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2 of 3 copies available
2 of 3 copies available

"Indriđason fills the void that remains after you've read Stieg Larsson's novels."—USA Today on Hypothermia

Inspector Erlunder has spent his entire career struggling to evade the ghosts of his past. But ghosts are visiting him, both in the form of a séance attended by a dead woman and also in the reemerging puzzle of two young people who went missing 30 years ago. And there's the ghost of the detective's disastrous marriage, which, despite the pleas of his drug-addled daughter, he is unwilling to confront. In addition, he's still obsessed with the disappearance of his brother, who vanished without a trace when they were boys.

He can only run from his ghosts for so long, and, when they finally catch up with him, Erlunder is forced to face the heart shattering truth of his past.

One of the most haunting crime novels readers are likely to encounter this year or any other, this mystery set in Iceland belongs on the shelf of every serious reader of suspense fiction. Hypothermia will chill you to the bone.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Arnaldur Indridason's sixth Detective Erlendur mystery revolves around a woman's death that is officially ruled a suicide, but Erlendur senses there is something more to the case and continues to investigate. George Guidall capably portrays the aging Icelandic detective with a low, gravelly voice and a slow pace that perfectly suits the character. Erlendur's "official" work is going over cold cases from earlier in his career, and he strives to resolve the thirty-year-old disappearance of a young man before his terminally ill father runs out of time. Guidall's performance of the various supporting characters is monotonous, but his Icelandic accents adds authenticity to an atmospheric mystery. K.O. (c) AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from July 5, 2010
      At the start of Indridason's powerful sixth Reykjavík thriller (after Arctic Chill), the body of María, a woman ravaged by guilt, is found hanging in her holiday cottage, an apparent suicide. As Erlendur, a police detective who works largely alone because he prizes solitude above all else, doggedly interviews those close to María—her husband, her relatives, her friends—in an unofficial effort to understand what might have driven her to take her own life, he unravels an ingenious and sinister plot. Complicating his investigation are the ghosts from his personal and professional past: his failed marriage and his shaky relationships with the son and daughter who grew up without him, as well as unsolved missing-persons cases he still feels morally compelled to pursue. Most scalding of all is his memory of the blizzard that he barely survived as a boy but in which his younger brother perished, the tragic event that shaped Erlendur's later life and lends mythic resonance to Indridason's remarkable novels.

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  • English

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