During my pre Thanksgiving stop at the library, I mentioned that I have only read three mystery series during my adult life. A series has to contain just the right mix of the detective and crimes with his/her personal life and the cast of characters that go with it. When I completed Faye Kellerman’s Decker/Lazarus series, it took me almost a year until I discovered Still Life in my mom’s paper bag of books she brought with her for her winter in Florida. Because I was in Florida at the time, I overlooked the fact that this book and subsequent series takes place in a small village outside of Montreal. I detest winter with a passion except for that week in Florida, so I can only imagine if someone suggested to me to pick up Still Life in the middle of a midwestern winter. No can do, sorry. As it was, I was hooked on Three Pines and its quirky cast of characters and knew that it would be my next mystery series. Having caught up earlier this year, I am now reading in real time, waiting ever so impatiently for each book to drop. Wolves are majestic, so I thought, when I first saw the cover reveal for book 19, now known as The Grey Wolf. How fortunate I am that my library got me my copy right in time for a long holiday weekend where I had nothing but time to cozy up and return to Three Pines.
One Sunday in August, Chief Inspector Armand Gamache receives a disturbing phone call from an old adversary that sets off a chain of events that is this novel. Later the same day, the Gamaches’ pied-a- terre in Montreal is broken into and he can’t help but think that these two events are related. The peaceful life that the Gamaches enjoy in Three Pines had been compromised, an opponent sullying their home. Almost immediately, home and what it means to people becomes an overarching theme throughout the narrative. Penny noted that she took a year off between A World of Curiosities and The Grey Wolf because she wanted to both focus on her home and give the series its justice. This is book 19, and at this point in a series, plots can become formulaic, characters become archetypes. No one can fault a writer if this is the direction he/she chooses to go in once a series becomes successful; it is why we see mystery and thriller series reaching fifty books in one series. Not so Louise Penny. Yes, Inspector Gamache and the Three Pines community has enjoyed more success than even she initially believed; however, she did not create her characters to become sketches of themselves, so she needed time between books to create new, exciting, and unique plots so that the series could essentially begin to reinvent itself. Once the phone call set events in motion, I knew that the Grey Wolf would be one of those special books in a series that a reader would not guess is now nineteen books in.
Water. It is a valuable resource that has taken center stage in the 21st century. What if a terrorist plot or cell wanted to poison the water of a major city? Instantly, thousands of people could lose their lives and the city and nation would be in chaos, setting off martial law. A coup would follow and a once democratic nation could fall into a dictatorship. This is the scenario that Gamache is up against when his Montreal apartment is broken into and he meets clandestinely with a young marine biologist who has uncovered this very plot. Gamache at first does not know if this is a legit concern or the work of a green nonprofit agency to get funding for their work. He suspects the latter until this young man is murdered at their meeting and his work goes missing. The only clue left for Gamache: family. At this point, the only people Gamache can trust are the members of his own family, which includes the Three Pines community and Inspector LaCoste, who is essentially an extra daughter. The family convenes in Three Pines in case the threat to Montreal’s drinking water is real because Three Pines is both off the grid and receives its water from wells and springs. Like old times, Gamache, Beauvoir, and LaCoste sit on the terrace or in the Bistro to plan out their case, one that will take them across two continents and involve the help of old, supposedly trustworthy friends.
The only clues Gamache has to go by are two notes left in his coat, one of which is the recipe for chartreuse that is only made at the Chartrusian monastery in France. This message had been left by Dom Phillipe, the abbot of Saint-Gilbert-Entre-les-Loups, located in a remote location in northern Quebec, even more off the grid than Three Pines. Gamache and Beauvoir return to the monastery, their last visit being the low point of the entire series when Beauvoir was grappling with his addiction to pain medication and not yet married to Annie. Once at the monastery, they find few clues other than information about the abbot, which will take Beauvoir to Washington, DC, Gamache to Blanc Lablon, a fishing village on the coast, and LaCoste to the Vatican. One of these locations should provide the key to why this young man was killed, why Dom Phillipe would have left his monastery, and why an adversary would disturb Gamache at home. Some readers note that this read more like a thriller than a cozy mystery featuring Three Pines residents. In truth, that it what it is; however, what became a turn-off for a lot of readers worked for me because I love action and rarely read cozy mysteries outside of Miss Marple. Penny does not need for an entire book to take place in Three Pines or feature long running dialogue between characters for readers to know that the village is home. Yes, even after this many books a joke between Clara and Myrna in the bistro is touching, but it does not need to be the focal point of the entire book. As long as the denouement ends up back in Three Pines, I am fine with it as long as plenty of action takes place in between, and here it definitely did.
The plot to poison Montreal’s drinking water was real. Gamache, Beauvoir, and LaCoste do have to trust only themselves. Although the threat is real and alarming, Gamache says Noli timere- do not be afraid. He quotes poetry and evokes his love for Rodin’s art, reminding readers that he would be just as an effective English professor as a homicide investigator. Reine Maria realizes that Armand’s place is to use empathy to catch criminals. Had he chosen the route of attorney or professor, it would have been a safer choice, but then he would not have met Beauvoir in this life and he would not have met Annie, giving them two adorable grandchildren. It just so happens that Gamache is the best at what he does even if his methodology has resulted in a number of political adversaries during his career. What is Gamache- the grey wolf or the black, the question posed during the climax of the book when Gamache explains to Beauvoir how Saint Gilbert Entre les Loups got its name from the Cree. In each individual, the good and bad war inside, like yin and yang. Many cultures believe in something similar and the side that prevails, in this case wolf, grey or black, is the one that is fed. Poignant and deep words for a police procedural, proving yet again that Gamache would be the most sought after English professor in Montreal had he chosen that route. In this instance, the grey wolf prevails, or perhaps it doesn’t. After a year’s absence, Penny hints as much, noting that The Black Wolf will be published at this time next year. A cliffhanger, a stunning way to keep a long running series relevant. I will giddily await the thrilling conclusion to this case and in the interim imagine myself in Three Pines.
4.9 stars