It’s easy
to think of the Inspector Armand Gamache mystery novels by Louise Penny as character-driven. Her
dominant character, Inspector Gamache of the Quebec Surete, spans some 13
novels and has survived ambushes, shootings, nefarious plots and betrayals by
his own police force, and more. His presence looms large in each of the Penny
novels. But even her lesser characters are strong ones – Jean-Guy Beauvoir,
Gamache’s son-in-law and second-in-command, Gamache’s wife Reine-Marie, and the
residents of Three Pines – Myrna, Clara, Olivier, Gabriel, and especially Ruth
Zardo the crazy poet with her duck Rosa.
Penny
draws her characters so well that it’s easy to miss what truly drives her
stories – and that is the story itself, what each novel is about. Glass
Houses, her most recent book (published in 2017), exemplifies the power
of Penny as storyteller. She alternates her story between a murder trial in
which Gamache is being questioned by the prosecutor and six months earlier when
the murder actually took place.
The story
centers in Three Pines, the small (very small) village in Quebec, close to the
Vermont border and not far from Montreal. This is where the Gamaches have made
their home (Gamache has retired once, and then agreed to come back as the head
of the Surete). It is here that one November day a cobrador appears on the village green, staring at Olivier and
Gabriel’s bistro. Dressed in a body-long cloak and hood, wearing a mask, the cobrador says nothing. He, or she, or
it, simply stares.
A few
people in the village recognize what is going on. A cobrador is a myth-like figure known is Spain, someone hired to
follow a debtor who won’t pay his bills, or really anyone who has done something
wrong and won’t atone. A cobrador is
a conscience. The question is, who is the figure staring at?
Louise Penny |
Then there’s
a murder. The body is found in the basement of the town’s small church. The
victim has been beaten to death with a baseball bat, and the victim is wearing
the clothes of the cobrador.
Back and
forth Penney weaves the story, first in the courtroom and then in Three Pines.
Slowly we come to see that the prosecutor’s badgering of Gamache has a purpose;
there is a plan behind it, and Gamache is part of that plan. Something besides
a murder trial, something far greater and more important, is going on. And that
“something” is what drives the story of Glass
Houses.
It says a
great deal about the author that her stories continue to get better and better,
when they began somewhere near the level of outstanding.
Related:
Top photograph: In Spain, people actually
work as cobradors, usually in connection with a debt collection agency. The
cobrador in Glass Houses looks more like a monk with a cowl and mask.
1 comment:
Sounds intriguing. I may have to check this one out also!
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