59 pages • 1 hour read
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Louise Penny’s Chief Inspector Gamache series burst onto the mystery scene in 2005 with her debut novel, Still Life. In it, she introduces two iconic features of the series: Armand Gamache and the village of Three Pines. Chief Inspector Armand Gamache is, in some ways, a classic detective in the style of Agatha Christie’s Hercule Poirot.
With Three Pines, Penny has created a village that has become a favorite among her readers. The village is idyllic and isolated from the world, seeming to exist outside of normal space and time. In A Rule Against Murder, even though the main action of the novel doesn’t take place in Three Pines, Penny takes the reader there with a mailman who sets the scene: “It always amused him to imagine that Three Pines, nestled among the mountains and surrounded by Canadian forest, was disconnected from the outside world. It certainly felt that way. It was a relief” (5). Throughout the series, whenever a character visits Three Pines for the first time, they respond with an immediate sense of well-being and belonging. Many books in the series take place in Three Pines, and Gamache always returns eagerly, considering the village a home away from his home in urban Montreal.
By Louise Penny
A Fatal Grace
Louise Penny
A Great Reckoning
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All the Devils are Here
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A World of Curiosities
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Bury Your Dead
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How the Light Gets In
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State of Terror
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Still Life
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The Beautiful Mystery
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The Brutal Telling
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The Cruelest Month
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The Long Way Home
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The Nature of the Beast
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