Some
feeling that had once between human and natural had twisted. Become
grotesque. Had turned sour and corrosive until its container had
eaten away. Until the human barely existed.
– Louise Penny, The Cruellest Month.
– Louise Penny, The Cruellest Month.
Louise
Penny is a master at articulating and exploring corrosive emotions –
jealously, bitterness, hatred and revenge – as well as joy and
grief. The resolution of a murder by Chief
Inspector of Homicide, Armand Gamache and his team,
which she expertly accomplishes, is
what garners to Penny legions of readers. What I find most compelling
about her work is not discovering the identity of the murderer but
how she explores the range of emotions in the character
of the empathetic Gamache. She goes even further in examining the emotional dynamics between him, his
team and his superiors, and the captivating denizens of the hamlet of
Three Pines in the Quebec Eastern Townships. They feature in all of
Penny’s eight novels except her most recent, The
Beautiful Mystery (Minotaur,
2012).
In her
debut novel, Still
Life, Penny reveals
a piece of information about Gamache that powerfully reverberates
throughout the subsequent novels. He broke rank by investigating a
senior officer in the Sûreté du Quebec who had ordered the murder
of natives. The officer was convicted and he and his friends on the
force are determined to destroy Gamache. Although Gamache has
achieved an almost perfect record in solving homicides, he will never
be promoted and has been excluded from the confidences of the top
inner circle, something that Gamache fully understands given that
actions have consequences. Nonetheless, he is a contented man,
happily married and maintains a good relationship with his adult son
and daughter. Penny hints in the first two novels that there may be
agents de
provocateurs in
Gamache’s team who are working to undermine him. By the third
novel, The Cruellest
Month, I found the
tension so gripping that I skipped ahead not to find out the identity
of the killer but to those passages about how this subplot would play
out. Then I was able to return my attention to murder investigation
itself.