Series: Book 1 in the Inspector Sveinsson series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Thrillers, Lang:en
Summary
Starred Review. In Indridason's stellar fifth Reykjavik
thriller (after
The
Draining Lake), police detective Erlendur Sveinsson
and his team investigate the murder of a dark-skinned Asian
boy, found frozen in his own blood one midwinter day outside
a rundown apartment block. The author imbues the
self-doubting Erlendur with enormous depth, as an insecure
father unable to show his love for his errant son and
daughter as well as a troubled professional who's made pain
his constant companion. Indridason also lays bare the plight
of Thai women brought to Iceland, married and soon divorced
by Icelanders, left to raise their children alone in a
culture, a climate and a language they don't understand. On
top of this national tragedy is the universal problem of
bored, unsupervised youth, raised with no respect for
authority and awash in fast food, rock music and violent
computer games. Indridason has produced a stunning indictment
of contemporary society.
(Sept.)
"A remarkable series."—_The New York Times Book
Review_ "This Icelandic tale is delivered with exquisite
sensitivity, in a moody translation."—Marilyn Stasio,
The New York Times
__ "A solid police procedural . . . well-constructed and
certainly unflinching in its with of the human
condition."—Patrick Anderson,_ The Washington Post
"Arctic Chill_ is most reminiscent of Henning
Mankell's Kurt Wallander series."—Jessica Moyer,_
Booklist _"Delving into the prejudices and inequalities of
Icelandic society, this novel has great clarity, emotional
depth, and resonance."—Katie Owen,
The Daily Telegraph (UK)From Publishers Weekly
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