Title: THE GIRL WHO DIED
Author: Ragnar Jonasson
Publisher: Penguin Michael Joseph UK
Read: January 2021
Expected publication: 29 April 2021
My Rating: 🌟🌟🌟🌟
Book Description:
Una is struggling to deal with her
father's sudden, tragic suicide. She spends her nights drinking alone in
Reykjavik, stricken with thoughts that she might one day follow in his
footsteps.
So when she sees an advert seeking a teacher for two girls in the tiny village
of Skálar - population of ten - on the storm-battered north coast of the
island, she sees it as a chance to escape.
But once she arrives, Una quickly realises nothing in city life has prepared
her for this. The villagers are unfriendly. The weather is bleak. And, from the
creaky attic bedroom of the old house where she's living, she's convinced she
hears the ghostly sound of singing.
Una worries that she's losing her mind. And then, just before Christmas,
there's a murder...
What attracted me to this book:
I love Icelandic noir, and Ragnar Jonasson is one of my favourite Icelandic authors – with good reason. I was thrilled to be able to read and review his latest stand-alone novel, which delivered the same kind of atmospheric setting as his Ari Thor Arason books. With the added bonus of a spooky element!
My musings:
Let’s talk a bit more about setting, which was my
favourite element of the novel. A hostile little village – both in its
isolation, the harsh weather and the suspicious and outwardly unfriendly
villagers – made for the perfect claustrophobic setting. Very cleverly,
Jonasson chose a 1980’s timeline for his story, which completed the sense of
utter isolation. No cell phones, no internet, not even TV to keep in touch with
the news. Can we even still imagine such a life? This is the situation Una, a
city girl through and through, finds herself in when she takes on a remote
teaching post in the far East of Iceland. I have been to the area Jonasson
describes in his novel, and even though I found it breathtakingly beautiful, I
could imagine that the long nights and harsh weather would soon wear a bit
thin, and the lack of human kindness would soon get to you.
Not only has Una discovered that
most of the locals are not very friendly, and don’t want her here, but she is also
aware of some supernatural happenings in the house she is staying in. I give
credit to Jonasson for striking just the right balance with his paranormal
element to make it just the perfect degree of creepy without going over the
top. I also loved the way he employed the setting to ratchet up the creep
factor.
I found myself very involved in
Una’s narrative but thought that the 2nd POV didn’t marry well with
the overall story and didn’t add much for me. I would even go as far as saying
that it was superfluous and could easily have been merged into Una’s POV by
letting Una discover the “secret”, which would have given the ending a much
bigger impact. As it was, I wasn’t invested in those chapters at all.
Summary:
All in all, THE GIRL WHO DIED was an atmospheric
and slightly creepy mystery with that sense of claustrophobia and darkness that
makes Icelandic noir so compelling for me. It’s a slow burning mystery which
will appeal to readers who value atmosphere, setting and an underlying sense of
unease over action and plot. I thoroughly enjoyed it and loved reading a standalone
novel by one of my favourite Icelandic authors!
Thank
you to Netgalley and Penguin Michael Joseph UK for the free electronic copy of
this novel and for giving me the opportunity to provide an honest review.
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