Eric Hazan's elegant, characteristically learned account of his journey through contemporary Paris, written in a tone both intimate and authoritative, is at once a companionably unhurried evocation of the city's rich, radical past and - at a time when capital is dramatically reorganising its topography - a bracingly urgent intervention in debates about the city's future. As Andre Breton might have observed, there really are no lost steps here.
- Matthew Beaumont, author of <i>Nightwalking</i>,
Still more than a historian, Éric Hazan is a writer, in a prestigious literary lineage of solitary walkers. At the same time phenomenological and historical, ethnographic and political, documented and dreamed, this walk is above all a literary experience.
- Jean-Marie Durand, Les Inrockuptibles
The crossing of the capital we areoffered by the Parisian Éric Hazan is both delightful and erudite.
- Gilles Heuré, Télérama
An ardent student of the anatomy of the city, Hazan is a keen observer with a remarkable memory: despite his limitations, he has written an unmissable account of Paris's unique and defiant physiognomy.
- Lauren Elkin, Guardian
In tracing a continuity of resistance and its presence within the contradictions of the contemporary city, Hazan makes a compelling argument that 'the people have not lost the battle of Paris'...This book similarly brings the solitary act of reading and the social experience of urban life into constant dialogue. Passages from Balzac, Baudelaire and André Breton come to mind at different street corners, verbal illuminations reflecting the ambience of a particular locale. In these enlightened pages, Hazan deftly guides the reader through a Paris where history and literature animate the lived experience of the present.
- Eugene Brennan, Washington Post
Hazan is much concernced with riot, insurrection, protest, and revolution. He is, naturally, on the side of the proletariat...<i>A Walk Through Paris</i> is sometimes a work of urbanism, sometimes a subversive history book, sometimes a kind of tourist guide.
- Geoff Nicholson, LA Review of Books