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Quirky Characters, a Charming Setting and Topical Issues: Louise Penny’s A Better Man

4 May

A Better Man
Take a small rural Canadian village. A bistro serving almond croissants and café au lait. A quirky cast of core characters, with a few new faces mixed in each new book of the series.

Mix in some current topical issues, in this case the effects of environmental change, social media reality and the how impressions can be shaped there by anonymity, doctored videos and the viral nature of opinions. Add other dark aspects of life, like violence against women.

What you get is a somewhat cozy mystery with enough rough reality mixed in that you won’t gag from the sweetness.

It’s a formula that is repeated throughout this now 15 book long series. Armand Gamache, an officer of the Surete du Quebec lives with his extended family in the (fictional) village of Three Pines in Quebec. He deals with various crimes (a rather shocking amount, for such a backwater) as well as issues within the Surete du Quebec. He carries the baggage of decisions he has made in his career in each new book. In this one, he is looking into the disappearance of a woman known to have been abused by her husband. He is helped by his son-in-law Jean-Guy Beauvoir, and other Surete agents that have appeared in previous books in the series.

I hesitate to make the suggestion, because it is a rather substantial reading commitment, but it really is best to read the series in order. There is enough explanation of the backstories of the major plot developments to get you through each book as a stand-alone, but your enjoyment will be deeper for seeing characters develop over time. Penny doesn’t pull any punches. She is not afraid to write main characters out of the script or involve plot twists that will shock you.

A list of the series in order from the first to the most recent is: Still Life, A Fatal Grace/Dead Cold (same book, different title), The Cruelest Month, A Rule Against Murder/The Murder Stone (same book, different title), The Brutal Telling, Bury Your Dead, A Trick of the Light, The Beautiful Mystery, How the Light Gets In, The Long Way Home, The Nature of the Beast, A Great Reckoning, Glass Houses, Kingdom of the Blind, and A Better Man.  You can find them as ebooks and/or digital audiobooks to checkout from eLibraryNJ, eBCCLS, and Hoopla.

If you require s bit more convincing, take a look at Louise Penny’s web site, which features reviews and more describing the books in detail.

What I enjoy about the series is the morality of Armand Gamache and the plotting that keeps each book both familiar and surprising. And the food! The characters frequently indulge in food and drink at the bistro or at get-togethers at the villagers’ homes that sound awesome.

Written by:
Victoria Turk
Reference Librarian

The Disaster Diaries –One Man’s Quest to Learn Everything Necessary to Survive the Apocalypse

23 Mar

Knowing that the physical Hoboken Public Library would be inaccessible to me for the at least next two weeks, I took a quick peek at my home bookshelves to look for something I haven’t gotten around to cracking open yet. Aha! That’s when I spotted The Disaster Diaries –One Man’s Quest to Learn Everything Necessary to Survive the Apocalypse by Sam Sheridan.  You can listen to it as a digital audio book on Hoopla.  Our digital resources are always available, even when the building is closed.

I’m not sure when or where I acquired this, but how fortuitous! The book is blurbed as the story of a guy who has a background in mixed martial arts, emergency medical and firefighting skills. He claims that after becoming a father, thoughts of disaster spurred him on to learn further survival skill sets.

To clear up any misconceptions before you get your hopes up too high, the specific pandemic we now find ourselves in, that of being forced to adapt our behaviors to inhibit the spread of a virus was not a situation Sam Sheridan considered when writing his book.

So far, things have been inconvenient, economically unpleasant, psychically frightening, and uncertain. They have not, as of yet, required wilderness survival or combat skills.  Sheridan uses ridiculous scenarios (think zombie apocalypse) to provide a launching point for his real life strategies that are based on scientific studies or the advice of real-life experts. This is not without entertainment value in the world we find ourselves in, with access restricted to sports, art and community.

Physical preparedness, stockpiling food and water, learning to use weapons, wilderness medicine, and even some urban “survival” skills (stealing a vehicle / stunt car driving) are covered. As are the mental attitudes necessary to weather the storm.

TEOTWAWKI – The End of the World as We Know It. Are you ready? Do you need to be? I recommend this book as infotainment and hope we’ll all be able to meet up soon in the Hoboken Public Library.

Written by:
Victoria Turk
Reference Librarian

Have any timely reads about getting through tough situations?  Share them in the comments!