eBookSpanish-language Edition (Spanish-language Edition)

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Overview

El chocolate puede ser mucho más que un placer para los sentidos. A veces, una peca minosa tentación y otras, una forma de acercar los sueños a la realidad. Vianne Rocher y su hija Anouk llegan al pueblo de Lansquenet para abrir una chocolatería frente a la iglesia. Vianne es alegre y desenfadada, sensual y misteriosa y parece poseer extraños dones. Para el cura Francis Reynaud, la presencia de esta singular mujer no puede ser sino el primer paso para caer en la tentación y el pecado. Para Vianne, sin embargo, el chocolate es algo más que un placer para los sentidos: gracias al chocolate, las penas se hacen más llevaderas, los secretos más íntimos y los sueños, quizás, se vuelven reales.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9788415945154
Publisher: Duomo ediciones
Publication date: 07/29/2013
Sold by: Libranda
Format: eBook
File size: 545 KB
Language: Spanish

About the Author

Es la autora del éxito de ventas Chocolat (Duomo, 2013), cuya aclamada versión cinematográfica protagonizaron Juliette Binoche y Johnny Depp, además de diez bestsellers internacionales. Sus libros, entre ellos Chico de ojos azules (Duomo, 2011), se han publicado en 50 países y vendido más de 30 millones de ejemplares en el mundo. Nació en 1964 en Barnsley, de madre francesa y padre inglés. Estudió Lengua y Literatura Moderna y Medieval en Cambridge y antes de dedicarse por completo a la como profesora. Vive en Yorkshire con su familia, toca el bajo en la banda que fundó cuando era adolescente, escribe en el cobertizo de su jardín, le encantan los musicales y los filmes de ciencia ficción clásicos. Uno de sus sueños es perderse algún día en una isla del Pacífico.

Read an Excerpt

We came on the wind of the carnival. A warm wind for February, laden with the hot greasy scents of frying pancakes and sausages and powdery-sweet waffles cooked on the hot plate right there by the roadside, with the confetti sleeting down collars and cuffs and rolling in the gutters like an idiot antidote to winter. There is a febrile excitement in the crowds that line the narrow main street, necks craning to catch sight of the crêpe-covered char with its trailing ribbons and paper rosettes. Anouk watches, eyes wide, a yellow balloon in one hand and a toy trumpet in the other, from between a shopping basket and a sad brown dog. We have seen carnivals before, she and I; a procession of two hundred and fifty of the decorated chars in Paris last Mardi Gras, a hundred and eighty in New York, two dozen marching bands in Vienna, clowns on stilts, the Grosses Têtes with their lolling papier-mâché heads, drum majorettes with batons spinning and sparkling. But at six the world retains a special luster. A wooden cart, hastily decorated with gilt and crêpe and scenes from fairy tales. A dragon's head on a shield, Rapunzel in a woolen wig, a mermaid with a cellophane tail, a gingerbread house all icing and gilded cardboard, a witch in the doorway, waggling extravagant green fingernails at a group of silent children. ... At six it is possible to perceive subtleties that a year later are already out of reach. Behind the papier-mâché, the icing, the plastic, she can still see the real witch, the real magic. She looks up at me, her eyes, which are the blue-green of Earth seen from a great height, shining.

Reading Group Guide

1. To what extent is Reynaud the villain of the piece? Is it possible to understand or sympathize with the motivations and feelings behind his actions?

2. Reynaud and Vianne seem to be natural enemies from the start, and yet they both have significant elements in common: a haunted past, a desire for acceptance. How do you think this affects their relationship?

3. The preparation and eating of food is decribed in detail in many parts of the book. What is the significance of this, and what do the attitudes of the main characters towards food show about their personalities?

4. The author uses the first-person narrative voice for both of her principal characters. Why do you feel she does this, and how effective is each in showing the character's attitudes and motivations?

5. Vianne appears to other people as a strong and confident woman, but is secretly filled with fears and insecurities. To what extent do you think she has been strengthened or damaged by her relationship with her bohemian mother?

6. The themes of moving on and settling down recur frequently in the book. Why do you think Vianne wants so badly to remain in the village? Do you think she eventually decides to stay?

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