Every Frenchman Has One

First published in 1962 by Random House, the memoir is a lighthearted account of the author's often amusing attempts to understand and adapt to French life, manners, and customs.

The book consists of twenty small chapters, each with a focus on some aspect of French life, manners, and customs from the perspective of someone new to the country.

Through a series of vignettes and observations, each chapter explores a subject from the author's perspective as she experienced it, conveying the joys and difficulties encountered in her new French life.

The title of the book refers to the liver—"the most significant of all human organs as the French constitution is concerned", according to the author.

[3] In her review on the Backlots website, Laura Fowler writes, "Olivia de Havilland is an immensely talented and entertaining writer, and each chapter of the book is laugh-out-loud funny.