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A better man  Cover Image E-book E-book

A better man

Penny, Louise (author.).

Summary: It's Gamache's first day back as head of the homicide department, a job he temporarily shares with his previous second-in-command, Jean-Guy Beauvoir. Flood waters are rising across the province. In the middle of the turmoil a father approaches Gamache, pleading for help in finding his daughter. As crisis piles upon crisis, Gamache tries to hold off the encroaching chaos, and realizes the search for Vivienne Godin should be abandoned. But with a daughter of his own, he finds himself developing a profound, and perhaps unwise, empathy for her distraught father.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781466873711
  • ISBN: 146687371X
  • ISBN: 9781250066213
  • ISBN: 1250066212
  • ISBN: 9781250257833
  • ISBN: 1250257832
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (437 pages)
  • Edition: First U.S. edition.
  • Publisher: New York : Minotaur Books, 2019.

Content descriptions

Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Gamache, Armand (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Police -- Québec (Province) -- Fiction
Fathers and daughters -- Fiction
Missing persons -- Fiction
Floods -- Fiction
Missing persons
Police
Québec
Genre: Detective and mystery fiction.
Detective and mystery fiction.
Fiction.
Mystery fiction.
Detective and mystery fiction.
Electronic books.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 June #1
    *Starred Review* Agreeing to a demotion from chief superintendent of the Sûreté du Québec, Armand Gamache has returned to his old job as head of homicide, but that's not enough for some of his critics, who launch a vicious Twitter attack against the former chief. Meanwhile, once-in-a-century flooding threatens both the city of Montreal and the entire province, and the new superintendent is loath to take Gamache's advice on how to proceed. There's trouble at home, too, in the idyllic village of Three Pines, where artist Clara's series of miniature paintings is being savaged by critics. And, yes, there is also a murder, this time of a pregnant woman who appears to have been thrown off a bridge by her abusive husband. When the husband is cleared of the crime on a technicality, Gamache and his son-in-law, Jean-Guy Beauvoir, both fathers of daughters, and their colleague Isabelle Lacoste must confront their own rage against the system and the abuser, who has slipped through their grasp. With a line from Moby-Dick reverberating in Gamache's mind—All truth with malice in it—the three investigators look beyond the surface to the subtle demons of life and thought. The appeal of this series and especially of Gamache himself has always been Penny's ability to show her hero moving from the tangible, brutal facts of murder to the emotions within, the stories in the blood. There are multiple stories, often contradictory, to be found in the many-tentacled web of human tragedy and suffering that Gamache teases to the surface in this moving exploration of ties that both bind and destroy.HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: The buzz has begun months in advance for the book that will be on every mystery fan's late-summer must-read list. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2019 September
    Whodunit: September 2019

    ★When Hell Struck Twelve
    General Dwight D. Eisenhower, Supreme Allied Commander during World War II, hand-picked his nephew, Captain Billy Boyle, to serve as his eyes and ears on the ground and to handle investigations and secret missions that are both vital to the Allied effort and exceptionally dangerous. Billy has a fair bit of experience in law enforcement, having served as a police detective in Boston in the years leading up to the war. But as the situation in Europe ramped up, he did what a lot of patriotic young Americans did in those days and enlisted in the Army. When Hell Struck Twelve finds the intrepid spy/investigator in search of a murderer and, at the same time, tasked with planting the seeds of deception regarding Allied plans for the liberation of Paris. The Germans are on the run, but there is every indication that they will leave carnage in their path as they abandon the City of Light, and it is up to Billy and his team to thwart them in that endeavor—and to try to stay alive in the process. I've read every book in James R. Benn's series, reviewed most of them, loved all of them, and this is the best one yet. Watch for some great cameos by Ernest Hemingway, Andy Rooney, George S. Patton and others.

    This Poison Will Remain
    Fred Vargas' This Poison Will Remain is the first of her novels that I have read. Yes, I said her: Fred Vargas is a female author who has topped the fiction charts in several European countries, and if there is any justice in the literary world, she will do the same on this side of the pond. Commissaire Adamsberg has been rather peremptorily summoned back to Paris from a fishing holiday in Iceland to investigate a nasty hit-and-run. Police officers are rarely afforded the luxury of pursuing just one case at a time, however. Adamsberg quickly finds himself investigating a series of deaths caused by bites from recluse spiders, small but occasionally lethal creatures that seem to have been working overtime in the vicinity of Nimes, France. Turns out that the victims were all once residents—rather unsavory residents at that—of the same orphanage. Now octogenarians, they are dying off one by one, each succumbing to the venom of the recluse. By turns wry and quirky, and with no shortage of plot twists, This Poison Will Remain will have Vargas' new readers scurrying to find the six books that precede it. 

    A Better Man
    Once the Superintendent of Sûreté du Québec, Armand Gamache has been demoted to a position leading the homicide department. It was a demotion few believed he would accept, but he surprised the naysayers and took the job. As A Better Man opens, the spring thaw is beginning in the St. Lawrence River, and the elements are conspiring to spawn a 100-year flood, the river overflowing its banks as ice dams the flow at every bend. It's not a propitious time to be investigating a murder, but a young woman's body turns up in a small but volatile tributary of the St. Lawrence. Her husband is the prime suspect; no surprises there, as he is a mercurial and abusive man. But there are other possibilities, too: a pair, or perhaps a trio, of spurned lovers, as well as a high-ranking police official bent on tanking the investigation if doing so will shed a bad light on Gamache. All the while, the floodwaters rise inexorably. Louise Penny's latest offers suspense galore, well-drawn characters we'd like to know (even the crotchety poet Ruth and her "fowl-mouthed" duck), a return to the fictional village of Three Pines—where we would all like to live—and some of the finest prose to grace the suspense genre.

    The Bone Fire
    S.D. Sykes' The Bone Fire is the outlier in this column, and I mean that in a good way. Set in England in 1361, the year of the second major bubonic plague outbreak, it's the story of a varied band of people, including noblemen, servants, a knight, a fool and a crusty Low Countries clockmaker with his sociopathic nephew/assistant in tow. This medieval cast of characters holes up in the remote island-fortress of Eden for the winter, sealing themselves off from the rest of the world until the danger of infection has passed. But mortal peril wears many masks, and one by one, people in the castle start mysteriously disappearing or dying—and not from the plague. It will fall to visiting nobleman Oswald de Lacy to solve the murders and protect his wife and young son. It's a task for which he has some aptitude, but then the villain is no slouch either. And just about the time the reader has that "aha" moment, when they think they know the identity of the killer, that suspect dies a particularly gruesome death, and the reader gets sent back to square one. The Bone Fire is a classic and confounding locked-room mystery, with several promising suspects to choose from before the big reveal.

     

     

    Copyright 2019 BookPage Reviews.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2019 April

    In Kingdom of the Blind, Chief Inspector Gamache's previous outing, Penny seemed to be pointing her top characters in new directions. No plot details yet, but I for one can't wait to see what happens here. From the CWA Dagger and six-time Agatha Award winner.

    Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2019 August

    After Kingdom of the Blind), CI Armand Gamache returns to the position where he first began and to the place he has come to call home in order to solve a missing persons-turned-murder case, avert the rising floodwaters of Canada's St. Lawrence River, and say goodbye to his son-in-law, who is both a dear friend and longtime second-in-command. In their final case together, Gamache and Jean-Guy Beauvoir search for the hidden truths behind what seems to be a cut-and-dried case and screwed-up investigation while battling the demons rising in both the upper echelons of the Sûreté du Québec and in hearts too wrapped up in the how of this murder to figure out the why—until it's nearly too late. VERDICT This title brings several character arcs to a close while resetting others to make this psychological mystery serve both as a beginning for new readers and a satisfying continuation for series fans. Gamache is an explorer of the human psyche, and the care he takes with the victims, their friends and family, as well as his own allows this series and his character continually to surprise, delight, and enthrall. Highly recommended for lovers of psychological, character-driven mysteries. [See Prepub Alert, 2/25/19.]—Marlene Harris, Reading Reality, LLC, Duluth, GA

    Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 June #2

    Bestseller Penny's wrenching 15th novel featuring Chief Insp. Armand Gamache (after 2018's Kingdom of the Blind) finds Gamache, former chief superintendent of the Sûreté du Québec, returning to work after a nine-month suspension and demotion, and reporting to his own his son-in-law and one-time protégé, Jean-Guy Beauvoir. When the body of Vivienne Godin, 25 and pregnant, is found in a river near Three Pines, trapped in the debris of a violent spring flood, Gamache and Beauvoir are sure that she was killed by her drunken, abusive, supremely unlikable husband, Carl Tracey. But knowing who did it and proving it are two different things. After an exhaustive investigation, the detectives build a convincing circumstantial case against Tracey. But a shocking twist forces Gamache to look at the evidence anew. With an uncompromising eye, Penny explores the depths of human emotion, both horrifying and sublime. Her love for her characters and for the mystical village of Three Pines is apparent on every page. Agent: Teresa Chris, Teresa Chris Literary. (Aug.)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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