![]() ![]() Her last request was for Jean to visit before she died. Manon returned to her home in Provence (and her husband-it was complicated) to succumb to the cancer she had been hiding. ![]() The two fall into kissing, and Jean, buoyed by Catherine, finally reads Manon's letter, but the truth is heartbreaking. In the table Catherine finds Manon's unopened letter and demands Jean read it, or she will. When heartbroken Catherine moves into his building, Jean brings her an old table and a stack of books to cure her crying. He can diagnose a shopper's ills (ennui, disappointment, a range of fears) and select the correct literary remedy. Ever since, Jean has devoted his life to his floating bookstore, the Literary Apothecary, a barge docked on the Seine. Twenty-one years ago, his lover, Manon, left, leaving behind only a letter to explain herself-which Jean never opened. Parisian bookseller Jean Perdu has lived in a time capsule of his own grief. This newly translated German bestseller is a warmhearted, occasionally sentimental account of letting go of the old loves to make room for new. ![]()
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