One notable detail of our recent tour of Marianne's Paris apartment is her toilet library. This space-exploiting idea is a common sight in Paris apartments, where toilets often occupy their own room...
One notable detail of our recent tour of Marianne's Paris apartment is her toilet library. This space-exploiting idea is a common sight in Paris apartments, where toilets often occupy their own room...

So will news of these Parisian toilet libraries be as controversial as the French bathroom libraries we looked at a while back?
To see the rest of Marianne's apartment, go here.
- Kristin Hohenadel blogging from rue Vieille du Temple, Paris, France. She can be reached at kristin @ apartmenttherapy . com
is that tub cut in half?
view msjessica's profile
This just reminds me of the Seinfeld episode: "This book has been in the bathroom!"
view JV's profile
Sorry - spelling nazi.
"This space-exploiting idea is a common sight in Paris apartments".
And... this just looks messy.
view ChzPlz's profile
There is a used bookstore in Capitol Hill (DC) where the french books are stored in the bathroom...
view cmu's profile
I would not wish it upon anybody to be sitting in that seat when those shelves decide to collapse. The shelves look like just wooden crates piled on top of each other. They're probably nailed to the wall (like the boxes in her kitchen), but still...
The door on the left though, with the white-and-red striped cloth, looks pretty cool.
view somedudeinvicenza's profile
I recognize that little sticker from my old Berlin shared-apartment-- "Kein Sitzpinkler!" I don't know how to say it in French.
view 212gretchen's profile
whoops-- I mean "Kein Stehpinkler!"
view 212gretchen's profile
Mariann- I really like your apartment- but......toilet reading creeps me out. and I think a library encourages that behavior so I would have to say nay!
view JodieAnn's profile
now that's really a "water closet"
i really don't enjoy spending a lot of time in a smelly bathroom, so i never read in there. plus, the room is usually pretty humid because of the shower and that is not good for books.
view ange_lune's profile
Perhaps I'm a stuck-up North American, but...
...anyone who spends that much time on the toilet needs to eat more fiber. Can you say "constipation"?
view PrettyKitty's profile
I feel sick thinking about all those germs going all over my precious books.
view Monkeyme's profile
When a toilet is flushed, the water from inside sprays into the air in a fine mist. In this case, the urine-and-feces contaminated mist will settle onto those books. Not my idea of good reading...
view Elle B's profile
This just grosses me out.
view gryt's profile
I lived in paris and visited several friends with their own apartments..
This is so odd.
No one keeps books above the toilet in a a paris flat. The french love their books and most wouldn't do it.
Where do you get this stuff, AT?
view cityofparis's profile
This is gross...yet somehow this topic keeps popping up...why????
view suzy8track's profile
Is that a package of pink TP on the top shelf? Please say it isn't pink. Please.
view Swan's profile
Whats wrong with pink TP, is that a faux-pas too?
view Hollie's profile
there was a post here on AT about french pink tp a few months ago.
i couldn't imagine keeping my books (or magazines even) in the toilet, ew!
view f.in.eur's profile
There are a lot of germophobes on AT. In a small apartment, I think this isn't a bad idea for your not-so-beloved books, and it gives the white bathroom some color.
view Cheryl's profile
If not wanting doodie hands on my books means I'm a germophobe, well count me in! ha
view I_Heart_The_Eastside's profile
This isn't entirely on topic, but I'm so glad I don't live in France anymore with one of those toilet-only rooms. No window, no ventilation of any sort usually. It smells and you have to go to another room to wash your hands (touching light switches and knobs on the way). The bidet is a great invention, the persistence of these toilet closets. not so much.
view otis's profile
Doodie hands, germs, fine mists of feces... Are there (((that))) many people out there unable to manage bathroom duties without involving hand to fecal contact? This is shocking to me. And as for fine flushing mists, does no one lower the lid first before flushing? Also a handy habit to get into overall for the aesthetic and feng shui aspects. (I hate an open toilet lid, period.)
I keep a smallish library in the bathroom but mostly for bathtub soaks. It never occurs that this might be "gross" especially in an obviously clean bathroom.
Carry on.
view TMM's profile
There's nothing germaphobic about knowing basic sanitation and knowing that the toilet (as a FACT) sprays those germs throughout a bathroom. If you're not bothered by it, fine, but don't resort to namecalling people who have their facts right.
view Monkeyme's profile
Some people...jeez. I'm pretty obsessive compulsive myself, but the way folks respond to bathroom related matters makes me wonder how they even manage to use the toilet without having a panic attack on the pot.
Seems like a clever solution for find a bit more space. We're moving into a new apartment this weekend and it has it's own little toilet closet, and I think I will use the space above for storage, as well. Probably not for our books, but something can go up there.
view trygve's profile
As someone who would feel uncomfortable sleeping under wall shelves with books or other heavy items on them, I don't think I'd want to sit underneath them, either. Crash!!! (It's happened!)
view Jane's profile
i love our toilet only room (or well, i really like it), it has a little corner sink and a ventilation system. and is really practical in an apartment with 2 people and 1 bathroom.
view CaliinFrance's profile
hahaha, where can i get a "Kein Stehpinkler" sticker for my toilet?
view sanna's profile
As regards reading material in the loo, Alexander Kira in The Bathroom Book suggests psychological reasons and not lack of fiber:
"People who experience shame or guilt in connection with elimination, particularly defecation, very often must take their minds off the act in order to defecate at all. Otherwise, tensions produced by guilt or ugliness associated with the act will prevent completion. One of the most common methods of accomplishing this is reading."
"It has been suggested by some psychologists that reading also serves as a symbolic way of replacing the material lost through defecation and helps to prolong the act of defecation and the consequent loss."
view BonivaGScott's profile
Everything else in your bathroom is covered in germs, why are people so protective of books? These are the same people who think every single book is precious and you're never giving it to anyone else. I just don't think I care so much about the physical books as I might about the information that's there if I need it, and then I guess these people don't love their library and won't read a book if it looks like someone else may have touched it ever. FIXATION is the word we're looking for here.
Anyway, this doesn't look like a lot of books, and actually it's funny that the middle shelf looks like it might be DVDs or even video games (I don't have any games but think they're about the same size?) It's a small selection of the kind of books you might read while you have the time and don't mind wasting if they're ruined. It's a serious problem, how when people see books, they assume they are good books. Books are mostly kind of cheap and mostly replaceable too.
view K T G's profile
Books in the bathroom...hmmm this does not strike me as sanitary. I certainly wouldnt want to borrow a book form that library.
view NOWDRIVEAROUND4YOURTOTAL's profile