Series: Book 3 in the Inspector Sveinsson series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-Thrillers, Lang:en
Summary
Starred Review. In Indridason's excellent second
mystery (after 2005's
Jar City), a skeleton, buried for more than 50
years, is uncovered at a building site on the outskirts of
Reykjavík. Who is it? How did he or she die? And was it
murder? The police wonder, chief among them the tortured,
introspective Inspector Erlendur, introduced in
Jar City. While an archeologist excavates the burial
site, several other narratives unfold: a horrifying story of
domestic abuse set during WWII, a search for missing persons
that unearths almost-forgotten family secrets involving some
of the city's most prominent citizens, and Erlendur's own
painful family story (his estranged, drug-addicted daughter
is in a coma, after miscarrying her child). All these strands
are compelling, but it's the story of the physical and
psychological battering of a young mother of three by her
husband that resonates most. And the denouement of this
astonishingly vivid and subtle novel is unexpected and
immensely satisfying. Indridason has won the CWA Golden
Dagger Award.
Icelandic mysteries hit the U.S. ground running last year
with the appearance of Indridason's outstanding
Jar City. This equally fine follow-up returns to the
theme of buried pain, with the action centering on the
discovery of a human bone at a construction site near
Reykjavik. Inspector Erlendur Sveinnson is on the case, but
the trail, which leads back to World War II, has gone very
cold indeed. Erlendur (Icelanders use first names) has a very
personal reason for his abiding interest in missing persons,
and that--combined with the fact that his drug-abusing
daughter is in the hospital in a coma--opens the door for
plenty of backstory regarding the detective's troubled
history. With a narrative that jumps between the 1940s and
the present--without giving away whodunit--the novel
generates a sort of emotional claustrophobia, its characters
trapped in a world where the pain of the past, though often
submerged, is always with us. Indridason has definitely
vaulted onto the A-list of Scandinavian crime authors.
Bill Ott
From Publishers Weekly
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