The Lollipop Shoes

The Lollipop Shoes
Author Joanne Harris
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Novel
Publisher Doubleday
Publication date
2 May 2007
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 352 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-385-60948-5 (ISBN13: 9780385609487)
OCLC 40881895
Preceded by Chocolat
Followed by Peaches for Monsieur le Curé (Peaches for Father Francis in the US)

The Lollipop Shoes (retitled The Girl with No Shadow in the U.S.) is a 2007 novel by Joanne Harris and is a sequel to the best-selling Chocolat. Set between Hallowe'en and Christmas, it continues the story of the chocolate-making witch, Vianne Rocher, and her two young daughters, Anouk and Rosette.

After leaving Lansquenet-sous-Tannes, Vianne has been living in the Montmartre quarter of Paris for the past four years. She has forsaken magic to live a normal life, and is quietly resigned to having lost her identity. However, just as she is about to make the terrible mistake of marrying a man she does not love just for the sake of respectability, she is befriended by the mysterious and free-spirited Zozie de l'Alba, who turns her life - and Anouk's - upside down.

Darker than Chocolat and more openly mystical, the story is told in the first person from the three viewpoints of Vianne, Zozie and Anouk, indicated by the three icons: a sun, a black cat and a crescent moon.

Plot

Living in a tiny chocolaterie in Montmartre, Paris, Vianne and her daughters Anouk and Rosette have forsaken magic and adventure for a stable, if unhappy life. Vianne has now become the widow Yanne Charbonneau, mother of 'Annie'. Hiding her magical nature, she feels she is doing the right thing by her daughters, but she herself is dissatisfied: there is friction with Anouk; money is short; there is pressure from her landlord, Thierry le Tresset, to marry him and she no longer has time to make hand-made, quality chocolate, but is forced to sell the ordinary, factory-made kind. Anouk is equally unhappy. She is bullied at school and made to feel like a freak; her mother seems to have changed beyond recognition and she hates living in Paris. She misses Roux, Rosette's father, with whom Vianne is still in love, but whom she left because of his inability to settle down. The situation seems hopeless and set to deteriorate. And then, on All Hallows' Eve, Zozie de l'Alba blows into their lives, bringing back magic and enchantment. She seems to be exactly what Vianne herself used to be: a benevolent force and a free spirit, helping people wherever she goes. But Zozie is a thief of identities, maybe even a collector of souls. She has her eye on Vianne's life, and begins to insinuate herself into the family.

She is soon working at the chocolaterie, helping and understanding everyone as Vianne used to do. She helps Anouk to deal with the bullies who torment her at school. The shop begins to prosper under her guidance, much to Thierry's displeasure. When Roux, Vianne's former lover, re-appears on the scene, Zozie helps Vianne to decide between a stable life with Thierry and a loving relationship with the man she loves.

But as Vianne's life begins to improve little by little under Zozie's influence, it becomes clear that all this must come at a terrible price. Finally, Vianne is forced to confront Zozie on her own ground, to reclaim her magic and her identity and to fight back - but is it too late?

Characters

Vianne Rocher

Vianne is many things; a witch, a traveller, a chocolate-maker, a troubled soul. She has been used to travelling all her life, and is impelled to move on "with the wind" every time she believes she has found a place to settle down. She has great powers of empathy, and is able to help people in trouble, though she is much less good at helping herself. She lives for her daughters, but is secretly afraid of other relationships, preferring to flee rather than settle down and face the possibility of rejection. She has spent most of her life on the run from the various embodiments of her fears; "the Black Man", who represents the Church, and "The Kindly Ones", which symbolize her fear of losing her children.

Zozie de L'Alba

Zozie is a shadowy figure. She has many personas, but the one she uses to seduce Vianne and Anouk is charming, bohemian and free-spirited. She loves shoes, which she uses to read character (just as Vianne uses chocolate). However, underneath the charm, her ruthlessness and greed emerge. She is unusual among Harris' characters in that her motives are never made entirely clear - she remains a mystery until the end.

Anouk

Anouk is entering adolescence, and she is unhappy and confused. She hates the way her mother has changed, is bullied at school and hates the fact that her mother is contemplating marriage. She is at a vulnerable stage in her life, and is immediately seduced by Zozie and her promises.

Magical motifs

Themes

Fear

A recurring theme is that of Vianne's fears. There are three; the Wind, the Black Man, and The Kindly Ones (A euphemism used for the Furies, the Greek personification of vengeance). The Kindly Ones are explicitly shown to be those who mean good but actually cause pain; to Vianne these are usually social workers, priests and doctors. To Zozie, the Kindly Ones are the cost of the lives she leads; the authorities after her for fraud, theft and possibly murder. The Black Man are those who cannot live with the happiness of others, but this is never explained completely and The Black Man could be childish monsters. In this novel, Zozie is the Black Man. The Wind quite simply represents destiny, something which tells Vianne to leave a place even though she never wants to, and this is why she fears it. To Zozie, the wind is the force that drives her to travel, the wanderlust that moves her to travel.

In Chocolat, Vianne confronts her fear of the Black Man, by opposing Reynaud. Here, in this novel, Vianne confronts the Wind - one way or another, by choosing to stay.

Magic

The magic in this book is a mix between the power of an open mind and a sort of strong intuition or powerful perception that nearly cross into the fantastic. The print of the Magical realism style is ever-present.

Free Will versus Fate

All the books reflect the combat against a predestined will. Vianne feels the force of the wind, and is driven by it, yet as she struggles to settle.

Chocolate

Just as in Chocolat, the power of chocolate, as a symbol for love and tolerance, is shown again in The Lollipop Shoes.

Sequel

References