Introduction

When
he realizes that Vianne intends to open a chocolate shop in place of
the old bakery, thereby tempting the churchgoers to over-indulgence,
Reynaud's disapproval increases.
As
it becomes clear that the villagers of Lansquenet are falling under
the spell of Vianne's easy ways and unorthodox opinions, to the
detriment of his own authority, he is quick to see her as a danger.
Under Vianne's influence an old woman embraces a new life, a battered
wife finds the courage to leave her husband, children rebel against
authority, outcasts and strays are welcomed... and Reynaud's tight and
carefully ordered community is in danger of breaking apart. As Easter
approaches, both parties throw themselves whole-heartedly into the
preparations; Vianne for the chocolate festival she plans to hold on
Easter Sunday, Reynaud into a desperate attempt to win back his
straying flock. Both factions have a great deal at stake; the village
is bitterly divided; and as the big day looms closer their struggle
becomes much more than a conflict between church and chocolate - it
becomes an exorcism of the past, a declaration of independence, a
showdown between dogma and understanding, pleasure and self-denial.
Background

I first planned
out this story during the Easter holidays, and so it seemed natural to
me that I should set it at that time. Easter to me has many memories
and associations, all of them French; elaborate carnivals, egg-hunts in
my great-grandmother's garden, the story about the flying bells, the
exquisite displays in the windows of the confiseries and pâtisseries.
The Catholic church, of course, still so influential in French
communities. And chocolate. It seems very strange to me that Easter
should now be so closely linked with fasting and self-denial.
Originally Easter was a time of feasting and celebration and the
rebirth of Spring. The pagan traditions which still survive all prove
it. And it's ironic, too, that we should have come full circle. The
shops are never so full of temptations as they are at Easter. I wanted
to write a book about that conflict between indulgence and guilt, with
chocolate as the central metaphor.

Nor
is the book set at any particular time. I deliberately wanted to give
it an old-fashioned feel, to suggest that this was a place where
nothing had changed in many years, whilst retaining some elements of
modern life. There are still many rural communities in France -
especially in the south - where this remains a true depiction, but
Chocolat was never intended to be an accurate representation of
"today's France". It is a France seen through a very selective, very
personal filter which has as much to do with nostalgia as with
present-day realism.
Lastly I
wanted to write about magic. Not the popular view, but about the magic
of everyday things and the way something quite ordinary can, given the
right circumstances, take on extraordinary properties. Vianne's belief
in the supernatural seems dangerous, even sinister, to Reynaud. And yet
it is her very human qualities - her understanding and her kindness to
others - which make her what she is. She does nothing which could not
be achieved by purely ordinary means. Her magic, working as it does
through simple pleasures, is accessible to everyone. If she is a witch,
as Reynaud believes, then so is anyone else with similar values. We
live in a world which is becoming increasingly complicated around us;
we are bombarded with mixed messages and impossible targets from the
media; like Reynaud we have learned to demonize pleasure and to be
afraid of our feelings. Chocolat was my reaction against that; a plea
for tolerance of others but also of ourselves, a reminder that to be
fallible is both natural and allowed; that self-indulgence isn't always
bad; that testing people to destruction isn't the way to make them
better people.
There are no real
heroes or villains in Chocolat. Even Reynaud, with his intransigence
and his dark past, is more of a victim than an oppressor. His deep
insecurity and his desire for order reflect Vianne's own need to
belong, and her fear of being rejected. Nor is the Catholic church the
villain of the piece; Reynaud uses his own interpretation of
Catholicism to enforce his own agenda of control and self-denial.
Vianne does the same in a gentler way, but she too has preconceptions
and prejudices, and like Reynaud, she is a victim of her past. I see
Vianne and Reynaud as two sides of a single coin; closer in terms of
their background, their fears and their struggle for dominance than
anyone else in the story. To me the real difference between them is
that Vianne is a mother, whereas Reynaud, ironically, is a Father only
in name.
For in Chocolat it is
love, and not faith, which ultimately holds the key to salvation.
Reynaud fears love (and pleasure, which he equates with sin), whereas
Vianne embraces it and encourages its free expression. Because of her
love for her daughter Vianne must try to exorcize her past; Reynaud is
condemned to relive it in sterile isolation. But no-one in this story
is beyond redemption; Vianne and Reynaud are both forced to confront
their demons in the end, and I like to think that they both learn
something about themselves in the process, and are both able at last to
rejoin the human race."
Note
from me: It gets you into the christmas mode - in a different way - but
everything is so yummy and you just want to eat chocolate all the
time........Enjoy xxx
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