LOUISE PENNY’S

The Annotated Three Pines: The Nature of the Beast

The Annotated Three Pines: The Nature of the Beast

Nature of the Beast tw

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From Pg. 30
“Partly, but I run a bookstore,” said Myrna, looking at the row upon row of books, lining the walls and creating corridors in the open space. “So many of them were banned and burned. That one,” she pointed to the Fahrenheit 451 Clara still had in her hands. “To Kill a Mockingbird. The Adventures of Huck Finn. Even The Diary of Anne Frank. All banned by people who believed they were in the right. Could we be wrong?”
“You’re not banning it,” said Clara. “He’s allowed to write and you’re allowed to pull your support.”

Louise’s Thoughts:
Ongoing questions, uncomfortable questions I struggle with but always seem to clear to others, of where the line is. What is taking a strong stand, and what is violating the rights of others? People I disagree with. People whose opinions I vehemently disagree with and even believe might be dangerous? When is it ok to cross the line between vocally disagreeing, and censoring? Mark Twain once said, “Your right to swing your fist ends where my face begins”. This seems like a reasonable and clear definition of the limit of rights. But – we all have different sensitivities. Where something might hurt me, it might not hurt someone else. My “face” perhaps should not be the deciding factor. (Clearly here, I’m not talking about physical abuse, where a fist in the face is not debatable.)

 

From Pg. 34
If anyone believed in second chances, it was the man who sat before her. She’d been his friend and his unofficial therapist. She’d heard his deepest secrets, and she’d heard his most profound beliefs, and his greatest fears. But now she wondered if she’d really heard them all. And she wondered what demons might be nesting deep inside this man, who specialized in murder.

Louise’s Thoughts:
I love writing the scenes between Armand and Myrna. Their conversations about the human condition, about what drives people to do what they do. Their mutual respect, and complete trust.

 

From Pg. 53
This isn’t our parents’ generation, Armand. Now people have many chapters to their lives. When I stopped being a therapist I asked myself one question. What do I really want to do? Not for my friends, not for my family. Not for perfect strangers. But for me. Finally. It was my turn, my time.

Louise’s Thoughts:
Now this is a question that, on the surface, should be easy for a person in late middle-age to answer. What do I really want? What gives me pleasure. And yet, I’ve found it’s surprisingly difficult to answer. We’re just so imbued with the expectations of others. Of parents, of teachers, of neighbours, of the broader society. The start of this realization came shortly after I met Michael. We were at the Montreal Symphony, using his season tickets. As we left he turned to me and said, “I don’t think I like going to the symphony.” He went on to say that he’d sat there and realized his parents had taken him, then his first wife had taken him, and he’d never asked the question….what does he want? He was 61 years old at the time, and I was astonished. Then I began questioning my choices, as an adult, and realized how much of it was driven by what others told me I should be doing. What do you want? Hmmmm.

 

From Pg. 136
But suspicion was inevitable and often turned out to be true. People were almost always killed by someone they knew, and knew well, which compounded the tragedy and was probably why, Gamache thought, so many murder victims did not look frightened. They looked surprised.

Louise’s Thoughts:
One of the challenges of writing the books and, as it turns out, the great pleasures, is getting inside Gamache’s head. Seeing what he sees. Feeling what he feels, or imagining it anyway. What has been his experience? Trying to imagine years and years of investigating murders, investigating people.

 

From Pg. 168
Clara knew that grief took a terrible toll. It was paid at every birthday, every holiday, each Christmas. It was paid when glimpsing the familiar handwriting, or a hat, or a balled-up sock. Or hearing a creak that could have been, should have been, a footstep. Grief took its toll each morning, each evening, every noon hour as those who were left behind struggled forward.

Louise’s Thoughts:
I wrote this passage, this book, as Michael slipped further and further into dementia. As horrific as that was, there was also some comfort in knowing this pain brought us closer to others. That far from being alone, we were among the majority of people, who’d lost ones they loved. And lived in grief. I was, and am, so lucky on so many levels, including being able to turn that grief into a book. Rather than just writing from the head, I can write from the very core.

 

36 replies on “The Annotated Three Pines: The Nature of the Beast”

For many decades, I read the books that I was told were good or were good for me. I listened to reviews and discussed books with friends and family. The Gamache series is the first time in my life that I have chosen a book series on my own after reading Glass Houses (a randomly available hard copy). Thank you, Louise, for enriching my life!

I too read Glass Houses first, after a friend recommended it to me. I was hooked immediately. Every character developed so fully. I found I needed to know more about Gamache. So I started at the beginning. I have never been disappointed. Waiting with baited breath for Aug 27th and A Better Man.

The conversations between Armand and Myrna, Clara’s grief, the evolution of Jean Guy, the internal musings of various characters ~ these are the elements that give your art of storytelling such depth. The intricacies of the whodunnit are skillful, yet your attention to the motivation of characters gives us so much more to enjoy!

well said-I believe Louise Penny is very insightful and her books carry much that we all should consider as we move forward on our life path

As someone who worked in, was educated in, and loves the woods I’ve been in search and rescues. One I remember vividly was a downed plane in the high mountains of the Adirondacks in NY.
We searched constantly for ages. Felt we covered every square inch. Nothing.
Many months later the plane and its victims were found by accident. Right where we had searched. A glint in the sun had alerted the person that found it.
The woods hide many secrets. Some lovely and magical. Others evil and horrifying. But they are my life…

Thank you for your thoughts on the subject of grief, loss, and your deep regard and very obvious love for your dear husband Michael.

As always, Louise’s words resonate deeply. Such eloquence. I love revisiting parts of her books read and loved. I confess….I highlight and turn corners down on passages I want to revisit. They will never leave my shelves anyway and when they do whoever reads them will have a little insight to what the passages that stayed with me.

I recently saw a tee shirt that had a open ended heart on it. Printed in the middle was “grief… is love unfinished”.
This resonates with me… I’ve lost many people in my life incluing both parents and an adult daughter. The love remains.

” Grief…..is love unfinished.” This spoke directly to my heart, we lost our youngest son less than a year ago to melanoma that has spread to his brain, bone and internal organs. It was his 3rd time and he didn’t respond to any treatment that was tried. He was only 54. Yes, our grief is surely love unfinished.

Amen to that. My adult daughter was an occupational therapist. She was murdered when she stayed late at the school where she worked. Unbelievable even now 19 years later. I have found a way to live on but Carolyn is always wit me in my heart. We all have stories.

True words. Love unfinished. Twenty years, still grieving, still loving…until I too am gone. Thanks for your insight.

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