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Downtrodden Detective Erlendur and his team must once again investigate Reykjavik’s hidden past to unravel a case of human nastiness.
Construction work in an expanding Reykjavik uncovers a shallow grave. Years before, this part of the city was all open hills, and Erlendur and his team hope this is a typical Icelandic missing person scenario; perhaps someone once lost in the snow, who has lain peacefully buried for decades. But things are never that simple. While Erlendur struggles to hold together the crumbling fragments of his own family, his case unearths many other tales of family pain.
The hills have more than one tragic story to tell: tales of failed relationships and heartbreak; of anger, domestic violence and fear; of family loyalty and family shame. Few people are still alive who can tell the story, but even secrets taken to the grave cannot remain hidden forever.
Alive with tension and atmosphere, and disturbingly real, this is an outstanding continuation of the Reykjavik Murder Mysteries.
With only two of his novels currently circulating in English translation, Arnaldur Indridason puts Iceland on the map as a major destination for enthusiasts of Nordic crime fiction. In Jar City, published last year, this commanding new voice drew us into the melancholy world of Erlendur Sveinsson, a Reykjavik police detective haunted by the forgotten victims of unsolved crimes. The author raises the same ghosts in Silence of the Grave, applying his austere style to a crime of such emotional breadth and sociological complexity that it acquires the sweep and consequence of epic storytelling.
More Reviews and RecommendationsArnaldur Indridason worked for many years as a journalist and critic before he began writing novels. He has published several thrillers, but it is for his Reykjavík Murder Mysteries — the series featuring Erlendur and Sigurdur Óli — that he is best known outside his native Iceland. He has won the Glass Key for best Nordic crime novel (both for Tainted Blood and for Silence of the Grave) and the Martin Beck Award for best crime novel translated into Swedish (for The Voice). In 2005, Silence of the Grave was awarded the coveted CWA Gold Dagger for best crime novel, an accolade shared with Minette Walters, Reginald Hill, John le Carré and fellow Nordic crime writer Henning Mankell.
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March 09, 2009: Arnaldur Indridason's SILENCE OF THE GRAVE is a welcome addition to the detective genre. The main character, Inspector Erlendur, a sad, lonely, driven, obsessed detective, compares favorably with such stalwarts as Ian Rankin's John Rebus, John Connelly's Harry Bosch, and Henning Mankell's Kurt Wallander. Indridason shares with his fellow authors the ability to move beyond mere plot to strong, compelling characterization. In Erlendur's case, his failed marriage; his former wife, who feels visceral hatred for him; a daughter trapped in a web of drug dependency and bad choices; coupled with a lifestyle devoid of meaning and happiness, provide the spark that sets him apart from the conventional detective, making it virtually impossible for the reader to maintain anything resembling emotional distance. As the story plays out, Erlendur must balance his need to make sense of a vicious crime with his concern for his daughter, whose life hangs precariously between life and death. The book's story revolves around two bodies, one a child's, apparently killed around the time of the second world war. As Erlendur struggles to discover their identities and the meaning of the crime, the author creates a parallel story of a family trapped in a world of violence and hate, a story in its own way just as moving as Erlendur's. The conclusion, when the two stories merge in cataclysmic fashion, is as sharp and as satisfying as the rest of the story. It leaves the reader completely wrung out. An added bonus is the excellent translation from the Icelandic by Bernard Scudder. This novel, by the way, is the second of four. All are excellent and highly recommended.
I Also Recommend: The Falls (Inspector John Rebus Series #12), Exit Music (Inspector John Rebus Series #17).
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July 26, 2006: On the outer perimeter of Reykjavik, Iceland, a construction crew uncovers the remains of a body. The corpse had been placed in this shallow grave over five decades ago when the area was undeveloped hills. Inspector Erlendur leads the investigation into the death of this identified male at the same time a forensic archeologist excavates the location to insure no other clues are damaged or lost.-------------- While Erlendur works on what is probably going to end up a cold case, he finds the investigation fascinating and enables him to avoid the domestic abuse cases that seem prevalent. Many prominent leaders would prefer past and present family violence ignored. Erlendur would like to do that as those cases eat at the cop perhaps because his drug addicted daughter remains in a coma following a miscarriage. However, the police or society will not be able to pretend that a brutal beating of a young woman did not occur.--------------- The subplots tie together to make a delightful police procedural that emphasizes the locale as much as the criminal activity. The crusty Inspector is a fine protagonist with woes caused by feelings of guilt as he fears her failed his daughter yet it is Iceland that holds the plot collectively as one strong story line. The abuse theme will haunt readers well after the tale is finished as Arnaldur Indritason provides a deep extremely well written Icelandic police procedural.---------------- Harriet Klausner