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Bury Your Dead

Average rating: 4/5

Based on 12 ratings

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Bury Your Dead

by Louise Penny

Little, Brown And Company | September 15, 2010 | Trade Paperback

Louise Penny (born 1958) is a Canadian author of mystery novels. Penny was born in Toronto where she earned a Bachelor of Applied Arts (Radio and Television) from Ryerson Polytechnical Institute (now Ryerson University) in 1979. Before she turned to writing in 2004, she was a journalist and radio host for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in various cities across Canada for 25 years. She currently lives in a village south of Montreal with her husband Michael.

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This item is found in: Mystery and Suspense

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    Rating: 3/5

    Not her best piece.

    Miche Xu

    7 days ago

    In short, this book was interesting, but it wasn't what I had expected. Louise Penny's books have always served to entertain me more than most other crime-fiction authors. But this book was not as entertaining. The plot is something new in the world of crime fiction, in my opinion. But throughout the book, there's dialogue about Gamache trying to save an explosion of a dam and Agent Morin. Although it seemed interesting, it nevertheless confused me greatly and I did not really understand the significance of the story until about the very end. Of course, Louise Penny is a great writer and her writing is always very illuminating and structured, but I didn't really like how many futile commas there were. Seriously.

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    Rating: 3/5

    A good read

    Stuart Musson

    9 months ago

    I have read all of this series and enjoyed each book for the suspense. However I did find that there should be a disclaimer that you read A BrutalTelling first because of the references that keep bringing you back to that story.

    This reviewer also recommends:
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    Rating: 2/5

    A disappointment

    Toni Osborne

    • Top Book Reviewer

    10 months ago

    6th book the Chief Inspector Gamache series

    "Bury your Dead", won numerous awards in Canada and other countries for being the "Best Crime Novel" in 2010 and consequently became profitable for everyone in the business. Browsing reviews from different sites before I finalized my thoughts, I discovered most readers' qualified it as extraordinary; the best in the series….seems I am one of the few to question this assessment.…OMG did I dislike one of Louise Penny's cosy novels? What did I miss?

    I agree with those saying that Louise Penny ran out of ideas in this one, after creating so much murder and suspense in Three Pines she seems to have lost focus and direction in this one. The action moves to Québec City, dead of winter, Carnival time, where we learn the loveable Inspector has suffered a traumatic event. Initially I wondered, did I miss something, where, when and how did this event happen?

    This latest instalment is a rather quiet introspective story that intertwines three plots:

    1) Inspector Gamache while in recovery mode decides to spend some time with his mentor in Québec City and rehash some of his memories that still haunt him and try to tie up some loose ends. While there, he stumbles upon the Lit& His Library/Museum at the time when a body is discovered in the basement. Naturally our Québec "Columbo" takes the reins of the investigation, an investigation that brushes the delicate aspects of history between the French and Anglo communities.

    2) While in flashback mode Gamache rehashes the events of a deadly police investigation that went terribly wrong. A deadly raid that always comes back to haunt him.

    3) Another case that has also haunted him over time is brought to the forefront. He was never happy with the outcome and asks Jean Guy Beauvoir to revisit the case with the hope of answering some of his unanswered questions. It is a step back in time covering the events in the novel "The Brutal Telling"

    The author hopscotches her way between plots that are not linked in an awkward manner making it very hard to follow, even with a full background of the previous novels, I found it a challenge. MS. Penny passion for Québec can be overwhelming at times, French terms and expression add atmosphere to the prose but may not have full effect if not understood. Gamache wandering the cobble stone streets of the Old City munching a baguette or a croissant spells tourist rather than a native of the province in my books….The pacing pussyfoots all through the story, the only serious action surfaces in the last pages with Gamache's step by step recount of the botched investigation.

    This was a tedious read, a disappointment. ….I preferred when Inspector Gamache focused on one case at a time.

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    Rating: 5/5

    Magnificent!!!

    Danny Lyonnais

    2 years ago

    All six of Louise Penny's are excellent reads. Bury Your Dead, however, stands out as the best so far in its scope, intricacy, plot flow, most wonderfully in its humanity. If you haven't read any of Mme. Penny's novels, treat yourself: get all six and read them in order.

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About the Author

Louise Penny (born 1958) is a Canadian author of mystery novels. Penny was born in Toronto where she earned a Bachelor of Applied Arts (Radio and Television) from Ryerson Polytechnical Institute (now Ryerson University) in 1979. Before she turned to writing in 2004, she was a journalist and radio host for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in various cities across Canada for 25 years. She currently lives in a village south of Montreal with her husband Michael.

Trade Paperback

6.35 x 8.75 x 0.68 in

September 15, 2010

Little, Brown And Company

English


1847444385
9781847444387

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