I have blogged before about how poorly promoted Karin Fossum is in this country. Since Steig Larsson, anyone with so much as a vaguely Scandinavian name has been snapped up by a publisher and launched with a barrage of ads in the Press, heralding the debut of the new Nesbo. Few have made it to a second contract. But here is Fossum, already a successful series writer before the Girl even thought about getting her Dragon Tattoo and - more importantly - all the signature tropes of the best Scandi Noir: deep, dark secrets; focus on the excluded; and gruesome deaths. Yet where, other than Goodreads and here, do you see her mentioned?
This is the second Inspector Konrad Sejer novel, first published in 1997. The cover is as uninspired as ever; I can only assume she somehow upset the art department at Vintage. Inside, however, is the best of her novels that I have so far read, and I am was already a big admirer. All the action takes place on a single day. An old lady is murdered, a bank is robbed, a hostage taken, and a chubby kid from the boy's home reports seeing the local lunatic who has escaped again. Over the course of twelve hours or so, Sejer investigates and indeed solves all. But Fossum gives equal space to the offenders and the relationship that develops between them. I won't say more for fear of giving the final twist away. It is a very good twist, worthy of Nesbo himself.
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Showing posts with label Jacob Skarre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jacob Skarre. Show all posts
Wednesday, 23 August 2017
Thursday, 2 June 2016
When the Devil Holds the Candle - Karin Fossum
I won't waste space by restating my conviction that Karin Fossum is by far the best writer in Nordic Noir. What I will say is that When the Devil Holds the Candle is easily the best Fossum I have read thus far.
First off, Inspector Sejer enters the fray much earlier, and he has the assistance of Jacob Skarre, his regular protege. Indeed, Skarre makes a brief appearance on page 1. The crime itself is complex; there are several of them and we are never sure until the very end how they are linked, if at all. Essentially two young lads, Andreas and Zipp have too much time on their hands. They get into minor scrapes until a handbag snatch goes wrong and Andreas reveals an uncomfortable truth about himself to Zipp. In order to regain lost ground he takes on a home invasion. After that, no one hears from him again.
To reveal more of the plot would risk giving away some of the twists and turns. What sets Fossum apart, when she's on form such as this, is her exploration of her characters, whether good or bad. Of course, in truth, no one is wholly good or wholly bad. Andreas and Zipp both love their mothers. Sejer is dating again after a long time alone and wonders if he has waited too long. Irma Funder, who keeps cropping up throughout the novel, is older than Sejer, lonelier, and equally stubborn. I bet Karin regrets calling her elderly now that she herself has turned sixty.
Felicity David's translation from the original Norwegian reads very well. The cover is not as bad as other Vintage Fossum covers, though scarcely a design masterpiece, and it does for once reflect the story.
When the Devil Holds the Candle is therefore HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. If you're trying Fossum for the first time, start here or The Water's Edge.
THE CALLER
BAD INTENTIONS
IN THE DARKNESS
First off, Inspector Sejer enters the fray much earlier, and he has the assistance of Jacob Skarre, his regular protege. Indeed, Skarre makes a brief appearance on page 1. The crime itself is complex; there are several of them and we are never sure until the very end how they are linked, if at all. Essentially two young lads, Andreas and Zipp have too much time on their hands. They get into minor scrapes until a handbag snatch goes wrong and Andreas reveals an uncomfortable truth about himself to Zipp. In order to regain lost ground he takes on a home invasion. After that, no one hears from him again.
To reveal more of the plot would risk giving away some of the twists and turns. What sets Fossum apart, when she's on form such as this, is her exploration of her characters, whether good or bad. Of course, in truth, no one is wholly good or wholly bad. Andreas and Zipp both love their mothers. Sejer is dating again after a long time alone and wonders if he has waited too long. Irma Funder, who keeps cropping up throughout the novel, is older than Sejer, lonelier, and equally stubborn. I bet Karin regrets calling her elderly now that she herself has turned sixty.
Felicity David's translation from the original Norwegian reads very well. The cover is not as bad as other Vintage Fossum covers, though scarcely a design masterpiece, and it does for once reflect the story.
When the Devil Holds the Candle is therefore HIGHLY RECOMMENDED. If you're trying Fossum for the first time, start here or The Water's Edge.
Other novels by Karin Fossum discussed on this blog:
THE MURDER OF HARRIET KROHNTHE CALLER
BAD INTENTIONS
IN THE DARKNESS
Sunday, 30 August 2015
In the Darkness - Karin Fossum
Karin Fossum is one of the leading lights of Nordic Noir. She has won all the prizes and is up there with Mankell and Nesbo in Scandinavia. It is such a shame that she is so poorly published in English. You never find her books in major bookshops and the product itself looks cheap and frankly manky.
In the Darkness dates from 1995 and is ostensibly an Inspector Sejer novel (her other protagonist Skarre hardly features). In fact Sejer appears to do very little - until everything falls into place at the end and you realise just how clever a book this is. The final twist came out of nowhere but, for me, was just perfect. In many ways I was reminded of Nesbo's standalone novel Headhunters, which I've raved about before on this blog (I still haven't plucked up the courage to watch the movie for fear of disappointment). It's no secret that Nesbo is a Fossum fan - the endorsement on the moon above is, for once, genuine. Indeed he pays homage in Headhunters to one of the more startling moments here. I won't go into detail, because the last thing I want to do is give any plot away, but toilets are involved. Nesbo's cyclical structure, so different from the linear arrangement of the Hole novels, is surely also influenced by In the Darkness.
A magnificent achievement. My interest in Nordic Noir, which was slipping a bit after a couple of imported duds on TV, is reinvigorated.
Tuesday, 16 July 2013
Bad Intentions - Karin Fossum
Bad Intentions (2010) is the eighth in Fossum's Inspector Sejer series. I had previously read the seventh, The Water's Edge (2009) and the standalone novel Broken (2008), both of which I rated highly. Indeed, Fossum was my personal discovery of the year 2010. Why is she not featured on this blog as often as other purveyors of Nordic noir? Because she is seriously badly published in the UK by vintage. The covers are uninspiring (I mean, just look at it) and they seem to do almost zero marketing. You never find them in major national bookstores and happening on one in your local library, as I have done for all three aforementioned, is pure fluke.
Fossum, who is Norwegian, writes psychological crime in the manner of Ruth Rendell. She eschews serial killers and conspiracy. In this novel we are not sure if there has been a crime at all. If there has been, we know for sure whodunit, but not exactly what has been done or why. There is no gore, no startling twists, and yet Fossum holds our attention from the first sentence to the last. She is a major writer and deserves to be better known. I mean, the least Vintage could do is give her an English-language website.
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