like an
unlikely setting for murder and intrigue. But the tiny, secluded
village has
seen its share of both.
The town
square is ringed with older, well kept homes, a theater, and
combination
library and cozy, welcoming bistro, which is a gathering place
for
villagers. The book's unforgettable, main characters are friends and
frequent
bistro visitors who come in from the cold Canadian winter to enjoy
hot coffee,
or wine, excellent food and lively discussions around the large
stone
fireplace.
Ruth is a
grumpy, outspoken retired, award-winning poet whose constant
companion is
a duck. Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Montreal
Police
Department and his wife recently joined the group since moving to
Three Pines.
Myrna the bookstore owner, mothers quirky but sweet bistro
owners
Gabriel and Olivier. She is worried about her missing friend,
Constance.
The elderly Constance carefully guards the secret that she is
the last
survivor of the famous Ouellette quintriplets, whose birth and early
life caused
an international media frenzy for years. And no one has ever
seen the
inside of Constance's home until the morning she is found
murdered and
they discover that she has used the walls of her home as
canvases for
her strange, beautiful paintings.
The
Inspector begins discovering connections between Constance's
murder, the
unexplained nearby murder of a young woman, and corruption
and
evil-doing in his own police department. The secrets go deeper and
become more
intertwined, threatening Inspector Gamache, the police
department
and the village itself. Penny skillfully twists and turns her plot
and her
characters, tugging the reader into the lives of the villagers and the
intrigue
surrounding them.
How the
Light Gets In is nine in a series of 10 Inspector Gamache books by Louise Penny. All are set in the village of Three Pines.—by Gail Stilwill
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