Sylvia Beach on boots in a time of Nazi anti-modernism (yes, not “books” but “boots”)
In a 1960 issue of Kenyon Review I came across a transcript of a conversation moderated by the literary historian of modernism, Jackson Mathews, with Sylvia Beach, proprietor of the famous Parisian modernist bookstore, Shakespeare & Company—haven for expatriate and local avant-gardists. She’s remembering what happened when a Nazi soldier came into the store looking for Joyce’s notoriously degenerate book. It turns into a fascinating memory of fascist boots.