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Hello and welcome to Shana's web site

I am your soft, sweet courtesan. I transport you towards the charms and the pleasures of the East entwined with elegance, refinement and sensuality.

I invite you to an intimate voyage to multiple pleasures and without taboos. Parisian, 30 years, cultivated, having a command of several languages (English, Spanish, Italian or German), simple, with an open spirit, I will be for you, your picuri a companion to accompany you on business trips, dinners and shows ... Libertine, soft and sexy, with expertise in sensual pleasures. I will satisfy your inner most desires during our privileged moments.

With anticipation

Shana

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Escort Girl Shana's Paris Travel Guide

9 Place de la Sorbonne: 47 Boulevard Saint-Michel          
The hub of student life, this square has seen many renovations, but usually
holds bookshops and cafes. At No. 47, at the entrance to the Place de la Sorbonne, was Cafe d'Harcourt, a popular terrace cafe in the 1920s frequented by Hemingway, McAlmon, Joyce, and others.
Walk toward the Seine, past the Roman baths and Cluny Museum (on the right) and across Boulevard Saint-Germain. Hemingway takes this walk in his memoirs and stops at a cafe in the Place Saint-Michel to write a short story and drink two rum St. James's. After finishing the story he orders oysters and white wine: 'After writing a story I was always empty and both sad and happy, as though I had made love'.

10 Gabriel Garcia Marquez: Boulevard Saint-Michel

On a rainy spring day in 1957, Gabriel Garcia Marquez (author of One Hundred ~a1:) of Solitude) saw Hemingway walking on the other side of the street and wearing 'cowboy pants, a plaid shirt and a ballplayer's cap . . . [looking] so alive amid the secondhand bookstalls'. The 28-year-old Colombian, then a newspaperman with one published novel, would one day himself win the Nobel Prize. Instead of spoiling the moment with autograph or effusive praise, Marquez cupped both hands to his mouth and yelled 'Maaaeeestro!' The 59-year-old writer turned, raised his hand, and shouted in Castillian, 'Adiooos, amigo!' This was 'the only time I saw him', recalls Marquez, adding, 'my two great masters were the two North American novelists to have the least in common': Hemingway and Faulkner.

Marques's recollection may be the last record of Hemingway in the streets of Paris.
Either walk right along the river to the park, or cut through one of the narrow streets before the quai: rue Saint-Severin will take you past the Saint-Iulien-le-Pauvre church; rue de la Huchette, made famous in several books by Elliot Paul (The Last Time I Saw Paris), will take you to the front of George Whitman's Shakespeare and Company. All three alternatives will take you across rue Saint-Jacques. This medieval quarter has teeming, narrow streets; lovely churches (Saint Julian of the Poor is the oldest and one of the smallest in Paris); and the remarkable Square Hene-Viviani, next to Saint Julien, with the best view of Notre Dame. Before crossing the Seine one should turn the corner (rue de la Bftcherie) on the left to visit George Whitman's Shakespeare and Company bookshop (so named in 1964), which dates from the 1950s. Rest with a book in the shop (which faces the river) or with the pigeons in the park.