LOUISE PENNY’S

Series Re-Read: The Beautiful Mystery

INTRODUCTION BY BARBARA PETERS

I asked to enter into a discussion of The Beautiful Mystery because reading the Acknowledgments and the Prologue hooked me before ever opening Chapter One.

I’m a lifelong operaphile, starting at age 13 when a friend took me to see Renata Tebaldi singing in La Traviata at Chicago’s Lyric Opera. Tebaldi was a robust woman, decked in a gorgeous dress featuring real camellias, so the idea that she grows increasing frail and dies of consumption reeked of miscasting—except that her voice was glorious, passionate, convincing, the music moving, so in the end I accepted Violetta’s fate. Music made me believe, music was the passport to Verdi’s story, into a world where its logic, if you can call it that, ruled.

I’ve chased operas all over the world for 60 years now, and every performance produces the same immersion experience. And I’ve learned that opera grew out of church music, from the simple beginning, chants such as those sung by the monks of the monastery of Saint-Gilbert-Entre-les-Loups, to more complex performances. As I’ve grown older I travel back from the complexities of Puccini to the operas of Monteverdi, then Cavalli, and back farther into the rediscovered music of Hildegard of Bingen.

You can make a little of this journey by listening to a transitional stage from chant to opera in the “The Play of Daniel.” And read medievalist Priscilla Royal’s mystery The Valley of Dry Bones inspired by this play. Its performance requires more of the singers than does chant since it is liturgical drama based on the biblical Book of Daniel accompanied by monophonic music. One of two surviving versions is found in a 13th-century manuscript containing ten liturgical dramas. Recordings exist, as they do of what it is imagined Hildegard’s music was.

However, as Louise writes in the Prologue:

“. . . no one knew what the original chants sounded like. There was no written record of the earliest chants. They were so old, more than a millennium, that they predated written music. They were learned by heart . . . there was power in [their] very simplicity. They first chants were soothing, contemplative, magnetic. They had such a profound effect on those who sang and heard them that the ancient chants became known as ‘The Beautiful Mystery.’ The monks believed they were singing the word of God. . . .

“Gregorian chant was the father of western music. But it was eventually killed by its ungrateful children. Buried. Lost and forgotten. Until the early 1800s. . . ”

Controversy raged over what might be genuine Gregorian chant as resurrected. But no one knew for sure, for there was no starting point, no benchmark against which to compare. So The Beautiful Mystery remains one still. . . . And lies at the heart of this novel where the choir director of the monastery of Saint-Gilbert-Entre-les-Loups, secluded in Québec’s wilderness, is murdered.

Louise writes in the Acknowledgments that she too has a fascination with music “and a very personal and baffling relationship with it.” Like me, she finds it transformative and acknowledges neuroscience that links music with brain function. I’m sure I’ve read that studying is enhanced by listening to baroque music, its harmonies and rhythms inducing better concentration. Certainly this works for me. When my husband turns up jazz at the other end of the house, I get jangled when I hear it, feel edgy. Various mystery writers I know, notably Michael Connelly, Ian Rankin, and Peter Robinson, have discussed with me and with readers how they listen to jazz when writing; So too does John Harvey. So their brains react differently than mine, and no doubt to each other’s, when music is playing. And informs their writing.

The other fascination I have with The Beautiful Mystery is its structure, a marvelous adaptation of a classic form: the country house murder.

What do I mean when I talk about the geometry of crime fiction? There are more or less four shapes. The closed circle wherein all the suspects dwell and the detective is either on the spot at the outset or brought within it. The thriller where the circle opens out into a path or road down which the protagonist(s) and antagonist(s) chase each other. The megaphone shape of novels of suspense that build from a small beginning to a crescendo, much like Wagner’s Liebestod if you listen to it. And finally, the caper, where the lines of the circle, the road, or the megaphone fragment into pieces that end up fitted together like a jigsaw puzzle if the caper is successfully designed. (Appositely “transformation geometry” can be applied to music). I have had some fascinating discussions on this topic with Professor B. J. Rahn of Hunter College and others at Malice Domestic, and with a number of British crime writers.

The village mystery, the country house murder, the murder taking place in a theater or on a ship or, as in a memorable Nero Wolfe novel, inside a banquet room, takes the closed circle shape. The victim and some number of suspects are gathered together; ingress or egress from the circle is limited (maybe a blizzard engulfs a house, or the ship is at sea); and a sleuth whether an amateur with special skills or a policeman or a consulting detective is introduced. Some of the suspects have secrets, some may have none, or as in Christie’s Murder on the Orient Express, a classic closed circle, everyone but the sleuth shares one big one. Alibis, red herrings abound. And often if the plot is diabolically clever, it takes a second murder or more to expose the culprit(s).

I bore you with this because I am so impressed with the way Louise has used this traditional form in her work, especially in The Beautiful Mystery. The community of monks is limited in size. 24 men. It’s cloistered, closed to outsiders. It’s in the wilderness, limiting access and departure; a stranger could not hide. The monks have taken a vow of silence, although they are allowed to sing. When their choir director is murdered, there is thus a very limited circle of suspects and in this religious community, to suspect anyone is almost unthinkable.

The detectives, Armand Gamache and Jean-Guy Beauvoir, arrive by boat with the local agent, Captain Charbonneau. They are admitted. And locked in. And must rely on traditional detecting tools, observations, interviews, intuition, to guide them. They are on their own, although they text the outside world. And attune themselves to the failings, the passions, the pride and the regrets of the monks, the cracks in that circle where the modern world seeps in.

This is actually thrilling stuff, captivating, puzzling, heart wrenching. Louse has a gift for actions arising out of character rather than the characters serving the demands of the plot. The result is an always unpredictable journey for the reader, a voyage of discovery undertaken with Gamache. Plus here, as I’ve said, she sets the stage for future stories even though we don’t see it at the time but only when we’ve read future books.

One of the joys of deep reading of mystery, of learning its conventions and tropes and gaining familiarity with landmark books, is being able to admire the skill with which an author takes the familiar and does something new, something unexpected, something complex yet fundamentally simple, something at once familiar and fresh. You can read The Beautiful Mystery with joy without knowing anything about crime fiction geometry, but it’s a richer experience to see someone engage the levers and give readers an extraordinary reading experience, carrying them out of their world into one like the monastery of Saint-Gilbert-Entre-les-Loups. And Three Pines.

RECAP

Prologue and Ch. 1-17: My Introduction is so long I’m making this short. We begin by talking about music, The Beautiful Mystery, and glimpse its history in the Prologue. In Chapter One we move to the modern story where we get a scene in the monastery and meet Dom Philippe. Then we view Armand Gamache’s daughter Annie with her lover, his second in command Jean-Guy Beauvoir, who gets the summons to join Gamache as the Scene of the Crime Team sent to the monastery. They will pick up a local agent of the Sûreté when they arrive. My favorite quote in the first chapters of the book ends Chapter One. It is so perfect for this story.

Chapter Two allows us to explore the Québec wilderness as the Scene Team travels by boat through rough country to the isolated community. Then we explore the monastery and enjoy a gradual introduction, an immersion, meeting the monks. A joy of this book is its leisurely pace, free of hurry-up pressures from the outside world despite the texting to and fro.

Gamache and Beauvoir observe and interview the monks, none of whom claims to have a clue as to who killed Mathieu. The abbot says, in Chapter Nine, “I actually believed I could look at them just now and tell. That there’d be something different about him. That I’d just know.” Is this naiveté, or is this someone so free of sin himself he truly believes that mortal sin wears a visible face? Our detectives know better. . . .

Gamache asks the abbot, “Who could have done this, mon père?” And the abbot replies, “I don’t know. I should know, but I don’t.” If the leader of the community is so in the dark, cannot see the wolf in his fold, how will two policemen succeed when they have little to work with except their own observations and hearts? (I refer you again to my quote from Matthew10:36).

Eventually, in Chapter Sixteen, Gamache stands in the garden, the scene of the murder, 24 hours after it has occurred. He stands there with the abbot and he imagines himself in the mind of the killer, and he also wonders if Mathieu had sensed he would be murdered. It had taken him a little time to die, a time when he crawled away from the abbey, towards the dark, away from the light. Animal instinct? Or was Mathieu making some kind of statement?

And then comes Chapter Seventeen and a game changer: the arrival of Sylvain Francoeur, the Chief Superintendent of the Sûreté du Québec, dropping from the sky not on wings but via a plane. The dynamics change. And our chapter ends with Gamache thinking about Saint Gilbert, praying to him. And asking himself, “if it was ever right to kill one for the sake of many?” Is he referring to the murder at the monastery, or to something relating to his superior?

In Chapter One we saw how the relationship between Gamache’s daughter Annie and his second, Jean-Guy, had developed. As we move along they are now apart, communicating by text, their own closed circle broken. This is a major thread to follow as the story unfolds. What signals are there to this point about how it will go for them?

Introduction to Part 2: I had some opportunity while in Santa Fe pursuing opera this week to read some of the comments posted on The Beautiful Mystery, Part 1. To address one, Louise has signed each year at The Poisoned Pen since arriving in 2009 with A Rule against Murder.

You can see we’re friends as well as colleagues after an improbable start that began in 2005 when a copy of Still Life arrived from Louise’s London publisher. I was enchanted by Louise’s loving and brilliant reimagining of the village mystery from the Golden Age of Crime Fiction—but set in Canada, Quebec, rather than in England. I imagined that Louise was probably British, although I smiled at the irony of her application of a classic British mystery structure to Quebec, knowing how some of the Québeçois have long and vociferously lobbied for separation from Canada, and thus the British Commonwealth. This new author must have an excellent sense of humor, thought I.

Eager to amass and sell tons of copies, I soon learned that the publisher had mostly sold out its print run. And that Louise was not British but lived in Quebec. The logistics of our usual procedure with outstanding debut fiction, obtaining signed copies of the first printing for customers, were hopeless, involving three countries and shipping nightmares. But I had another string to my bow, Toronto’s wonderful Sleuth of Baker Street bookstore, which generously supplied what copies it could and hooked us up with Louise, or rather lured her in to sign them for us. That was the start.

Imagine then our joy (I speak for me and The Poisoned Pen staff) when St. Martin’s/Minotaur bought Still Life and in time the rest of Louise’s work, and with her fourth Gamache, sent her to Scottsdale.

Generally when you as a reader are enchanted with the work of an author, the author’s voice, you begin to imagine how that author might be as a person. Creating a sort of hagiography. Only you know if the reality, should you chance to meet the author or observe the author say through the webcast links given above, meshes with your vision of the author. I refer you to one of the quotes I cite below. “Ecce homo.” Frère Mathieu utters these words when he’s dying. Frère Sébastien utters them to Gamache towards the end of Chapter 34. If the meet-the-author experience has been yours, if you in effect “Beheld” the person, then you will understand the relevance of Ecce homo in The Beautiful Mystery. It can be a risky business, meeting an author, who is, like you, merely human.

Second, let’s clear up the Locked Room Mystery. The LRM, or “impossible crime,” is a subgenre of detective fiction, a subset of the closed circle construct. The crime is committed under apparently impossible circumstances and presents a challenge from the author to the reader—work this one out! In the classic LRM the clues are there for the reader to spot but the author is skilled in massive misdirection. If you missed them while reading and went on to The Big Reveal at book’s end, it’s fun to go back and read the LRM a second time to admire the author’s artistry.

Let’s apply the LRM to The Beautiful Mystery. Frère Mathieu is one of 24 monks living in a cloistered community. He is murdered in the garden, an open space. There are thus 23 possible suspects and the question is, who-dunnit? Often determined by asking, why? Supplying the compelling motive. In The Beautiful Mystery, this task is so daunting that an unusual step is taken in Chapter 34 to cause the murderer to reveal himself. Gamache has figured out who-dunnit, but he needs verification. “It was a risk,” he says, to Frère Sébastien, the man Gamache got to sing the prior’s chant in hopes the murderer would react. “But I needed a quick resolution.” The detective also asks, who has the means to commit the murder? And the opportunity? Any monk had the means to kills Mathieu. Both Gamache and the abbot eventually work out who was the monk with the opportunity. In the final chapter, they arrive at the motive.

Now suppose that Frère Mathieu was found dead in a windowless cell (his bedroom). The roof fits tightly, with no trap doors or dormers or chimneys or thatch you can raise for exit. The floor is tiled. The door is tightly fitted and of stout oak and has a secure lock. When the monks break down the door (with an axe), the key, the only key, is found in the lock on the inside.

What do we have? Death by natural causes? Suicide (are the means at hand?)? A homicidal angel (or demon) visitation? A clever killer who, most likely, is well alibied? Sometimes this is the first line of investigation: cause of death. And the second is, how-dunnit? Deducing how-dunnit identifies who-dunnit, and the why of it emerges.

An older and rickety example of the LRM can be found in Sherlock Holmes’ “The Case of the Speckled Band.” I’ve always felt that the fact the bed is fixed to the floor is such a big clue the rest should have been obvious. The master of the LRM is one John Dickson Carr who wrote copiously, and also as Carter Dickson. Edward D. Hoch is his American analogue. And let’s not overlook the Queen of Crime, Agatha Christie, with And Then There Were None. And if I could think of the title, a fiendishly clever Reginald Hill mystery.

I felt I should address the LRM from your posts. But, back to The Beautiful Mystery. The village Louise imagines is Three Pines. It is not a place where the whole population can either be murdered—or become murderers. Nor can the village credibly become host to a continual influx of victims or killers. Otherwise it’s Cabot’s Cove.

Three Pines can remain the touchstone, the home base, but Armand Gamache has a broad writ—the whole of Quebec. One reason I like The Beautiful Mystery so well is the way Louise sweeps us up and off to a new location, one with an even less porous perimeter and a smaller population of suspects than Three Pines. So she’s upping her game by circumscribing the scene of the crime more tightly.

Which brings me to world-building. Introduce a place like Three Pines, or the monastery of Saint-Gilbert-Entre les-Loups, at once real and not, and you touch upon the power of fantasy, or epic fiction. Some real world rules can be suspended. Three Pines is at once a place to live, and an escape. To observe an investigation there immerses the reader in the village (or the monastery) for an experience with an added dimension to watching an investigation unfold in real time in a real place, say, Los Angeles.

Magical landscapes are luminous, glorious, touch us. Yet dangerous. Edan Lepucki, reviewing Lev Grossman’s The Magician’s Land, another example of world-building, underlines one of Louise’s dominant themes: “But enchanted worlds can be as devastating as our own, and good and evil don’t bifurcate as neatly as we would like.

Read the discussion on the very last two pages where Gamache, having watched the plane carrying away Jean-Guy Beauvoir, turns to the abbot. And the abbot asks him, “Do you know why we’re called Saint-Gilbert-Entre-les-Loups? Why our emblem is two wolves intertwined?” Gamache does not know, nor do we, but then the abbot lifts the curtain…. It’s a bit Brothers Grimm, a touch of the dark fairy tale, of something scary, feeding the beast within.

World-building goes hand in hand with fandom. Fandom is a community wherein, for readers who’ve accepted and enjoyed the special world the author has created, something slightly magical, something apart from daily life, happens. And fans bond with other fans to share its magic. And become apostles, spreading the word in a geometric progression. The Poisoned Pen is Diana Gabaldon’s home bookstore so we know this progression well.

We may be in a special world with Louise, but real world rules, human strengths, weaknesses, and emotions, remain. In The Beautiful Mystery, as in the real world around us, we’re looking at orthodoxy vs. change, tradition vs. modernity. Holding on to the core while embracing the new. “Some malady is coming upon us.” “Modern times,” adds Frère Sébastien. Forcing us to embrace change, so difficult for humans, even monks. Where do the cloistered Ghilbertines touch the modern world? Does the one most ready to embrace change, to further change, consciously put himself at risk? Or is he naïve or willfully blind not just to danger to himself but to the danger arising to others? Through fear? Through jealousy? If you are jealous, you fear you won’t be able to hold on to what you have or have attained. Jealousy doesn’t just apply to sex, or love of others, but to love of self.

History furnishes us with innumerable examples of what can happen when the prospect of change appears, when a rift in a society opens frightening those desperate for it to close. Jewish zealots. Catholic inquisitors. Puritan witch-hunters. Militant Islam. Or a monk who feared another would ruin the (Gregorian) chants—an irony in that, as Louise points out, we don’t know how they sounded originally but only as they have come down to us through the development of musical notation. A monk determined to be the guardian of what is, not of what is to come. Or is it that the monk feared exclusion, that he was jealous of his role in the choir. “All I wanted was to sing the chants?…Why wasn’t that enough?”

I wonder how The Beautiful Mystery reads according to the reader’s faith. To what the reader brings to the story. I’ve already pointed out my own lifelong love for music, for the beauty of the human voice, and emotional/neural reactions to music. But for me, there’s more. I made my first trip to Quebec as a young teen, going from Chicago to Montreal and then to Quebec City, then boarding a small ship and sailing down the St. Lawrence and, making a left turn, up the Saguenay River towards St. Anne de Beaupré. The church/shrine is Canada’s Lourdes, an important Catholic pilgrimage destination. To sail towards it on a dark yet starry night, towards an edifice lit like a beacon and with music (I think it was actually a commercial recording of Ave Maria, but hey…) pouring forth over the water… It made a beautiful mystery, especially to an Anglican unprepared for such Catholic ritual and ceremony. I’ve since spent a lot of time in England listening to boys’ choirs (St. Paul’s, York, Durham, Wells, Canterbury) and tried to imagine those unearthly, incredibly beautiful outpourings translated to a venue like that night on the river—although they are astonishing and beautiful in their home cathedrals. I especially like to hear those voices sing plainchant at Evensong (the sung version of Evening Prayer). I am almost entirely secular, yet the ceremony of the whole is incredibly moving. For the monks living their cloistered life, how much more so. For one, too much so? I wonder what each of you brings to reading the book and how your experiences and beliefs interact with the story. This belongs in “questions”, but fits better here.

Finally, I mentioned Louise’s genius at seeding plots earlier, her gift for long-range planning, creating story arcs that sweep her characters (and readers) from book to book, propelling us through the series always wondering what next. The Beautiful Mystery is about the murder of one monk, but it’s also the story of Jean-Guy Beauvoir’s journey which begins with a scene with his lover, Gamache’s beloved daughter Annie, and travels past confrontation and choice onto an airplane lifting into the sky. We want to call it back. We know his story isn’t over. We are fearful and we wonder and we can’t wait for the story’s continuation. I am in awe of how carefully Louise sets up How the Light Gets In –and how surprising it turns out to be.

Ch. 18-34: Chapter 17 brought Francoeur into the picture and has Gamache hoping to see more clearly, not only the monks, his suspects, “But also the motives of the man in front of him. Who’d dropped so precipitously from the skies, with a purpose.” We see some of this purpose at Chapter 34, but in fact it will take How the Light Gets In to truly illuminate it. So, Gamache and Beauvoir sit in the Blessed Chapel, not quite as one, and ask “whether it was ever right to kill one for the sake of the many.” Gamache in asking is thus on track for motive. And identifying the murdering monk.

Chapter 18 develops Beauvoir’s story. We learn he hasn’t been on Oxy for months, since Gamache confronted him, took away the pills, got him help. This is ominous. Will being in the monastery despite the murder bring Beauvoir peace, or exacerbate his issues? Chapter 19 heats up the war between Francoeur and Gamache, illuminating their mutual loathing, discussing the crime. And so it goes on.

In Chapter 27 we get a good window into Dom Philippe, the abbot, his responsibilities and his sense of failure as the monks’ spiritual and physical shepherd. And Frère Sébastien arrives from Rome. Gamache quickly realizes that the murder comes as a surprise to the young man and that he has come, paddled his way to the monastery, for some other reason. He’s a Dominican, not a Ghilbertine. Which is revealed at the chapter’s end. Chapter 33 complicates Beauvoir’s story with a reintroduction of drugs.

And Chapter 34, in a variation of the classic detective story wrap up (think Nero Wolfe in his study) that plays upon many emotions and pulls together various threads, reveals the murderer and the why of it, propels Beauvoir in an unexpected direction, and prepares Gamache for future confrontation.

FAVORITE QUOTE

Anne Daphné Gamache, Matthew 10:36

“And a man’s foes, shall they be of his own household?”

Ecce homo,” John 19:5 “Behold the man,” spoken by Pontius Pilate and by Frère Mathieu as he was dying.

“Some malady is coming upon us.” —TS Elliot, Murder in the Cathedral

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. In her Acknowledgments, Louise mentions the neuroscience of music, its effect on her creativity, its effects on our brains. How does listening to music—and what music you listen to—affect you?
  1. Would you read—or reread—The Beautiful Mystery while listening to, or after listening to, Gregorian chant? (There’s a surprising amount recorded.) Would you expect to alter your reading experience by doing so?
  1. Chief Inspector Gamache’s writ runs to the whole province. Do the books taking him (and other characters) to new corners of Québec enrich your enjoyment or are you happiest when the story focuses on Three Pines? If so, why?
  1. Do you find the closed-circle concept works for you when thinking about the structure of the mystery in this book? In any of the others? What challenges does this geometry set the author?
  1. The monastery is a cloistered community of 24 men. One of them must be the killer. Did you start asking yourself which of them as you read Chapters 1-17? In other words, are you a reader who likes to solve the mystery or do you prefer to wait for the revelation?
  1. Depending on how you answered that, do you read other authors’ mysteries differently?
  1. If you have read the books in order as Louise wrote them, by now you know that she plants seeds for future plots. As you read Chapters 1-17 were you struck by anything that might carry forward into a future book?
  1. Here is the Third Collect from The Book of Common Prayer for Evensong, “Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord; and by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night.” Is this strictly the province of the Lord, or is it also the province Armand Gamache sees for himself? Is he harsh with himself if he falls short of defending someone from “all perils and dangers”? Should he be?
  1. What act and by what person, do you feel is the most evil in The Beautiful Mystery? (Hint: malice aforethought is essential to a charge of murder in the first degree).
  1. Do you fear change and if so, has reading The Beautiful Mystery made you more (or less) receptive? More conscious of accelerating change all around us?
  1. Did you exit this book hardly able to wait until Louise’s next? If so, why?
  1. “Words are effective not because of what they carry in them, but for their latent potential to unlock the accumulated experience of the reader.” (Peter Mendelsund) Does this help explain your responses to Louise’s work?
  1. Are you a Louise Penny reader, or a fan (in the way I discuss both above)? If you are reading this, and posting, does that answer the question?

The Beautiful Mystery, Part 2

I had some opportunity while in Santa Fe pursuing opera this week to read some of the comments posted on The Beautiful Mystery, Part 1. To address one, Louise has signed each year at The Poisoned Pen since arriving in 2009 with A Rule against Murder. On Labor Day, 2012, we webcast the discussion between Louise and me for The Beautiful Mystery. As it was part of her book tour it has no spoilers and you can watch it before reading on, or at any time. Watch here » . . .


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The Beautiful Mystery, Part 1

I asked to enter into a discussion of The Beautiful Mystery because reading the Acknowledgments and the Prologue hooked me before ever opening Chapter One. I’m a lifelong operaphile, starting at age 13 when a friend took me to see Renata Tebaldi singing in La Traviata at Chicago’s Lyric Opera. Tebaldi was a robust woman, decked in a gorgeous dress featuring real camellias, so the idea that she grows increasing frail and dies of consumption reeked of miscasting—except that her voice was glorious, passionate, convincing, the music moving, so in the end I accepted Violetta’s fate. Music made me believe, music was the passport to Verdi’s story, into a world where its logic, if you can call it that, ruled.


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AuthorBARBARA PETERS holds a BA from Stanford University, MA from Northwestern University, MSLS from the University of Tennessee and is the founder of the Poisoned Pen Bookstore.

247 replies on “Series Re-Read: The Beautiful Mystery”

# 3 Change can be good or bad (evil, even) as can its sister, Progress. Change for the sake of change is sometimes neutral and neither improves nor harms, but can do either. I usually welcome change when I can see it will be beneficial.
In the early 1950, our city leaders decided an overpass through our most historic and oldest neighborhood was needed. Beautiful, architecturally important houses were demolished. A few were relocated from the highway site. It was a costly undertaking for the owners even then. My father and others went to the Council to plead for the houses. Of course, the over pass was built. After all, Federal Money would pay for it, for the most part, and it would create jobs. About the same time, across the river, South Carolina was blessed with the Dupont Plant, aka the bomb plant, the bum plant and other names. Yes, some good came from the infusion of money and people but I still wish the benefits could have come about in another way. I’ll post this and continue it later. Dr’s appt.

# 2 Sylvain Francoeur is absolute evil. He hates Gamache because Gamache disobeyed and arrested Arnot. Arnot and Francoeur were co-conspirators in crimes that are defined as genocide. How could a person with any good in them do such things. He hates Gamache and plots to destroy Beauvoir( in such a despicable manner) for revenge. Evil has walked our earth in its most absolute form many times– in Francoeur it walks again.

# 1 Gamache realizes his responsibility to keep his people safe but needs to learn that his power to protect them is, after all, limited. After he does his best, he can do no more. He is too harsh on himself, but it seems to follow that he would be because he cares so fully. Sometimes in my own life, I have felt that I was in a Greek play where the gods and goddesses strike at my loved ones just for fun.

Barbara, Thank you for the thought and time you put into your comments. I am anxious to see the webcasts of 2012 and 2013 and anticipate this year’s.
I mentioned in an earlier post that I had attended a course on the Golden Age of Mysteries. Your discussion of the mystery formats had me thinking you should teach a course on the mysteries via the internet. Learning revitalizes the mind and body and such a course would be so much fun.

I don’t know how I feel about the word “fan” being derived from fanatic, is it not? I think of Louise Penny’s followers are devoted readers who see clearly both the story and the underlying mystery of light and dark that weave through the books. I imagine Louise is a “normal” person like the rest of us but one who has exhibited tremendous bravery in putting her creations out there for us to take as we will, good or bad. It can’t be easy because she writes so much more than a story. She seems to put her heart into each and every line and that makes her terribly vulnerable.

Through this online forum I have felt very connected to all who have joined in. You all display a warmth and intelligence I find reassuring and refreshing. I think back in one of the earliest sets of postings we talked about how coming together made us feel less alone. I hope Louise knows how much joy she gives us through sharing, as much as reading the books. And I thank Minotaur for this opportunity.

In answer to some of the questions.

The change I fear is when the book club ends. I find endings very difficult. Lizzy, I am with you in every way. I too was disturbed at the end of the book, desperate to know what would happen. I can’t believe how much anxiety and rancour the fictional character of Francoeur can generate. Thank goodness he is not real. I can’t imagine what we would do to him.

The latent potential of words to unlock and connect with the inner experience of the reader is the key to a novel that reaches beyond the presentation of merely a plot. It is a concise description of what so many of us have touched on. We enter Louise’s built world and experience it with our hearts and our memories, ourselves. It’s no surprise so many of us forget who the murderer is, we are too engrossed in listening to the chanting of the monks, standing open mouthed with Gamache taking in the beauty of the light, tight with anxiety watching the video with Jean Guy and screaming silently with rage at Francouer stealing our friend away in his plane. So much emotion. So much to see. No wonder we have to keep rereading the series.

I am afraid of the series ending.

I am, too, Anna. Afraid of the books ending. What if there is no more story to tell one day? I know that Louise has a personal life and that writing books for my personal enjoyment is not really what she wants to do with her time on this earth, hahaha. But what if everyone ends up happy forever after and living in Three Pines? Will there be anything left to write about? The Arnot case ending definitively is a BIG thing, and something to be wished for, but what then? What delicious suspense will there be? I will miss everyone so much just for the year or so until the NEXT next book comes out. Will re-reading again be enough?

Yes Julie and Anna, I’m also afraid of the series ending, of there being no more stories to tell. I guess we”ll have a better idea about that after we have read The Long Way Home. It has been delightful rereading the books and being part of this discussion group.

6. Are you a Louise Penny reader, or a fan (in the way I discuss both above)? If you are reading this, and posting, does that answer the question?

Oh my gosh, yes and yes! I’m not really the ‘fan’ type, but I am with Louise. She makes herself so personal and vulnerable with us. She is like a backyard neighbor. She is genuine. She had me from book 1. Then a couple books later, a dear friend of mine came down with a type of cancer and was having an awful time. She too was a fan and reader. Well, I emailed Louise and she worked out getting an autographed book for me to give my friend!!! And it made my friend’s year! She in fact, is doing well as we speak. ( As I type) 🙂

5. “Words are effective not because of what they carry in them, but for their latent potential to unlock the accumulated experience of the reader.” (Peter Mendelsund) Does this help explain your responses to Louise’s work?
Yes, it’s true, though I never thought about it in this manner before. We all have different backgrounds and experiences so it makes sense that will color our interpretations of the characters.

. Did you exit this book hardly able to wait until Louise’s next? If so, why?

Here comes true confessions. You will all think I’m a basket case. I was so upset at the end of the book. In tears. Crying..I threw the book. I could not wait for the next one! I pre-ordered as soon as I could. I entered contests to try to win the ARC. Finally I had it in my greedy little mitts. I caressed it. I smelled it. I opened it and ruffled the pages, but….I could not read it! One reason being, that I was afraid. What will I do if I lose Gamche and Jean Guy? What if this is the last book. I also couldn’t read it because then, it would be finished, and then what??? Also, I was waiting for the perfect time when I could just sit and embrace it. Well, every time a near perfect opportunity presented itself, I’d pick the book up, caresses it and put it back down. I couldn’t bear for me to read it and have it over. So I’m so thankful for the re-reads! Now I can dive in. I’m still scared, but I know another book is being written. I know the next book is pro-ordered and will be to me shortly! Oh, I am so weird.

Lizzy, I don’t think you’re crazy at all! When you care about characters that deeply, you don’t want to be separated from them, to have their lives hanging in the balance while you wait for the next book. 🙂

Not weird at all, though I don’t think I could have stood not reading it. But I read it so fast I really didn’t get all the nuance (or even half of it), so we’re both in the same boat, in a way! 😉

Lizzy, I sure understand your response to this book. I read it one page at a time from the middle on…as in read one page, put it down, read another page, put it down. As the mother of an addict I found it torture to read and yet I wanted to know the end. Although, as you demonstrated, that didn’t help at all. I actually met Louise just after that when she interviewed Will Schwab (End of Your Life Book Club) at McGill and asked her to PLEASE save Bouvoir. And then when How the Light Gets In came out I raced thru it at top speed before going at it a second time for enjoyment. (This is very hard on the nerves. But I loved How the Light Gets In …while still despising The Beautiful Mystery.) So now I’m at the middle of TBM…and can’t seem to make myself pick it up. Am enjoying the commentary tho.

Thank you Julie, Judy, and Nancy! We should start a sisterhood. Lol. I’m going to crack the pages of How The Light Gets In tonight! Cheers! And Nancy, I’ve read most of Louise’s books like that! Read a page, put it down…etc.

Lizzy, I started it today – I hope you enjoy it as much as I am! (If not, put it down for a few more days. 🙂 )

I’ll do that with books I really enjoy as I come toward the end – trying to stretch the experience out – though I have nothing like the kind of willpower to only read one page at a time. For me, it’s either a few pages, or even a short chapter…

Lizzy, I hope you had no where to go and nothing to do last night because I’m sure that once you started How the Light Gets In you would have no time for anything else until you reached the end. What a roller coaster ride ( I never ride them)! I just hung on tight. I think it’s the best book so far.

Nancy! That’s what I’m just going to start now! I had to finish my other book first. I usually read a couple books at a time, but I want total concentration with this one! Judy, I’m sure I will!

Fair warning, Nancy – it can be tough to get through some of it – it has to get darker before it gets lighter. But I hope you can stick with it – it’s totally worth it!

Ooops – I meant to say Lizzy, not Nancy. I couldn’t answer on Lizzy’s post as it was down as far as it could go in the hierarchy, I guess… But it’s Lizzy who’s starting the book now, and who I hope can stick with it through the tough parts.

1. Here is the Third Collect from The Book of Common Prayer for Evensong, “Lighten our darkness, we beseech thee, O Lord; and by thy great mercy defend us from all perils and dangers of this night.” Is this strictly the province of the Lord, or is it also the province Armand Gamache sees for himself? Is he harsh with himself if he falls short of defending someone from “all perils and dangers”? Should he be?

A heavy question. I think the province of the Lord is very true. There are things that happen for reasons unknown to us that we have no control over, be they good or bad. As for Gamache, he is very harsh with himself. I identify with this as I am harsh with myself over failures. I constantly play the reel over and over in my mind, figuring out how I could have done it differently and better. I don’t think he should be, but how can human nature not be? Especially if it involves people we care about? A very hard place to be and very difficult to overcome.

3. Do you fear change and if so, has reading The Beautiful Mystery made you more (or less) receptive? More conscious of accelerating change all around us?

It depends on the change! If I find out I have a health issue and I have to have a change in my body, then I would be fearful. Change happens a lot in life, and I can accept most change. Doesn’t mean I like it! But what can one do? We must go on. Sometimes the change I didn’t like I end up embracing. The book really has not changed my way of thinking about change.

Something else I would like to comment on is the story Dom Philippe tells Gamache at the end about the two wolves fighting inside the old grandfather. And which wolf will win? The one he feeds. This is so very true to life, isn’t it! We all know which wolf we want to win because we all long to be good, brave and kind, but we can’t manage it on our own. I love all these wonderful contrasts in Louise Penny’s books. They are so deep, so much more than mere entertainment. I am still very fond of a series of police procedurals written by Peter Robinson, which are set mostly in Yorkshire, England. They are very much plot driven, and they are excellent on that level, which is pure entertainment, but as soon as I started reading Still Life, I knew I had found an author of much greater depth and richness. Friends recommended Penny to me and urged me to read them in order, so I ordered the whole lot from Amazon and tucked in! Not a whole lot of housework got done, I must confess, but I have had such a marvellous time. By the time I heard about this delightful club engaged in the rereads, you were already at A Rule Against Murder, which I have as The Murder Stone. I have enjoyed these discussions so much and have been able to add a little based on personal knowledge of life in Quebec.

Sylvia – I really liked that quote too, and have thought much about which wolf I feed. I need to be careful – I think, from my family dynamic, there’s a tendency to feed the petulant wolf (is this why I like poor Nichol so much?). I try to feed the kind one, but some days, he looks like he’s starving!

Some days I’m sure all our good gray wolves are starving!! I have started to pray each morning that today I will feed the gray wolf. I think this is one of the easier metaphors for the warring of good and evil within us. I, too, have thought a lot about which wolf I’m feeding.

When I first read a Beautiful Mystery I felt as if we were taking a breath, away from the office of the Surete that had become so poisonous. The peace disturbed, does not break at the monastery, the hidden life, has been shared. Gamache’s journey, still hidden is evolving towards a climax. Beauvoir’s lack of strength, lack of faith, lack of willingness to move forward, mimics the stagnation of the monk who is locked into only the chants. Always it is the forces outside the scene that moved us to an ending. Beauvoir moves into the darkness. Gamache, must be making choices, of course that will be revealed for the reader in the next book. We can never leave these people hanging, so of course we crave the next chapter.

This book was the most tense of all so far. It started out fine, Jean Guy was doing pretty well, and he and Armand were working well together until the “slimeball” Francoeur showed up. You just new chaos was coming! The most evil person is definitely Francoeur, and three things he did were the most evil acts:
1) He brought the video of the factory raid, knowing that Beauvoir would find it and be unable to resist watching it,
2) He placed the bottle of Oxy Contin on Jean Guy’s night table with the “bona fide” note signed by the doctor monk to take them as needed,
3) He called Beauvoir Gamache’s bitch along with other vile crude names.
Francoeur’s whole purpose for being there was thoroughly evil. Francoeur and Gamache are a contrast in darkness and light and poor beloved Beauvoir is stuck in between. It was so heartbreaking when he chose Francoeur, and Gamache was left behind to watch him go.

I truly cannot read this or any other things about Gamache and his adventures until I finish all 10 books! 🙁

The Third Collect for Evensong is one of my personal favorite prayers, having learned it in Youth Group as a teenager.
This book disturbed me more than any of the other books. I genuinely feared for Gamache when Francoeur appeared. It was as if the incarnation of evil had suddenly raised it ugly head and even the Abbot could not hold him back.
I truly love Louise’s books. I knew from the first page of “Still Life” that I had found a gem. She has not disappointed me. All of the novels have been about change and how the characters handle change. Each book really does need to be read in order so that you can watch the development of the story.
Jean-Guy is so full of contradictions. You want him to open his eyes to see that his addiction is a lifelong problem. And he is very weak — physically and emotionally. Gamache can only help him so far and then he will have to stand on his own two feet. Francoeur is the sabot in the works! It truly is a case of good vs evil — not just in the death of the monk but in the relationship between Gamache and Jean-Guy and Gamache and Francoeur.
Yes, Gamache was too hard on himself. He wanted to protect his team. He can not protect his team from all “the perils of the night” — no one can do it all!

Who is the most evil? Francoeur, bien sur. He came to try to attack Gamache and almost destroyed Beauvoir.

Barbara! I just love reading your thoughts! You also write beautifully. Have you ever thought of writing a book? I’d love to read it!

Love the questions but alas I need to make dinner now. Later. Oh and Julie I love the richness you add to the discussions!

DVD NEWSFLASH #2

Think I was one of last posters for Part I, so I’m reposting info for anyone interested. A friend just told me that a DVD is available for the CBC’s made for tv film of “Still Life” – our first foray into the Gamache books. It can be purchased for $29.99 at

http://acornonline.com/still-life/p/still-life/

If you don’t want to buy it, submit it as a title for purchase if your local public library has a video lending section, — or buy it, watch it and then donate it!
Little hectic here. I still have a little over 100 pages to reread – so I won’t comment on anything yet.

You can pre-order the DVD on Amazon.com ($16.99 for Prime members) in the US – but it won’t be available until October 7, 2014.

Oh, that’s a much better price – good news. Thanks. It’s interesting to note that Louise Penny has distanced herself from this tv movie. She started out participating in it and happy about it, but something happened (she’s much too much of a lady to say what) and she now simply won’t comment on it. This has made me loath to spend too much money on it – much more than I’ve ever spent on one of her books! Kind of makes me want to send the money to Louise rather than the CBC, hahaha.

6. Are you a Louise Penny reader, or a fan (in the way I discuss both above)? If you are reading this, and posting, does that answer the question?

I guess I started as a reader and became a fan. By the time this re-read book-club came about, I was completely hooked and ready to share my mania with others. I’ve so enjoyed the discussions here, and found that there is a LOT more for me to discover as I read others’ comments and insights. So much I hadn’t thought of. I’m enjoying my third read through these novels, and I know I’ll continue to read them again and again….

Yep. I’m a fan. I’ve tried other mystery writers and have found them wanting in comparison. I am SO looking forward to The Long Way Home.

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