A real-life Dud Avocado, this memoir is a provocative account of a feminist scholar's sexual awakening set amid the backdrop of 1960s Paris. --Library Journal Miller's memoir will resonate with women who, over the years, have been fascinated by Jean Seberg's role as Patricia in the Godard film Breathless (1960) ... Her look back is filled with vintage vignettes of garret apartments, matronly concierges, and the silk-lingerie splurges of a poor young student's milieu. --Booklist Breathless, a deliriously satisfying account of erotic awakening and disillusionment, unfolds as a chain of tightly crafted, riveting vignettes, each episode as mesmerizing as the city enshrined at the book's center. Simone de Beauvoir would have loved this story. Jean-Paul Sartre, too. But Nancy K. Miller is more entertaining than both of them put together. Her book offers a beautifully distilled parable about the difficulties of finding a direct path to happiness. --Wayne Koestenbaum, author of Andy Warhol This cautionary memoir of a girl's fantasy adventure in Paris gone awry reads like a witty novel. Its vivid scenes are frequently hilarious, sometimes sad, and always engrossing. That it really happened only makes it better. --Alix Kates Shulman, author of To Love What Is A steamy portrait of the jeune fille before she became a feminist. A wonderful reminder of what it meant to be a good daughter determined to become a bad girl in the roiling sixties. I loved every chapter of this American's sex-obsessed quest for identity in Paris. --Susan Gubar, author of Memoir of a Debulked Woman Witty, wise, poignant, and funny, Breathless is an extraordinary memoir about a young woman's adventures and misadventures in Paris, a city that was for her as much an idea as a place. Miller's vividly told memories, keen intelligence, gentle irony, and striking gift for narrative pacing held me captive from beginning to end. --Siri Hustvedt, author of What I Loved and The Summer Without Men Surprising, daring, funny, wise, and profound. --Elaine Showalter, author of A Jury of Her Peers Breathless, Nancy Miller's wry and wonderful new memoir about a romantic (and chastening) student sojourn she spent in Paris in the early 1960s, is a delicious, picaresque, often hilarious female 'coming of age' story--full of zest and pathos and more than a few glints of Proustian profondeur... [Miller] offers a story at once salutary, intelligent, deeply humorous, and ineluctably bittersweet: the souvenir of a magical mise-en-scene, from a brilliant young woman who paid attention to it all. --Terry Castle, author of The Professor and Other Writings An artful portrait of youthful indiscretion in a bygone time. --Bustle