
The Finney
family has chosen this retreat to have its annual family reunion, a
historically difficult encounter for all as the result of the family’s
legendary cruelty to one another. They are a dysfunctional family of the worst
order. The father is long since deceased, and while he continues to influence
everyone, it is his wife, the matriarch who now holds the real power, including
the division of a vast inheritance. The oldest of four kids, Julia, had wisely
abandoned the family many years before, but she has decided to return for this
year’s event when her own marriage has ended and her ex-husband has gone to
prison as a result of a famous financial scandal. This year, the family has
decided to erect a statue to the father of the four children, so Julia has come
for the unveiling of the statue. It’s Julia who is killed in the most
mysterious manner when the huge statue falls on top of her, as if dad killed
the daughter who had left the family.
The main plot
and subplots are interwoven with skill by Penny. It is her use of the subplots
which gives her characters such richness and depth, much more so that what we
usually see in his genre. And, the quality of her writing is wonderful. In
telling the story of Gamache’s father who was seen by many, including the
Finneys as a coward, Penny revealed that while Gamache’s father had been an
advocate of keeping Canada out of WWII, when he learned of the horrors in the
Nazi concentration camps, he realized his stance on the war was wrong. Penny
wrote, “My father got up in synagogues, churches, in public meetings, on the
steps of the Assemblee Nationale, and
he apologized. He spent years raising money and coordinating efforts to help
refugees rebuild their lives. He sponsored a woman he’d met in Bergen-Belsen to
come to Canada and live with us. Zora was her name. She became my grandmother,
and raised me after my parents died. She taught me that life goes on, and that
I had a choice. To lament what I no longer had or be grateful for what
remained. I was fortunate to have a role model that I couldn’t squirm my way
around. After all, how do you argue with the survivor of a death camp?”
If I’m rating
Penny on a 5-star system, she gets all 5.
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