Address: 36 rue bonaparte , Paris 75006, France Show on map
Situated just up from the cafes and hubbub of place St-Germain des Prés and south of the Seine, this 30-room hotel is a tastefully appointed choice. We especially love the suite (room No 26) with the baronial four-poster bed.Many guests appear to be students of American literature in search of the ghost of Henry Miller (1891-1980) who, in the spring of 1930, stayed in a 5th-floor mansard room here and later wrote about the experience in Letters to Emil. The lovely salon in the lobby, filled with overstuffed easy chairs, tapestries and antique sideboards, looks onto a rather trite mural of findesiècle place St-Germain des Prés and a small patch of greenery behind glass. Guestrooms are somewhat small so if you need more room, splurge on a 'superior' or 'deluxe' one (numbers ending in 4 and 5). It's a quiet hotel in general but rue Bonaparte is a busy thoroughfare. There's air-con throughout the hotel.
Many guests appear to be students of American literature in search of the ghost of Henry Miller (1891-1980) who, in the spring of 1930, stayed in a 5th-floor mansard room here and later wrote about the experience in Letters to Emil. The lovely salon in the lobby, filled with overstuffed easy chairs, tapestries and antique sideboards, looks onto a rather trite mural of findesiècle place St-Germain des Prés and a small patch of greenery behind glass. Guestrooms are somewhat small so if you need more room, splurge on a 'superior' or 'deluxe' one (numbers ending in 4 and 5). It's a quiet hotel in general but rue Bonaparte is a busy thoroughfare. There's air-con throughout the hotel.
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Atmosphere: Elegant and Low-key
Check-in / Check-out Earliest check-in: 1:00 PM Latest check-out time: 12:00 AM
US$194.90 per night
(US$97.45per person per night)
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Les Deux Magots (170 blvd St-Germain, 6e), which takes its name from the two magots (grotesque figurines) of Chinese dignitaries at the entrance, is best known as the favoured hangout of Sartre, Hemingway, Picasso and André Breton. Everyone visiting Paris has to sit on the terrace of the Deux Magots at least once.
The philosopher Auguste Comté (1798-1857), the founder of positivism, lived in the building now housing the Hôtel St-Germain des Prés from 1818 to 1822.
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