Casas_de_cristal_inspector_armand_gamache_13_lo... -

The novel heavily features themes of betrayal from within, referencing the struggle against corruption.

The central theme of the novel is "the court of conscience"—a concept mentioned by Gandhi that supersedes all other legal systems.

Glass Houses opens not with a body, but with a presence. A tall, mysterious, cloaked figure—labeled "The Cobrador"—appears on the village green in Three Pines, standing silent, motionless, and accusatory through rain and sleet. Casas_de_cristal_Inspector_Armand_Gamache_13_Lo...

The novel alternates between a sweltering July courtroom trial in Montreal and the cold November that led to it.

Penny purposely keeps the victim and the accused secret for much of the novel, reflecting the disoriented experience of grief and moral uncertainty. Characters and Internal Strife Go to product viewer dialog for this item. Glass Houses The novel heavily features themes of betrayal from

Inspired by a 19th-century Spanish concept, the Cobrador is a debt collector of conscience. It stares, waiting for someone to pay a debt, not just of money, but of moral failings.

This deep dive explores Glass Houses ( Casas de Cristal ), the 13th installment in Louise Penny's Inspector Armand Gamache series, a pivotal, dark, and highly introspective novel where the idyllic village of Three Pines faces its deepest existential threat. Characters and Internal Strife Go to product viewer

Now Chief Superintendent of the Sûreté du Québec, Gamache is no longer just solving local murders; he is fighting a war against the opioid epidemic.