cover image I'll Never Be French (No Matter What I Do): Living in a Small Village in Brittany

I'll Never Be French (No Matter What I Do): Living in a Small Village in Brittany

Mark Greenside, . . Free Press, $24 (244pp) ISBN 978-1-4165-8687-6

In 1991, Greenside, a teacher and political activist living in Alameda, Calif., found himself at both the end of a relationship and “the end of the world.” The French world, that is: Finistère, a remote town on the coast of Brittany, where he and his soon-to-be-ex-girlfriend spend 10 weeks. Preternaturally slow to negotiate the ways of life in a small Breton village, he gets help from Madame P., his slow-to-melt landlady and neighbor. At summer's end (as well as the end of his relationship), his attachment to France became more permanent through the quasi-impulsive purchase of an old stone house, which was made possible with the help of Madame P. She figures prominently and entertainingly through the rest of the book, facilitating several of the author's transactions with the sellers and the local servicemen who provide necessities such as heating oil and insurance. At times the author's self-deprecation comes across as disingenuous, but his self-characterization as a helpless, 40-something leftist creates an intriguing subtext about baby boomerism, generational maturity and the relationship of America to France. Greenside tells a charming story about growing wiser, humbler and more human through home owning in a foreign land. (Nov.)