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Available for companionship, visits to restaurants, shows, theatre etc.

Travelling UK, Middle East, Asia, Europe, Carribean

Travel rates: to be announced

+33649352228
julia.kalas@gmail.com


Our time together is a new adventure, special date and I want it to be an evening to remember for both of us....

Love,
Julia

WINE: White wines, champagne

LINGERIE: www.laperla.com
size 2 (34B) and 1 for panties

BAG: www.louisvuitton.com, www.hermes.com

SHOES: www.dior.com size 37

JEWELLERY: www.bulgari.com

SPA: certificate



Escort Girl Paris - Hemmingway's Paris

Among Hemingway's friends of the mid 1920s, in addition to Fitzgerald, were John Dos Passos, the Archibald MacLeishes, and the Murphys, Sara and Gerald Murphy - she was an heiress from Ohio and he the son of a New York businessman who owned Mark Cross leather goods - always kept a home in Paris which they lent to the Fitzgeralds and others. The Murphys introduced Hemingway to their rich Riviera life (Living Well is the Best Revenge tells their story). In his memoirs, Hemingway blames them and the wealthy Pauline Pfeiffer for the end of his marriage to Hadley: 'then you have the rich and nothing is ever as it was again'.

During the final rewriting of The Sun Also Rises, Hemingway's marriage to Hadley disintegrated because he was having an affair with Pauline Pfeiffer, whom he married in May 1927. Though he began writing A Farewell to Anns in Paris in March 1928, he was spending more time away from the city. His last Paris address was rue Ferou, near Saint-Sulpice, where he lived with Pauline. When he left Paris after nearly seven years, he had completed his apprenticeship. He left having written novels that reworked (purged) and fictionalized (mythologized) the two periods of his apprenticeship, written in reverse order: A Farewell to Anns (1929), his war experience in Italy, and The Sun Also Rises (1926), his Paris youth. In the words of Roger Asselineau (Europe's leading Hemingway authority), Paris had been 'his university in the same way as a whaling-ship was Melville's Yale and Harvard'.

In the 1930s, when he was feeling mature and was more interested in Montana and Idaho than in France, he told Esquire that Paris 'was a fine place to be quite young in and ... a necessary part of a man's education ... But she is like a mistress who does not grow old and she has other lovers now'. Yet he would continue to return to Paris (as a rich tourist) for two more decades: to and from an African safari in 1934; with Martha Gellhom, who would become his third wife, during the Spanish Civil War in 1937-8; at the liberation of Paris in 1944; for the wedding of his son Jack in 1949; and for several short visits in the 1950s before his suicide on 2 July 1961. At his death, French television commemorated his passing by gathering three representatives of his colourful artistic and social life in Europe: Sylvia Beach, the bartender at the Ritz, and a bullfighter. In the final years Hemingway wrote, 'there is never any ending to Paris and the memory of each person who has lived in it differs from that of any other, We always returned to it ... Paris was always worth it and you received return for whatever you brought to it.' Today, because his words and his favourite places remain, the visitor can bring Hemingway's memories to his own experience of Paris.

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