63 pages • 2 hours read
Louise PennyA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
The novel is written in the third person omniscient, a style of narration that allows the readers to see into the minds of many characters. These varying points of view in give the characters depth; in the mystery genre, they are also useful for revealing information to the reader.
Some shifts in perspective give readers more information than characters have. The novel opens with the abbot’s tension on the morning of the murder, making the reader familiar with the fault lines in the monastery between the abbot and the prior even before the investigation starts. Knowing that there are competing groups of monks allows readers to draw their own conclusions from Gamache’s first encounters with these potentially enigmatic figures.
Point of view allows even minor characters like local policeman Captain Charbonneau to have a narrative function. In this case, Charbonneau’s thoughts give readers a window into Gamache’s special status as an admired but also vulnerable member of the police force, as Charbonneau imagines telling Gamache, “I do know something you should hear.
By Louise Penny
A Fatal Grace
A Fatal Grace
Louise Penny
A Great Reckoning
A Great Reckoning
Louise Penny
All the Devils are Here
All the Devils are Here
Louise Penny
A Rule Against Murder
A Rule Against Murder
Louise Penny
A World of Curiosities
A World of Curiosities
Louise Penny
Bury Your Dead
Bury Your Dead
Louise Penny
How the Light Gets In
How the Light Gets In
Louise Penny
State of Terror
State of Terror
Hillary Rodham Clinton, Louise Penny
Still Life
Still Life
Louise Penny
The Brutal Telling
The Brutal Telling
Louise Penny
The Cruelest Month
The Cruelest Month
Louise Penny
The Long Way Home
The Long Way Home
Louise Penny
The Nature of the Beast
The Nature of the Beast
Louise Penny
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