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Showing posts with label Nordic Reading Challenge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nordic Reading Challenge. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 June 2013

Review: Some Kind of Peace, Camilla Grebe & Åsa Träff (Sweden)

Title: Some Kind of Peace
Author: Camilla Grebe & Åsa Träff
Translator: Paul Norlen
Publication: 2012/New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks
Original Publication: 2009/Sweden: Wahlstöm & Widstrand
ISBN #: 978-1-4516-5459-2
# of pages: 315
Discovered at an airport bookstore
Read in paper format
Also available in e-book and audio formats

The book opens on a young girl dead under an apple tree outside her home. The scene quickly moves to psychologist Siri Bergman’s office where another young girl is discussing her struggles with cutting. Through different patients’ sessions, we come to learn more about Siri, professional therapist by day and wine-loving darkness-fearing widow by night. The sudden death of her beloved husband Stefan a few years ago has profoundly affected Siri and in her grief, she clings to the isolation of her seaside home.

The reader soon learns there is a dark presence stalking Siri. Brief pages share the stalker’s thoughts and plans. Siri begins to feel as if someone is watching her, perhaps following her. She doubts her feelings though and does not even share her concerns with her best friend and fellow therapist Aina. When a body is found outside her home, Siri is forced to confront the fact that someone is after her. The stalker seems to know too much about her to be a stranger. Could they be a patient or someone even closer to Siri, one of her colleagues? The police meet with her regularly to try and advance their investigation but it is up to Siri to search her files and her memories to discover who is behind the escalating acts.
At first, this book seemed a bit disjointed. The chapters weave between the background of Siri’s life with Stefan, her personal struggles and her sessions with patients. The details of the sessions and the mundaneness of some of their concerns were not initially engaging. Siri herself was somewhat annoying at first, a therapist not willing to address her own unresolved issues. Some of her discussions with patients seemed to make their situations worse. At times, she seems quite naïve about situations at work and in her personal life.  Can she really be a competent therapist? However, as the story proceeds, you get caught up in the building suspense and the eerie remoteness of her home. You start reviewing the possible suspects and seeing how they fit into the clues. Definitely worth reading to the end.          
Rating: (°_°)  Worth reading

The authors Grebe and Träff are sisters, Träff putting her psychologist background to good use. They grew up on Swedish mystery books, especially author team Sjöwall and Wahlöö (my favourites as well). This book is the first in the Bergman series, followed by “Strangers” and “More Bitter than Death”.

Monday, 24 June 2013

Review: The Healer, Antti Tuomainen (Finland)

Title: The Healer
Author: Antti Tuomainen
Translator: Lola Rogers
Publication: 2013/New York, Henry Holt and Company, LLC
Original Publication: 2010/Helsinki, Helsinki-Kirirat, “Parantaja”
ISBN #: 978-0-8050-9554-8
# of pages: 211
Discovered on a blog earlier this year that I neglected to write down
Read in paper format
Also available in e-book and audio book formats
Link to author’s website: http://anttituomainen.com/

Johanna Lehtinen, investigative reporter, had been working on a serial killer story when she goes missing two days before Christmas. Her poet husband Tapani is immediately concerned because they keep in touch throughout each day via text and email and he has not heard anything from her for some time. He begins his search at her newspaper’s office and is soon put off by her managing editor’s blasé attitude.
But how can anyone be too concerned about one missing woman in the midst of the torrential rain that has been lashing Helsinki for weeks, the rain that is only one sign of the effects of climate change? Climate change has become a truly apocalyptic event, resulting in wars in the EU, never-ending forest fires in the Amazon and hundreds of millions of climate refugees worldwide, fleeing their homelands and heading north. Civil society has collapsed in Finland, anarchy rules and chief inspector Harri Jaatinen of the violent crimes unit, an officer who still cares, struggles to stay ahead of the dozens of daily incoming reports of violence and missing people, leaving him no time to investigate any of them.  He offers little hope to Tapani that they will get to his wife’s case in the near future.
Tapani decides to find his wife on his own, with some tips from Jaatinen and the support of taxi driver Hamid. Johanna’s character and her strong connection with Tapani are revealed through his flashbacks to happier times.
This was a very intriguing book. Tapani’s search leads him to unexpected places and revelations but for me, it was also the background of climate change that was fascinating. How does one man stay focused on finding his wife when society as we know it is collapsing around him? Never before had I considered the societal effect of climate change and this book creates one possible new world. What makes it scary is that this is a very believable new world.  The climate change theme is an integral part of the story line and yet does not turn the mystery into science fiction. “…fear, building up moment by moment…” keeps you reading to the very end.    

Rating: (°o°)!         Stayed awake all night to find out what happened!
Notable sentence: “Helsinki had finally become an international city. But this wasn’t how we had imagined it.”

Tuomainen was an award-winning ad copywriter in Helsinki until 2007 when he realized his long-time dream to become a writer.  With this book, he wanted to paint a picture of what Helinski would be like under the predictions of the negative results of climate change. He chose a poet as narrator so he could use lyrical and precise language where every word counts. His previous two books are “A Killer, I Wish” and “My Brother’s Keeper”. His fourth book is due out in Finland this year.

Friday, 8 March 2013

Review: Unwanted, Kristina Ohlsson (Sweden)

Title:                           Unwanted
Author:                       Kristina Ohlsson
Translator:                 not acknowledged
Publication:               2012/Simon & Schuster, Inc
Original Publication: 2009/Piratförlaget, Sweden (“Askungar”)
ISBN #                       978-1-4391-9891-9
# pages:                    353
Discovered at my local independent bookstore
Read in paper format
Also available in e-book format

The third Tuesday in July will remain frozen in Henry Lindgren’s memory for the rest of his life. He was the train conductor in the coach from which the little girl Lilian went missing. A few minor incidents with passengers, an annoying train delay, and then…life changed forever.

The police team called in to work the case is not necessarily the most cohesive. DCI Alex Recht has been on the force for more than 25 years and is considered a legend but his skills will be challenged as the case unfolds.  He is used to working with Peder Rydh, an eager young officer with plans for promotion. However, their newest colleague Fredrika Bergman is a puzzle to both these career officers. One of the new civilian recruits brought on board for their specialized skills, she is in her probationary period but has been placed right into an investigative role, skipping the usual patrol car entry position. Her expertise is in crimes against women and children and she sees policing as a temporary position to gain experience.

Despite their internal conflicts, they will be forced to work together to find the little girl and track down her abductor. The suspect is obvious but the clues don’t always lead where expected.

 Although the reader follows both the police investigation and the perpetrator’s activities, the answer to “who dunnit” keeps shifting.  The back stories for the three detectives are nicely woven into the plot. All three are flawed but their prickly sides are nicely balanced with a softer side, making them quite human and real. A page turner that makes you stay up late to finish the book.

Kristina Ohlsson has written several more books in this series: “Silenced”, “Guardian Angels”, “Hostage” and “Star of David” (due for release in April 2013). She has also begun a trilogy of children’s fiction. Interestingly, her background is as a political scientist, most recently holding the position of Counter-Terrorism Officer at OSCE (the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe).