The People of Three Pines: Ruth Zardo

The People of Three Pines: Ruth Zardo

The People of Three Pines: Ruth Zardo

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As far as she knew, Ruth had always been like this. ‘Then why does everyone like her?’ Myrna had asked. Clara had laughed and shrugged, ‘You know there are days I ask myself the same thing. What a piece of work that woman can be. But she’s worth the effort, I think.’ – Still Life

‘You’re wrong there,’ said Ruth, following Myrna’s gaze. ‘This used to be my drug of choice. In my teens my drug of choice was acceptance, in my twenties it was approval, in my thirties it was love, in my forties it was Scotch. That lasted a while,’ she admitted. ‘Now all I really crave is a good bowel movement.’ – A Fatal Grace

There was Ruth on the village green, talking to someone. Only she was alone. There was nothing odd about that. It actually would have been strange had there been someone willing to listen to her. – The Cruelest Month

Peter listened as Clara talked again about Fortin visiting her studio this past spring and seeing the portrait of their friend Ruth Zardo, the old and withered poet. Embittered and embattled and brilliant. – A Rule Against Murder

Standing like a ramrod beside them and staring unblinking at the bistro was Ruth Zardo. And her duck, looking quite imperious. Ruth wore a sou’wester that glistened in the rain. Clara spoke to her, but was ignored. Ruth Zardo, Gamache knew, was a drunken, embittered old piece of work. Who also happened to be his favorite poet in the world. Clara spoke again and this time Ruth did respond. Even through the glass Gamache knew what she’d said. “Fuck off.” – The Brutal Telling

Ruth appeared at Beauvoir’s chair, a scowl on her deeply wrinkled face. Her cropped white hair lay flat on her head, looking like exposed skull. She was tall and stooped and walked with a cane. The only good news was that she wasn’t in her nightgown. – Bury Your Dead

He’d actually been looking forward to seeing Ruth again. He examined the tall, thin, elderly woman leaning on her cane. Ruth’s hair was white and thin and cut close to her head, so that it looked like her skull was exposed. Which seemed to Beauvoir about right. Nothing inside Ruth’s head was ever unexposed or unexpressed. It was her heart she kept hidden. – A Trick of the Light

HOW THE LIGHT GETS IN

It was supposed to be just the three of them, which was bad enough, but then Ruth Zardo and her duck had arrived and the evening went from bad to a fiasco. Rosa, the duck, had muttered what sounded like “Fuck, fuck, fuck” the whole night, while Ruth had spent the evening drinking, swearing, insulting and interrupting. – How the Light Gets In

Below them, Ruth Zardo limped from her run- down cottage, followed by Rosa, her duck. The elderly woman looked around, then glanced up the dirt road out of town. Up, up the dusty path, Gamache could see her old steel eyes travel. Until they met his. And locked on. – The Long Way Home

The long, low brick building across the Rivière Bella Bella from the village was the home of the Three Pines Volunteer Fire Brigade, of which Ruth Zardo was the chief, being familiar, everyone figured, with hellfire. – The Nature of the Beast

Ruth loved words and used them intentionally. Even the thoughtless words were used with thought. – A Great Reckoning

There was a growing resemblance between Ruth and Rosa. Both had scrawny necks. Their heads white. Their eyes beady. They waddled when they walked. They shared a vocabulary. If it wasn’t for Ruth’s cane they’d be almost indistinguishable. – Glass Houses

Ruth Zardo. A gifted poet. One of the most distinguished in the nation. But that gift had come wrapped in more than a dollop of crazy. The name Ruth Zardo was uttered with equal parts admiration and dread. Like conjuring a magical creature that was both creative and destructive. – Kingdom of the Blind

Myrna Landers heaved a sigh and shifted her considerable weight in her armchair. As much as she longed to contradict Ruth, she couldn’t. The fact was, their drunk and disorderly old neighbor in Three Pines was a brilliant poet. Though not much of a human being. – A Better Man

Ruth made a noise that could have been a laugh. Or indigestion. – A Better Man

Ruth Zardo, Stephen’s friend, was also their close friend and neighbor in their Québec village of Three Pines. An elderly poet, she was embittered, often drunk. Definitely nuts. And brilliant.

You were a moth
brushing against my cheek
in the dark
I killed you
not knowing you were only a moth,
with no sting.


She and Stephen had proven a good match and fast friends. And while often angry, she was no devil. Perhaps, he’d often thought, just the opposite. – All the Devils Are Here

“Drink?” he said, handing Clara one of the glasses of spiked punch.
“Merci.”
He gave the other to Reine-Marie.
“What about me?” demanded Ruth.
He looked at the vat of scotch the old poet was gripping. He recognized it. It was actually a flower vase. From their home. – The Madness of Crowds

So many summer evenings sitting on the dilapidated front porch of the ramshackle house, Ruth in her rocker, her cane across her lap. In another era it would have been a shotgun, thought Harriet. And she’d have had a corncob pipe. Rosa, the mad duck, would hop up and settle on Harriet’s lap. Exhausted after a day of terrorizing the villagers. “Fuck, fuck, fuck,” one of them muttered, though it wasn’t always clear which one. – A World of Curiosities

Ruth Zardo. The poet. The laureate. Who from her ramshackle home in this little lost village managed to see things others did not.

Now here’s a good one:
you’re lying on your deathbed.
You have one hour to live.
Who is it, exactly, you have needed
all these years to forgive?


She was one of Armand’s favorite poets, if not favorite people. Though he had to admit, she was close there too. – The Grey Wolf

The brilliant poet Ruth Zardo – and her pet duck, Rosa – are two fan-favorite characters in the world of Three Pines. Do these excerpts from Louise’s novels, describing Ruth and sampling her poetry, encapsulate this unforgettable character? Is there anything you’d add?

68 replies on “The People of Three Pines: Ruth Zardo”

Writing Ruth has to be one of your best achievements . You’ve made her wonderfully human, difficult, obnoxious, loving and both tender and sarcastic. You’ve kept her from becoming a caricature in many ways, one of which is by putting those wonderful Atwood quotes in her mouth and illustrating her heart by birthing Rosa. And, as we say in the rooms, she’s F.I.N.E., just as we all are at base. Thanks for giving her life.

While reading snapshots of this woman’s life, it dawned on me that she really did like being around people. Or need to be around other humans. Am I wrong or is it true that she is rarely portrayed alone for long periods of time. Is it her secret that she likes being around others, but doesn’t want them to know?

I am in my older years and, like Ruth, I like to speak my truth with a few foul words once in a while, to wake up the crowd. Took me a long time to be okay hearing and speaking those words. And it was empowering for me to do that. I did not want any word to shake me off my center. So I laugh nearly every time Ruth ruffles people’s feathers, so to speak.
I’m wondering if there will ever be a compilation of Ruth’s poetry?
I envy the closeness of the characters in Three Pines. Can I go live there with Myrna and Ruth and the foul-mouthed duck…alas, only in my imagination while listening to the Three Pines books.

Ruth has become like a difficult friend over the years. Yes, she swears and acts obnoxiously but that is, to me, just a way to express her disgust with much of the world as she sees it and communicate her disgust with others; particularly, her friends.

My favorite thing about Ruth is how she sees everything. She sees people and situations for what they really are. She’s not fooled. I think a quote about the time she held Isabelle’s hand after she’d been shot should be included. I believe that was Ruth in her truest form.

I agree Christine about Isabelle, and also how loving she really is with Jean-Guy. The scene when she gave him Rosa and kissed her on the head the way Gamache kissed him on the forehead in the factory was the truest Ruth moment of all. Absolutely brilliant.

I like Ruth because the other characters in Penny’s books like her. Would I like Ruth in my real life, though? No.

This is my first comment to this query as I was not aware there was a discussion of the Three PInes books. I have been reading Louise Penny since 2019. I have read everyone of her 3 Pines stories and YES. Ruth is one of my favorite character’s. she is unfiltered, never know what is coming out of her mouth, also never know what a genius she really is. As we read more stories, she evolves all the time…as do most of the characters. Keep em coming Louise.

I really dislike Ruth and her duck. There’s no way a duck says anything but quack! What I especially dislike is Margaret Atwood’s beautiful poetry supposedly being generated by this selfish, and unkind woman.

Ruth is so much more than a selfish, unkind woman. I believe she feels deeply but has been hurt in the past. Her relationship with the villagers and Rosa is proof. The chapter where Rosa’s “sibling” dies broke my heart. Sure she’s really crusty but I like this character

Ruth is unfiltered. She says what’s on her mind,without any regrets or boundaries. She’s had it with life
s etiquette and rules.
Where did Ruth pick up or find Rose, the duck? I laughed when Honore” s first word was “fuck”. Oops. babies are like that.

Ruth and Isabel are my favorites. It’s the beautiful dichotomy that Louise paints of Ruth that I love so much – the gifted curmudgeon and the incredible protective friend. Favorite moments: when she stayed with Isabel after she was shot and held her hand until Gamache got with her into the ambulance; saving Jean Guy by giving him Rosa and the keys to Myrna’s car; and FINE, of course! So perfect and so true.

Maryellen, you named my two most favorite events with Ruth. They both show so clearly the depth of her empathy and love. Things she never wants anyone to witness, but which are always there.

The character , Ruth, has taught us one of life’s most precious words : acceptance, It’s what we all strive for in life for ourselves and others. She and Rosa however, put a funny and wonderful twist on it !

I adore Ruth’s penchant for foul/fowl language. Reminds me of listening to my late husband’s commentary of a Mississippi State football game. My favorite Ruth moment was when she sat on that bench waiting for the return of her best friend.

I think Ruth’s character is softening somewhat as the stories progress, revealing heart-patches of tenderness. The warm, inclusive community of Three Pines perhaps is helping her lower her guard. Her poem, “Who hurt you so much …” hints at a wound, so profound, that it created an embittered Ruth full of dramatic contradictions: sensitive, beautiful poetry alongside rude, name-calling sarcasm, hostility vs tender love (for Rosa and others), imperious pride alongside a crippling addiction to whisky.

Ruth Zardo. She appears unfeeling, uncaring of circumstances, foul mouthed at any occasion (no pun intended). Has a funning way of expressing her care or affection for people. (That would include numb nuts, Calusoe, the maid, Gabrielle) she gets back what she dishes out with good humour. How honest is all that?

Ruth is the friend we love to visit but feel like we need to bring the cleaning supplies every visit . Her honesty and her direct approach to life makes me not dread getting old but look forward to the next chapter of my life .

Ruth is priceless. We all have a similar character in our lives. Very frank and honest with the utmost intelligence and happy with a little drink. I find her interesting as well as the duck!

An alcoholic, functioning questionable’ Ruth carries the weight of the world on her shoulders and expresses this in her poetry. Who is not to love such a paradisim❤️

I think I have an inkling about why we love Ruth as we do. She is the outrageous shoot-from-the-hip unfiltered wild person that we yearn to be. In our dreams (or nightmares?) Ruth is one of the cast of unique characters which make Louise Penny’s books so amazing that I for one come back to them time after time. The Libby of the Black Wolf audiobook at my library already has a waiting list of 62. Merde.

i would llove to be as free as Ruth in my speech!!! The older i get the more i do say, but her freedom to be her is wonderful!!!!

In the beginning I disliked Ruth. Annoying, obnoxious, etc. But once she found Rosa, I began to find her fascinating!

Ruth is my favorite character, inseparable from dear Rosa. As a health professional, I view addiction as a chronic disease. But beyond that, Ruth is a brilliant, witty and totally lovable woman.

ruth is the cement. she’s the one character who not only lives her truth out loud but lives it quietly, too. like a true onion, she requires the release of many layers. her crust is her strength. beautiful to the core… if you see beauty that way.

Ruth is a fantastic counterpoint to the other characters of three pines. Often as obnoxious as she can be, her poetry often clarifies a difficult situation. I love the back and forth between Ruth and Jean Guy. There is respect and dare I even say, love. It reminds me that even the so called unloveable have value

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