Just Finished Reading: The Savage Altar by Asa Larsson
Rebecka Martinsson is making a new life for herself in a
highly respected law firm in the city. It’s a struggle but she’s just starting
to make the grade and is beginning to collect her own clients. Everything seems
to be on track when she receives an early morning phone call – a voice from her
past asking for help. The best friend she left behind in the small town of
Kirana in northern Sweden has just discovered her brother – the charismatic
preacher who has transformed the fortunes of that isolated religious community
dead in his own church. If that wasn’t bad enough it appears that he has been
ritually murdered and the tightly-knit members of his church are amongst the
suspects including her friend. Of course she offers any help she can but had no
idea where that simple response would lead her – back into a community she has
grown to despise, back into a life she has turned her back on and back to a
place that holds so many painful memories. But once Rebecka starts digging into
the activities of the church and its ruling council she finds disturbing
evidence of tax fraud and maybe, just maybe, something truly explosive. But
with a multi-million Krona industry to protect some people will go to great
lengths to silence her even if that means more blood in the snow.
I’m coming late to the Scandinavian crime scene (as it
where) but at least I started off with a good one. This is a very impressive
first novel. The main character Rebecka is very well drawn and nicely complex.
She’s truly multi-levelled with a history (some of which we find out through
flash-backs) that drives her. She is very real and I’d love to meet her. But
this is not just a novel with a single strong character surrounded by puppets –
no way. Rebecka’s life is full of interesting (as well as crazy) people she’s
known for years and who know, or think they know, her. A person she doesn’t
know beforehand, but gets to know and respect, is police Inspector Anna-Maria
Mella who is heavily pregnant and supposedly deskbound until the birth of her
child. But when she’s needed by her uncertain subordinate she can hardly say
no. I hope to see more of her in future novels (I already have the second book
featuring Rebecka but I’m not totally sure Anna-Maria makes an appearance). It’s
my intention to read more novels by women – most of my novels are by men as you’ve
probably noticed – as well as more books by non-Anglo Americans which provide
an often interestingly different perspective on things. As always much more to
come. (FB: 2003)
2 comments:
If you are new to the Scandinavian crime novels,have you read Steig Larsson's books (Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, etc.)? They are very good and I'm sure you would like them.
Those are actually the only crime novels from there that I've read. But it sounds like I should try The Savage Altar.
I haven't read Steig Larsson (yet) but I do have the trilogy in one or more of my book piles. I've seen the first 2 films (the original rather than the English language version) and was rather impressed. They are, of course, on my read-soon list.
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