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The Caveman

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Only three houses away from the policeman's home, a man has been sitting dead in front of his television set for four months. There are no indications that anything criminal has taken place. Viggo Hansen was a man nobody ever noticed, even though he lived in the midst of a close-knit community. His death doesn't hit the headlines, but there is something about the case that catches the attention of William Wisting's journalist daWhile Line embarks on her investigations, the police are notified about another death. A male corpse has been found in a forest clearing, and it appears that he has lain there for quite some time. An extremely unexpected discovery on the dead body triggers one of the most extensive manhunts in Norwegian police history. The only thing that can hinder the police in their work, is the media finding out what's brewing.ughter, Line, and she decides to write a newspaper article with a different twist for the festive season: the portrait of a completely anonymous and obscure person whose death goes unremarked and unmourned.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 6, 2015
      In Horst’s absorbing fourth mystery featuring Chief Insp. William Wisting of the Larvik police to be published in English (after 2014’s The Hunting Dogs), the 53-year old widower’s investigative journalist daughter, Line, researches a story involving Viggo Hansen, a resident of Wisting’s neighborhood, who apparently died while watching TV and whose body was undiscovered for four months. Meanwhile, Wisting follows up the few leads in a murder case concerning a badly decomposed body found in a wooded area. Shockingly, the clues connect to a serial killer wanted in America who has been on the run for the last 24 years. As Wisting and Line investigate their respective stories—and as the body count rises—he realizes that the two seemingly disparate deaths are connected and that his daughter may be the next victim. A richly detailed narrative, morally complex characters, and a deeply contemplative, philosophical undertone make this a superior example of Scandinavian crime fiction.

    • Kirkus

      Veteran Chief Inspector William Wisting of the Larvik Police Department is faced with a pair of unusual cases: two men who were dead for four months before anyone so much as missed them. The U.N. may consider Norway the best country in the world, but it's still possible for some people to live and die in such lonely isolation that no one notices. One such person is Wisting's neighbor Viggo Hansen, whose virtually mummified corpse is discovered sitting in front of his television only because he hasn't paid his utility bill. Another is the anonymous victim found beneath the snow at a Christmas tree farm without a mark to indicate how he died four months earlier. Genre fans will immediately suspect that the two deaths are neither innocuous nor unconnected. But since Wisting focuses on trying to identify the snowbound corpse while his daughter, Line, an investigative journalist, toils in alternating chapters to recover a back story for the neighbor she never really knew, the two cases don't begin to converge, or even to establish themselves as criminal cases, until they're both linked to Robert Godwin, the Interstate Strangler who escaped the police in Minneapolis years ago and went to ground in Norway in a surprising, logical, and deeply disturbing fashion. Horst keeps the long second act in which Wisting works with an international task force while Line interviews one acquaintance of Viggo's after another brimming with tension, slowly building suspense as the two searches cross paths in increasingly intricate ways; only the much briefer and more melodramatic third act, which inevitably makes the search personal for Wisting, is disappointingly predictable. After a case in which he was very much the main story (The Hunting Dogs, 2014), it's good to see Wisting cast once more as the dogged detective in this solid, unspectacular procedural. COPYRIGHT(1) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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