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A trick of the light  Cover Image E-book E-book

A trick of the light

Penny, Louise. (Author).

Summary: Investigating a murder at a solo artist's Quebec village home, Chief Inspector Gamache and his team encounter deceptive nuances in the art world that distort every clue they find with tales of duality and broken hearts.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781429972895
  • ISBN: 1429972890
  • ISBN: 9781250007346
  • ISBN: 1250007348
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (viii, 351 pages).
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Minotaur Books, 2011.

Content descriptions

General Note:
Includes discussion questions.
Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Gamache, Armand (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Police -- Québec (Province) -- Fiction
Québec (Province) -- Fiction
Murder -- Investigation -- Fiction
FICTION -- Mystery & Detective -- Traditional British
Gamache, Armand (Fictitious character)
Murder -- Investigation
Police
Québec
Genre: Detective and mystery fiction.
Electronic books.
Detective and mystery stories.
Detective and mystery fiction.
Fiction.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2011 June #1
    Whereas Penny's superb Bury Your Dead (2010) was an elaborately constructed crime novel incorporating three freestanding stories, her latest in the Inspector Armand Gamache series is much more focused. The action, of course, is centered in Three Pines, the Brigadoon-like village outside of Montreal, a seemingly idyllic oasis from civilization except for the remarkable number of murders that occur there. This time the body is discovered during a party in celebration of Clara Morrow's breakthrough art show in Montreal. The victim, art critic Lillian Dyson, was a childhood friend of Clara's, but her savage review of Clara's work early in her career put an end to that. Gamache and his team, including the troubled Jean Guy Beauvoir, gather at Three Pines yet again to make sense of the crime. While the investigation burrows deep into the cutthroat art world, the narrative line is fairly straightforward, building to an Agatha Christie–like finale in which all the suspects gather for dinner at Clara's home. Readers who have watched Penny's novels develop from character-driven cozies into deeply textured, multifaceted crime fiction may find this one just a bit disappointing but only in context. Like P. D. James, Penny shows how the tight structure of the classical mystery story can accommodate a wealth of deeply felt emotions and interpersonal drama. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Penny's remarkable string of successes and awards has moved her to the top of the genre. A 100,000 first printing and the attendant publicity will ensure that her latest effort finds the author's adoring audience quickly. Copyright 2011 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2011 September
    Murder and mayhem around the globe

    We have another cross-global collection this month, with mysteries from the U.S., Denmark, Canada and even Botswana! First up is Death of the Mantis, number three in the series featuring portly policeman David "Kubu" Bengu. Kubu's debut adventure, A Carrion Death, earned author Michael Stanley (a pen name for two authors, Michael Sears and Stanley Trollip) the nod as our Top Pick a couple of years back. Both authors are old Africa hands, and their experience with the land and its people permeates every paragraph. This time out, Kubu is solicited by an old school chum to look into a murder case involving Bushmen, by nature a peace-loving group of folks quite disinclined to take a human life. Although Kubu is able to cast reasonable doubt regarding the guilt of the Bushmen, he decides that the case merits his continued participation, a choice that will put him, his staff and even his family in grave peril—and from a most unexpected source. Released as a trade paperback with a list price of only $14.99, Death of the Mantis is, without a doubt, Bargain Mystery of the Month!

    PELECANOS' NEW HERO
    Fans new and old will celebrate George Pelecanos' return to the ring with his latest novel, The Cut. A new Pelecanos hero has been brought into the fold, one Spero Lucas, a specialist in retrieving items deemed irretrievable by legal means. Lucas is an Iraq vet, world-weary at a young age and with a pragmatist's view of the fine line of legality—a line he steps over with some regularity. Hired by an inmate to recover several packages of marijuana that have mysteriously gone missing, Lucas discovers that bent cops are in on the swiping of the drugs, not to mention the redistribution thereof. It goes without saying that they will pull out all the stops to keep Lucas at bay—murder included. You may want to keep a jargon dictionary on hand, as Pelecanos has perhaps the best ear in the business for contemporary street lingo, and he passes it on to the reader without editorial commentary. His writing is masterful, and The Cut deserves a place among his best work, which, as his legions of readers well know, is high praise indeed.

    MUST-READ NORDIC NOIR
    When The Keeper of Lost Causes hit stands in the U.K.—where it was titled Mercy—the London Times called author Jussi Adler-Olsen "the new ‘it' boy of Nordic Noir." (I wish I had said that. . . .) Other reviewers threw around adjectives like "gripping," "impressive" and "atmospheric." Let me add a few more: "chilling," "unsettling" and "downright disturbing." When cranky detective Carl Morck returns to work after an assignment that went deadly wrong—in part thanks to him—the last thing he expects is a promotion. To his surprise, he is put in charge of Department Q, the cold-case unit of the Copenhagen police department. One such case is the disappearance of Merete Lynggard, once a leading light in the Social Democrats, missing for five years and presumed dead. But she is not dead—far from it. Can Morck find her, and perhaps find a morsel of redemption in the process? All you fans of Scandinavian mysteries (in my opinion some of the finest suspense novels in contemporary fiction): Be sure to grab this book now that it's on sale in the U.S. You'll thank me.

    TOP PICK IN MYSTERY
    Louise Penny's previous novel, Bury Your Dead, was our Top Pick last October, and she continues her winning streak this month with the latest Chief Inspector Gamache novel, A Trick of the Light. Gamache returns to the Quebec border town of Three Pines to investigate a murder in the tiny artists' enclave. The victim is Lillian Dyson, a well-loathed art critic. The list of people who would have liked to see her dead is both lengthy and distinguished, as her exhibition reviews were catty and scathing, and her poison pen savaged newcomer and veteran alike. But by all reports, in the months before her death, Dyson seemed to have turned over a new leaf: She was a regular attendee at Alcoholics Anonymous, and she practiced the 12-step program religiously, particularly Step 9, the making of amends to people she had harmed. Apparently, however, someone remained singularly unmoved by Dyson's contrition, ending her life with a vicious twist of the neck and leaving the body in the garden of an up-and-coming artist on opening night of said artist's Montreal exhibition. The sole clue: an AA "beginner's chip" carelessly(?) left behind in the freshly turned soil of the garden. Penny's characters are, to a one, rich and multifaceted, her plotting is intricately laced with backstory and her depiction of modern-day Quebec is spot on. A Trick of the Light, like all the Gamache novels that precede it, is simply not to be missed.

    Copyright 2011 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2011 August #2

    Schadenfreude descends on the Quebecois village of Three Pines.

    Clara Morrow's solo exhibition at the Musee d'Art Contemporain in Montreal has been a long time coming. And although some seem pleased for her success in middle age, others, including a school friend turned vitriolic art critic, a gallery owner and even her husband Peter, an artist himself, wrestle with their envy. The day after the showing, back in Clara's garden in Three Pines, Lillian Dyson, former critic, current A.A. participant and Clara's vituperative ex-friend, lies dead of a broken neck. Armand Gamache, heading up the Sureté's homicide division, and his second-in-command Jean Guy Beauvoir (Bury Your Dead, 2010, etc.), are called on to investigate. They soon realize the case pits sobriety against drunkenness, appearance against reality and good changes against bad. Moreover, Gamache and Beauvoir have their own demons to exorcize, stemming from a catastrophic police raid, physical and emotional rehab and a marriage that never should have happened. With suspects and old slights vying to be uncovered, it becomes difficult indeed to find "some measure of peace in the small village."

    Penny, elevating herself to the pantheon that houses P.D. James, Ruth Rendell and Minette Walters, demonstrates an exquisite touch with characterization, plotting and artistic sensitivity. And there could be no better explanation of A.A. than you will find here.

     

     

    Copyright Kirkus 2011 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2011 July #1

    This follow-up to the Agatha Award-winning Bury Your Dead finds Armand Gamache, chief inspector of the Montreal police force, and Beauvoir, his lieutenant, still healing physically and psychologically from a fatal police operation gone awry. But this doesn't prevent them from taking on yet another murder case in the secluded village of Three Pines. When resident artist Clara Morrow's solo show at Montreal's premier art museum causes a sensation in the art world, it sets into motion a series of events that expose the vicious jealousies of artists and dealers. Clara's joy rapidly gives way to perplexity when the body of her sociopathic, long-estranged roommate is found in her garden. Gamache's investigation reveals the sad panoply of crippling human aspirations and failures. VERDICT Readers who love literary mystery writers such as Donna Leon will enjoy Penny's latest excellent series entry. [100,000-copy first printing.]—Lynne F. Maxwell, Villanova Univ. Sch. of Law, PA

    [Page 62]. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ BookSmack
    Penny's seventh Gamache novel opens with a celebration of art. Clara Morrow's hard-won solo show at the Musée in Montreal is followed by a party at her home in Three Pines with friends and a who's who of the art world. The show is a smashing international success, but Clara's night of triumph is followed by a cold morning when she discovers a body in her garden. Chief Inspector Armand Gamache and his team return to the small village of Three Pines to find a woman in a red dress face down in newly tilled soil, her neck broken. Gamache and even more notably his number two, Jean Guy Beauvoir, are still recovering from the events of a past investigation, but both press on to uncover long-hidden secrets and resentments. Through restrained plotting, this puzzle box of a novel unfolds via a series of small revelations, deftly connected and finely drawn. As carefully as she builds plot, Penny also builds character: Gamache, Beauvoir, and some old favorites from Three Pines continue to deepen in complexity. Along with her lovely subtle and spare writing, Penny delivers a sharp right hook of humor, which she uses to leaven the tone as her novel grows bleak. Smart and cultured, with finely drawn and atmospheric settings, Penny's novels are gems of storytelling. Note: If you are hooking a reader who has not yet met Penny's fabulous cast, start them with Still Life, the first in the series, but if you are working with a reader who found Penny through A Trick of the Light, rest easy, as not too much will have been revealed in advance. - Neal Wyatt, "RA Crossroads," Booksmack! 11/3/11 (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2011 July #1

    In Penny's outstanding seventh Chief Inspector Gamache novel, Gamache and his loyal deputy in Québec's Sûreté, Insp. Jean Guy Beauvoir, are still coming to terms with the multiple physical and emotional traumas they suffered in the previous book, Bury Your Dead. These tribulations have already cost Beauvoir his marriage. Meanwhile, the day after the triumphant opening of a show of their friend Clara Morrow's paintings at Montréal's Musée d'Art Contemporain, a dead woman with a broken neck turns up in Clara's garden in the small town of Three Pines. Gamache and his team return to this outwardly idyllic community once again to ascertain whether one of its residents is a murderer. With her usual subtle touch and timely injections of humor, Penny effectively employs the recurring motif of the chiaroscuro, the interplay of light and dark, which distinguishes Morrow's artwork and which resonates symbolically in the souls of the author's characters. 100,000 first printing; author tour. (Sept.)

    [Page ]. Copyright 2010 PWxyz LLC

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