A review by briarsreviews
Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong: Why We Love France, But Not the French by Jean Nadeau, Julie Barlow

informative slow-paced

1.0

Sixty Million Frenchmen Can't Be Wrong by Jean-Benoit Nadeau and Julie Barlow is an incredibly well researched piece about how the French work, behave, and live. The history, French system, and future are written very well and reads very much like a textbook. It's informing, gives insights into many aspects of the French (history, cultural practices, language, health, etc.), and can open your eyes into the French culture as a whole.

Personally, I couldn't connect with this book well. I wasn't engaged and got bored easily. It's the kind of book I'd need a professor to break down and explain. Perhaps in audiobook form, I might have been more engaged. Regardless, I can tell the research was well down and it is written well. It just didn't connect to me personally.

One star out of five. The book just isn't for me, hence the one star. For how well it's written, someone else will thoroughly enjoy it!