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The nature of the beast  Cover Image Book Book

The nature of the beast / Louise Penny.

Penny, Louise. (author.).

Summary:

All our old friends are back in Three Pines where a young boy with a compulsion to tell tall tales tells one true story with disastrous results. But which story is the truth and why is it so threatening?
Hardly a day goes by when nine year old Laurent Lepage doesn't cry wolf. From alien invasions, to walking trees, to winged beasts in the woods, to dinosaurs spotted in the village of Three Pines, his tales are so extraordinary no one can possibly believe him. Including Armand and Reine-Marie Gamache, who now live in the little Quebec village. But when the boy disappears, the villagers are faced with the possibility that one of his tall tales might have been true. And so begins a frantic search for the boy and the truth. What they uncover deep in the forest sets off a sequence of events that leads to murder, leads to an old crime, leads to an old betrayal. Leads right to the door of an old poet. And now it is now, writes Ruth Zardo. And the dark thing is here. A monster once visited Three Pines. And put down deep roots. And now, Ruth knows, it is back. Armand Gamache, the former head of homicide for the Sûreté du Québec, must face the possibility that, in not believing the boy, he himself played a terrible part in what happens next.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250022080
  • ISBN: 1250022088
  • Physical Description: 376 pages ; 25 cm.
  • Edition: First Edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Minotaur Books, 2015.
Subject: Gamache, Armand (Fictitious character) > Fiction.
Cold cases (Criminal investigation) > Fiction.
Missing persons > Fiction.
Murder > Investigation > Fiction.
Police > Québec (Province) > Fiction.
Retirees > Fiction.
Québec (Province) > Fiction.
Genre: Canadian fiction.
Detective and mystery fiction.

Available copies

  • 35 of 41 copies available at BC Interlibrary Connect. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Radium Hot Springs Public Library.

Holds

  • 1 current hold with 41 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Radium Hot Springs Public Library FIC PEN (Text) 35130000034219 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2015 July #1
    The winds of change are freshening in Three Pines. Armand Gamache, former chief inspector of the Sûreté du Québec, now retired to the idyllic village north of Montreal, is starting to feel twitchy, pondering the next stage in his life. But even as the future signals change, the past is calling forth a nightmare. When the shocking death of a nine-year-old boy with a penchant for telling tall tales sends Gamache to the woods, looking for clues, he discovers that the boy's last tale was tall but true: a giant missile launcher is found hidden in the woods, pointing toward the U.S. Is it the work of Gerald Bull, a real-life rogue physicist who actually built such a gun? Penny builds this fascinating and still little-known slice of Canadian history into a compelling mystery that leads to an exciting but tantalizingly open-ended finale. A few too many coincidences may be required here to link Three Pines to Gerald Bull's bizarre, shocking career, but the overarching metaphor—the presence of a very large serpent in paradise—will resonate powerfully for devotees of this compelling series.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: A 400,000-copy market distribution, combined with all manner of online promotion and Penny's astounding popularity, will ensure that the curious story of Gerald Bull and his very big gun will soon be common knowledge across the world. Copyright 2014 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2015 September
    Transcending the cozy village mystery

    Woe be unto the free-range American reader who casually picks up any of Louise Penny's Chief Inspector Gamache mysteries, set in the French-Canadian village of Three Pines, expecting a "Murder, She Wrote"-style cozy. The author erupts at the mere suggestion. 

    "To call them cozies is to completely misread!" she protests by phone from her home in Sutton, a French-speaking village in Québec, east of Montreal. "I get very annoyed at anyone who calls them cozies, or even traditional. I think it's facile for people to think that anything set in a village must, per force, be superficial and simplistic."

    Far, far from either, Penny's addictive series may be the quintessential anti-cozy, centered as it is on a village that bears more resemblance to Twin Peaks than Cabot Cove and an erudite chief inspector of the Sûreté du Québec whose demons are never far behind him.

    Publisher Minotaur Books says more than three million copies of the Inspector Gamache books have been sold worldwide since the series debuted in 2006, with growing sales and buzz for each new release. Penny's 11th Gamache mystery, The Nature of the Beast, marks her largest first printing ever.

    As series devotees know, the brooding, wounded Armand Gamache left the Sûreté and retired to Three Pines after tearing the lid off of internal corruption in 2013's How the Light Gets In, only to resurface last year, shaken but not deterred, in The Long Way Home. Penny focuses as much on whether Gamache will overcome his demons as on whether his next demon will be his last. 

    In The Nature of the Beast, 9-year-old Laurent Lepage goes missing after annoying the townspeople yet again with another of his signature far-fetched stories, this one about a monster and an enormous gun hidden deep in the surrounding woods. When the boy's body is found, the search for his killer leads authorities to the unthinkable: an enormous rocket launcher, expertly concealed, provenance unknown. 

    Who built it? How? And most importantly, why? It's just the knotty puzzler to lure Gamache and his ever-inquisitive wife, Reine-Marie, out of early retirement.

    A similar unfathomable horror—the terrorist attacks of 9/11—proved to be a game-changer for Penny as well. Back in 1996, after jettisoning an 18-year on-air career with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and winning a 14-year battle with alcoholism, she'd retreated with her physician husband Michael to the Eastern Townships to try her hand at historical fiction. But five years in, she was getting nowhere.

    "I realized I was writing for the wrong reason; I was trying to impress my family, my former colleagues—trying to write the best book ever written. The judgment of others has played a terrible role in my life for much of my life, and I became frozen," she recalls.

    Shortly after 9/11, a desultory glance at her bedside table helped dispel her ennui.

    "Like most people, I read catholically; I read just about anything. But among my pile of books were crime novels. I remember sitting on my bed looking at them and thinking, that's it! I will simply write a book I would want to read," she says.

    Those tenuous, post-traumatic days even inspired where she would set her mysteries.

    "I was feeling, like the rest of the world, fairly vulnerable and thinking that the world might be a dangerous place, and I wanted to create a place where there was a sense of belonging and community," she recalls. "The books aren't about murder; they're about life and the choices that we make, and what happens to good people when such a harrowing event comes into their lives. It's an exploration of human nature, I hope."

    Re-inspired by her new direction, Penny tripped out of the gate by shooting for a perfect first draft.

    "The danger, at least for the first couple of books, was that I had to get it right the first time. As a result, it paralyzed me because it didn't allow for creativity, for flights of fancy, for inspiration," she says.

    That's when her years of journalism with the CBC crashed the party, lending offbeat spontaneity and quirky humor to the otherwise serious task at hand.

    "My first drafts are piles of something very soft and smelly. They're huge, almost double the size of the final book," she chuckles. "I throw everything in—I have to—and then I edit, because I know I'm good at editing. That's part of the beauty of having a big, messy first draft, because then I feel like I'm in a warehouse full of ideas and words and thoughts and stories. Then I can just pick and choose."

    Her unique creative process produces that rarest of wonders in fiction: verisimilitude. In Three Pines, clues to the mystery are often dropped casually over café au lait at the bistro, and so subtly that we talk ourselves to sleep wondering whether to trust them, and if they'll ultimately form a whole. Only a writer with Penny's instincts could wait until an author's note at the end of The Nature of the Beast to reveal a walloping fact that's as shocking as the book's climax (don't peek; it's worth the wait!).

    While it's not a spoiler to note that a serial killer haunts this latest installment, Penny admits she's not about the body count, and never will be.

    "I've been on a number of writer panels where people say, ‘Well, when it gets slow or boring, I just throw in another body!' And I think, that can't be right," she says. "I'm not interested in body counts or serial killers; I'm really interested in the why. What would make a real-life human being do something like that? The murder is just a conceit to allow me to look at all sorts of other issues."

    Which explains why the village setting not only appeals to Penny, but may well have been inevitable.

    "What always amazes me is, there is a tendency to dismiss crime novels set in a village or rural setting rather than in a city. As someone who lived in cities all my life, murders in Montreal are in the briefs column of the newspaper. It's always tragic but it's not horrific; it's not a shock, it doesn't set the whole community on edge," she says. "But a murder in a tight-knit community? How big of a violation is that? Not only has a person's life been taken, but your whole sense of security has been taken. And knowing that someone you know was murdered and someone you know did it? How horrific is that?"

    Although Penny had a brief brush with cinema, serving as a consultant and executive producer on the 2013 film version of her first Gamache novel, Still Life, she's an admittedly poor candidate to go Hollywood anytime soon.

    "I don't know about films. I was involved, but I'm not anymore, by my own choice. While they did consult me, they did not take a great deal of what I said; there was no onus on them to take anything to heart, and I found that very difficult," she recalls.

    Nor should readers expect any non-Gamache standalones. Penny readily admits she has found the perfect cast and setting to accomplish her primary goal as a mystery writer.

    "I want the reader to care, and if you don't care, why bother? I want the books and characters to follow the reader for days or weeks after," she says. 

    "I want to try to bring down the fourth wall, to where they feel they're actually sitting in the bistro listening to the conversation; they can smell the wood smoke and taste the café au lait and feel what the characters are feeling. I think if someone just reads my book with their head, they're missing probably two-thirds of the book. You have to absorb it through your heart."

    This article was originally published in the September 2015 issue of BookPage. Download the entire issue for the Kindle or Nook.

    Copyright 2012 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2015 July #2
    In Inspector Gamache's 11th outing, the sheltering forest around his small village of Three Pines is revealed to be a hiding place for unexpected evil. Armand Gamache, former head of homicide at the Sûreté du Québec, is learning to let go and be happy with his new life in Three Pines, far from the evil that ate away at him for years. His former colleagues and friends poke fun at him, saying the great inspector will never truly hang up his hat, but these jokes turn deadly serious when an imaginative 9-year-old boy named Laurent is murdered shortly after telling what seemed to be a tall tale about a massive gun wielded by a monster in the woods. When it's discovered that the boy was not exaggerating even in the slightest, Gamache's mind quickly switches back to questioning his surroundings and the people who inhabit this space—many of them his close friends. Chief Inspector Isabelle Lacoste and her right hand, Jean-Guy Beauvoir, take up residence in Three P ines, and with Gamache's sideline help, they begin to find out what sort of darkness lurks just outside of town. Penny uses her well-known, idyllic setting as the center point of a mystery with global scope and consequences, spanning decades and implicating many, including series veterans. What makes this story most magical, though, is how the many aspects of this spiraling tale can be connected by a Bible verse and related lines from a Yeats poem: "And what rough beast, its hour come round at last, / Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?" It's with this eye for detail that Penny sketches the "nature of the beast"—evil that has the potential to grow even in the most unexpected places. An especially terrifying character returning from Gamache's past is the perfect reminder of the dark side of human nature, but that side does not always win out. Penny is an expert at pulling away the surface of her characters to expose their deeper—and often ugly—layers, al w ays doing so with a direct but compassionate hand. Copyright Kirkus 2015 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2015 April #2

    Penny's ten previous Chief Inspector Armand Gamache novels have made her a No. 1 New York Times best-selling author, and she has the Crime Writers' Association New Blood Dagger and five Agatha Awards tucked on her shelf, too. Here, the disappearance of a lad in Gamache's Quebec village famed for his tall tales shakes things up.

    [Page 58]. (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2015 July #1

    Penny's 11th series entry (after The Long Way Home) has Armand Gamache slowly adjusting to retirement in the small, idyllic, Quebec village of Three Pines. When a local boy is found dead in a ditch, Gamache, feeling guilty about ignoring the young man's tall tales, becomes involved. Soon the familiar cast of characters, including Clara, Gabri, Inspector Beauvoir, Ruth, her duck and the serene Reine-Marie, are all involved in the investigation of the murder and the unthinkable object that precipitated the terrible act. A thread that subtly runs through the book is the disquiet Gamache feels as he tries to find his purpose now that he is no longer the chief inspector of the Sûreté. VERDICT A strong sense of place, a multilayered plot, and well-crafted (and for Penny's fans, familiar) characters combine for a thoughtful, intriguing tale. More than a simple mystery, Penny's novel peels away the emotional and psychological layers of the inhabitants of Three Pines. Although this book may stand alone, reading the previous titles will give readers context to truly understand and enjoy this latest in the series.—Terry Lucas, Rogers Memorial Lib., Southampton, NY

    [Page 58]. (c) Copyright 2015 Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2015 June #3

    The bucolic Quebec village of Three Pines again proves no refuge in Penny's stellar 11th Armand Gamache novel (after 2014's The Long Way Home). Gamache has settled in the small community after retiring from the Sûreté, where he worked as a homicide detective. But he's drawn back to the hunt after Laurent Lepage, a nine-year-old boy with a penchant for crying wolf, is found dead under circumstances that Gamache finds suspicious. The death followed Laurent's latest fantastic—and disbelieved—claim, of having found a gun as big as a building with a winged monster on it in the woods. Despite Gamache's unofficial status, he's allowed to work the case, which takes multiple unexpected turns. In this typically engaging and fairly clued installment, Gamache wrestles with whether he can truly be content with the quiet life Three Pines offers, a struggle that echoes the choices, past and present, others have made about their responsibility to confront the evil the human spirit is capable of. Series fans will delight in Penny's continued complex fleshing out of characters they have come to love. Author tour.Agent: Teresa Chris, Teresa Chris Literary Agency. (Aug.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2015 PWxyz LLC

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