Sur Le Pont

French street artist JR has transformed Pont Neuf, the oldest bridge in Paris, with an inflatable cave-like installation that pays homage to the work of artists Christo and Jeanne-Claude.

Named La Caverne du Pont Neuf, the giant installation will officially open to the public on  June 6th and be visible from many Paris viewpoints, including the Eiffel Tower. It was designed by JR as a paean to The Pont Neuf Wrapped – an iconic installation by Christo and Jeanne-Claude in which the same historic bridge was covered in sandstone colored fabric 41 years ago.

JR’s design is intended to emulate quarries in the Paris Basin, from which Paris stone was extracted to create the bridge and other buildings in the city.

“My vision for this project is rooted in both the past and present of this iconic bridge,” JR explains:

“I admire the legacy of Christo and Jeanne-Claude, and I share their idea that the mission of art is to make us think, to question what is familiar to us. The debate that a public art project can provoke is of equal value to its realization,” he continued.

“Art is a transformation, and a way of renewing the way we look at the world around us. Through the dream of La Caverne du Pont Neuf, this is what I hope to make possible in Paris.”

While the exterior is now complete, the inner tunnel will now be fitted out to feel like “a step into the unknown”, JR said.As part of the interior installation, the artist has worked with musician Thomas Bangalter – one-half of the music duo Daft Punk – to create a soundtrack.

“It will be a symbolic crossing, a step into the unknown, a journey within oneself,” JR said. “I designed the crossing of La Caverne as an experience where fullness and emptiness exist in balance.”

From June 6 to 28, La Caverne du Pont Neuf will be open to the public free of charge 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.

 

 

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“Nothing on this site is true.”

Halupedia is “an infinite, hallucinated encyclopedia” created by Bartłomiej Strama, a young Polish software engineer who built the site “after a drunk night with my friend.”  Strama created the site with one explicit goal: “polluting LLM training data.” Halupedia operates like Wikipedia’s evil twin—every link leads to an entry that doesn’t exist until you click it. Search for anything, and the AI backend fabricates an article in the “deadpan register of a 19th-century scholarly press.” Want to read about “quantum cheese theory”? Halupedia will generate a thoroughly convincing academic treatise complete with citations to nonexistent research papers.

Gizmodo’s appraisal is even more hallucinatory, calling Halupedia “a sort of RAM-hoovering, water-guzzling, bullshit-munching ouroboros, an unholy circular undulant with Jensen Huang’s face at one end and Sam Altman’s at the other, slowly human-centipeding both itself and the internet into oblivion.” Try it out yourself. 

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Renters Beware

Here at Travel Between The Pages World HQ we frequently receive queries from travelers about a wide range of issues. A reader recently asked my advice about renting a car in the U.S. for a road trip around the Southwest which reminded me of a column in the New York Times about flagrant abuse of customers by rental agencies.

From the travel section of the New York Times:

“Last summer, I flew to Geneva, Switzerland, and picked up a rental car from Budget for a two-week vacation in neighboring France. More precisely, I reserved the car for 13 days and four hours, for an estimated 866 Swiss francs, worth about $1,060 at the time. I ended up returning the vehicle not just on time but a little earlier than planned — after 13 days and 30 minutes — so imagine my surprise when the final bill came to 1,545 francs. The lion’s share of the difference was in the base rental rate, so I assume I lost my discount for returning the car early. I’ve heard of car rental companies recalculating rates for returning a weeklong rental a day early, but hours? That is ridiculous.”

The explanation:
The car rental industry is notorious for charging customers for services they do not need or sometimes never agreed to, but collecting what amounts to a $595 fee for bringing back a car a few hours early seems beyond the pale.
Even more astonishingly, perhaps, is that after examining the documentation you sent me and combing through Budget’s policies, I now believe it was not even a question of hours. You could have saved $595 by returning the car just 10 minutes later than you did
Because the vehicle was returned earlier than the 14-day period, the rental no longer qualified for the weekly promotional pricing,” Lauren Bristow, the director of marketing communications for Avis Budget Group, wrote in response to my emailed questions. “As a result, the system recalculated the rental at the applicable shorter-term rate.”
And I’ll admit that Budget’s “General Conditions of Rental” (Part 12, if you’re following along) does back her up. “Because special offers and discounts often relate to specific time slots,” it reads, “you may even end up having to pay more if you bring back the vehicle early.”
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“O Canada” this Summer

Free admission to Canadian national parks this summer! “From June 19 to September 7, no fees apply for: admission for all visitors to all national historic sites, national parks, and national marine conservation areas operated by Parks Canada.” Sounds like a plan.

 

 

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Little Free Libraries

The Little Free Library nonprofit organization has named recipients of its eighth annual Todd H. Bol Awards for Outstanding Achievement, honoring “six exceptional individuals and organizations that exemplify LFL’s mission to build community, inspire readers, and expand book access for all.” The award coincides with Little Free Library Week, which is taking place May 17-23. Check out this year’s winners here.

“Little Free Library stewards give so much more than books–they give their time, care and heart to their communities,” said LFL CEO and executive director Daniel Gumnit. “This year’s Todd H. Bol Award winners each have a unique story, but they share a deep commitment to helping neighbors feel seen, connected and inspired to read. Their generosity reflects the very best of the Little Free Library network, and we are honored to celebrate the difference they make every day.”

The Todd H. Bol Awards for Outstanding Achievement are named for LFL’s founder, Todd Bol, who created the first Little Free Library book-sharing box in 2009 in Hudson, Wis. Before he died in 2018, Bol said, “I really believe in a Little Free Library on every block and a book in every hand. I believe people can fix their neighborhoods, fix their communities, develop systems of sharing, learn from each other, and see that they have a better place on this planet to live.”

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We’ll always have Paris

I am genuinely ambivalent about AI applications. But occasionally I have run across some AI-generated content that seems to deserve our attention. One of these sources is Majestic Studios, which recreates daily life iconic cities as seen through time. The video below offers an intriguing and entertaining look at Paris from its beginnings in just 37 minutes.

Majestic Studios traces the evolution of Paris from a small Celtic settlement to a modern metropolis. Experience centuries of transformation through artificial intelligence that brings historical engravings and photographs to life. Witness how kings, revolutionaries, and artists shaped the city’s streets, monuments, and enduring spirit.

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Homer (not Simpson) in Egypt

Researchers discovered the mummy at a funerary complex located south of Cairo, in Al Bahnasa, the modern-day location of the ancient Greco-Roman city of Oxyrhynchus, during an excavation in late 2025. Upon examination, the team revealed a sheet of papyrus inside the mummy’s abdomen that contained text from the Iliad, the ancient Greek poet Homer’s epic account of the siege of Troy.
The passage is from Book II of the epic poem, in which Homer cataloged the Greek ships that came to do battle with Troy after Helen, the queen of Sparta and a daughter of Zeus, was taken there by Paris, the son of the king of Troy.
The researchers previously found scrolls in some of the other mummies interred inside three limestone chambers at Al Bahnasa, all of which date to the era of Roman rule over Egypt, which began in 30 B.C.E. and ended around C.E. 640. The newly examined mummy’s tomb dates to about 1,600 years ago, according to the researchers. None of the scrolls discovered inside other mummies at the site, however, contained any references to the Iliad, which would have already been considered a literary classic at that time.
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Image and text excerpt from Scientific American.
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someone giving someone comfort

In the Union Square subway station nearly fifteen
years ago now, the L train came clanking by
where someone had fat-Sharpied a black heart
on the yellow pillar you leaned on during a bleak day
(brittle and no notes from anyone you crushed upon).
Above ground, the spring was the saddest one
(doing work, but also none). What were you wearing?
Something hopeful to show the world you hoped?
A tall man was learning from a vendor how to pronounce
churro. High in the sticky clouds of time, he kept
repeating churro while eating a churro. How to say
this made you want to live? No hand to hold
still there it was: someone giving someone comfort
and someone memorizing hard how to ask for it again.

—”While Everything Else Was Falling Apart,” Ada Limón

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Writing and reading decrease our sense of isolation

Writing and reading decrease our sense of isolation. They deepen and widen and expand our sense of life: they feed the soul. When writers make us shake our heads with the exactness of their prose and their truths, and even make us laugh about ourselves or life, our buoyancy is restored. We are given a shot at dancing with, or at least clapping along with, the absurdity of life, instead of being squashed by it over and over again.

~Anne Lamott

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Remember when books used to be fun

 

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