![]() ![]() ![]() I think that’s because each and every person in Lansquenet has their own story and Joanne Harris could spend the rest of her life telling their tales. Lansquenet-sous-Tannes seems to be a village that Joanne Harris can’t get out of her head. There’s Guillaume and his little dog Charly, Armande Voizon and her red silk underwear, Curé Reynaud and his secret past. I first read it about three or four years ago and fell in love with Lansquenet and its character filled streets. Vianne has to decide whether she is going to finally stop wandering where the wind blows her, or if she and Anouk will leave when the wind changes. Not only that, but the river-gypsies are not well-accepted in the village and violence is brewing. Armande’s family doesn’t approve of Vianne and their friendship and so her daughter causes trouble for Vianne in the village. Just as the villagers begin to warm to Vianne and her chocolaterie, she befriends the river-gypsies from the Tannes and an old woman named Armande. ![]() So that doesn’t exactly go down well with the Curé. They buy the old bakery and Vianne turns it into a chocolaterie. Lansquenet-Sous-Tannes is not the most welcoming village in the world, but when the wind blows Vianne and her daughter Anouk into town, she decides to stay. ![]()
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