Reviews for The reckoning

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Twelve years after the rape and murder of an 8-year-old schoolgirl, a new series of murders blossoms in her memory in Sigurdardttir's latest horrific police nightmare.Since Iceland doesn't imprison convicted criminals for life, Jn Jnsson is released after serving his time for having assaulted and smothered Vaka Orradttir, who was in his house because she'd asked her classmate, Jnsson's daughter, Sigrn, if she could use her home phone to call her father when he was late picking her up from school. Within a week, storm clouds are already converging over the demoted CID department manager Huldar from several directions. There's the discovery of two severed hands in retired prosecutor Benedikt Toft's hot tub. There's a note discovered in a time capsule Vaka's schoolmates buried 12 years ago: "in 2016 the following people are going to die: K, S, BT, JJ, OV, and I." There's a series of present-tense threats prosecutor Thorvaldur Svavarsson receives from reckoning@gmail.com. And there's the murder of Benedikt Toftcould he be the BT that menacing prediction specified?in a municipal parking garage. Although Huldar's been replaced as head of the CID and has precious little influence in the department anymore, he's itching to work the case, and eventually he gets his wish, only to face the challenge of establishing that the case is indeed a case and not a cascade of unfortunate but unrelated events. Veterans of Sigurdardttir's peerlessly grim procedurals (The Legacy, 2018, etc.) will share the hero's irrational conviction that all these dire portents are indeed related, and it's not giving too much away to say that they'll be proved shockingly correct.More evidence of the author's gift for establishing a web so dark and deep-laid that it hardly matters which particular spider wove it. You're left agog at the detective's concluding observation: "Sometimes violent instincts had to be given their head." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Reykjavik detective Huldar and child psychologist Freyja, both demoted after their rule-breaking hunt for a serial killer in The Legacy (2018), are drawn back together by a child's macabre prediction. An elementary school's time capsule has been unearthed, revealing a note listing the initials of five people who will be murdered in 2016 (the current year). Huldar is assigned to assess the threat and manages to convince Freyja to assist, despite her lingering anger at him. The letter's author is identified as Thröstur Agnesarson, the deeply traumatized son of Jón Jónsson, a pedophilic murderer recently released from prison. When Thröstur refuses to talk, and Huldar and Freyja find the records of a court case from Thröstur's childhood wiped clean, the gaps in the boy's story ignite Huldar's suspicion. At the same time, his new boss, Erla, struggles to lead the investigation into a series of gruesome crimes that Huldar believes are connected to Thröstur's prediction. Sigurdardóttir offsets sharp procedural elements and gruesome crimes with masterful character development and social commentary, creating a riveting, affecting thriller.--Christine Tran Copyright 2018 Booklist


Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

SigurdardA3ttir just keeps getting better and better, as shown by this second entry in the trilogy that began with 2018's The Legacy. In 2016, hunky demoted ReykjavA-k detective Huldar consults Freyja, a child psychologist with whom he worked on a previous case, about a 10-year-old unsigned letter left in a time capsule by an unknown high school student predicting six murders in 2016. The victims are indicated only by initials. Soon chopped up body parts start turning up, and Huldar and Freyja uncover disturbing information that links these murders to old crimes that sparked the letter. SigurdardA3ttir effortlessly blends police procedure and politics with gleeful jabs at inane human frailties, like Huldar's ill-advised drunken one-night stand with his foulmouthed female boss. She also categorically indicts a governmental system whose minions refuse to believe children who cry out for help in unimaginably sadistic family situations. The spiky romantic tension between Huldar and Freyja, who's furious with him because he once slept with her under false pretenses, provides relief from the grim story line. This is must-reading for Scandinavian crime fans. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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