3.5 stars
Whitsuntide sees the return of former local resident Helena Hillerström to the sparsely furnished cabin that her family still own on the island of Gotland with her boyfriend of six years, Per Bergdal. Now living in Stockholm for the past fifteen-years after a stressful and hectic spring, thirty-four-year old Helena and thirty-eight-year old Per begin their break with a gathering of Helena's childhood friends on June, 4th. As alcohol is liberally served and spirits raised, Per's jealously is triggered when eternal bachelor, Kristian Nordström, flirts with Helena and the evening ends with a vicious feud between Helena and Per. Awakening with a splitting headache and the remnants of a hangover, Helena takes her beloved and watchful retriever, Spencer, for an invigorating walk on the beach at Fröjel on the west coast of the island. As she reaches the path down to the beach she is enveloped in a dense fog which leaves little visibility of the horizon and she is filled with a creeping sense of unease. Just hours later an elderly pensioner comes across the dog murdered in the most macabre way, with a paw hacked off and its head almost completely severed from its body. Just yards away, the shocked witness sees the trail of blood from the beach into the grove and is confronted by the body of a naked woman, savaged with what looks to be deep stab wounds delivered by an axe and with her knickers stuffed into her mouth. The victim is quickly identified as Helena and boyfriend Per seen as having an obvious motive.
Visby police HQ under the supervision of Detective Superintendent Anders Knutas leads the investigation, with the added benefit of working alongside his close ally thirty-seven-year-old Detective Inspector Karin Jacobsson. Married to long-suffering wife and part-time midwife, Lina, he is a family man with twins. Such a serious case entails a medical examiner from the mainland being summoned to the body and the assistance of colleagues from the National Criminal Police in Stockholm. Lead investigator, Knutas does not make much of a memorable impression and is a fairly straightforward man lacking in dynamism. His surprisingly direct line of questioning certainly lacks guile, notably early on he asks one man why he does not have a girlfriend and if he is gay so bluntly that it is both insensitive and rude. At the same time, Johan Berg, crime correspondent for Regional News, Swedish TV is the first to hear a well-informed tip-off and editor Max Grenfors takes full advantage and sends him on location. Johan's contact somehow manages to continue furnishing him with prescient details and it is no surprise when he lands a series of scoops, delivering added colour and atmosphere and managing to strike up a connection with the best friend of Helena, Emma Winarve. Much of the investigative impetuous comes courtesy of reporter Berg, whether than is due to his burgeoning relationship with local resident Emma or his drive for his work, and therefore I was rather surprised that the lead character is the rather unprepossessing Detective Superintendent Anders Knutas.
When an axe covered in the blood of the victim is found by two young children out playing and the fingerprints of Per Bergdal are found on the handle, everything points to the fiery temper of her boyfriend. Friends of Helena doubt Per's supposed guilt and even for Knutas his every instinct tells him that this is not the man he is after and it is no surprise that almost two weeks later Per remains vociferous in his protestations of innocence. That the axe was the property of Helena's family and Per had utilised it before holds no weight and with the tourist season on the horizon and the acknowledged dependency on the prosperity of the area a rapid response is required.
Unusually cold for the time of year with a ferocious wind blowing a gale at the start of June, the island of Gotland are preparing from the hordes of tourists who descend on the idyllic landscape in what has previously been a relatively murder free region, with only twenty incidents committed on the island since 1950 and a resident population of fifty-eight thousand. Under increasing pressure from the local authorities to restore calm to the region and thus not hinder the tourist trade, the media make merry from the scare story of a serial killer roaming the peaceful island of Gotland. As things return to normality on the island, less than two weeks later another young woman, thirty-five-year-old Frida Lindh is murdered and again the body is found with her knickers stuffed into her mouth. As Per is released, Frida's friends tell of the man she chatted to for over a hour in the bar they visited. Flirty, sociable and attractive this second victim shares much common ground with Helena. Then on the day of Midsummer Eve another murder victim is discovered... Three homicides in less than three weeks. As Knutas faces the prospect of a serial killer in their midst, his colleagues desperately struggle to find a connection between the three victims, but as pressure mounts they are engaged in a race against time to uncover the perpetrator before he strikes again.
Marked it italicised text throughout the entirety of the novel are chilling extracts from the mind of the vicious predator than sends shivers down the spine and offers up the rationale behind these murders and their poignancy leaves a feeling of pity for both the perpetrator and the victims of this sorry tale. Unseen is solid if unspectacular fare, but does lack a certain dynamism and the tension throughout is minimal. Much of the novels relevance pertains to its exploration of a largely closed community paralysed by the fear of a serial killer at large, under the competing pressures of an economy dependent on the tourist industry and a media keen to capitalise on the news value. Brooding and atmospheric, this is a well executed tale told with sensitivity. Unseen is translated into American English by Tiina Nunnally.