As her most famous creation hits the screen, the author talks about the inspiration for Inspector Gamache, her fearless, fine-dining Canadian cop – and remembers how she co-wrote a hit with the presidential hopeful

Louise Penny, bestselling Canadian novelist and creator of the detective Armand Gamache, was sure as far back as 2005, when she published her award-winning debut Still Life, that she wouldn’t be able to go on writing if her husband Michael Whitehead died. Not only was he the inspiration for her wise, kind, clear-sighted detective, but he was also the reason she found the courage to write in the first place.

Whitehead was diagnosed with dementia in 2013, and Penny became his caregiver. After he died in September 2016, she felt that was probably it for her career as a novelist. She was wrong.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Covid distancing may have weakened children’s immune system, experts say

End of social distancing and mask wearing could leave children vulnerable to…

Blind date: ‘He wasn’t drinking, but looked lovingly at – and sniffed – my glass of wine’

Julia, 28, arts and learning manager, meets Dean, 34, actor and writer…

The Guardian view on finance failures: manmade errors amplified by machines | Editorial

Markets aren’t working when a system makes Elon Musk billions by adding…

‘Pathetic’: Andy Murray slams 1% pay offer made to NHS workers

Two-time Wimbledon champion praises frontline staff, some of whom were invited to…