1.3k reviews for:

The Long Way Home

Louise Penny

3.9 AVERAGE


Not my favorite of the series.

Once again, Louise Penny does not disappoint. Her tenth book, The Long Way Home, is an intricate and complex mystery that had me guessing until the very end. I was delighted to find out that my guesses were wrong and that Penny had created a mystery that mystified me until the end. Unfortunately I now have to wait for her next one!

A fitting start to retirement

It's been a great journey. I began this series one year ago after seeing Louise Penny speak and receiving a recommendation from a friend. I was not disappointed. My only regret is that Three Pines is fictional. It would be a lovely place to spend my time.

I agree with all the plaudits and all the complaints this book has received. But I can't be objective. There is no way I would recommend this book to anyone who hadn't read the rest of the series...and having read them all, there's no way I would have passed on this one.

3.5 it got a little convoluted toward the end but still better than the one w the monks.

Long story short, I forgot to post a review about this book when I read it right after book #9. I was too irritated to do much besides be super aggravated by the nonsense going on in the Armand Gamache series and this latest was just more of the same it seemed to me. The story was way too long and drawn out for the terrible payoff we get in the end. I was wondering about reading the next book in the series, and a friend said she thinks I will like that much better, so I will. But, I wanted to post my review of book #10 before I totally forgot about it.

"The Long Way Home" has Chief Inspector Armand Gamache retired and living in Three Pines. I still don't get why he and his wife relocated there after all of the insanity that seems to befall people in this village, but they do. Gamache goes to a bench everyday and reads a book (until a certain point) and seems to be waiting for someone or something to come along. Eventually, the someone does come along, Clara Marrow finally talks to Gamache about the promise that she and her estranged husband Peter made back in "A Trick of the Light" when she finally realized that for all of the lip service he was making, Peter wanted to see her do badly. The couple agrees to go their separate ways for a year, with Peter returning at the end of that year to see if they could move forward or not. Now it's more than a year and Clara believes that something truly awful had to have befallen Peter for him not to keep his promise.

"The Long Way Home" has Gamache team up with his former protege Jean Guy Beauvoir in trying to track down Peter's movements. Gamache's wife is concerned about him being pulled back into anything resembling an investigation that will leave him injured after the events in "How the Light Gets In." I really don't get why Gamache even agrees to help Clara with this besides his own curiosity. The reveal of what was going on with Peter was pretty much a letdown.

Jean Guy is blissful as anything cause he finally has capture, er married Gamache's daughter. I have already said repeatedly I don't care a bit about this romance and that still holds true here.

I ended up not liking Clara much throughout this book. She was aggressive and didn't listen one bit to what Gamache was saying. And honestly if she had listened, the events that transpired at the end of the book would not have occurred.

We do get to see Peter's messed up family a bit in this one, but I thought Penny did a disservice not showing them in the ending of the book.

The writing was typical Penny, but honestly I was bored. I just didn't care to read the symbolism behind everything that Peter was doing. The insights that everyone had while looking at Peter's artwork and figuring out his cold trail made me laugh. I don't know if maybe Penny had included drawings of "Peter's work" or something that would have helped us readers see what everyone else was looking at. But it's hard to read about what other characters are seeing when you don't see the artwork in question. I started skipping over stuff like that in this book just to get through this. I would think a look back at Clara and Peter's history and the art world in general would have been way more intriguing than this, but honestly after reading "A Trick of the Light" I just cannot anymore with the art world in Canada.

I had a hard time with the overall mystery that was solved here and how Peter was worked into that plot. It didn't make a lot of sense and the villain reveal in this one was done really badly. I liked what another reviewer said about this being a backwards mystery and honestly it was a backwards mystery. I wish that Penny had just decided to not loop in two mysteries for the price of one in this book since neither one of them were carried off very well.

The flow was not that great either. We have Clara, Mryna, Armand, and Jean Guy bouncing from location to location and meeting tertiary characters who I am sure will appear in future books. I just didn't care enough to pay that much attention to them.

The setting of this one is a little bit of Three Pines and other locations. None of them really stayed with me at the end of this book.

The ending was such a slap in the face though. I don't know how I feel about it besides cheated. I did feel like I wasted all of my time to just get this ending that pretty much thumbed its noses at the readers. I would say that this book is pretty much filler and you can skim it to get the bare bones of the story and can skip to the next book in the series.

How was Penny ever supposed to live up the expectations set by the previous two, outstanding mysteries she released? The Long Way Home incorporates all we've come to love about the Inspector Gamache series: cultural elements, vivid characters with faults and strengths, sly humor. But it was almost too long and I felt that the central mystery surrounding Peter Morrow wasn't as convincing as her previous ones.

Unfortunately, this book isn't representative of the series and is a very slow burn. It might not even be burning... Most of the book is spent searching for Clara's husband, Peter, and you're not sure if he is dead or if he's just got better things to go. There's a bit of mystery and action at the end which would've made for a better book IMO, but instead everything is just kinda sad.
Spoiler.They finally find Peter, caring for an old art professor in a remote village, but then he's tragically killed by the other, jealous art professor who earlier killed the sick one.
Of course, I'll keep reading the series, but probably going to take a short break.

The best thing about this series of 18 books (so far)- murder mysteries aside for a moment--is the continuing saga of the principal characters. At this point, they're family. Here, Gmache, Jean-Guy, Clara and Myrna set off into the Canadian wilderness to find a missing member of the group.

I like that this one included so many of the supporting Three Pines characters for such large chunks of time. However, the actual story line became quite far fetched to the point of being unbelievable.