Nobody Sits Like the French
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Luster Publishing
Published:30th Apr '25
Should be back in stock very soon

Paris is the physical memory of seven World Expos that took place in the city from 1855 to 1937. These Expos left behind monuments like the Eiffel Tower, the Musée d'Orsay, the Grand and Petit Palais... But many traces are more subtle: your suitcase today is an evolution of the trunk Louis Vuitton won a gold medal with at Paris’ Exposition Universelle in 1867, and the typical Parisian bistro chairs were designed during those years when a multitude of cafés and restaurants flourished because of the Expos, including icons like Le Procope.
A cocktail of travel guide and history book, Nobody Sits Like the French tells these stories and many more, pointing out the marks the Expos left behind. From now on, you’ll know that every time you sip a glass of burgundy, drink from Baccarat crystal, admire a Manet or a Gauguin, and even enjoy the benefits of a working sewer system in Paris, you owe it to a World Expo there.
"This exploration of Paris “through its World Expos” (the city managed seven between 1855 and 1937) is the story of what those colossal festivals of modernity gave to the world, from Louis Vuitton trunks to the Ei!el Tower (the world’s most valuable monument, “with an estimated worth of $600bn”) and “a working sewer system” – giant stone balls propelled by the pressure of stoppered sewage to declog pipes." - Strong Words
ISBN: 9789460583797
Dimensions: 185mm x 135mm x 21mm
Weight: 293g
240 pages