Title: The Reckoning
Expected publication: out now
My Rating: 🌟🌟🌟🌟
Book Description:
A chilling note predicting the deaths of six people is found
in a school's time capsule, ten years after it was buried. But surely, if a
thirteen-year-old wrote it, it can't be a real threat...
Detective Huldar suspects he's been given the investigation simply to keep him from real police work. He turns to psychologist Freyja to help understand the child who hid the message. Soon, however, they find themselves at the heart of another shocking case.
For the discovery of the letter coincides with a string of macabre events: body parts found in a garden, followed by the murder of the man who owned the house. His initials are BT, one of the names on the note.
Huldar and Freyja must race to identify the writer, the victims and the murderer, before the rest of the targets are killed...
Detective Huldar suspects he's been given the investigation simply to keep him from real police work. He turns to psychologist Freyja to help understand the child who hid the message. Soon, however, they find themselves at the heart of another shocking case.
For the discovery of the letter coincides with a string of macabre events: body parts found in a garden, followed by the murder of the man who owned the house. His initials are BT, one of the names on the note.
Huldar and Freyja must race to identify the writer, the victims and the murderer, before the rest of the targets are killed...
My musings:
Yrsa Sigurdardottir’s Children’s House series has been my
most exciting discovery in 2018, and I fully expect to become totally addicted
to future books in the series. It is so good that I picked up The Reckoning
immediately after turning the last page of The Legacy because I had to find out
what would become of investigative duo Freyja and Huldar.
Sigurdardottir again delivers an intriguing and somewhat creepy
premise – a time capsule sealed at a local school ten years ago has now been
opened, containing a list of names that predicts the death of several people in
2016. Huldar, demoted to solve minor crimes after his massive fall from grace
in The Legacy, has been tasked with finding out who would write such a dark and
sinister letter, and must investigate whether this has been a prank or whether
there is any danger of harm befalling the people named in the list. And since
the letter had allegedly been written by a young boy at the time, none would be
better to help solve the mystery than child psychologist Freyja, who
specialises in disturbed and traumatised children. Even though Freyja herself
is still suffering the consequences of their last doomed partnership and is
less than eager to be involved in yet another one of Huldar’s troublesome investigations.
Of course, it doesn’t take long until the first body turns up, and Huldar finds
himself once more involved in the sinister game of a ruthless killer.
It’s no secret that I like my crime novels dark and
disturbing, and Sigurdadottir is a true queen of the creepy and haunting. The Children’s House series is not for the
faint of heart, as both books feature some disturbing themes, in this case hints
at horrific acts of child abuse and quite gruesome murder scenes. However,
Sigurdardottir’s writing style strikes exactly the right balance between too
lurid on one end of the spectrum or too nebulous and glossing over at the other,
so that the scenes can play out vividly without crossing the line that would
turn suspense into revulsion - and still maintain the shock value I have come
to expect from books in the genre. As in The Legacy, the final reveal took me
by surprise and showed how cleverly constructed this mystery really was.
Personally, my favourite part of the book was to learn more about Freyja and
Huldar’s lives, as I have become quite fond of these two flawed but lovable
characters.
Short of being able to learn to speak Icelandic anytime
soon, I will have to comfort myself with the promise of an English translation
of part three in the series coming out in 2019. I, for one, will surely be
lining up for it, because Freyja and Huldar have really gotten under my skin
and I am eager to learn more about yet another case they can hopefully solve
together. In the meantime, I am making my way through some of Sigurdatottir’s
other books, happy that there is a long backlist to choose from. If you are a
fan of Nordic noir with dark and disturbing undertones, then I strongly urge
you to pick this one up!
No comments:
Post a Comment