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Jean-Louis Beaucarnot: Votre arbre généalogique : guide pratique de recherche
Jean-Louis Beaucarnot: Réussir sa généalogie
The author is known as "the Pope of Genealogy"!
A truly excellent resource and also very attractive. (The French like their books to be pretty so that they can double as décor.) I have his earlier "abc de la généalogie" which, if you can find it, is a handier, smaller, and of course older version of this book. (****)
Myriam Provence: Retracer l'histoire d'une maison
Basically, this book tells how to research the history of a house, but for genealogists, it is a quite useful guide to searching land records. The blurb begins: You spend all of your holidays in an old house, finally you buy it and want to know its history...." I did that, gutted the house, and now cannot sell it for money, love, or history! C'est la vie. (**)
Marie-Odile Mergnac: Les prénoms du calendrier révolutionnaire
Good fun to learn of the children named Pistachio or Axe when the Revolutionary Calendar was in effect. (**)
Bertrand/Lanaspre/Mergnac: Les métiers d'autrefois
The skills of long ago. This is a useful little book that gives an explanation of each skill or craft and what it involved in terms of tools and training. (****)
Larousse: Larousse de la généalogie : A la recherche de vos racines
This is as complete and clear as are all of the Larousse publications. Full of internet addresses, is a good starter for researchers based in North America. (*****)
Miguel Mennig Pombeiro: La généalogie sur Internet (1Cédérom)
This came out in 2005 and is partly already out of date, as website addresses change constantly. Still, it has an impressive list of online sites and good instructions on how to use them. The blurb for this says that genealogy is the "second passion of the French". What is the first? It's not what you think, not by a long shot. It's food. (***)
Francis Christian: La Généalogie pour les Nuls
The author is editor-in-chief of the magazine, "Généalogie".
Jean Delorme: La généalogie : guide pour débutant
A nice little starter guide by one of the respected experts. 48 pages. (***)
Marie-Odile Mergnac: La Généalogie
What would a list of French books be without one that is for "les intellectuels"? Here you have an analysis -- psychological, sociological, historical and journalistic -- of why genealogy has become a passion of ordinary, non-aristocratic French. (**)
Jean-Louis Beaucarnot: Généalogie, mode d'emploi
Very attractive and with plenty of colour illustrations, this is a good guide for beginners, but will be a waste of money for those who know the ropes. (***)
Laurent Cassedane: Généalogie facile : Réaliser son arbre
A good guide for those just beginning in France. (***)
Pierre-Valéry Archassal: Généalogie : une passion moderne
Not a guide, but a charming polemic inciting all to the love of genealogy. (***)
Michel-Gasse: Guide de recherche généalogique aux Archives nationales
This guide covers all aspects of using the National Archives, not only for genealogy. It is excellent, but may be more than a genealogist would want. (****)
Philippe de Montjouvent: Dépouiller les archives de notaires
This is a little gold mine, explaining how, once you have the basics on an ancestor, you can use notarial records to learn much, much more. (*****)
Yves Buffetaut: Découvrir la carrière militaire d'un ancêtre
Marie-Odile Mergnac: Déchiffrer les écritures de nos ancêtres
The book begins with dozens of pages of copies of old documents, then continues with 100 lessons using those copies. You could train for a new career with this book. Yet, it is a useful idea to be able to decipher the old records. For most of us, a pamphlet would probably do. For €5, the Editions Généalogiques de la Voûte's "La Paléographie : Guide pour débutant", 20 pages long, will get you started. (***)
Gasse Michel: Dictionnaire-guide de généalogie
This is an extremely handy little book, in French only. It explains just about every term you would come across in doing genealogy in France. (*****)
Gilles Laurendon: Dictionnaire des métiers d'autrefois
(***)
Collectif: Comment réaliser sa généalogie
How to research the history of a surname. (**)
Hi Anne,
First of all I must say I am humbled and exhilarated by the opportunity to be your friend, thank you for reaching out to me on Facebook. I am blown away by your blog...this is my first visit, I'm sure I will spend most of my day surfing through your archives. I can't believe Kristi didn't tell me about you, but then I must remember she (like you) are busy women blazing through life. What a path you are traveling....I am just in awe
of what you are doing and now I am your #1 FAN.
XOXO
JULES
Posted by: Jules Greer | 05 July 2009 at 15:42