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Silence of the Grave: Reykjavik Thriller
 
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Silence of the Grave: Reykjavik Thriller [Paperback]

Arnaldur Indridason , Bernard Scudder
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. In Indridason's excellent second mystery (after 2005's Jar City), a skeleton, buried for more than 50 years, is uncovered at a building site on the outskirts of Reykjavík. Who is it? How did he or she die? And was it murder? The police wonder, chief among them the tortured, introspective Inspector Erlendur, introduced in Jar City. While an archeologist excavates the burial site, several other narratives unfold: a horrifying story of domestic abuse set during WWII, a search for missing persons that unearths almost-forgotten family secrets involving some of the city's most prominent citizens, and Erlendur's own painful family story (his estranged, drug-addicted daughter is in a coma, after miscarrying her child). All these strands are compelling, but it's the story of the physical and psychological battering of a young mother of three by her husband that resonates most. And the denouement of this astonishingly vivid and subtle novel is unexpected and immensely satisfying. Indridason has won the CWA Golden Dagger Award.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Icelandic mysteries hit the U.S. ground running last year with the appearance of Indridason's outstanding Jar City. This equally fine follow-up returns to the theme of buried pain, with the action centering on the discovery of a human bone at a construction site near Reykjavik. Inspector Erlendur Sveinnson is on the case, but the trail, which leads back to World War II, has gone very cold indeed. Erlendur (Icelanders use first names) has a very personal reason for his abiding interest in missing persons, and that--combined with the fact that his drug-abusing daughter is in the hospital in a coma--opens the door for plenty of backstory regarding the detective's troubled history. With a narrative that jumps between the 1940s and the present--without giving away whodunit--the novel generates a sort of emotional claustrophobia, its characters trapped in a world where the pain of the past, though often submerged, is always with us. Indridason has definitely vaulted onto the A-list of Scandinavian crime authors. Bill Ott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Involving and Compelling, Mar 1 2008
By 
Toni Osborne "The Way I See It" (Montreal, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Silence of the Grave: Reykjavik Thriller (Paperback)
In a Reykjavik suburb during a building excavation, a body is found in a shallow grave. This part of the city was once open hills. Detective Erlendur and his team investigate and hope this will solve a cold case. Things are never that simple...Complicated by the age of the burial, Erlendur team's work slowly through all the possibilities... The hills reveal more than their share of family tragedy, brutally and heartache..

Erlendur is also confronted by the mess of his own family. Eva Lind his drugs-addicted daughter is in a coma and he finally finds the courage to tell her what he feels for her.

This mystery novel is well constructed fairly predictable but never the less involving and compelling. The investigation and Erlendur's private life intertwines nicely to provide both a contrast and an explanation of how people become who they are and why they react like they do. The story moves smoothly taking more than a few twists along the way before reaching a cleverly poignant conclusion. This is a captivating novel that will entice you to read the next one in the series.
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5.0 out of 5 stars An absolutely stellar novel, Sep 25 2011
By 
Tommy Tom Tom (toronto canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Silence of the Grave: Reykjavik Thriller (Paperback)
I read Jar City and was fairly impressed with it, but it is eclipsed by Silence of the Grave, which is something of a quiet masterpiece.
Indridason's books remind me of the HBO series The Wire. They both tell stories about crime and the police, but what is really riveting about these works are their portrayals of the broken and messy and incomplete lives of the characters - whether "good" guys or "bad" guys.
Erlendur, the detective in these novels, is a truly mesmerizing character. We get introduced to his messy family life in Jar City, and in Silence of the Grave, we learn more about the ghosts he is carry forward from his childhood. In another author's hands, Erlendur's life would just be a sad soap opera, but Indridason gives it a depth and poignancy which makes you really feel for this man.
The storylines of Silence of the Grave - the modern day investigation of an uncovered skeleton, and the 60 year old backstory of a ruptured Icelandic family during WWII - are quiet storylines without fireworks, but all the same, they are completely compelling. When the novel concludes, and these storylines converge, it is an extremely emotional experience.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 4.2 out of 5 stars (61 customer reviews)

59 of 60 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Cold Case, Oct 15 2006
By Gary Griffiths - Published on Amazon.com
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This review is from: Silence of the Grave (Hardcover)
If you're a fan of crime fiction and well-plotted mysteries, and are on the lookout for a fresh new face in a crowded genre, then you'll be doing yourself a favor by trying Arnaldur Indridason and his captivating "Silence of the Grave".

Back from last year's "Jar City" is Erlendur Sveinsson, the jaded Reykjavik police detective plodding bitterly though a life of regrets. A skeleton is found while excavating a new housing project, quickly determined to be decades old, and assumed a murder victim. With a supporting cast of eccentric archeologists and his own quirky investigative team, Erlender gets to the bottom of a gut-wrenching tale of domestic violence and child abuse.

A word of warning - this is some tough material. Any idyllic views of a society tolerant to drug use may be shocked into sensibility with the author's unapologetic portrayal of life among the needles and crack vials. And Erlender is about as bleak a character as the barren Icelander setting in which he is cast - the subject matter adding to a general air of depression and despair. But this is powerful noir fiction, only heightened by the dark setting, as Indridason's prose captures the unique Scandinavian brand of fatalism. The mystery is tightly wound and fully engaging, taking more than a few twists along the way before reaching a cleverly poignant conclusion. In the end, a haunting tale of revenge with little redemption - a novel that you'll not easily forget. Clearly one of the year's best - don't miss it.

51 of 52 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Such vivid descriptions that you cannot read it in one go, Aug 8 2005
By Linda Oskam "dutch-traveller" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Silence of the Grave: A Reyjavik Murder Mystery (Paperback)
A corpse is found on a hill in the outskirts of Reykjavik. It looks like it has already been there for a long time, but the excavation goes terribly slow because a team of archaeologists is carrying out the work. In the meantime inspector Erlendur and his colleagues try to get a picture of what happened 50 to 70 years ago. Slowly but surely they find out the awful truth. In between the story line of the investigation, there is another storyline about a family consisting of a father, mother, 2 brothers and a handicapped sister. It soon becomes apparent that something horrible happened in the family and this is written down so vividly that I had to put down the book a few times because it nearly became too much. An in the meantime Erlendur's drugs-addicted daughter Eva Lind is in a coma and he finally finds the courage to tell her what he feels for her. In short, this is a wonderful, sensitive thriller with a lot of psychological insight, well-developed storylines and beautiful descriptions of the various characters.

19 of 19 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars a very engaging read, Jan 2 2007
By tregatt - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Silence of the Grave (Hardcover)
This is the second installment in Arnaldur Indridason's Detective Inspector Erlendur Svinssson series, and it definitely does, in my opinion, top "Jar City" -- the first book in the series. Evenly paced and highly suspenseful, it is no wonder that "Silence of the Grave" won the Golden Dagger Award. I certainly was riveted by this novel and (literally) read on relentlessly till the very last page.

When skeletal remains are discovered at the building site of a new housing estate, Detective Inspector Erlendur Svinsson and his team are called in to take charge of the case. The first thing the team must do is establish just how long the skeleton has lain buried, and then determine if this indeed a case of murder, or something else. And if certain members of Erlendur's team (Detective Sigurdur Oli in particular) aren't too sure why they're wasting so much time on a cold case, it is obvious that Erlendur holds to the belief that every suspicious death deserves an investigation, and that Erlendur at least feels that there is something suspicious about this mysterious burial. Elendur's quest to learn the truth will take him back to Iceland during W.W.II, and to the guilty secrets of two families in particular. This case will also lead him to reexamine on his own past and his own failed relationships with his ex-wife and his two children, and to wonder if it is not too late to repair the damage...

Arnadldue Indridason is a very gifted storyteller, and I have to thank both him and his brilliant translator, Bernard Scudder, for the 4 very pleasurable hours I spent reading "Silence of the Grave." The novel was evenly paced, taut and completely riveting. The book is divided into two subplots -- one subplot deals with the events of the past, while the other subplot centers on the current investigation. It is not an easy thing to do, going backwards and forwards in time, while still managing to maintain a level of suspense and to keep readers guessing as to the identity of the unearthed skeleton. And yet, the author managed this feat with ease, skill and finesse. And even though I expected and suspected certain developments, the denouncement still took me by some surprise. Truly, "Silence of the Grave" was very well done, and if you're looking for a fresh voice in the police procedural genre and one that will hold your interest from beginning to end, you will want to check both "Silence of the Grave" and "Jar City" out.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 61 reviews  4.2 out of 5 stars 
 
 
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