Showing posts with label Louise Penny. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louise Penny. Show all posts

Friday, August 25, 2023

The Hangman by Louise Penny

 


Reviewed by Jeanne

I am a fan of Louise Penny: I love the way she delves into character and into the human heart while spinning engrossing mysteries.  I love her sense of place, and how I wish there was a real Three Pines to visit!  I confess I am running a few books behind because her books are meant to be savored and, despite what others have said, I find this a series best read in order.

Since I tend to keep up with what Penny is writing, I was surprised to come across a reference to The Hangman.  It’s a novella written in 2010 which had somehow slipped my notice, so of course I had to rectify that.  The date puts it between Bury Your Dead and A Trick of the Light.

The story opens in Three Pines where a man out for an early morning jog finds a body hanging from a tree.  Chief Inspector Armand Gamache and his team arrive to determine if the man committed suicide or if they have a murder to investigate.

At only 87 pages, the story has a lot of ground to cover.  Even so, Penny makes sure to give the reader some of Gamache’s musings and insights which for me underpin all the books.  Is it a good story?  Yes, and I would recommend that fans read it.  However, the short form left me wanting more.  This could have been a full novel. Some things felt rushed, and I was sorry that we didn’t get to see more characterization, which is the hallmark of Penny’s writing as far as I am concerned.

Still, any Penny is better than none!

Monday, April 24, 2023

Favorite Series: Selena's Picks (Karin Slaughter, Lisa Gardner, and more!)

 

The theme for National Library Week this year is “There’s More to the Story.” With that in mind, we asked staff to tell us the names of some of their favorite series. Today we hear from Selena who works in the Children’s Department.

 


I love love Karin Slaughter!  She is such a good writer.  Her books are so suspenseful.  I started with the Grant County  series which is set in Georgia.  Sara Linton is the pediatrician and medical examiner in a small town. Her ex-husband is the chief of police.  The first book in the series is Blindsighted. The other titles are: 

Kisscut

A Faint Cold Fear

Indelible

Faithless

Beyond Reach

Undone


She also writes the connected Will Trent series, which is set in Atlanta.  Trent is an agent with Georgia Bureau of Investigation, along with his partner, Faith Mitchell.  The first book in that series is Triptych.  In the third book in this series, Undone, Sara Linton shows up. The books are:

Triptych

Fractured

Undone

Broken

Fallen

Criminal

Unseen

The Kept Woman

The Last Widow

The Silent Wife

I’m looking forward to the next one in the series.  The title is After That Night and it’s due out in August this year. I’m already on reserve for it! 

In case you didn’t know, there’s a TV show based on the series, “Will Trent.”

 


Another author I love is Lisa Gardner, and she also has two series I really, really like.  The FBI Profiler series starts with The Perfect Husband. Pierce Quincy is the profiler, and these books will have you on the edge of your seat.  The others in the series are: 

The Third Victim

The Next Accident

The Killing Hour

Gone

Say Goodbye

Right Behind You

The other series stars D.D. Warren, a tough Boston cop. She is such a good character.  The books in this series are:

Alone

Hide

The Neighbor

Live to Tell

Love You More

Catch Me

Fear Nothing

Find Her

Look for Me

Never Tell

When You See Me

The C.B. Strike series by Robert Galbraith is another one I like.  Cormoran Strike is a British private detective with a complex backstory.  He’s ex-Royal Military Police, he lost part of his leg in Afghanistan, and he’s the illegitimate son of a rock star.  He has a secretary, Robin Ellacott, who is supposed to only be a temp but ends up staying. The books are good mysteries but sometimes I worry that I am just hanging in there for the “will they or won’t they?” It is driving me crazy!

The books in the series are:

The Cuckoo’s Calling

The Silkworm

Career of Evil

Lethal White

Troubled Blood

The Ink Black Heart

 


I am reading my way through Lousie Penny’s Armand Gamache books 

right now. They are set in Canada, many in a small village called Three Pines.  I love the characters and the way Penny writes. They’re good mysteries but it’s the characters that bring me back. I’m on #11 now, The Nature of the Beast.  These books have won a ton of awards. The books are:

 

Still Life

A Fatal Grace

The Cruelest Month

A Rule Against Murder

The Brutal Telling

Bury Your Dead

A Trick of the Light

The Beautiful Mystery

How the Light Gets In

The Long Way Home

The Nature of the Beast

A Great Reckoning

Glass Houses

Kingdom of the Blind

A Better Man

All the Devils Are Here

The Madness of Crowds

A World of Curiosities

 

I have a ton more but those are my top picks. Until I think –“Wait a minute what about ....?” 

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Nevermore: Civil War, White Trash, Whiteout, Big Short, A Great Reckoning, and The Innocent



Reported by Ambrea


Kicking off Nevermore this week, we looked at a fascinating book by Thomas Fleming titled A Disease in the Public Mind:  A New Understanding of Why We Fought the Civil War.  Described as a “riveting, character-driving history” on the book jacket, Fleming’s book was a fascinating exploration of the Civil War and the divisions that pitted North against South—and why, as Fleming seems to assert, a war was bound to happen with or without slavery as a justification.  According to our reader, Disease in the Public Mind was a marvelous book.  Wonderfully detailed and incredibly well written, Fleming’s book is “the best explanation of why the Civil War started” and how the deep rooted prejudices (and, in some cases, fanaticism) between North and South inflamed—and eventually ignited—violence.  Our reader gave it very high marks, recommending it to history buffs and Civil War aficionados alike.




Next, Nevermore took a second (or third) look at White Trash:  The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America by Nancy Isenberg, which takes a long hard look at political and social prejudices that have divided and, in essence, polarized the so-called “class-free” society of the United States.  Isenberg describes the plight of the poor and succinctly looks at how history has shaped Americans’ vision of poverty, how it impacts our reactions and our perceptions of it:  “First known as ‘waste people,’ and later ‘white trash,’ marginalized Americans were stigmatized for their inability to be productive, to own property, or to produce healthy and upwardly mobile children…[and well] into the twentieth century, expulsion and even sterilization sounded rational to those who wished to reduce the burden of ‘loser’ people on the larger economy.”  Our reader said she enjoyed reading White Trash, because, like Disease in the Public Mind, it is incredibly detailed and it looks at racial tensions, as well as class distinctions, that have shaped the American public.  At once jarring and fascinating, Isenberg’s book proved to our reader that “the more things change, the more they stay the same.”


Shifting gears, Nevermore decided to share a suspenseful, yet entertaining read by Ken Follett.  In Whiteout, Toni Gallo, direct of security at a Scottish medical research firm, has a problem:  a canister containing a deadly virus is missing and one of the lab technicians is dead, bleeding from his eyes—which means someone has already released the virus.  Which means the world is about to face one of the most terrifying biological disasters in history.  Our reader said she enjoyed reading Follett’s novel.  Described as fun and frivolous, Whiteout was a wonderful change of pace and it was such an exciting crime story.  Our reader admitted that she finished it in two days, high praise in her book, and said she enjoyed almost every minute of it.

Nevermore also looked at economics and finances—and the big stock market crash of 2008—in The Big Short:  Inside the Doomsday Machine by Michael Lewis.  “The real crash, the silent crash, had taken place over the previous year where the sun doesn’t shine and the SEC doesn’t dare, or bother, to tread,” reads the book cover.  “The smart people who understood what was or might be happening were paralyzed by hope and fear; in any case, they weren’t talking.”  According to Lewis, several people knew that impending financial devastation was on the horizon—and yet, instead of warning anyone, some did nothing and others decided to make millions.  Our reader, who admitted she was not savvy when it comes to the stock market and economics, said she enjoyed reading Lewis’ book.  She understood many of the complicated concepts outlined by Lewis, which she liked, but, most of all, she was duly impressed by the fact the author names names.  Overall, she said it was a great book to read and she recommended it anyone curious about the complicated state of financial markets and stock exchanges.


Next, Nevermore pulled out a favorite novelist to share:  Louise Penny.  In A Great Reckoning, our reader revisited Armand Gamache, former Chief of Homicide for the Sûreté du Québec, as he stepped into a new mystery involving a strange old map, four young cadets at the Sûreté academy, a stained glass window with its own horrific secrets—and a murdered professor.  Gamache, along with a young cadet named Amelia Choquet, finds himself caught in a tangled web of secrets and lies that will lead to places that even he is terrified to see.  Our reader, a fan of Penny and her Inspector Gamache series, said she enjoyed loved reading A Great Reckoning.  Although she said the story does become a little technical, she pointed out that it didn’t diminish the novel or make it any less appealing.  It’s Penny’s most recent novel—the twelfth in a long running series—but, according to our reader, it stands well on its own and provides an intriguing, entertaining mystery that will leave the audience breathless.

Last, Nevermore shared The Innocent by Ian McEwan.  Leonard Marnham is twenty-five years old and looking for excitement, and he certainly gets it when he is tasked with tunneling under a Russian communications center to tap phone lines and when he meets the alluring, enigmatic West Berliner, Maria Eckdorf.  Caught up in an international “comedy of errors,” Marnham finds himself risking everything when, in one night—one terrible, terrible night—everything goes horribly awry.  Our reader highly recommended reading McEwan’s novel.  Personally, he said he enjoyed excavating the pieces of Marnham’s and, moreover, he enjoyed the way McEwan writes.  However, he did point out to his fellow readers that “you do need some bravery to read this book.”  It’s guaranteed to surprise and, possibly, horrify.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Nevermore: Nature of the Beast, Space Shuttles, Jesus Cow, Go Set A Watchman, Harry Bosch, and American History



Summary by Ambrea

This week, our meeting began with The Nature of the Beast, another Chief Inspector Gamache book by Louise Penny.  Now living in Three Pines, Quebec, with his wife, Armand Gamache has adapted to village life and he has learned to take nine-year-old Laurent Lepage’s stories with a grain of salt.  But when Laurent suddenly disappears, Gamache is faced with the very real possibility that Laurent’s stories might not have been tall tales after all—and a very real, very sinister monster has set down roots in his new hometown.  According to our reader, Penny’s novel was very good.  It has threads of a traditional mystery, but, he pointed out, “it fools you.”   He said the resolution was nothing like he expected.

Our reader also explored NASA Space Shuttle  Manual:  An Insight into the Design, Construction, and Operation of the NASA Space Shuttle by David Baker.  The NASA Shuttle, which flew nearly 140 missions by the time of its retirement in 2011, has a long and storied history—and David Baker explains just how the Shuttle came to be, how it operated, how it was built, and how it served a multitude of purposes throughout its tenure at NASA.  Our reader said it was an excellent book, because it details the entire development of the Shuttle and, more importantly, offers excellent illustrations to really help readers view the project down to the tiniest details.

Another reader shared The Jesus Cow by Michael Perry.  Perry, who typically writes nonfiction, crafts a humorous tale about a low-key farmer, named Harley Jackson, who receives the shock of his life on Christmas Eve:  a calf is born with the image of Jesus Christ emblazoned in his fur—and Harley, confronted with a multitude of other challenges, isn’t sure what to do.  According to our reader, The Jesus Cow is a hilarious story with a heart of gold.  “It’s such a good story,” she said, which she found appropriate for this time of year.

Our readers also looked back at Go Set a Watchman by Harper Lee.  In a previous meeting in August, Lee’s new novel—which finds Jean Louise Finch (who is best remembered as young, rebellious Scout) returning to Maycomb County, confronting a number of drastic changes in her tiny hometown and her father, Atticus Finch—received some mixed reviews.  However, in our most recent Nevermore meeting, our reader said she really liked Go Set a Watchman.  She loved reading about Scout’s childhood stories, loved the glimpses of small-town life Lee offered, and she highly recommended reading it:  “You don’t have to like the topic, but it’s worth reading.”

Next, our readers examined Brave Companions:  Portraits in History by David McCullough, bestselling author of Truman and John Adams and The Wright Brothers.  McCullough, who is best known for his forays into history, explores some of the most oft forgotten names in American history.  From Alexander von Humboldt—who, as a contemporary of Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, explored North and South America extensively—to Harriet Beecher Stowe to Harry Caudill, McCullough sheds new light on these forgotten (sometimes, neglected) figures by writing short “sketches.”  Our Nevermore reader was absolutely thrilled with Brave Companions, saying he didn’t think McCullough was capable of writing a poor paragraph.

Last, our readers looked at an audiobook by Michael Connelly called The Crossing.  Recently published in November as part of his ongoing Detective Harry Bosch series, The Crossing chronicles Bosch’s investigation as he helps his half-brother, Mickey Haller, uncover a killer—and, whether it’s Mickey’s client or not, Bosch has dedicated himself to uncover the truth.  But as Bosch pursues his line of inquiry, he discovers the prosecution doesn’t have a faultless defense and, worse, the killer he’s pursuing might be chasing him.  Our reader said Connelly’s novel was so, so good.  Although it was full of the usual tropes found in suspenseful novels—such as a lawyer who never loses, a detective unexpectedly pulled out of retirement—she said it was an excellent novel.

Monday, October 5, 2015

How the Light Gets In by Louise Penny






Reviewed by Jeanne

Chief Inspector Gamache of the Homicide Department of the Quebec Surete  is facing what would seem to be a rather bleak Christmas.  His department, once composed of a close-knit group, has been split up.  The new agents seem to intent on breaking down the department, mocking the once highly regarded Gamache. At least one of the Chief Inspector’s protégés has turned against him; others, frightened and bewildered, are keeping their distance.  Those in authority want him out for their own nefarious reasons.  The question is, will Gamache go quietly?

As Gamache weighs his options, he gets a call from his friend Myrna in Three Pines, the tiny isolated village where he has solved cases before.  A friend of Myrna’s had planned to come for Christmas but has not shown up and the psychologist turned bookseller is concerned.  She calls Gamache, but is strangely reluctant to tell him exactly who is missing. The secret of the woman’s identity is going to open a door into the psyche of a nation and perhaps a murderer. Meanwhile, a trap is drawing shut. . . but who is the trapper and who is the trapped?

As you may guess from the somewhat vague plot description, I feel strongly that this is a series that needs to be read in order. I’d rather err on the side of caution and not spoil the book for anyone else.  Penny has been building to this scenario from quite some time and fans will be eager for the payoff.  They won’t be disappointed. For everyone else, let me give you some background to the series:

In Roman mythology, the goddess Minerva was born as an adult, fully armed and armored.  She was the goddess of wisdom and poetry, among other things, and is in many ways the perfect symbol for Louise Penny’s books.  From her very first Inspector Gamache novel, the writing has been mature and graceful, the characters deeply layered, and the plots satisfyingly complex. That debut won almost numerous mystery awards and launched Penny into a fabled career as an author. Poetry plays a major role in the books:  not only do characters quote lines frequently, but one of the main characters is a mad poet herself:  Ruth Zardo, who seems to be a bit of a horror, an angry and bitter person, but who sees things others don’t and who writes the truth—something that’s terrifying in and of itself.  For all that, there’s a strong sense of humor that runs through the books; I find myself frequently smiling at a description or a bit of banter.  And have I mentioned the lovely use of language and imagery? It’s no coincidence that visual artists appear frequently in the cast of characters.

Penny’s writing always examines the human condition; mostly the human heart and spirit.  The books are rooted in the psyche. All the characters have depth; they change and grow.  Many are significantly different than the people we met a decade ago. In some ways Penny’s writing reminds me of P.D. James; but where James’ approach was clinical, Penny’s is emotional.  And no matter how grave the situation, there are always grains of hope and joy.  Penny has said that “goodness exists.” That’s not to say that goodness always wins or that evil isn’t real, but simply that there is true goodness in the world. And that knowledge gives us all hope.

With all that said, I admit I put off reading How the Light Gets In.  The previous book, A Beautiful Mystery, had left me saddened and fearful of changes to come to characters I loved.  The title itself was a hint; it comes from the Leonard Cohen song, Anthem: “There’s a crack in everything/That’s how the light gets in.”  Broken things can become stronger. And light shines against the darkness.

The series order is as follows:
1.
Still Life
2. Fatal Grace
3.
The Cruelest Month
4.  A Rule Against Murder
5.
The Brutal Telling
6.
Bury Your Dead
6.5.
The Hangman
7.
A Trick of the Light
8.
The Beautiful Mystery
9.
How the Light Gets In
10.
The Long Way Home
11.
The Nature of the Beast