In my first post on the book I described the principal setting of the Academy for the Surete. The Academy is a closed setting for murder but far more plausible than the closed locale in The Beautiful Mystery. One of my frustrations with the earlier book was that it was a Gilbertine (an order that was extinguished in the 16th Century) monastery that was purportedly secretly established and maintained in rural Quebec for hundreds of years with the monks having contact with their neighbours and recruited from other monasteries for their singing talent. Had the book been a work of fantasy the monastery might have been credible but not in a mystery series firmly set in contemporary Quebec.
By
contrast, the Academy of A Great
Reckoning, is set in a community with real contacts and challenges in its
relationship with the citizens of the town. The cadets and professors at the
Academy are not in a hidden institution. They come from varied communities in
Quebec and reflect the diversity of the province. The demands of training have
them focused on life in the Academy but they do interact with the world outside
the Academy doors.
Murder
in a monastery is harder to be convincing than murder in a police academy.
I
was grateful in A Great Reckoning
that there was no implausible, if not impossible, secret location near Three
Pines. In A Brutal Telling there was
a hermit living in a cabin a few kilometres from Three Pines who was apparently
invisible to the residents of the area. In the most recent book, The Nature of the Beast, it was a giant
gun, so large you can stand up inside the firing chamber, which was supposedly
concealed in the forest less than a kilometre from the village. Having grown up
in rural Canada there is no plausible way for there to be an unknown hermit or
a huge hidden gun so close to the village. The inhabitants of rural Canada know
what is around them.
In
A Great Reckoning the homes of the
regular characters and the bistro are featured. Beyond the bistro being
impossibly welcoming each house is a home. None are grand edifices. Each is a
place for real people.
The
feature of the village in A Great Reckoning
is the small church that serves as a sanctuary for the residents. Far from
being secret it is accessible all the time. It plays an amazing credible role
in the book. In The Nature of the Beast
the church had an unworthy and unlikely role.
When
I finished The Nature of the Beast I
was uneasy about the direction of the series. That book had an end of the
world, Doomsday scenario, with Gamache saving the world at the final minute.
Gamache is not the character to be saving the world.
A Great
Reckoning
turned from rescuing the earth from Armageddon to having Gamache return to his
police roots in becoming commander of the Academy that had trained him as a
police officer.
It
has been a reading roller coaster proceeding in consecutive books from the
weakest in the series, The Nature of the
Beast, to the best, A Great Reckoning.
My
third post will explore how a map made A
Great Reckoning a special reading experience.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this, Bill. I think you've highlighted the real importance of credibility in a series. And one thing I like about the direction of this novel is that its focus is again on the real people of Three Pines. I think those sorts of plots are a lot more engaging.
ReplyDeleteMargot: Thanks for the comment. I agree. I was glad to see Three Pines and its residents important in the book.
DeleteIt is good to know there is variation in the quality of the Three Pines books. That is always true somewhat in a series but possibly with this knowledge I won't give up on the series if I have problems with some of the books.
ReplyDeleteTracyK: Thanks for the comment. You have a good approach to reading being willing to give an author another chance if a book does not read well for you.
Delete