Das letzte Ritual. Island-Krimi
by Yrsa Sigurdardottir
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 81)
bookshelves:
crime-fiction,
scandinavian
Read in November, 2007
For a novel about witchcraft and ancient pagan rituals and such, this book was strangely prudish. On many levels, actually. For one, several of the book's main characters--a group of part-time witchcraft enthusiasts/alterna-college students (they have piercings! and tattoos! and they do drugs! and still get A's!)--are embarassingly endowed with the language of 12 year olds in 90s middle America, scoffing at the world with such badass rejoinders as "Don't be a jerk," and 'As if!" T...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
people who want to learn a little about Iceland
Icelandic lawyer, Thóra Gudmundsdottir is puzzled when German resident, Amelia Guntlieb, wants to hire her to find out who really murdered her son, Harald. The Guntlieb family believes the police arrested the wrong man, and because Harald was studying at a university in Reykjavík, where Thóra lives, they ask her to look into the matter. Thóra doubts she find evidence to change events, but since she needs the Guntlieb’s generous fee, she agrees to investigate. Sent to assist her, is the fam...more
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bookshelves:
books-set-in-iceland,
mystery,
mystery-international,
mystery-series-first-novel
Read in May, 2008
While not totally overwhelmed with this one, I'll chalk it up to being the first in a series of novels planned by this author. It takes a while for characters, etc. to be developed, so I'll wait for her second novel to see how it turns out.
Last Rituals wasn't bad but it wasn't great. The main character is lawyer Thora Gudmundsdottir, a lawyer in a tiny firm with an unruly secretary that came with the place. She doesn't make a lot of money to support her two children, so when she gets a ...more
Last Rituals wasn't bad but it wasn't great. The main character is lawyer Thora Gudmundsdottir, a lawyer in a tiny firm with an unruly secretary that came with the place. She doesn't make a lot of money to support her two children, so when she gets a ...more
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bookshelves:
arc
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
People who fetishize Icelandic names
Anybody who knows me will realize that there is one rather shameful reason that I would choose this book off of the advance readers copy shelf at work: ever since seeing Lyle Lovett attacking the name "June Gudmundsdottir" in THE PLAYER, I have found Icelandic names to be utterly irresistible (and, embarrassingly, downright risible).
That being said, Icelandic names are pretty much all this book has going for it; while I was snoozing through the plot developments, and the lack of char...more
That being said, Icelandic names are pretty much all this book has going for it; while I was snoozing through the plot developments, and the lack of char...more
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Read in July, 2008
This was another pick I had high hopes for. At first glance, I thought it was going to be a true crime book about a bizarre murder that takes place in Iceland, but upon closer inspection, it's just a fictional account and I was a bit disappointed.
I was prepared for a much grislier tale than what unfolded. The author ended many a chapter with characters gasping and screaming as they ran away from the scene. The eventual outcome was not nearly as disgusting as I thought it was going to be--...more
I was prepared for a much grislier tale than what unfolded. The author ended many a chapter with characters gasping and screaming as they ran away from the scene. The eventual outcome was not nearly as disgusting as I thought it was going to be--...more
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Read in February, 2008
It passed all of yesterday when my head was hurting, and D was too sick to talk to me. They mystery was standard, and not overly accomplished. The best thing about reading foreign mystery novels is the by-the-way things you pick up by accident. What people call their dogs, or what kind of food they think is a romantic night out. Or how this book always tells what language a conversation is held in: English, German, or Icelandic. I don't know exactly what that means, but I'm sure it does signify....more
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1 comments
bookshelves:
dnf
Read in March, 2008
I was really keen on this book when I started it, but as the narrative progressed, I got more and more disenchanted. By the time I was about 150 pages in, I just didn't care anymore. I think the biggest obstacle was the language. It read like a case study of what happens when a great novel gets a poor translation. The dialog was very straightforward, without idiom, or anything else to liven it up and make it seem like real people were speaking. Instead the characters came off as prudish and...more
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bookshelves:
mysterythriller
Read in March, 2008
This is an English translation of a first novel by Icelandic author Yrsa Sigurdardottir. A most interesting mystery that involves secret soticeties, symbols, witchcraft, and family secrets. If you are a fan of Dan Brown's Da Vinci Code you will most definitely be interested in this new author. Sigurdardottir makes characters who we care about and a most interesting mystery that one cannot guess right away. I am most interested to see where she goes with her next installment in this series.
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bookshelves:
gen-fic
Read in March, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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bookshelves:
mystery
Read in December, 2007
Not a book to read while eating, this book managed to be gross, suspenseful, interesting, and charming all at the same time. Even as Thora and Matthew are traveling around Iceland looking for clues as to who killed and then mutilated the body of German student Harold, there were moments I laughed out loud.
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Read in January, 2008
While the premise seemed intriguing...as did the main character...I think something might be lost in translation here. The prose seemed very, very stilted. Overall I think it's a tad disappointing that such a risque-sounding book should be--well, sort of dull. At least the English version...
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i wanted to read this, its iceland and what i love is to travel to these cold countries and find out about murders, but i couldnt get past the gruesomeness. which is wierd because i am drawn to grim and dark stories. this might be a really good book but i am not its best reader....
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2 comments
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
people who already like Reykjavik
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Read in February, 2008
It's a great little mystery, but has some offensive parts for sure. I'd like to read more by her but wish she'd clean things up a bit.
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Hmm, not as good as I had hoped. Annoying students, little sense of place. Easy to read though!
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bookshelves:
iceland-mystery,
to-read
07/21/08 rec via bookmooch
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bookshelves:
books-read-in-swedish,
crime
Read in April, 2008
080414 - 080418
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