Clara Morrow,
who lives with her husband Peter in the Quebec village of Three Pines near the
border with Vermont, is now experiencing what she has always for – her own show
of her paintings. Peter is also an artist, and officially supporting Clara but
also expressing an ambivalence – you can call it jealousy.
The show is in Montreal,
at the Contemporary Art Museum, and it is followed by a rather large party in the
village square of Three Pines. Both the exhibition launch and the party are
packed with gallery owners, artists, critics, friends and even enemies. In the art
world, friends and enemies can be the same people.
The Morrow home
fronts the square, and a discovery is made in the garden – the body of a dead
woman. She is wearing bright party red, obviously a guest, and yet at first no
one recognizes her. Her neck had been broken, neatly snapped.
The victim turns
out to be a former art critic for a Montreal newspaper, an artist, a recovering
alcoholic, and Clara’s childhood and college friend. As it turns out, most of
the guests knew her. And more than a few had a motive for killing her –
horrible press reviews that destroyed early careers and vicious personal
attacks are only some of the reasons why she might have been killed. Clara
herself has to be considered a suspect, for what happened in the past.
The death and
the art world that provides its context is the heart of Louise Penny’s seventh Inspector Armand
Gamache mystery, A
Trick of the Light.
Louise Penny |
And it wouldn’t
be a Louise Penny if the murder was the only action. Penny layers her stories,
providing a richness to the characters and settings that make the stories come
alive. In this seventh mystery, published in 2011, Gamache and his chief
lieutenant Jean-Guy Beauvoir are both still recovering from the attack on the Quebec
Surete police that formed a considerable part of the story in Bury Your Dead. Gamache knows that
someone in the Surete released the video of the shootings of police to attempt
to force him to retire. Beauvoir is struggling with a possible addiction to
oxycontin pain pills and the realization that he has fallen in love with
Gamanche’s married daughter, Annie.
It is a
wonderful brew of passion and suspense that Penny concocts. A Trick of the Light is another
wonderful story.
Related:
Top photograph: The Montreal Contemporary
Art Museum.
Loved these books and will be grateful for whomever first wrote about them a few years ago - I think it was Christie Purifoy.
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