RAVE REVIEWS by Jean e. Eustance
Right now, Canadian author Louise Penny’s murder mysteries are very popular. She writes about a small village in Quebec Province called Three Pines, where people find dead bodies in their flowerbeds. However, some of her books are set elsewhere. Let’s look at “elsewhere.” Start with All the Devils Are Here.
Chief Inspector Armand Gamache of the Surete du Quebec is on vacation with his family in Paris. His son and his daughter, and their spouses have found jobs there—and Armand and his wife Reine-Marie are waiting for the birth of their next grandchild. Then one of their oldest friends is knocked down by a speeding van. He goes into the hospital, and they start to look at what the old man has been involved in, lately, and it’s appalling. Suddenly there are troubles and questions where people work, and a different old man is found dead, in the first one’s apartment. All the Devils are Here is named for a line in Shakespeare’s play, The Tempest. “Hell is empty, and all the devils are here.” It sure seems that way.
Pg.189 sums up what I feel. “What happened, Armand? First he’s hit by a car, and now a man’s killed in his apartment. We don’t understand.” Neither do I.
To be even more confused, I read an earlier book, Bury Your Dead. Chief Inspector Gamache is in Quebec City, trying to recover from an ambush which left many police officers dead, and which barely spared him. If you want to develop chilblains while you are indoors, this is the book for you. It is set in deep winter and you can feel the cold coming off the pages. It isn’t made warmer by someone finding a dead body in the deepest basement of the largest library in the area. Meanwhile, in that same basement, people are desperately searching for the bones of the man who founded Quebec in 1608, Samuel Champlain.
Put on your warmest jacket, and unearth these books from the Pine Bush Area Public Library.
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MAY NEWSLETTER
Our latest newsletter has been published!!!!!!
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SPOTS STILL AVAILABLE
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WE REMEMBER: SONGS OF SURVIVORS to Premiere 4/26/22 8:00 PM ON PBS
Witness the healing power of song with local Holocaust Survivors who share their stories
In April of 2018 Jewish Family Service of Orange County NY embarked on an agency changing program in partnership with Jewish Federation of North America, Center for Advancing Holocaust Survivor Care. Using groundbreaking principals in Person Centered Trauma Informed Care, the lives of over 40 Holocaust survivors and their family caregivers throughout Orange, Ulster, Dutchess and Rockland Counties in New York were enriched. The stories of our most precious Survivors were shared through music, art, holistic self-care, and nutrition. Seven of these survivors chose to participate in a songwriting project with SageArts. Survivors were introduced to songwriters, and together they composed songs that celebrated their lives and shared their stories. These seven songs were showcased in “Honoring Holocaust survivors: A Concert of Resilience and Hope” in May 2019. The well attended concert, and the process leading up to the event was documented for a film called We Remember: Songs of Survivors, the documentary, premiering on PBS on April 26, 2022.
Virtual Career Fair
Pre- Register:
https://nysdolvirtual.easyvirtualfair.com/landing
MAKE SURE YOU ARE USING GOOGLE CHROME, INTERNET EXPLORER & FIREFOX WILL NOT WORK
A VIDEO LINK SHOWING JOB SEEKERS HOW TO REGISTER AND NAVIGATE THE NEW YORK STATE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR’S VIRTUAL CAREER FAIR:
WATCH OUR LATEST YOUTUBE VIDEO
Join Dr Barbara Bodenhorn, Director of Studies, Social Anthropology, Girton College Emeritus Fellow, Pembroke College. As she discusses the changing migratory patterns of the Bowheard Whales and its effect on the indigenous people who rely on them.






















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