yes - the whole area is rather nice......looked at an apartment very close by, but it was all the tourists around that put me off
Good to take visitors there though - there's even a small vinyard nearby making about 500 litres a year on the Rue Saint Vincent - and it is thought to be mediaeval in origin.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Montmartre.
I stayed in a friend's flat in nearby rue de Clignancourt which is very multi-cultural with many north African shops with colourful displays of vegetables etc. Montmartre itself is very touristy but I loved it.
its a good hike up the steps but once up, the whole area is a mass of small restaurants, galleries and a street market for the artists. There's also a small railway to use and you can actually drive up there, but parking can be fun.....(one of the reasons I did not stay there - had the use of a garage for one, but any visitors would have struggled). The Basilique de Sacre Coeur isn't my fav eglise in the city, but the views out over Paris are superb......
Have you been to Paris - if you like the thought of Montmartre then also head for the Left Bank up river from the Musee d'Orsay and perhaps even St Germain-en-Laye, a Parisian equivalent of Hampstead Heath - a lovely old town and full of good shops and cafes - also got a spectacular Chateau, overlooking the Seine, to which James II fled after the Glorious Revolution.
Montmartre is wonderful - but our taxi-driver warned me to hang on to my handbag as there were theives about!! so ended up with white knuckles !!! I'd go again though
The most common "scam" at the moment involves someone (usually east European looking) finding a gold ring on the ground in front of you. (NB they didn't find it they planted it, it isn't gold and they don't deserve a reward for being honest/generous!!) If you visit Paris it is almost a certainty it will happen to you at some point. Four times to me in 3 days a couple of weeks ago. Tell them to p off!!
Don't tell them to p off, tell them to, "Fous le camp!"
The gold ring is a new one on me, although I haven't been back to Paris for 5 years. The main scam on the Boulevard de Clichy below Montmartre was the three card trick, for which people amazingly still fall.