| Chaos is coming, old son.
With those words the peace of Three Pines is shattered. As families prepare to head back to the city and children say goodbye to summer, a stranger is found murdered in the village bistro and antiques store. Once again, Chief Inspector Gamache and his team are called in to strip back layers of lies, exposing both treasures and rancid secrets buried in the wilderness. No one admits to knowing the murdered man, but as secrets are revealed, chaos begins to close in on the beloved bistro owner, Olivier. How did he make such a spectacular success of his business? What past did he leave behind and why has he buried himself in this tiny village? And why does every lead in the investigation find its way back to him?
As Olivier grows more frantic, a trail of clues and treasures— from first editions of Charlotte’s Web and Jane Eyre to a spider web with the word “WOE” woven in it—lead the Chief Inspector deep into the woods and across the continent in search of the truth, and finally back to Three Pines as the little village braces for the truth and the final, brutal telling.
Annotation: Another murder threatens the serenity of the tiny Canadian town of Three Pines in Louise Penny's fifth novel to feature Chief Inspector Armand Gamache. The only clue to the identity of the stranger who turns up dead is the location of the body--Olivier Brulé's bistro, which happens to be the social center of the village. Though Olivier and his partner Gabri claim they don't know the dead man, Gamache and his subordinates have no choice but to investigate them, but as soon as they think they've found a connection, forensics invalidates their hunch by revealing that the corpse was moved several times before ending up in its final location. But the puzzle has only just begun--Penny's eminently perplexing and addictive mystery will eventually come to encompass rare books, totem poles, a haunted house, Nazi-stolen treasures, and a tiny word woven into a spider's web. Louise Penny continues to advance her craft with every novel, and BRUTAL TELLING should finally take her from the margins of contemporary mystery writers to the mainstream.
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