![]() Josephine has a son, which Vianne didn’t know about and Roux never mentioned despite living in Lansquenet for four years before finding Vianne in Paris. Father Francis Raynaud has been replaced by another priest because he’s under suspicion of arson. Vianne and her daughters pack up and travel back the village they have not visited in so long, only to find that much has changed. Vianne wants to return Roux refuses to go. The letter states that Vianne is to return to Lansquenet, take care of Armande’s peach tree so the fruit doesn’t go to waste, and to help someone in the village who will need it. ![]() It’s been eight years since Armande’s death, yet Luc has been instructed to give Vianne a letter from his grandma upon his twenty-first birthday. But then a letter arrives from Luc Clairmont, the grandson of Vianne’s friend Armande (played by Judi Dench in the film). Rosette, still speechless but fluent in sign language, stays with Roux all day instead of attending school. Though space is tight, Roux’s new boat has a small area for Vianne to make and sell chocolates, while Anouk continues to go to school. ![]() Vianne, Roux, Anouk, and Rosette are living on a boat moored along the Seine. ![]() Originally published as Peaches for Monsieur le Curé and later released as Peaches for Father Francis, Joanne Harris takes readers back to Lansquenet, the quaint French village they were first introduced to in Chocolat. ![]()
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