautiful places, best vacation spots, and places to visit.

  17. Condé Nast Traveller India

    Condé Nast Traveller's inaugural edition of The UK's Top New Restaurant Awards searched the country to find the very best openings from 2023. These are the places we loved the most. By Sarah James. Hotels & Homestays. 14 hotels to visit if you love tea.

  18. The Traveller edit: What the editors are loving right now

    6 October 2023. Caitlin Isola, Getty Images. Right now we're making the most of London's best restaurants and London's best bars, taking UK staycations and taking advantage of restrictions easing abroad. Here, the editors of Condé Nast Traveller share what they're up to at the moment.

  19. The Gold List 2024

    Book Now. Powered By: Expedia. Eden Rock - St Barths. St. Barts, Baie de Saint Jean, A refresh of a storied classic that does not sacrifice any sophistication for modern perks. The Gold List 2024 is Condé Nast Traveller's list of the best hotels, resorts, cruise ships, and destinations in the world.