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The Girl with No Shadow

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Since she was a little girl, the wind has dictated every move Vianne Rocher has made, buffeting her from the small French village of Lansquenet-sous-Tannes to the crowded streets of Paris. Cloaked in a new identity, that of widow Yanne Charbonneau, she opens a chocolaterie on a small Montmartre street, determined to still the wind at last and keep her daughters, Anouk and baby Rosette, safe.

Her new home above the chocolate shop offers calm and quiet; no red sachets by the door; no sparks of magic fill the air. Conformity brings with it anonymity—and peace. There is even Thierry, the stolid businessman who wants to care for Yanne and the children. On the cusp of adolescence, an increasingly rebellious Anouk does not understand. But soon the weathervane turns . . . and into their lives blows the charming, enigmatic—and devious—Zozie de l'Alba. And everything begins to change.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The multiple perspectives involved in this modern-day witch's tale are ably tackled by Susanna Burney. She takes on the various voices of a precocious teenager, a depressed middle-aged mother, and an ambitious manipulator of indiscernible age. Each of these characters has her own accompanying cast of supporting characters. Although it may take listeners a while to get used to the shifting narrative perspective, the alternating chapters build to a palpable tension. Burney's voice modulates the distinct personalities in a versatile and engaging style. She is also adept at the French phrases interspersed throughout the story. The lives and passions of these three women are presented in a fascinating manner. M.R. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 21, 2008
      Harris revisits characters from 1999’s bestselling Chocolat
      in this equally delectable modern fairy tale. More than four years have passed since Vianne Rocher pitted her enchanted chocolate confections against the local clergy’s interpretation of Lent in smalltown France; since then, Vianne has renounced magic, changed her name to Yanne Charbonneau and moved with her two daughters to Paris’s Montmartre district. There, Yanne embraces conformity and safety, much to the dismay of her increasingly troubled older daughter, Anouk. When Anouk becomes entranced with Zozie de l’Alba, an exotic itinerant who happens upon a job at the new shop, and the relationship grows increasingly sinister, Yanne must call up all of Vianne’s powers, culinary and mystical, to save her family. Harris again structures the narrative (told in alternate chapters by Zozie, Yanne and Anouk) around a liturgical season (in this case Advent). Harris gives fans much to savor in this multilayered novel, from the descriptions (including Yanne’s mouthwatering chocolate confections, Zozie’s whimsical footwear and Anouk’s artistic efforts) to the novel’s classic, enduring theme of good vs. evil—and the difficulty of telling the difference.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 28, 2008
      Harris's haunting sequel to Chocolat gets a credible, though uneven, performance from Susanna Burney, who narrates the story of Yanne Charbonneau, the confectionary artist formerly known as Vianne Rocher now living in dowdy anonymity in Paris with her two daughters, Anouk and Rosette. Yanne and Anouk's perspectives alternate with that of Zozie de l'Alba, who helps in Yanne's chocolaterie and secretly instructs 11-year-old Anouk in the old mystical ways. Burney does a wonderful job with Zozie, infusing the would-be villainess with enough enchantment and enthusiastic esprit that it is entirely believable that the neighborhood is taken in by her. Her Yanne is less successful, perhaps partly because the character herself is flat for most of the story, only gradually finding her voice and her power. However, Burney brings a proficient French accent, a lovely singing voice for the recurring lullaby leitmotif and emotional power to the novel's final scenes about the bond of maternal love. A Morrow hardcover (Reviews, Jan. 21).

    • Library Journal

      July 15, 2008
      In this sequel to Harris's 1977 "New York Times" best-selling novel "Chocolat" (which also found life as a popular film featuring Johnny Depp), Anouk and her mother, Vianne, return to Montmartre, to live above their Parisian chocolate shop. Vianne has given up magic and changed her name to Yanne; still a single mom, she now also has a four-year-old daughter named Rosette, who does not speak. Roux, Rosette's father, has had no contact with Yanne since she resettled in Paris. This modern-day tale involves identity theft, preadolescent anxiety, a special-needs child, and a marriage of convenience, as well as lots of chocolate. Yanne, who has fallen on hard times, dresses in dark colors, suppressing her talent for magic and selling chocolates from her Montmartre storefront. Eleven-year-old Anouk, now called Annie, has started secondary school, where her schoolmates torment and bully her for being different and wearing the wrong clothes. Zozie, a charming, gifted young woman who inexplicably shows up one day and volunteers to help in Yanne's store, has worked her way into every aspect of Yanne's and her daughters' lives and generally makes herself indispensable. The characters are well drawn, and the apprehension among them leads to a climactic ending on Christmas Eve. Performed by Susanna Burney, this novel includes drama, romance, comedy, the supernatural, and adventure. Recommended. [Also available as downloadable audio from Audible.com.Ed.]Carol Stern, Glen Cove P.L., NY

      Copyright 2008 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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