Helene Tursten
The Glass Devil
Detective: Irene Huss
Setting ; Gothenburg, Sweden
Time ; Current
Genre: Scandi Noir
This opens with the murder of a Swedish Pastor and his wife and also their son at a nearby cottage. Their are suggestions that the murder may have been committed by Satanists whom the Pastor has been trying to identify through the internet following an arson attack which destroyed a local church. The only surviving member of the family, a computer expert living in London is too traumatised to offer useful information.
Irene Huss and her colleagues pursue the possibility of Satanic links but eventually another, less esoteric but sinister motive emerges.
A
Helen Turtsten Website
Previously read
Detective Inspector Huss
The Torso
Having consumed avidly over 130 police procedurals since purchasing a Kindle, with many more in my pre-Kindle days, it seems useful to make a record and to comment briefly on those I am now reading. I will refer back to ones read previously and I may, from time to time, comment on an author in general, but I doubt I'll ever be able to cover the entire "backlist" in any depth.
Showing posts with label Gothenburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gothenburg. Show all posts
Sunday, 28 July 2013
Labels:
Gothenburg,
Helene Tursten,
Irene Huss,
Scandi Noir,
Sweden,
The Glass devil
Location:
Gothenburg, Sweden
Monday, 22 October 2012
Helene Tursten
Detective Inspector Huss
Detective: Irene Huss
Setting: Gothenburg: Sweden
Time: Recent Past (1990's)
Genre: Scandi-Noir
This is the complicated investigation of the murder of a wealthy Swedish industrialist with a sub plot that involves violent criminals, Hell's Angels and drugs and which eventually merges into the main story. Although Huss is the main character, the team she works with are significantly involved in the development.
As this is the start of a sequence of novels featuring Huss, the elements of the background story ARC are laid, introducing a home life with a husband who is a chef and with twin teen daughters.
As is often the case prejudiced assumptions enter the story. This time with relating to Finnish immigrants ("only a Finn can clean well"). At one stage one of the daughters gets involved with right wing skinheads and begins to Holocaust deny She needs persuasion to abandon the interest. One agent in this is one of Huss' colleagues who has a Jewish/holocaust ancestory and the other is Huss' mother who experienced rehabilitating concentration camp survivors. In so doing Sweden's discomfort in the ambivolent role it played in the Second World War is revealed.
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