Get BookThe Beautiful Mystery A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel

[Free Download.C3nA] The Beautiful Mystery A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel



[Free Download.C3nA] The Beautiful Mystery A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel

[Free Download.C3nA] The Beautiful Mystery A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel

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[Free Download.C3nA] The Beautiful Mystery A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel

The Beautiful Mystery: A Chief Inspector Gamache Novel A Great Reckoning: A Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novel ... A Great Reckoning: A Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novel) [Louise Penny] on . *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Instant New York Times bestseller ... How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 9 ... Start by marking How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 9) as Want to Read: Louise Penny Author - Official site Booklist 'a compelling mystery that leads to an exciting but tantalizingly open-ended finale.' Miami Herald 'Louise Penny is unsurpassed at building a sense of ... Louise Penny Author - Official site I'm so glad you've discovered the Armand Gamache books. I hope you're enjoying reading them as much as I love writing them. The newest Gamache novel the twelfth in ... A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 12) Start by marking A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 12) as Want to Read: How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Gamache Series 9 ... Christmas is approaching and in Qubec its a time of dazzling snowfalls bright lights and gatherings with friends in front of blazing hearths. But shadows are ... Book Archive Well Read TV Show Book Reviews Online ... BOOK CLUB Share Reviews and Comments Live Chats with Authors Win Books and Prizesand More! Free to Join! A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Gamache Series 12) by ... 1 New York Times bestselling author Louise Penny pulls back the layers to reveal a brilliant and emotionally powerful truth in her latest spellbinding novel. When an ... Order of Inspector Gamache Books - OrderOfBooks.com This is the Order of Inspector Gamache Books in both chronological order and publication order. List verified daily and newest books added immediately. The Most Famous Mystery Detectives Chief Inspector Gamache - author: LouisePenny ; Medieval Trilogy - author: LisaJackson ; A Lady Of The West series - author: LindaHoward Rank: #6919 in BooksBrand: Brand: Minotaur BooksPublished on: 2013-07-02Released on: 2013-07-02Original language: EnglishNumber of items: 1Dimensions: 8.19" h x 1.08" w x 5.46" l, .77 pounds Binding: Paperback400 pagesUsed Book in Good Condition 4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.Completely unsure about continuing this seriesBy MikiI have been avidly reading all the Inspector Gamache books, and have really enjoyed the characters inside those pages; Armand, Jean-Luc, Reine-Marie, and all the inhabitants of Three Pines. I understand the need for drama in mysteries, but the story line that has wound through many of the recent books concerning Chief Superintendent Forneau have, I believe, been stretched out far too long. I have been sick, reading about all of the evil that Chief Superintendent Forneau has done to Inspector Gamache, and Detective Beauvoir, as well as many others. And to continue to put pen to paper, making the corrupt and evil person the apparent winner in these stories is simply too much. In this book, a beautiful friendship is torn apart by Forneau, that of Gamache and Beauvoir, and in reading the synopses for the next two books, it seems the the author has chosen to allow evil to reign supreme, and send Gamache packing, with Beauvoir's and Annie's life in shambles. She (the author) may feel this is necessary to her stories, but I, as the reader, find it highly unsatisfying, and has left me very unsure as to whether or not I will continue with the series. If I had even seen a glimmer of hope in the next two synopses, I wouldn't be this upset, but it seems that this is not to be the case. I would love for the author to explain why she is destroying the good characters and elevating the evil ones.8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.Know the Turf!By J. WilsonI have thoroughly enjoyed the author's work -- having discovered her in June, I have had a great summer working through her books and eagerly await the next one.The Beautiful Mystery suffers from Louise Penny's unfamiliarity with what she is writing about. She makes it clear that Quebec today is a secular, post-Christian culture; but she should have run her book by someone familiar with Catholicism, and monasticism.It's simply not believable that a community of monks fleeing Europe disappeared into the woods of Quebec and sustained monastic life for four hundred years without the Church being aware of them. We're asked to believe that the Holy See never stopped searching even for a day, but only discovered where these monks were when their chant CD was released.Simply impossible. A monastery has relations with its local Bishop (although it has independence from him) and a Visitor, an Abbot from another Abbey who checks in every three years or so. How did these guys get their Priests ordained over those four hundred years If the Abbot was regularly going out to recruit (and pilfer!) new monks from other monasteries, plenty of people in the Church had to know about these guys.The monks puzzle over the last words of the dying monk, deciding that they were "Ecce homo." The Abbot tells the Inspector that this means, 'He is Man," which is untrue. The words are famous; Pilate, having had Christ scourged and tortured, shows Him to the crowd, saying, 'Behold the Man."The Inspector asks why he said that; the Abbot tells him, 'He wanted to prove to the crowd that their god wasn't divine at all; that Jesus was just a man." Um, unless the monks in Quebec are as ignorant of the faith as everyone else, this is inexplicable. It's Biblical illiteracy. Pilate was addressing the bloodthirsty crowd who were screaming for Christ's death, thinking that if they saw He'd been punished they'd relent. The crowd didn't think Jesus was divine; they were the henchmen of the chief priests, assembled under cover of night for a show trial.Much of the plot revolves around the monks' "vow of silence." There's no such thing. Monks take three vows: obedience, stability, conversion of manners. There is no vow of silence. Having taken their vows, the monks then live in common and live the Rule of the house, which involves stated times of quiet.But this is where I most regret the shortcomings of the book. Much of its effect is from the contrast between two world, which the detectives experience powerfully. It's like the Harrison Ford film 'Witness" -- contrasting the Amish world with that of Philadelphia police.A Monastery is not a completely other world. It is a family. In any home there should be someone making decisions, someone procuring food, division of chores, provision for the care of the weak and elderly, and, yes, silent times ("Dad got home from work at 4AM so QUIET this morning!!!"). A monastery is no different: How do we all live together here, at peace, fruitfully, supporting each other, givng each other space and needed privacy Whether the household is five people or seventy, it is the same question.Louise Penny clearly knows, for example, to immerse herself in AA lore before writing a novel involving it. I wish she had done the same for monasteries. Monastic life is a fascinating contrast -- not an other-worldly experience -- to ordinary lives people lead, illuminating by similarity and difference. I enjoyed the book, but there were many jarring, unreal notes struck. That being said, what a GREAT summer Ms Penny's books gave me. I look forward to "That's How the Light Gets in!!"2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.Beautiful indeed, with perhaps too much of a good thingBy Laurence R. BachmannLouise Penny's The Beautiful Mystery succeeds on many levels. The mystery is solid and engaging--incidents and events tie together and "wrap up" well. There's no bait and switch or superfluous diversion along the way to 'whodunit'. Also, characters are very well drawn and the author has a sharp eye for the moral turpitude and shortcomings of those in religious and secular life. Division, jealousy and pettiness great and small is rife in both worlds. Generally, the characters are complex in nature with one important exception. Armand Gamache is, in my opinion, rather too immaculately conceived, but that is a personal opinion.Best of all there is a trove of interesting musical and historical information. Did you know the Dominican Order (that spearheaded the Inquisition) were the Hounds of the Lord (Domini Canis) Now you do. I learned lots about plainchant music, monastic orders and neumes (the predecessors to musical notes). It's all very well done and my only complaint is that perhaps Ms. Penny provides too much of a good thing. It seems as though I attended service for each of the seven canonical hours, whose music and liturgy were constantly interrupted or obscured by the crude carping of a rather annoying inspector, Jean-Guy Beauvoir. I realize he is the street-smart, working-class foil to the esoteric and posh Gamache, but he began to get on my nerves.Last, there is lots and lots of backstory. It's practically another novel (and was). This could definitely have been trimmed. Getting to our denouement began to feel like a Second Coming and I personally couldn't wait to say, "Amen!"See all 1582 customer reviews... How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Gamache Series 9 ... Christmas is approaching and in Qubec its a time of dazzling snowfalls bright lights and gatherings with friends in front of blazing hearths. But shadows are ... A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Gamache Series 12) by ... 1 New York Times bestselling author Louise Penny pulls back the layers to reveal a brilliant and emotionally powerful truth in her latest spellbinding novel. When an ... A Great Reckoning: A Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novel ... A Great Reckoning: A Novel (Chief Inspector Gamache Novel) [Louise Penny] on . *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Instant New York Times bestseller ... Order of Inspector Gamache Books - OrderOfBooks.com This is the Order of Inspector Gamache Books in both chronological order and publication order. List verified daily and newest books added immediately. Book Archive Well Read TV Show Book Reviews Online ... BOOK CLUB Share Reviews and Comments Live Chats with Authors Win Books and Prizesand More! Free to Join! Louise Penny Author - Official site Booklist 'a compelling mystery that leads to an exciting but tantalizingly open-ended finale.' Miami Herald 'Louise Penny is unsurpassed at building a sense of ... How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 9 ... Start by marking How the Light Gets In (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 9) as Want to Read: A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 12) Start by marking A Great Reckoning (Chief Inspector Armand Gamache 12) as Want to Read: Louise Penny Author - Official site I'm so glad you've discovered the Armand Gamache books. I hope you're enjoying reading them as much as I love writing them. The newest Gamache novel the twelfth in ... The Most Famous Mystery Detectives Chief Inspector Gamache - author: LouisePenny ; Medieval Trilogy - author: LisaJackson ; A Lady Of The West series - author: LindaHoward
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