MALO-LES-BAINS is a more attractive place to stop off than Dunkerque: it's a surprisingly pleasant nineteenth-century seaside suburb on the east side of town (buses #3 & #9), from whose vast sandy beach the Allied troops embarked in 1940. Digue des Alliés is the dirtier end of an extensive beachfront promenade lined with cafés and restaurants; at the cleaner end, Digue des Mers, the beach can almost seem pleasant when the sun comes out as long as you avert your eyes from the industrial inferno to the west. However, the suburb actually reveals its fin-de-siècle charm away from the seafront, a few parallel blocks inland along avenue Faidherbe and its continuation avenue Kléber, with the pretty green place Turenne sandwiched in between; around here you'll find some excellent pâtisseries, boulangeries and charcuteries.A beachfront campsite La Licorne is at 1005 boulevard de l'Europe (tel 03.28.69.26.68, [email protected]). Other places to stay include the Hirondelle, 46 av Faidherbe (tel 03.28.63.17.65, www.hotelhirondelle.com; €5570), a modern two-star in a great position; and the unassuming, less expensive Au Bon Coin, 49 av Kléber (tel 03.28.69.12.63, fax 03.28.69.64.03; €4055), whose cosy bar is good for a drink. Both have well-regarded restaurants specializing in seafood: menus cost from around €12 at both. Also on avenue Kléber are a few more exotic eateries, including a Vietnamese and a North African restaurant. Two popular beachfront brasseries, again focusing on seafood, are L'Iguane, 15 Digue des Alliés, a down-to-earth establishment offering generous servings at €7 a plat, and the stylish but more expensive Le Pavois, at 175 Digue de Mer (menu €16).
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