Sunny's bookshelf
Sunny's bookshelf photo by Judy Solomon

Online book reviews since 2011, the very best in reviewing – connecting good readers with equally good writers

The Long Way Home

Sign up to receive our latest reviews by email

Inspector Armand Gamache has now retired, but I can only hope that this is not his last detecting adventure.  He has entertained and beguiled me since reading his first solution in Still Life. Gamache is one of the few literary detectives that I’d like to drink Scotch with. Or, since literature, art, and food figure prominently in Penny’s books, we could make an evening of it.

Gamache has always been a detective with a difference, and it’s not just that he is the retired Chief Inspector of the homicide division at Sûreté du Québec. His essential difference is that he lives both his personal and professional selves with a firm belief that to have a meaningful life or to solve a murder requires one to understand his and others’ emotions. Gamache does not denigrate the role of reason, evidence, and deduction in solving murders, but believes correctly interpreting the evidence and making the proper deductions requires that one must come to understand some of the mysteries that reside in everyone’s heart – mysteries that are often connected to the Seven Deadly Sins. Although Gamache carries his religious beliefs lightly, they are in evidence, especially the importance of empathy and forgiveness.

Having retired with his brilliant wife and perfect rescue dog to the tiny village of Three Pines, Québec, near the Vermont border and scene of many of his previous murder investigations, Armand Gamache sits every morning on a bench placed on a rise that overlooks the village. Everyone can see him. He can see everyone.  They are all simpatico if not entirely sane. He reads the same book every day, appearing to begin at the beginning each day, but never finishing.  How mysterious. Clara, an old friend and award-winning painter, approaches to ask him about the book, but doesn’t say what is really in her heart. Gamache coaxes the unsaid to be said by asking her a simple question: “Why are you here, Clara?”

Clara speaks of her fears; at the center of them lies a mystery involving her husband, Peter, himself a famous artist. Unlike Clara, however, Peter’s career trajectory has flattened while his wife’s is ascending steeply. There is jealousy. The marriage has faltered.  Peter and Clara agree to a year-long separation. Peter has not returned on the date previously agreed to. Call out the hounds?

Not in a Louise Penny story. The hounds would become hopelessly confused. The story line is never simple because the people involved are complex. They have multiple, conflicting motives and are not always socially competent. There are usually two overlapping story lines and sometimes three. Typically, each involves a mystery of its own, but not all of the mysteries involve a murder.  In The Long Way Home, as it happens, no known murder has yet occurred when Clara confesses her anguish that Peter has not yet found his way home.

Although Gamache has no official standing he asks his son-in-law, Sûreté inspector Jean-Guy Beauvoir, to help him probe unofficially the puzzle of Peter’s absence. Although Three Pines retains its emotional grip on the unfolding story, Gamache,, Jean-Guy, and Clara are soon led from Three Pines to visit Peter’s parents in Québec (a horror), then to the art college in Québec where Clara and Peter met (academic intrigue), then to small, isolated towns along the St. Lawrence River (picturesque but deadly).  Art is at the center of the swirling story lines.  No matter where the detectives find themselves, the emotions evoked by art and paintings suggest the clues. Artistic emotions go beyond truth and beauty to envy, greed, insanity, and murder. Gamache finds himself caught between his desires for sanctuary and healing and his equally compelling desires for compassion and forgiveness.

You may enjoy reading The Long Way Home.  If so, then give yourself additional pleasure by reading the Inspector Gamache stories in order if you haven’t already.   – Neal Ferguson

Also available by Louise Penny: Still Life; A Fatal Grace; How the Light Gets In; The Cruelest Month; A Rule Against Murder; The Brutal Telling; The Beautiful Mystery; Bury Your Dead; A Trick of the Light; The Hangman; Dead Cold.

Add your thoughts and comments...

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Share this Review
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Related Reviews

Billy Blaster and the Robot Army from Outer Space

Billy Blaster

BILLY BLASTER AND THE ROBOT ARMY FROM OUTER SPACE – not necessarily a graphic novel only for the younger reader. No matter how old you

Read More »
The Little Sister

The Little Sister

The Little Sister – A first Philip Marlowe novel brings this reviewer into an enthusiastic appreciation of Raymond Chandler who makes (for me) the mystery

Read More »
The Midnight Library

The Midnight Library

Matt Haig’s novel, The Midnight Library, describes the twenty-seven hours it takes Nora Seed to choose life or death. The Midnight Library, Chapter One begins, “Nineteen

Read More »

About the Reviewer

Sign up for reviews by email

You’ll get email updates from Bookin’ with Sunny when we add a new review or blog post, and we never share your email with anyone else.

Shopping in-store Fun!

Support your local community’s economic growth by shopping for books at your independent bookstore in person, online at their website, or by phone.