by Amy
Dr. Gilbert poured
them glasses of spring water and made sandwiches with tomatoes still warm from
his garden.
I wanted to start off by saying that I haven’t read it yet.
I just received my copy today and am looking forward to sinking into it this
weekend. I think we should have a no spoiler policy for a few weeks (a month or
two?) before we begin to talk about the new book. We don’t want to ruin it for
anyone, right?
Dr. Vincent Gilbert
lived in the heart of the forest. Away from human conflict, but also away from
human contact. It was a compromise he was more than happy to make. As was the
rest of humanity.[...]“What do you want?”
Dr. Gilbert repeated, straightening up and walking toward them.“Drop the act,
Vincent,” said Gamache with a laugh. “I know you’re happy to see me.”
“Did you bring me
anything?”
Gamache gestured
toward Beauvoir, whose eyes widened.“You know I’m a
vegetarian,” said Gilbert. “Anything else?”
There’s something liberating about Dr. Gilbert and Ruth.
They’re both so obviously assholes, that you always know where you stand. No
filter. They’re also both capable of great kindness and insight – when they
choose to use it.
I hadn’t noticed this line, “You know I’m a vegetarian”,
until just now. I love how we find these brilliant little tidbits in the books.
Wonderful humor. Poor Beauvoir. He seems to be targeted by the two assholes in
these books. He’s also the recipient of their amazing kindness and gentleness.
Gamache reached into
his saddlebags and pulled out a brown paper bag and the map.“Welcome stranger,”
said Gilbert. He grabbed the paper bag, opened it, and inhaled the aroma of the
croissants.Tossing one precious
pastry into the woods, without explanation, he took the rest into his log
cabin, followed by Gamache and Beauvoir.
Why did he do that?
I wish we knew.
Is he taming some wild animal? Is it in honor of the hermit’s
spirit or something? I wonder.
Some considered
Vincent Gilbert a saint. Some, like Beauvoir, considered him an asshole. The
residents of Three Pines had compromised and called him the “asshole saint.”“But that doesn’t mean
he isn’t still a saint,” Gamache had said. “Most saints were assholes. In fact,
if he wasn’t one that would disqualify him completely.”
The Chief had walked
away with a smile, knowing he’d completely messed with Beauvoir’s mind.“Asshole,” Beauvoir
had hissed.[…]Jean-Guy Beauvoir had
seen great kindness in Gilbert, and ruthlessness in Gamache. Neither man,
Beauvoir was pretty sure, was a saint.
I think our greatest qualities can also be our worst faults.
Most things, in extremes, can be inconvenient, if not outright negative. I
think that is one interpretation of what Gamache said.
Just as it is difficult to become great at anything without
being slightly fixated on it (to the point of at least relative exclusion of
other things), it is hard to be intense at anything without it sometimes
backfiring.
Sometimes a good quality, a good characteristic, can become
too much… or can be badly used.
I picked my child up from a gym class the other day. A friend
was with me. She’s a teacher and we ran into one of her students’ moms. The mom
was picking up her younger son who is in the same gym class as my son. She and
my friend were talking about her eldest child and how neat and intelligent and
well behaved and … all good things in an academic setting. A few minutes later
she put an apologetic look on her face and mentioned that her son (a
7-year-old) was the polar opposite.
She went on to say how he’s in trouble
already at school and she’s told people at the school that she wants to “nip it
in the bud”. As she was talking about how “unruly” he is, always in a school
setting, I couldn’t help but answer.
I smiled and said, “Yeah… well… he’ll have to survive
school. But we need people in the world with that kind of energy and creativity
and ability to lead and inspire. The hard part in parenting and teaching
children like your boy is finding a way to channel all those amazing qualities
into good things. He’s probably amazing! He just has to learn how to use it in
a good way.”
She looked slightly surprised. Then, “You’re
the first person who’s ever said it like that. Usually it’s all bad. Yeah. He’s
a good kid.”
It’s not easy to love the assholes. Or the prickly people.
Or the tremendously honest. Or the ones with no filter between their brain and
their mouth.
It’s not easy to find the good in the messy, maladjusted,
unruly, dirty, annoying, non-conformists.
Sometimes, though, it’s worth it.
Sometimes, if you’re lucky (or blessed, I should say), you’ll
meet the saint or the genius or the soft hearted, sensitive, brilliant,
wonderful person that lives beyond the tough shell.
Or so I tell myself as I continue on my road to learning
kindness.
Louise Penny’s books have grace in them.
Vincent Gilbert is redeemed.
Olivier is redeemed.
Beauvoir is redeemed.
Peter is redeemed.
Ruth seems to be on a path to redemption as well (although I
hope she doesn’t change too much).
So many asshole saints. And we love them.
Tomato Sandwiches
Who knew?
I had a feeling of déjà
vu when reading about tomato sandwiches. It was just like when I prepared
to make oatmeal for the oatmeal post. Who knew there was a “right” way to make
tomato sandwiches?
Or that it’s even considered a “thing”. There are purists!
To all the purists out there – especially the “Southern
Tomato Sandwich” purist group? Please do not read what I did. I completely
blotched the “proper” sandwich.
From what I researched (I find it funny that so much has
been written about tomato sandwiches), the “proper” tomato sandwich consist of
cheap white bread – preferably the store brand kind, mayo spread on said bread,
a thick slice of a big summer-fresh tomato – preferably picked from your own
garden, but a farmer’s market tomato will do (store-bought, in this case, is a
no-no), and some salt and pepper on the tomato. Period. Nothing else. Anything else
will spoil the effect.
So… I can live with white bread. But I LOVE bread. Why does
it have to be the kind I don’t care for? Why can’t I have yummy bread? I haven’t
yet begun to make my own bread here, but there is a bakery in town that makes
good bread. I decided on a fresh sourdough one. It’s white, right?
I never eat mayonnaise. My son won’t touch it. My husband
doesn’t care for it. I love this blog, but not enough to buy mayonnaise for a “recipe”
I’m pretty sure I would enjoy more if I tweaked it. So I used olive oil. Also…
I toasted my bread with the olive oil. So wrong. I know. I read in more than
once place that the bread should not be toasted in a tomato sandwich. I decided
to be a rule-breaker here.
I don’t have a garden here. But a friend does. I’d gone
through all the tomatoes she gave me. But I got a perfect one from the Farmer’s
Market in town. So I did a good job with the most important ingredient, I
think. I added a sprinkle of pepper, but no salt. It didn’t need the salt.
Doesn’t it look like a summery-fresh meal?
So... what's your version of a tomato sandwich?
The tomato/mayo/white bread sandwich was a staple growing up, and I still love them every summer.
ReplyDeleteHi Nancy,
DeleteI only now realized I hadn't answered this!
Do you make it with the white bread that gets slightly soggy with tomato juice?
Made with Veganaise (I'm vegan) on sourdough rye (possibly because I grew up in metro New York in an era when rye bread was popular there, but I think it's quite good).
ReplyDeleteGood tomatoes are essential. And putting the whole thing into a pannini press briefly (comparable to your toasted bread) can yield pleasing results.
Hi Christine!
DeleteI only now realized I hadn't answered this yet. I'm sorry.
I agree. The whole secret is in the quality of the tomatoes... Ooooooh a pannini press sounds good... the tomato would also heat up a bit that way, right?
I'd never heard of veganaise! What is it made of?
I love tomato sandwiches, especially if you have tomatoes from your garden (still warm from the sun? Perfect!), but of course, I'd blow the purists out of the water. yes, I like white bread - preferably the store-brand, but I never use mayo, I prefer Miracle Whip, which I'm sure isn't even real food, and instead of salt, I have put - wait for it - potato chips! on my sandwiches and love the crunch and the saltiness and the taste of the pure, good tomato! What can I say? My father used to make sugar sandwiches, surely this isn't so bad?
ReplyDeleteHi Julie,
DeleteI had to look up Miracle Whip. From what I read it's kind of like mayo, right? Potato chips!? Brilliant. My husband would love your sandwich - preferably without the tomato. Haha!
And sugar sandwiches? I used to make those, too. I also made the chocolate sprinkle sandwiches the Dutch taught me to love. ;)
Tomato on favorite bread with a little melted brie and a couple of basil leaves...
ReplyDeleteOooooh... I love that. It sounds amazing!
Delete