| Hint | Answer | % Correct |
|---|---|---|
| This American author lived in the 14th between 1921 and 1928, writing for the Toronto Star | Ernest Hemingway | 100%
|
| These underground structures hold the remains of some six million people | Catacombs | 67%
|
| 53rd quartier of Paris and of a larger district known as a hot spot for artists that stretches in to the 6th and 15th arrondissements | du Montparnasse | 67%
|
| 55th quartier of Paris. It is the "little" part of an adjacent commune it was carved out of in 1860. | du Petit-Montrouge | 67%
|
| These two existentialist lovers are buried in a cemetery named after the 53th quartier. He wrote "Being and Nothingness", she wrote "The Second Sex". Name either. | Jean-Paul Sartre | Simone de Beauvoir | 67%
|
| Name of the 14th. It derives from an astronomical facility used to watch the sky | Observatoire | 67%
|
| The same author's memoirs of his time in Paris were published posthumously under this title in 1964 | A Moveable Feast | 33%
|
| Café where Pablo Picasso, Vladimir Lenin, and Henry Miller gathered and which is mentioned in Édith Piaf's song "Paris" | Café du Dôme | 33%
|
| It is often called "la Santé" and is the only remaining kind of this institution in Paris proper. The fraudster Stavisky, the vagabond-turned-writer Jean Genet and the bank robber Jacques Mesrine all spent some time here. | Prison | 33%
|
| 56th quartier of Paris | de Plaisance | 0%
|
| 54th quartier of Paris | du Parc de Montsouris | 0%
|