Louise Penny. The Black Wolf. USA: Minotaur Books, 2025.
Three Pines had worn kind of thin for me some time ago, so the right vibe wasn’t there and I set aside The Grey Wolf after a chapter or so. But curiosity about how The Black Wolf was said to foreshadow some real life developments (even though written before Trump’s second coming) spurred me on—without fully realizing that The Black Wolf is a continuation, a sequel if you will, of Grey. The author provides just enough here for grasping the gist of the preceding plot and players.
Armand Gamache is still head of homicide in the Québec Sûreté; he’s temporarily deafened by an explosion during a terrorist attack that nearly poisoned thousands in Montreal. The former Deputy Prime Minister of Canada, Marcus Lauzon, was convicted and imprisoned as the mastermind (the Black Wolf, as Gamache deemed the perpetrator). Lauzon consistently denies it and Gamache’s instinct says he’s not the Black Wolf; finally the prisoner gives him a clue to the next secretly planned attack. For all his vaunted intelligence, it takes Gamache over two hundred pages to recognize the devious plot—a plot the reader no doubt scoped much sooner. Then the action becomes breathless and non-stop. Penny is at her intricate storytelling best with puzzles galore.
The novel is populated with treacherous politicians, police of all ranks, Montreal’s mafia boss, a young biologist, a daring journalist, laundered money, American military brass, internet conspiracy theories, so many names, and – of course – the “usual suspects” of Three Pines village. It’s a complex zigzag race to identify and stop the impending disaster, with Gamache trusting very few people. Author Penny provides all the well-researched details that make the complicated scenarios so realistic. My only fret is the frequent tangents into a character’s memory lane to reveal how human he/she really is. Often inserted at a moment of dramatic decision-making, to me they unnecessarily interrupt the narrative flow. But Penny’s dexterity at such “re-winding” is an intrinsic part of her style.
For full impact, I’d really recommend reading The Grey Wolf first!
Intel
▪ Which meant there were others still out there. Those who had avoided arrest. And to do that, their influence must extend to the highest levels of government, the judiciary, industry. Organized crime. (17)
▪ If a trained Sûreté agent could believe the lies, believe the poisoning plot never happened, then how many others had been manipulated too? (48)
▪ She looked puzzled. “Now why would the mafia want Caron’s assistant dead?” (118)
▪ “By the way, the same site also claimed Canada was salting the clouds so that acid rain would melt American cities.” (182)
▪ “Natural resources are the new currency. Power is measured in liters now. Not missiles. Not GDP.” (222)
▪ No longer able to hold it in, Nichol blurted out, “Tardiff’s going to have Lauzon killed.” (163)
▪ Shots had been fired in the White House. (247)
▪ Jean-Guy felt pressure on his head. A boot was crushing his cheekbone against the cave floor. (297)
Eddy Boudel Tan. The Tiger and the Cosmonaut. Canada: Viking, 2025.
Sibling issues. Immigrant expectations. Racist taunts. Narrated from the perspective of Casper Han, he and sister Nadia and older brother Ricky gather at the old family home in a small wooded BC backwater called Wilhelm. It’s ten years or more since they’d all left home. Casper’s current love Anthony has willingly accompanied him. Mom had called to report their father Philip had gone missing overnight. They contact local policeman Ivan Bauer – who happened to be Casper’s secret boyfriend in high school – and search parties are organized. Philip is found later, wandering the nearby deep forest, agitated and not making sense; signs of dementia seem obvious. Undercurrents suggest that something dreadful happened to Casper’s twin Sam, when they were nine years old.
The novel’s title refers to the costumes the two young boys wore when Sam disappeared. It was during whistler’s night festival, a community event unique to Wilhelm, latterly downplaying its connotations of a legendary scary man (the whistler) who lived in the dark forest. That night affected each member of the Han family somewhat differently, but guilt weighs on all of them. Philip seems haunted by that fateful night, so before his mind drifts away forever, Casper determines to give him peace by uncovering what really took place then. To do so, he must overcome his resentment towards Ivan and his father Paul, the former police chief. And find the whistler.
Much more than just a mystery, the novel delves deeply into the immigrant psyche, its generational effect, conflicting emotions within the family unit. Unable to articulate feelings even to those closest to him, Casper comes to terms with his need to express grief and guilt. A scandal and a tragedy—tenderly told by a compassionate author.
Bits
▪ “It’s not healthy to bottle things up,” he’d often say, and I’d struggle to explain how I’m too afraid to let everything spill. Because every spill leaves a stain that can’t just be wiped clean. (22-3)
▪ I was supposed to be the promising one. I was bright and polite and obedient. (19)
▪ “Sam.” The name escapes my lips and hangs in the air. “This is about Sam. The fireworks, the woods, the scissors. Something’s going on with Dad’s brain.”(103)
▪ We stare at the floor from our respective corners, a triangle of siblings realizing that we now have what we’ve been avoiding for years: a common problem. (104)
▪ That man accused me of corrupting his son. That man took something precious that Ivan and I shared, and he perverted it into something shameful. (135)
▪ There were cameras in a few of the rooms, including ours, and some of the videos leaked online. To this day, nobody knows who planted the cameras or posted the videos. (160)
▪ “Aren’t you tired, Casper? Of being humiliated? You think any of us had a choice but to leave town, this place that’s supposed to be home?” (204)
▪ “Wouldn’t you be angry? If your family was pushed aside and pulled apart, your neighbours beaten, and nobody cared? Wouldn’t you want to break something, or hurt someone?” (206)

