How the Light Gets In is the ninth full-length mystery novel in Louise Penny’s Chief Inspector Armand Gamache (of the Sûreté du Québec) series, and was first released in 2013. This book resolves several long story arcs that have grown throughout the series. The most emotionally impactful is how the rift between Armand and his trusted second, Jean-Guy Beauvoir, finally resolves. Throughout the previous few books, Jean-Guy struggled with his feelings of abandonment from a traumatic police action that left him and Armand severely injured and many on their team dead. Armand’s superior, Sylvain Francoeur takes advantage of this rift and drives a wedge between Jean-Guy and Armand both personally and professionally. In this current book, that all comes to a head and is finally, and very satisfyingly resolved, but not without some serious consequences and life changes. Continue reading
Gamache
Life is anything but still
Still Life is Louise Penny’s first Chief Inspector Gamache story from 2005. Armand Gamache is a Chief Inspector from the Sûreté du Québec in Montreal who gets called to investigate a suspicious death in a small village not too far away. This is both Penny’s first novel and the first book in her long series of beloved detective stories. While the mystery in this story unfolds in the fictional village of Three Pines, it has been hypothesized that the location is based on Penny’s hometown of Knowlton in Southern Québec. Still Life was first written in English and has since been translated into multiple languages. In the English version, Penny sprinkles bits of French into the description and the dialog on occasion given where the story takes place. Fortunately, a knowledge of French isn’t necessary to fully enjoy the book.
Penny draws vivid characters who delight readers with their quaint observations and local quirks and customs. Her stories are thought of as gentler crime novels with very little violence and no sex which makes them far different from most of the aggressive stories that are so pervasive these days. These stories are instead built through character studies and relationships as Penny focuses on the human and humane interactions. Continue reading

