Pages

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Book review of The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan

French Village Diaries book review The Boulangerie on the Corner Susan Buchanan
The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan


The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan

đŸ„–đŸ„đŸ„–đŸ„ Grab your passport for the first in the European Escapes series đŸ„đŸ„–đŸ„đŸ„–

No home. No job. No boyfriend.

When Lia loses her job straight after a break-up, she escapes to the Molins’ family-run boulangerie in Toulouse – the place she was last happy, far away from her cheating ex.

Sworn off men, she isn’t prepared for the spark she feels for charming cheesemaker Jean-Luc, nor for things heating up at the family’s country home in Gascony when handsome, self-assured vineyard-owner ThĂ©o asks her out.

Torn between the two and her connections to the Molins family, Lia has some tough decisions to make.

Lia loves being back in France with the people she cares about, helping in the boulangerie. On discovering it is under threat of closure, she is devastated and resolves to do everything in her power to help it stay open.

Will she succeed? And will she be able to choose between the two handsome Frenchmen and live her happily ever after?

For fans of Gillian Harvey, Rebecca Raisin, Jo Thomas and Veronica Henry.


French Village Diaries book review The Boulangerie on the Corner Susan Buchanan
The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan


My review

This book cleverly illustrated the good and the not so good in the life of a family run boulangerie in France, plus a whole lot more that kept me turning the pages, wonderfully absorbed in Lia’s adventures in France. 

Following a tough time, Lia takes the dramatic decision to return to the boulangerie in France, where she had spent a short but happy part of her youth. She is warmly welcomed by her former host family, and with the maturity that comes with age, now sees their lives in a different light. In some ways, everything is just as she remembered: the bedroom, the scent of freshly baked bread (that I am sure I could also smell), and the love of the family. She now also appreciates the important role the boulangerie has in the neighbourhood and the difficulties for the family as they juggle the unsociable hours and long days with family life.


French Village Diaries book review The Boulangerie on the Corner Susan Buchanan
The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan


As the pressure mounts for the Molins family, Lia wants to do all she can to help them out. Learning who to trust when you are new to an area is never easy, but I certainly enjoyed meeting the local characters alongside Lia as she took her first steps helping in the shop. I am a great believer in always saying yes to new opportunities, especially if they take you out of your comfort zone and Lia did just this, which gave us an exciting and entertaining read, full of French promise.

The comfort of the baked goods, the love of the family, plus the simmering heat of romance and the spark of an idea that could change her life forever, all set with the beautiful city of Toulouse as a backdrop - I couldn’t have asked for anything more from this book. 

Purchase links

French Village Diaries is a participant in the Amazon EU Associates Programme, an affiliate advertising programme designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to Amazon.co.uk at no extra cost to you.

Amazon link 

Ebook – all digital retailers  


 

French Village Diaries book review The Boulangerie on the Corner Susan Buchanan
Susan Buchanan

Author Bio  

Susan Buchanan writes contemporary romance, women’s fiction and romantic comedies, usually featuring travel, food, family, friendship, community – also Christmas!

Her books are Sign of the Times, The Dating Game, The Christmas Spirit, Return of the Christmas Spirit, A Little Christmas Spirit, A Taste of Christmas Spirit and Just One Day – Winter, Spring, Summer and Autumn, The Leap Year Proposal, You Can’t Hurry Love and The Boulangerie on the Corner.

As a freelance developmental editor, copyeditor and proofreader, if she’s not reading, editing or writing, she’s thinking about it.  

She is a member of the Romantic Novelists’ Association, the Society of Authors and the Alliance of Independent Authors. 

She lives near Glasgow with her husband, two children and a crazy Labrador. 

When she’s not editing, writing, reading or caring for her two delightful cherubs, she likes going to the theatre, playing board games, watching quiz shows and eating out, and she has a penchant for writing retreats.

Social Media Links  

Facebook 

Twitter 

Instagram 

Threads @authorsusanbuchanan

Website 


French Village Diaries book review The Boulangerie on the Corner Susan Buchanan
The Boulangerie on the Corner by Susan Buchanan


Giveaway to Win a signed and dedicated paperback of The Boulangerie on the Corner (Open to UK Only)

*Terms and Conditions –UK entries welcome.  Please enter using the Gleam box below.  The winner will be selected at random via Gleam from all valid entries and will be notified by Twitter and/or email. If no response is received within 7 days then Rachel’s Random Resources reserves the right to select an alternative winner. Open to all entrants aged 18 or over.  Any personal data given as part of the competition entry is used for this purpose only and will not be shared with third parties, with the exception of the winners’ information. This will passed to the giveaway organiser and used only for fulfilment of the prize, after which time Rachel’s Random Resources will delete the data.  I am not responsible for despatch or delivery of the prize.


Win a signed and dedicated paperback of The Boulangerie on the Corner (Open to UK Only)

Monday, January 12, 2026

It's been a long winter, this week

French Village Diaries it's been a long winter this week
Frosty trees at Javarzay
photo credit Edward Brown


It’s been a long winter, this week

A week ago, we arrived back in France having spent Christmas and New Year in England with our families. We had been spoiled rotten, meals out, centrally heated houses with plush carpeted floors, and weather kind enough to allow us to wrap up warmly and walk regularly. France hasn’t been so gentle on us; in fact, this week has been a bit of a shock to the system.


French Village Diaries it's been a long winter this week
With Mum on New Year's Eve


Our journey home was rather exciting with a ferry full to bursting and way more French being spoken around us than English, followed by a dark drive in Normandy on roads that were edged in white and glowed ominously in the car headlights. As we made our way to a hotel just north of Rouen, the satnav, that has ideas of intelligence way above reality, sent us deep into the undulating countryside, where we crept along deserted roads whose surfaces resembled ice-rinks, all to avoid a one-way system on the final approach to the hotel car park. 

The drive home the following day began at -6Âș and alternated between freezing cold with sunshine, and freezing fog which decorated the trees in a beautiful, sparkling hoary frost. You could say it was a day where everything was freezing, but on our arrival home, the fridge-freezer in the kitchen was anything but freezing. I guess after over twenty-one years of sterling service, it was bound to pack up at some point, but to choose a week when we weren’t here was a little unfair. The first task having unpacked the car, was to throw most of the contents of the freezer into bin bags and to make up a soup with what could be saved. The second task was to call the water company, fill up as many pans of water as possible and then turn the water back off as while the fountain from the stopcock tap was pretty, it wasn’t a feature we needed. Welcome home and Happy New Year!


French Village Diaries it's been a long winter this week
Snow on the back gate


The week then threw us from one challenging meteorological state to another as we lunged from an orange alert for snow on Tuesday, that became an ice-rain warning on Wednesday, only to be replaced with the strong winds and rain warning on Thursday and Friday as storm Goretti appeared from the Bay of Biscay. Deep joy. The bikes were left untouched and the car too on Tuesday and Wednesday, as I set up office on the dining room table and clicked away on my laptop preparing the spreadsheets for the 2026 season at the chĂąteau as well as some promotional bits and bobs for upcoming chĂąteau and library events.


French Village Diaries it's been a long winter this week
New fridge-freezer safely loaded onto lovely friend's trailer


It was a relief to get to the weekend having survived 48 hours with no running water, a week using the porch as a fridge and thankfully missed the worst of storm Goretti, whose full force hit further north. Saturday was an exciting outing to buy a new fridge-freezer, and Sunday was celebrated with our first bike ride of the year. It is unusual for us to go so long without cycling as we are not generally only fair-weather cyclists, but the winter this week was intense. I’m crossing my fingers for a calmer second half to January and as I spotted some snowdrops this morning, the signs of spring won’t be far behind.


French Village Diaries it's been a long winter this week
The first bike ride of 2026


Don’t forget, if you want to know the dates for the public and school holidays in France this year, and how other notable dates are celebrated, click here to read my traditional 1st of January post. 

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Public and school holidays in France, 2026

French Village Diaries public and school holidays France 2026
Public holidays in France 2026


Public and school holidays in France, 2026

I’d like to wish you all a happy and healthy New Year from France and share my annual guide to help you make the most of the French holidays. Here you will find the dates of the public holidays, other notable dates and how they are celebrated, plus the school holiday dates, so you can avoid the busiest times on the roads or in the resorts.

 

Don’t forget, you can save the image and keep it to hand for reference during the year.

 

Public Holidays in France 2026

1st January, New Year’s Day, jour de l’an 

5th April, Easter SundayPĂąques 

6th April, Easter Monday, lundi de PĂąques (note there is no Good Friday holiday in France unless you live in Alsace or Moselle areas)

1st May, FĂȘte du Travail (celebrated by giving a sprig of lily of the valley)

8th May, Victory in Europe DayVictoire des AlliĂ©s 1945 

14th May, Ascension Day, jeudi de l’Ascension (note schools will have an extra day off on Friday 15thMay for the bridge (pont)

25th May, Pentecost Monday, lundi de PentecĂŽte

14th July, FĂȘte Nationale 

15th August, Assumption Day, Assomption 

1st November, All Saint's Dayla Toussaint

11th November, Armistice DayArmistice 1918 

25th December, Christmas Day, NoĂ«l (note there is no holiday in France on 26th unless you live in Alsace or Moselle areas)

 

Faire le pont

Except for the holidays linked to Easter: Easter Monday, Ascension Day and Pentecost Monday, the above dates are the same every year and the holiday is always observed on the actual date rather than being moved to the nearest Monday (as the UK would do). 

 

Public holidays can therefore fall on weekends (Sunday 15th August); to make up for this it is not uncommon for people to faire le pont (make a bridge) if a holiday falls on a Thursday (Ascension Day) or a Tuesday (14th July), by taking off the Friday or Monday to give themselves a four-day weekend. This leave will be part of their annual holiday entitlement, or the hours will need to be made up, so while most businesses will be open on bridge days, some staff shortages can be expected. 

 

No work May!

With Easter falling in early April this year, May will be hosting four public holidays and with two falling on Fridays (1st and 8th), plus Ascension Thursday (14th) and Pentecost Monday (25th), that means only one full working week in May and four weeks that will give us three-day weekends. For those of us working in the tourism sector this should get the 2026 summer season off to a good start.


 

https://www.vacances-scolaires-gouv.com


School Holidays

The school holiday dates in France are split into three zones and most of the holidays are staggered so not everyone is trying to hit the ski slopes or beaches at the same time, although be prepared for extra traffic on the roads on all Saturdays during the school holidays, or better still avoid driving on these days.

 

Here are the dates for 2026:

The winter holiday will be from 7th February to 8th March

Zone A gets the first two weeks, Zone B the middle two and Zone C the last two.

 

The spring holiday will be from 4th April to 3rd May

Zone A gets the first two weeks, Zone B the middle two and Zone C the last two weeks.

 

Thanks to Ascension Day falling on 14th May, everyone will be off for a four-day long weekend from Thursday 14th May to Sunday 17th May, with Friday being a bridge day.

 

The summer holiday for all zones will be from 4th July until 1st September.

 

The October holiday for all zones will be from 17th October to 1st November.

 

The Christmas holiday for all zones will be from 19th December to 3rd January 2027.



French Village Diaries public and school holidays France 2026
FĂȘte de la musique, 21st June

 

Other dates to note and celebrate in France

6th January, Epiphany, celebrated in France with a Galette des Rois (see here).

7th January, winter sales begin, soldes d’hiver. Sales are regulated in France and the winter sales will run from 7th January to 3rd February. 

21st to 25th January, Nuits de la lecture, national reading nights celebrated in libraries across the country.


 

2nd February Candlemas day, Chandeleur, celebrated in France with pancakes (see here).

17th February, Shrove Tuesday, Mardi Gras when carnival time begins in France and pancakes, or beignets (similar to doughnuts) are eaten.

 

29th March, Palm Sunday, Rameaux a day where our local boulangeries bake something different (see here).

29th March, clocks spring forward an hour to Central European Summer Time.

 

1st April, Poisson d’avril celebrated in France with sticky fish (see here).

 

23rd May, European museum nightNuits des musĂ©es, where many museums open late or run special events. 

27th May, National Resistance Day, journĂ©e nationale de la RĂ©sistance.

29th May, Neighbours’ Day, fĂȘtes des voisins often celebrated in France with shared meals.

31st May, Mother’s Day, fĂȘtes des mĂšres.

 

21st June, world music day, fĂȘte de la musique, celebrated with free concerts in towns and villages all over France.

21st June, Father’s Day, fĂȘtes des pĂšres.

24th June, summer sales begin, soldes d’Ă©tĂ©, and will run until 21st July.

 

4th July to 26th July, Le Tour de France, with a planned depart in Barcelona, and with a finish on the Champs-ElysĂ©es in Paris. 

 

1st August to 9th August, Le Tour de France Femmes avec Zwift, begins in Switzerland and finishes nine days later in Nice. 

 

19th and 20th September, European Heritage weekend, JournĂ©es EuropĂ©ennes du Patrimoine, many museums and other cultural sites will be open to the public, often organising special events, and with free or reduced-price entry. 

 

25th October, clocks go back an hour to Central European Time. 

 

Free museum entry on the First Sundays of the month 

Did you know many national museums in France open for free on the first Sunday of the month? Whilst not exclusive, as there are often restrictions in July and August, and some museums will close for some of the winter months, this is certainly a secret worth knowing and we’ve had some interesting visits over the years, all for free. 

 

Note: not all museums are national and without the financial support from the government, locally or independently run places will not have the ability to offer free entries. If you fancy a cultural city break, it would be worthwhile checking the museum websites to see if they are taking part and plan your visit accordingly.

 

I hope you’ve found this useful and that wherever in France 2026 takes you, you have a wonderful time. I’d love to hear about your adventures and new discoveries.