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A Trick of the Light: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novels)
 
 
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A Trick of the Light: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novels) [Hardcover]

Louise Penny (Author)
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (157 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 30, 2011 Chief Inspector Gamache Novels
A New York Times Notable Crime Book and Favorite Cozy for 2011
A Publishers Weekly Best Mystery/Thriller books for 2011
 
"Penny has been compared to Agatha Christie [but] it sells her short. Her characters are too rich, her grasp of nuance and human psychology too firm...." --Booklist (starred review)

“Hearts are broken,” Lillian Dyson carefully underlined in a book. “Sweet relationships are dead.”
But now Lillian herself is dead. Found among the bleeding hearts and lilacs of Clara Morrow's garden in Three Pines, shattering the celebrations of Clara's solo show at the famed Musée in Montreal. Chief Inspector Gamache, the head of homicide at the Sûreté du Québec, is called to the tiny Quebec village and there he finds the art world gathered, and with it a world of shading and nuance, a world of shadow and light.  Where nothing is as it seems.  Behind every smile there lurks a sneer. Inside every sweet relationship there hides a broken heart.  And even when facts are slowly exposed, it is no longer clear to Gamache and his team if what they've found is the truth, or simply a trick of the light. 
 

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A Trick of the Light: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novels) + Bury Your Dead (Chief Inspector Gamache) + The Brutal Telling: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel (Armand Gamache Mysteries)
Price For All Three: $34.31

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"The superbly gifted Louise Penny is on my secret shortlist of must-read authors, and A TRICK OF THE LIGHT proves why. Artist Clara Morrow is about to have a prestigious show of her paintings when her childhood friend is found murdered, and the finger of suspicion points to Clara. Chief Inspector Gamache is called to investigate, and using his trademark powers of deduction and his intuitive knack for the right question at the right time, he exposes the darkness that underlies the bright stars of Montreal's art world, where competition between friends, and even between husband and wife, can turn lethal. Ultimately, of course, it's Louise Penny who steals the show, and A TRICK OF THE LIGHT will not only keep you engrossed from start to finish, it will teach you something new about love, truth, and the human heart.” --Lisa Scottoline

“Penny, elevating herself to the pantheon that houses P.D. James, Ruth Rendell and Minette Walters, demonstrates an exquisite touch with characterization, plotting and artistic sensitivity. And there could be no better explanation of A.A. than you will find here.” --Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“Outstanding….With her usual subtle touch and timely injections of humor, Penny effectively employs the recurring motif of the chiaroscuro, the interplay of light and dark, which distinguishes Morrow's artwork and which resonates symbolically in the souls of the author's characters.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“Like P. D. James, Penny shows how the tight structure of the classical mystery story can accommodate a wealth of deeply felt emotions and interpersonal drama.”—Booklist“Penny’s characters are sharply drawn, realistically complicated and heartbreakingly real. Wonderful, complex characters and sophisticated plotting makes this a perfect book. Do not miss it.”—RT Book Reviews


 

                                                                                                                  

About the Author

Louise Penny, author of the New York Times bestselling Chief Inspector Gamache novels, worked as an award-winning journalist for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation before leaving to write crime fiction. Her first mystery, Still Life, was the winner of the New Blood Dagger and the Arthur Ellis, Barry, Anthony, and Dilys Awards; and was also named one of the five Mystery/Crime Novels of the Decade by Deadly Pleasures magazine. Louise went on to become the first writer ever to win the Agatha Award for Best Novel four times, as well as an Anthony Award for The Brutal Telling and the Dilys, Arthur Ellis, Macavity, and Anthony Awards for Bury Your Dead. Her novels are bestsellers in the United States and Great Britain and have been translated into twenty-three languages. She lives with her husband, Michael, in a small village south of Montréal.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books; First Edition edition (August 30, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312655452
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312655457
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.5 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (157 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #14,228 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

LOUISE PENNY is an award-winning journalist who worked for many years for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. She lives in a small village south of Montréal where she writes, skis, and volunteers. Her bestselling first mystery, Still Life, was the winner of the New Blood Dagger, Arthur Ellis, Barry, Anthony, and Dilys awards; and her second, A Fatal Grace, won the Agatha Award for Best Novel in 2008. Visit her website at www.louisepenny.com.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
132 of 136 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Clara Morrow, at age 50, is far beyond the age when most artists are discovered. Yet, on the evening this novel opens, she is about to enter the prestigious Musée d'Art Contemporain in Montreal for a gala solo show of her work. Clara's nerves nearly get the best of her, but she gets through the experience and is soon able to return to her idyllic Eastern Townships home of Three Pines for a celebratory party with her Three Pines friends, and artists, gallery owners and artists' agents from Montreal.

In the "friends" category are Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Québec Sureté and his second-in-command, Jean-Guy Beauvoir. Gamache and Beavoir have become acquainted with Three Pines and its quirky residents during their investigations of several prior murders. (Penny amusingly acknowledges the incongruity of Three Pines being simultaneously a place of art, friendship and warm hospitality, and a locale with a frighteningly high murder rate, by having bookseller Myrna describe Three Pines as "a shelter[, t]hough, clearly, not a no-kill shelter.")

The celebratory mood of Clara's Three Pines party doesn't last. Early the next morning, it is brought to an abrupt end by the discovery of the murdered corpse of a woman in Clara's garden. The woman is identified as Lillian Dyson, Clara's childhood friend who cruelly betrayed her while they were in art college. Clara claims she hadn't seen or heard from Lillian in over 20 years.

Looking at means and opportunity leaves Gamache and Beauvoir with a wide field of suspects. They must focus on motive, which reveals a huge gap between the type of person Lillian is widely reported to have been 20 years earlier and how she is seen contemporarily by her new circle of acquaintance. Gamache asks, over and over: "can people change?"

The search for Lillian's true identity is the key to the mystery, because only through understanding her nature can the investigators learn how she inspired murderous hatred and in whom. In the course of the investigation, Gamache and Beauvoir also confront the horrors they still live with as survivors of a deadly attack on their team the year before. The experience has affected Gamache profoundly, but it has not shaken his fundamental belief in people. By contrast, Beauvoir thinks: "The Chief believed if you sift through evil, at the very bottom you'll find good. He believed that evil has its limits. Beauvoir didn't. He believed that if you sift through good, you'll find evil. Without borders, without brakes, without limit." Though Beauvoir's name can be translated, literally, to mean "beautiful view," his actual view of people has become increasingly dark and embittered.

Clara's new-found success and Lillian's murder also bring to a boil the problems of envy and lack of understanding that have plagued her marriage for several years. In fact, envy is one of the deadly sins that is a persistent theme in this book, as greed was a theme in Penny's prior book, A Brutal Telling. This is what Penny does best. Her mysteries are not about forensics, timetables, alibis or violent action. They are about the human heart and spirit; about envy, resentment and fear eating away at people, threatening friendships, marriages, partnerships and even lives. But they are also about love, forgiveness and redemption offering hope for change and a forging of new, stronger bonds.

In A Trick of the Light, we see Louise Penny at the height of her powers. She is a master of characterization; a genius at creating a world that we enter into and fully live in, and want to return to. This is the finest book I've read this year and I have no doubt it will deservedly win many awards. Highly recommended.
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64 of 66 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
In this story about art, artists, love, hate, addiction, redemption and, yes, murder, readers will visit the beautiful and perhaps magical village of Three Pines, Quebec,a place that isn't on any maps and "...could only be found if you were lost." The plot is intricate and follows all the rules of mystery writing, with red herrings and false denouments, and would make a satisfactory read without any gourmet touches.

Yet, as always, Penny gives us characters that are so real and nuanced that, frankly, you want to go and, if not live with them, at least spend a few weeks of quality time. Calling them "real," is perhaps a disservice, because the central characters, especially Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of Sūreté du Québec, are in many ways the people we wish we could be. They are wise and kind and generous and damaged and flawed and trying their very best. They love and are loved, and have good friends with whom they share wine and simple meals (food is taken very seriously in these books!). The mental landscape of the characters is revealed through writing of such elegant and resonant clarity that the advancement of the story becomes synonymous with the development of a deep personal relationship with the characters. This story revolves around the first solo art show of 50-year-old but 'newly discovered' portrait artist and Twin Pines resident Clara Morrow, at the prestigious Musée d'Art Contemporain in Montreal. In the book, Clara's portraits are described by those who view them: at first, they see unremarkable-looking individuals that, upon closer consideration, are found to have depths of emotion and beauty of spirit that affect the viewer strongly, often with great joy. Many of the books I've read are peopled with "unremarkable individuals" and the things that happen to them and those books are often diverting and entertaining and even moving. However, what Clara has done in her paintings, Penny does with her words -- this book is truly a masterpiece.

With a series that started seven books ago in which the first book was brilliant, how could one expect an author to provide an even better book each time out of the gate? Yet that is what Louise Penny has done. I simply cannot fathom the possibility that someone might read this book and not immediately wish to read the previous six, and so I would encourage you to just start at the beginning with "Still Life."
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68 of 80 people found the following review helpful
Artificial "Light" September 30, 2011
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I'm prepared for the "unhelpful" votes.

Because as much as I like Louise Penny, I wish I liked her more. There's no question that she's a superb writer, with a keen understanding of the human heart and mind; her dialogue is, for the most part, very good; and her ability to create distinct, idiosyncratic characters is unmatched. But for me, the mechanics of a mystery are paramount, and in "A Trick of the Light," I feel that Penny falls short. Simply put, she jumps through some mighty big hoops to ensure that all of her suspects remain -- or return -- to the cosy town of Three Pines after the murder takes place. Characters hang out for no good (or believable) reason (even those who can't stand one another) or make the drive to and from Montreal arbitrarily. They even assemble, most improbably, at a climactic dinner party so that Penny's detective can actually announce, more or less, "The killer is in this very room." As psychologically astute as Penny can be, the nuts and bolts of plot seem to elude her.

One of the problems, I think, is the very narrow focus Penny has created for herself. Yes, the denizens of Three Pines are a colorful bunch, but ensuring that each of her mysteries (but one) somehow takes place there, creates logistical problems that strain credulity. Even Miss Marple traveled beyond the boundaries of St. Mary Mead. I think Penny would get more bang from her buck if the supporting characters surrounding Inspector Gamache changed with each book. This worked for Conan Doyle, Christie, James, Rendell -- the list is endless. I'd hate to see happen to Penny what happened to Martha Grimes, whose Richard Jury series became repetitive and precious precisely, I think, because her story telling was held hostage by characters who wore out their welcome. To me the most successful element of "A Trick of the Light" is Penny's continued exploration of post-traumatic stress, as experienced by her police officers. This is ultimately far more involving than the marital woes of her middle-aged artists or the strained comic relief provided by Ruth, Myrna, Olivier and Gabri. "Numb nuts" is a punch line we only need to hear once, not numerous times.

So let the "unhelpful" votes commence. I will continue to read Penny for her literate prose and astute observances of human nature; but I'll do so in the hope that her plotting gets tighter and less convoluted.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Keep on guessing
Fun mystery to read with clues to "who done it" not apparent. Part of an ongoing series w/the same characters and encouraging to look forward to next in the series. Read more
Published 10 hours ago by Librarian
Terrific Addition for the Series
Excellent addition to the series. Louise Penny can seriously write. I definitely recommend this book to all readers of the Gamache series but caution those who have never read the... Read more
Published 4 days ago by Lisa
A Trick of Light
Really enjoyed this book, held my attention and hated to put the book down, like her style of writing. Good mystery without be gory.
Published 18 days ago by Barbara Kozerowitz
More Life in Three Pines
I love it when I finish a book and wonder what happens next to the characters. I loved this one and can't wait to find out what happens next to them. Read more
Published 23 days ago by Anne Cloward
A Trick of the Light
Great book. I Really enjoyed it. Good story, well developed mystery, easy reading. Would recommend it. Would be fun as a Summer read.
Published 28 days ago by Erika
Louise Penny does it again
Louise Penny has once again given us a who-done-it with Inspector Gamache which will keep you from putting the story down. Ms. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Rob
On the beaten track
"The Trick of the light" is a story developed as a classical whodunit, in the style of Agatha Christie mysteries with a murder in a tiny Eastern Quebec countryside village in... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Manuel Gwiazda
Excellent mystery book.
Very good book with full bodied characters and a good plot line. Definately would recommend this series to others. Action without having to be overly graphic or tension filled.
Published 2 months ago by Helen C
I love Armand Gamache
This is a wonderful series. Penney's Armand Gamache is a wonderful character - so very human, and thoughtful. It's fun to have so many continuing characters in a mystery series. Read more
Published 2 months ago by B. Wilson
Three Pines
This is the last of this series by Louise Penney. I am half through this book and I don't want it to end. So far I am having a hard time putting it down. Read more
Published 2 months ago by Janice Stromberger
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