Non­fic­tion

Breath­less: An Amer­i­can Girl in Paris

Nan­cy K. Miller
  • From the Publisher
December 9, 2013

In the ear­ly 1960s, most mid­dle-class Amer­i­can women in their twen­ties had their lives laid out for them: mar­riage, chil­dren, and life in the sub­urbs. Most, but not all.

Breath­less is the sto­ry of a girl who rep­re­sents those who rebelled against con­ven­tion­al expec­ta­tions. Paris was a mag­net for those eager to resist domes­tic­i­ty, and like many young women of the decade, Nan­cy K. Miller was enam­ored of every­thing French — from per­fume and Her­mès scarves to the writ­ing of Simone de Beau­voir and the New Wave films of Jeanne More­au. After grad­u­at­ing from Barnard Col­lege in 1961, Miller set out for a year in Paris, with a plan to take class­es at the Sor­bonne and live out a great roman­tic life inspired by the movies.

After a string of sex­u­al mis­ad­ven­tures, she gave up her short-lived free­dom and mar­ried an Amer­i­can expa­tri­ate who promised her a life­time of three-star meals and five-star hotels. But her hus­band was­n’t who he said he was, and she even­tu­al­ly had to leave Paris and her dreams behind.

Inter­view

Read Tah­neer Oks­man­’s inter­view with Nan­cy K. Miller here.

Discussion Questions