Have you come across the novels of Louise Penny, featuring Canadian Detective Armande Gamache? To date, she has written 20 books in the series and her 21st is due out in October. I watched Alfred Molina in the TV series in the autumn of 2022, and really enjoyed his portrayal of this large, intelligent policeman, who showed empathy and concern for victims, and a passionate desire for truth and justice.
In September last year, I picked up one of Ms Penny's Gamache stories in Dereham library, and then the next week, another. After a while I realised I needed to read them in order. I have been reserving then reading them methodically for over 6 months
I have now just finished book 20. I am still waiting for book #17 to turn up - it is clear that at least two other people are working through the series, and the Millennium Library is currently closed for refit. These two factors I suspect have caused the hiatus.
What can I tell you ? - this guy is the Chief Inspector in Quebec, and his sidekick JeanGuy De Beauvoir is his son in law [that happened will through the series when he married the boss's daughter Annie] All the stories feature a little village not far from Quebec called Three Pines [because there are three tall pine trees on the village green] There comes a point where AG and his wife, Reine-Marie, buy a house there [although he maintains a flat in Quebec for convenience] There are eight key people in 3P who manage to appear in every story. Well, nine if you include a duck, belonging to the mad poet who can say one four letter word. And does, repeatedly, That sentence is ambiguous - at times I am not sure if it is the duck or the crazy lady who is swearing. The Gamache website explains everybody, if you start in the middle of the series. It also gives recipes for dishes mentioned in the books
My overall review of 19/20 books...
Positive
- I like AG as a character, and also his long-suffering wife [despite her weird name!]. But I sometimes feel Penny paints JeanGuy as a little bit too weak and unreliable.
- Each book is stand alone in terms of one crime and its solution, and you do not have to have read the other, although there are some storylines which run right through
- LP does her research very carefully, and covers many contemporary issues, as well as referencing historical events where relevant.
- Justice is [usually] seen to be done. Forgiveness and repentance are important themes, and handled sensitively
- I have learned some interesting Quebecoise terms. Canadian French is quite different from European French![as are its swear words]
- Sometimes the food descriptions make me hungry
- LP does repeat herself, a lot. When you binge-read 19 books over 10 months, you notice how many times she quotes the same piece of poetry, talks about the same two specific paintings by Clara-the-artist, or tells you about the one significant case which everyone in Canada knew about, which defined Gamache. And the duck repeats itself too.
- If 3P is, as she tells us often, not marked on any map, you have to know it is there, then how come Olivier and Gabri in the bistro are able to source such wonderfully diverse ingredients for the meals in the bistro? There must be many food suppliers in Montreal who are driving across the Champlain Bridge [real!] in order to take this fresh produce to their kitchen. And all the police in Montreal must know where there boss lives...
- If a new person turns up in 3P, you just know they are very likely to be either the victim or the perpetrator of the next crime, because we know all the other characters there already. But I guess that is always the case with a series set in a small community.
- Sometimes these Canadians seem a little bit naive. They come across something for the first time, and act as if they have discovered it before anyone else, and nobody else except one obscure librarian or specialist scientist is aware of it. Dear Ms Penny, it was interesting to read about 'The Paston Treasure', a key plot element in one book - but this painting is well known in Norfolk where it was commissioned nearly 400 years ago, and still resides, in the Norwich Castle Collection. [I have blogged about it twice]
so I guess I'd give the whole series an average rating of ****
What did you think about them?


I've never heard of them but I'm intrigued! I like your thoughts!
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DeleteI binge read them all last year... the violence was sometimes a bit (no, rephrase that, far too) graphic... as you say, binge reading reveals the flaws but it's still an excellent series and on I'll read again. It was Dr Annie Gray who put me on to them, rhapsodising about the food on on an episode of Rhe Kitchen Cabinet
ReplyDeleteI think some of the violence is reminiscent of Hitchcock films - not actually described, but told in such a way that you imagine it, and that makes it so much worse
DeleteI have read a couple of them and enjoyed them too. Never felt inspired to search out more as I have at least 20 books left to read in my stash!
ReplyDeleteI have been lucky enough to spend time in Quebec which makes the settings much more interesting to me. JanF
Oh that must have been lovely, it sounds like a beautiful place.
DeleteI binge read 4 or 5 of them after reading the praise about them on a few blogs.
ReplyDeleteThe mysteries were interesting, but the negatives you mentioned turned me off.
I suppose if I had read them as they were published, I wouldn't have noticed so much.
~ skye
Binge Reading does have its drawbacks!
DeleteIt's an insidious trap - you find an awesome book and it's the first in a series. You dive headlong into that series, love every moment, but you start picking up the repeats. At first it's just a fleeting note, then it's more obvious, then it starts grating...
ReplyDeleteAnd series in small towns are vulnerable to side characters that skew towards caricatures, and seriously obvious next antagonist status for newcomers.
It sounds like a good series, though, and I'm all about the research!
Thank you for the tip.
Your first paragraph describes it so well.Thank you!
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