manuel cohen

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  • General view of Salon des lettres (literature room) in Salon des Arcades (arcades room), 19th century, Hotel de Ville, Paris, France. The decoration of the Salon des Arcades was dominated by the idea of the supremacy and development of fine arts, crafts, science and literature divided in four different salons. Picture by Manuel Cohen.
    LC_Paris_MC028.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Rio del Mondo Novo, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC014.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC011.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC007.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC016.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC017.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC010.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Querini Stampalia library, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC012.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC008.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC006.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Santa Maria Dei Miracoli church, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC002.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC005.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC004.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Campo Santi Giovanni e Paolo square, in front of Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC001.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC003.jpg
  • Salon des Lettres (Literature Room), Salon des Arcades, 1882, Hôtel de Ville, 16th century and rebuilt in the 19th century by Ballu and Deperthes, Place de Grève, Paris, France. The decoration of the Salon des Arcades was dominated by the idea of the supremacy and development of fine arts, crafts, science and literature divided in four different salons. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_PARIS_11_MC245.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Campo Santa Maria Formosa square, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC015.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Querini Stampalia library, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC013.jpg
  • Donna Leon (New Jersey, United States, 1942), American author of a series of crime novels set in Venice, Italy, such as the international best-selling Commissario Guido Brunetti series, winner of the CWA Macallan Silver Dagger for Fiction. Leon was a lecturer in English literature for the University of Maryland University College - Europe (UMUC-Europe) in Italy and then worked as a professor at the American military base of Vicenza, Italy (1981-1999). Photo by Manuel Cohen. Cafe Florian, Piazza San Marco, Venice, Italy, on 3rd March 2016.
    03032016_DonnaLeon_MC009.jpg
  • Low angle view of Salon des Arts (Arts Room) with painted ceiling by Léon Bonnat and hanging Baccarat crystal chandelier with Salon des lettres (Literature Room) in the background, Salon des Arcades, 1882, Hôtel de Ville, 16th century and rebuilt in the 19th century by Ballu and Deperthes, Place de Grève, Paris, France. The decoration of the Salon des Arcades was dominated by the idea of the supremacy and development of fine arts, crafts, science and literature divided in four different salons. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC_PARIS_11_MC246.jpg
  • Bibliotheque de l'Assemblee Nationale, or Library of the National Assembly, created in 1796 and housed in the Assemblee Nationale at the Palais Bourbon, 2nd arrondissement, Paris, France. The 42m long library houses over 60,000 works and was decorated 1838-47 with a series of paintings by Romantic artist Eugene Delacroix, 1798-1863, who painted 5 cupolas and 2 hemicycles with allegories of philosophy, natural history, legislation, eloquence, literature, poetry and theology. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_FRANCE_MC_0587.jpg
  • Bibliotheque de l'Assemblee Nationale, or Library of the National Assembly, created in 1796 and housed in the Assemblee Nationale at the Palais Bourbon, 2nd arrondissement, Paris, France. The 42m long library houses over 60,000 works and was decorated 1838-47 with a series of paintings by Romantic artist Eugene Delacroix, 1798-1863, who painted 5 cupolas and 2 hemicycles with allegories of philosophy, natural history, legislation, eloquence, literature, poetry and theology. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC18_FRANCE_MC_0579.JPG
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_01.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_03.JPG
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_05.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_06.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen. Behind is the giant bird cage, a geodesic dome structure designed in 1935 by architect Raffaele de Vico.
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_08.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen. Behind is the giant bird cage, a geodesic dome structure designed in 1935 by architect Raffaele de Vico.
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_09.jpg
  • Pierre Pean, born 1938 in Sable-sur-Sarthe, French investigative journalist and author, photographed in his office by Manuel Cohen in 2017. Pierre Pean's works on political controversies include L'Homme de l'ombre (1990), Une jeunesse francaise: Francois Mitterrand (1994), Manipulations Africaines (2001), La Face cachee du Monde (2003), Noires fureurs, blancs menteurs (2005) and The World According to K (2008).
    06012017_PierrePean_MC001.jpg
  • Pierre Pean, born 1938 in Sable-sur-Sarthe, French investigative journalist and author, photographed in his office by Manuel Cohen in 2017. Pierre Pean's works on political controversies include L'Homme de l'ombre (1990), Une jeunesse francaise: Francois Mitterrand (1994), Manipulations Africaines (2001), La Face cachee du Monde (2003), Noires fureurs, blancs menteurs (2005) and The World According to K (2008).
    06012017_PierrePean_MC003.JPG
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC023.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC006.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC007.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC010.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC011.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC013.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC018.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC017.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC001.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC002.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC003.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_02.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_04.jpg
  • Pascal Janovjak, French-Swiss writer, b. 1975, author of a collection of poetic prose, novels and a romanticised correspondence with Quebec author Kim Thuy. Photographed at Rome Zoo, Rome, Lazio, Italy, or Bioparco di Roma, the title of his recent novel published 2019, on 20th June 2019 by Manuel Cohen
    200619_PascalJanovjak_MC_07.jpg
  • Pierre Pean, born 1938 in Sable-sur-Sarthe, French investigative journalist and author, photographed in his office by Manuel Cohen in 2017. Pierre Pean's works on political controversies include L'Homme de l'ombre (1990), Une jeunesse francaise: Francois Mitterrand (1994), Manipulations Africaines (2001), La Face cachee du Monde (2003), Noires fureurs, blancs menteurs (2005) and The World According to K (2008).
    06012017_PierrePean_MC002.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC019.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC020.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC021.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC022.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC025.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC026.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC024.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC027.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC029.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC004.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC005.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC008.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC009.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC012.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC014.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC016.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC015.jpg
  • Spanish writer and journalist, Cristina Fallaras, winner of the Spanish Hammett Prize at Gijon Crime Fiction Festival in 2012 for her last crime fiction novel "Las ninas perdidas" (The Lost Girls), Roca 2011, in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain on January 09, 2013. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    010913_CristinaFallaras_MC028.jpg
  • Majorcan Library designed by Ernesto Basile, in the Palazzo Francavilla, built in 1783 for Ignazio Barone, and then bought in 1801 by Saverio Oneto and Gravina Duca di Sperlinga, in Palermo, Sicily, Italy. More than half the books in the collection are Sicilian, from library of Vincenzo Mortillaro. Ernesto Basile worked on the interiors and the mansion is filled with 18th century works of art. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_551.jpg
  • Majorcan Library designed by Ernesto Basile, in the Palazzo Francavilla, built in 1783 for Ignazio Barone, and then bought in 1801 by Saverio Oneto and Gravina Duca di Sperlinga, in Palermo, Sicily, Italy. More than half the books in the collection are Sicilian, from library of Vincenzo Mortillaro. Ernesto Basile worked on the interiors and the mansion is filled with 18th century works of art. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC20_ITALY_MC_540.jpg
  • Tomb of Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-78), French philosopher, crypt, Pantheon, 1758-90, by Jacques-Gabriel Soufflot (1713-80) and completed by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829), Paris, France. Photograph by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC160.jpg
  • Tomb of Victor Hugo (1802-85), French author, crypt, Pantheon, 1758-90, by Jacques-Gabriel Soufflot (1713-80) and completed by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829), Paris, France. Photograph by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC163.jpg
  • Statue of Voltaire (1694-1778), French writer and philosopher, by Jean-Antoine Houdon (1741-1828), crypt, Pantheon, 1758-90, by Jacques-Gabriel Soufflot (1713-80) and completed by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829), Paris, France. Photograph by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC161.jpg
  • Statue of Voltaire (1694-1778), French writer and philosopher, by Jean-Antoine Houdon (1741-1828), crypt, Pantheon, 1758-90, by Jacques-Gabriel Soufflot (1713-80) and completed by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829), Paris, France. Photograph by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC166.jpg
  • Tomb of Jean Jaures (1869-1814), French Socialist leader, crypt, Pantheon, 1758-90, by Jacques-Gabriel Soufflot (1713-80) and completed by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet (1743-1829), Paris, France. Photograph by Manuel Cohen
    LC12_Paris_MC162.jpg
  • Head of Honore de Balzac, 1799-1850, French novelist and playwright, terracotta, 1891-92, study after the Conducteur de Tours, by Auguste Rodin, 1840-1917, from the Musee Rodin in Paris, in the Musee Balzac at the Chateau de Sache, a Renaissance manor house built 15th century, in Sache near Tours in the Loire Valley, France. Jean Margonne owned the building in the 19th century and Balzac stayed here many times from 1825 to 1840, working and writing. The chateau is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC23_FRANCE_MC_0265.jpg
  • Balzac's bedroom, with alcove bed and writing desk, on the second floor of the Chateau de Sache, a Renaissance manor house built 15th century, in Sache near Tours in the Loire Valley, France. Jean Margonne owned the building in the 19th century and Honore de Balzac, 1799-1850, French novelist and playwright, stayed here many times from 1825 to 1840, working and writing. The chateau now houses the Musee Balzac and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC23_FRANCE_MC_0261.jpg
  • Bust of Honore de Balzac, 1799-1850, French novelist and playwright, plaster, 1929, by David d'Angers, 1788-1856, in the Musee Balzac at the Chateau de Sache, a Renaissance manor house built 15th century, in Sache near Tours in the Loire Valley, France. Jean Margonne owned the building in the 19th century and Balzac stayed here many times from 1825 to 1840, working and writing. The chateau is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC23_FRANCE_MC_0255.jpg
  • Chateau de Sache, aerial view, a Renaissance manor house built 15th century, in Sache near Tours in the Loire Valley, France. Jean Margonne owned the building in the 19th century and Honore de Balzac, 1799-1850,  French novelist and playwright, stayed here many times from 1825 to 1840, working and writing. The chateau now houses the Musee Balzac and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC23_FRANCE_MC_0253.jpg
  • Portrait of Francois Rabelais, 1483-1553, French Renaissance writer and humanist, drawing, 1951, by Henri Matisse, 1869-1954, 1 of a series of 8 expressive heads of Rabelais, in the Musee Rabelais in the Maison La Deviniere, a 15th century farmhouse, home to a young Francois Rabelais, in Seuilly, Indre-et-Loire, France. The Maison La Deviniere is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen - Further clearance requested, please contact us
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  • Bust, 1557, of Pierre de Ronsard, 1524-85, French poet, detail, in the writing room of his home in the prior's lodge, where he lived from 1565 until his death in 1585, at the Prieure de Saint-Cosme, or Priory of St Cosmas, La Riche, in the Loire Valley, Indre-et-Loire, France. Ronsard was prior here for 20 years and is buried in the chancel of the church. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC23_FRANCE_MC_0273.jpg
  • Bust, 1557, of Pierre de Ronsard, 1524-85, French poet, in the writing room of his home in the prior's lodge, where he lived from 1565 until his death in 1585, at the Prieure de Saint-Cosme, or Priory of St Cosmas, La Riche, in the Loire Valley, Indre-et-Loire, France. Ronsard was prior here for 20 years and is buried in the chancel of the church. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Portrait of Honore de Balzac, 1799-1850, French author and playwright, oil painting on canvas, by Louis Candide Boulanger, 1806-67, in the Musee des Beaux Arts de Tours, a fine arts museum founded 1801, and housed since 1910 in the archbishop's palace on the Place Francois Sicard in Tours, Indre-et-Loire, France. The museum houses paintings from 14th - 21st centuries, sculpture, prints, ceramics and furniture, and is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_1540.jpg
  • Library, housing the collections of Joachim Carvallo and his wife Ann Coleman, owners of Villandry from 1906, at the Chateau de Villandry, on the river Loire near Tours in Indre-et-Loire, France. Much of the current building was built under Jean Breton who bought the existing medieval castle in 1532 and built the Renaissance palace. The chateau is listed as a historic monument and forms part of the Loire Valley UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_1501.jpg
  • Library at the Chateau de la Chaize, designed by Jules Hardouin-Mansart for Francois de la Chaise, and built 1674-76, at Odenas, Rhone, France. The 400 hectare estate boasts gardens by Le Notre and Beaujolais vineyards planted in the 18th century. The chateau is listed as a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Portrait of Arthur Rimbaud, by Etienne Carjat, 1828-1906, in the Musee Verlaine, formerly the inn Auberge du Lion d'Or, in Juniville, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The building is opposite the home of Paul Verlaine, French poet, 1844-96, where he lived 1880-82. Verlaine went to the inn every day to write. The museum opened in 1994 on the 150th anniversary of Verlaine's birth, and was inaugurated in 1996. The museum is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_2031.jpg
  • Room in the Musee Verlaine, formerly the inn Auberge du Lion d'Or, in Juniville, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The building is opposite the home of Paul Verlaine, French poet, 1844-96, where he lived 1880-82. Verlaine went to the inn every day to write. The museum opened in 1994 on the 150th anniversary of Verlaine's birth, and was inaugurated in 1996. The museum is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1959.jpg
  • Funerary mask of Verlaine, plaster, belonging to Dr Guillard, friend of Dr Blanche, copy by F Ruchon, in the Musee Verlaine, formerly the inn Auberge du Lion d'Or, in Juniville, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The building is opposite the home of Paul Verlaine, French poet, 1844-96, where he lived 1880-82. Verlaine went to the inn every day to write. The museum opened in 1994 on the 150th anniversary of Verlaine's birth, and was inaugurated in 1996. The museum is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1958.jpg
  • Musee Verlaine, formerly the inn Auberge du Lion d'Or, in Juniville, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The building is opposite the home of Paul Verlaine, French poet, 1844-96, where he lived 1880-82. Verlaine went to the inn every day to write. The museum opened in 1994 on the 150th anniversary of Verlaine's birth, and was inaugurated in 1996. The museum is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1953.jpg
  • Room in the Musee Verlaine, formerly the inn Auberge du Lion d'Or, in Juniville, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The building is opposite the home of Paul Verlaine, French poet, 1844-96, where he lived 1880-82. Verlaine went to the inn every day to write. The museum opened in 1994 on the 150th anniversary of Verlaine's birth, and was inaugurated in 1996. The museum is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1954.jpg
  • House built on the foundations of the original family farm of Arthur Rimbaud, French poet, 1854-91, at Roche, Chuffilly-Roche, Ardennes, Grand Est, France, bought for the Musee Rimbaud by Patti Smith. On the left is the Une Saison en Enfer memorial by Paul Boens. The upright stones represent Rimbaud's Celtic past, and his European and African paths. The house is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1909.jpg
  • Bibliotheque Carnegie de Reims, or Carnegie Library of Reims, a public library built on donations by Andrew Carnegie, designed by Max Sainsaulieu and built 1921-27 in Art Deco style, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. The library is a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Catalogue room, in the Bibliotheque Carnegie de Reims, or Carnegie Library of Reims, a public library built on donations by Andrew Carnegie, designed by Max Sainsaulieu and built 1921-27 in Art Deco style, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. The library is a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC21_FRANCE_MC_1978.jpg
  • Zenithal glass roof designed by Jacques Gruber, in the Large Reading Room of the Bibliotheque Carnegie de Reims, or Carnegie Library of Reims, a public library built on donations by Andrew Carnegie, designed by Max Sainsaulieu and built 1921-27 in Art Deco style, in Reims, Marne, Grand Est, France. The library is a historic monument. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Statue of Denis Diderot, 1713-84, French philosopher from Langres, bronze, 1884, by Auguste Bartholdi, aerial view, on the Place Diderot in Langres, Haute-Marne, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Bust of Denis Diderot, French philosopher and writer from Langres, 1713-84, bronze, 1780, by Jean-Antoine Houdon, 1741-1828, in the Maison des Lumieres Denis Diderot, or House of Enlightenment, a museum housed in the Hotel du Breuil de Saint Germain, in Langres, Haute-Marne, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Musee Rimbaud, dedicated to the life and work of French poet Arthur Rimbaud, 1854-91, born in Charleville, in a 17th century water mill on the river Meuse, in Charleville-Mezieres, Ardennes, Grand Est, France. The museum opened in 1969 in a mill built by Claude Briau as part of the city plans of Clement Metezeau. The building is listed as a historic monument and the city is on the Rimbaud Verlaine Trail. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    DRN_LC21_FRANCE_MC_2154.jpg
  • Portrait believed to be of Lord Byron, poet, encaustic painting on oak, by Jacques Nicolas Paillot de Montabert, 1771-1849, in the Musee Saint-Loup, or Musee des Beaux-Arts et d'Archeologie, housed since 1831 in the Abbaye de Saint-Loup, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Library with 8,000 books, at the Institut Universitaire Europeen Rachi, or Rachi European University Institute, opened 1989, specialising in Jewish and Hebrew studies, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. The institute offers seminars, symposia and conferences as well as higher education courses. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Barrel making, diagrams of parts of types of barrels, plate from the Encyclopaedia of Diderot and Alembert, first edition, published 1751, 35 volumes, in the library of the Maison de l’Outil et de la Pensee Ouvriere, with over 32,000 books, specialising in manual labour, housed in the Hotel de Mauroy, built c. 1560, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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  • Agriculture, hemp and cotton, with diagrams of their manufacture, plate from the Encyclopaedia of Diderot and Alembert, first edition, published 1751, 35 volumes, in the library of the Maison de l’Outil et de la Pensee Ouvriere, with over 32,000 books, specialising in manual labour, housed in the Hotel de Mauroy, built c. 1560, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0434.jpg
  • Natural History, illustrations of birds: Cayenne blue creeper, Cayenne Hummingbird, hummingbird, Hume hummingbird, Santo Domingo ortolan, Canadian torchepot, plate from the Encyclopaedia of Diderot and Alembert, first edition, published 1751, 35 volumes, in the library of the Maison de l’Outil et de la Pensee Ouvriere, with over 32,000 books, specialising in manual labour, housed in the Hotel de Mauroy, built c. 1560, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0438.jpg
  • Eye surgery, with diagrams of lacrimal gland problems, bandages and cataract surgery, etching by Goussier, plate from the Encyclopaedia of Diderot and Alembert, first edition, published 1751, 35 volumes, in the library of the Maison de l’Outil et de la Pensee Ouvriere, with over 32,000 books, specialising in manual labour, housed in the Hotel de Mauroy, built c. 1560, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0445.jpg
  • Breast surgery, with instruments used to perform a mastectomy, etching by Goussier, plate from the Encyclopaedia of Diderot and Alembert, first edition, published 1751, 35 volumes, in the library of the Maison de l’Outil et de la Pensee Ouvriere, with over 32,000 books, specialising in manual labour, housed in the Hotel de Mauroy, built c. 1560, in Troyes, Aube, Grand Est, France. Picture by Manuel Cohen
    LC22_FRANCE_MC_0446.jpg
  • Reading room of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, the Library of Alexandria, built 1995-2002 in Alexandria, Egypt. The reading room sits on 7 levels covering 20,000m2 with desks for 2000 readers, and is lit from north facing skylights in its glass roof. The building also houses a cultural centre, conference centre, museums, art galleries and a planetarium. It commemorates the original Great Library of Alexandria, founded 3rd century BC. Picture by Manuel Cohen
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