I. John Glassco in 1928. National Archives of Canada, PA 188476.
II. Graeme Taylor, John Glassco, and Robert McAlmon on the beach at Nice. National Archives of Canada, PA 188182.
III. Graeme Taylor, John Glassco, and Sibley Dreis (Stanley Dahl), Nice. National Archives of Canada, PA 188181.
IV. Thelma Wood (Emily Pine) and Djuna Barnes (Willa Torrance), c. 1930. McKeldin Library, University of Maryland.
V. John Glassco by Adolph Dehn, Paris, 1928. National Archives of Canada, C107027.
VI. Man Ray (Narwahl) and Robert Desnos, 1928. Copyright 1995 Man Ray Trust—ADAGP-ARS.
VII. The Surrealists, 1930 (left to right): Tristan Tzara, Paul éluard, André Breton, Jean Arp, Salvador Dalí, Yves Tanguy, Max Ernst, René Crevel, Man Ray. Copyright 1995 Man Ray Trust—ADAGP-ARS.
VIII. Kiki by Man Ray. Copyright 1995 Man Ray Trust—ADAGP-ARS.
IX. The poster advertising the Gala at which Kiki was proclaimed ‘Queen of Montparnasse’.
X. Kay Boyle (Diana Tree) by Man Ray, c. 1926. Copyright 1995 Man Ray Trust—ADAGP-ARS.
XI. Margaret Whitney, who was probably the model for Mrs Quayle. National Archives of Canada, PA 188183.
XII. The Dingo in 1925. Standing at the entrance are the American owner Louis Wilson and his Dutch wife Yopi. Courtesy of Hugh Ford.
XIII. Jimmie Charters (left) and Paris Tribune reporter Leigh Hoffman (far right), c. 1928. Courtesy of Hugh Ford.
XIV. The Dôme in the mid-twenties. La Coupole is almost out of sight down the Boulevard du Montparnasse. Courtesy of Hugh Ford.
XV. The Hôtel Jules César, now the refurbished Hôtel Unic at 56 rue du Montparnasse, almost directly across the street from the Falstaff. Michael Gnarowski.
XVI. 147 rue Broca today (now the rue Léon Maurice Nordmann), with the metal gate at the far right opening into the impasse. Michael Gnarowski.
XVII. The impasse, or dead-end laneway, at 147 rue Broca, with artists’ studios. Michael Gnarowski.
XVIII. The Falstaff, on the rue du Montparnasse, today. Michael Gnarowski.
XIX. The rue Daguerre district today, with some artists’ studio buildings still surviving in their original state. Michael Gnarowski.
XX. Three pages from the issue of This Quarter in which the ‘Extracts’ by Graeme Taylor and John Glassco appeared—along with contributions by Ernest Walsh, Joseph Vogel, Robert McAlmon, Edward Dahlberg, Emmanuel Carnevali, and Archibald Craig.
XXI. James Joyce and Sylvia Beach, 1920, in front of the first Shakespeare and Company bookstore on the rue Dupuytren. Reproduced with the permission of the Poetry/Rare Books Collection, University Libraries, State University of New York at Buffalo.
XXII. The cover of the Guide Rose, and an advertisement for the Sphinx, both featuring enticements to the sexual attractions of Paris.