The captivating, feminist, Nordic YA thriller from Sif Sigmarsdottir. The snow is falling thick and fast now. Snow in Iceland is dangerous.
Hannah Eiríksdóttir has been banished from her home in London to a place of eternal punishment for the wicked. No, not Hell, but close: Iceland. There, she faces a new life working as a journalist for her father's newspaper - a man she barely knows.
Imogen Collins has the perfect life as a social media influencer, showing off her glamorous London existence to adoring fans. But behind the filters lies a dark secret. She thought she'd buried it: But the Beast is back - a ghost from her past who's threatening to ruin her future.
When a man is found murdered at the edge of the road in snowy Iceland the girls' lives collide. Imogen had the motive. Can Hannah find out the truth, and discover the reality of the girl beneath the filters?
This is an interesting mix of young adult crime novel and Nordic Noir, which does have some quite adult themes. I read this with my, nearly teenage, daughter, and she was fine with it, but please do be aware that it deals with, not only murder, but the influence of social media and sexual assault.
The novel revolves around two young women. Firstly, Hannah, who goes to live in Iceland, with her father, after the death of her mother and who is mourning not only her mother, but her previous life, and who struggles to fit into her new surroundings. Secondly, we have Imogen, a celebrity on Instagram, who struggles with real life.
Ideally, I would suggest this is better for teens – it is perfect for 14+. Saying that, my daughter enjoyed it and it has whetted her appetite for more mysteries, set in other countries, with different backgrounds. However, it is a book that I think is pitched at the slightly older, YA, market and would, indeed, interest many adult readers, who enjoy crime novels.
I wasn't sure what to expect when I first picked up The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake by Sif Sigmarsdóttir. All I knew was that I was picking up a Nordic mystery with a stunning cover.
Once I started reading The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake I couldn't put it down. I loved this book and I loved the characters. I couldn't help but pick out quotes while I was reading.
Both Imogen and Hannah, vastly different characters, resonated with me. I could relate to them both and I loved that. Their voices were so distinct that I knew instantly who was narrating.
I really enjoyed the social media aspect of this story. It was necessary to the story, and I loved how self-worth and validation was explored through the medium. And social media wasn't vilified, it wasn't an "evil" in the story. I liked how each of the characters projected different images, how they acknowledged that what they put out wasn't necessarily quite true.
The ending. Wow, the ending. I loved it, the way everything came together. Ish. I'd happily read more set in this version of Iceland, with the same intrigues as this story, and the ending of The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake left it kind of open to that possibility.
I will absolutely read more by this author, The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake by Sif Sigmarsdóttir was excellent.
I was on the promotional Instagram tour for this book! A big thank you to Darkroom Tours for inviting me to participate!
T/W- Sexual Assualt
Set between the UK and Iceland, we follow two young female POVs. First, Hannah who is forced to move to Iceland after getting expelled from school. She has to work for a Dad she doesn’t know well as a media/journalist intern. Then, we get Imogen who is a young social media influencer with millions of followers but then gets arrested for murder during one of her conference speeches. Hannah decides to solve the case, with the help of old friend Kjarri but faces danger at every corner.
This was creepy and thrilling, with an array of dark and complex characters that kept me interested. I love Nordic crime novels, but you don’t find them often in YA. Twists and turns, secrets revealed and plenty of drama. It was lots of intriguing and scary fun to read. I eagerly wait for the next read!
NOTE- The pacing was a little slow to begin with, but did pick up!
I was provided a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This is a spoiler-free review.
I went on a big crime novel binge in October and The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake was one of the books I picked up. I adore the author as a person, having met her a couple of times at events like YALC, and this was the perfect time to pick up her latest book. I was absolutely delighted by this fantastic, twisty YA Nordic thriller.
Thanks to my recent YA crime binge, I feel like I can confidently say that this is one of my favourites of the genre. I’m not sure what it was about this book that felt more mature than something like Truly Devious or One of Us is Lying, but The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake is a book that I feel really transcends its YA label -- I think fans of adult psychological thrillers would really enjoy this book as well as YA readers. Perhaps it is the tension in Hannah’s family or Imogen’s dark past. Maybe it is the quieter, less action-packed story. It could be the sense of tension that continues to build and build as the story progresses. Whatever it may be, I think The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake is a fantastic addition to the psychological thriller genre!
I really enjoyed both Hannah and Imogen’s points of view. Despite the fact that they’re both very different people, their lives have been thrown off balance by trauma. The displacement in their lives adds an intriguing layer to both their stories and helps make them jump off the page as well fleshed out characters. Of the two, I think Imogen was actually my favourite, something I was quite surprised by. They both have good character arcs, however I was totally intrigued by Imogen’s life as an accidental social media star, how that status has impacted her life, and how much social media can influence one’s self worth.
Of all the YA crime books I've read recently, The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake is easily my favourite one and I'm looking forward to reading whatever Sif writes next. Filled with twists and turns, intriguing characters, and a great mystery, The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake is an incredibly fun read for your winter TBR.
Ein Buch, das sehr passend ist für die angesprochene Generation, aber ich auch in "meinem Alter" wirklich spannend fand. Es ist sehr viel reingepackt worden an Themen, wie eine psychisch kranke Mutter, ein Elternteil der fehlt, Datenklau im Internet, gezielte Werbung und Manipulierung, die Spirale der Social Media Abhängigkeit grade durch Instagram, sexuelle Übergriffe, ein Mord und ein bisschen Liebe. Allerdings hat die Autorin das ganz gut unter einen Hut gebracht.
Ich überfliege die Zahlen in den Blasen, die ewigen Gezeiten der Wertungen und Urteile, denen wir in Wirklichkeit so gleichgültig sind wie die Küste dem Meer: Wie sehr wirst du heute geschätzt? Wie stark geliebt, wie viele Menschen suchen deine Nähe? Mag dich denn überhaupt irgendwer? Hast du neue Freunde? Wie sieht´s mit Followern aus? Zitat Pos 69
Die 16jährige Hannah steckt ihre Nase gerne in fremde Angelegenheiten, was nicht immer positive Auswirkungen hat: das verschlägt sie dann auch zu ihrem Vater nach Island, zu ihm und seiner "anderen" Familie und zu seiner Arbeit bei einer Tageszeitung. Das Praktikum, das sie beim ihm als "Strafe" ableisten muss, führt sie dann allerdings recht schnell mitten in einen riskanten Mordfall.
Die 19jährige Imogen ist innerhalb von zwei Jahren zu einer berühmten Influencerin geworden, ein Traum von vielen, doch grade sie selbst weiß ganz genau, was hinter der Fassade der strahlenden Fotos auf Instagram und Co steckt. Auch ihr Weg führt nach Island, doch ihre Flucht vor der Vergangenheit stellt sie vor die harte Realität.
Aus Sicht der beiden Protagonistinnen werden die Ereignisse abwechselnd beschrieben. Ein sehr cooler Kapiteleinstieg sind immer Beschreibungen eines Instagram Fotos mit den Optionen für die Bildunterschrift, die meist schon sehr tief blicken lassen und die Kapitel perfekt einleiten.
Wie oben beschrieben gibt es sehr viele Konflikte und Spannungen, die die Handlung vorantreiben und man fliegt wirklich mit viel Tempo durch die Seiten. Auch wenn die vielen Themen nicht zu sehr in die Tiefe gehen, wird einem sehr klar bewusst gemacht, wie wichtig es ist, darüber nachzudenken und zu sich selbst ehrlich zu sein. Vor allem auch die Datensammlung über jede online Nutzung, über die wir ja kaum noch einen Überblick haben und die nur von Werbefachleuten ausgewertet wird.
Alles, was man tat, egal ob on- oder offline, hinterließ eine Spur im Digitalen. Jeder Kauf mit EC- oder Kreditkarte, jede Suchanfrage auf Google, jede Bewegung mit dem Handy in der Tasche, jedes Like auf Facebook wurde abgespeichert. Zitat Pos 968
Schön waren auch die Beschreibungen von Island, dem "Land und den Leuten" und ihrem eigenwilligen Charakter und vor allem auch kleine Besonderheiten, die den besonderen Charme des Inselstaates.
Vieles war leider etwas vorhersehbar, erst gegen Ende gab es dann die ein oder andere Überraschung, die mir dann aber fast schon zu abgedreht war und zuviel des ganzen. Obwohl es sich angebahnt hatte, hätte mir weniger Dramatik besser gefallen, da kam ich mir überrumpelt vor, auch wenn es an sich schon stimmig war.
Insgesamt aber definitiv eine lesenswerte Geschichte mit viel Input, der grade in der heutigen Zeit wichtigen Themen - abschließen möchte ich meine Rezension mit diesem tollen Zitat:
Die "Norm" ist eben nicht eindeutig definiert. Das Normale umfasst ein ganzes Spektrum wie ein Regenbogen. Lauter verschiedene Farben ohne Richtig und Falsch. Das Normale hat immer auch Macken und Fehler. Jeder hat sein Päckchen zu tragen. Wie gut wir unseren Weg durch die Welt trotz dieses Päckchens oder Pakets finden, danach sollte man beurteilen, wie wir uns schlagen, und nicht danach, wie schnell wir unsere Last abschütteln können. Zitat Pos 4332
Imogen Collins is everything I expected her to be: beautiful, stylish, elegant, and a total cow.
* * * 3 / 5
Reading The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake was a much better experience than the other book that I had read by this author - I Am Traitor. Snowflake is a contemporary murder mystery with heavy themes of sexual assault, family, and social media.
A piece of the puzzle is missing. Who is Imogen Collins?
First off, I loved the setting. I've never been to Iceland but I'd love to go - the long dark nights with clear skies, the perpetual snow, the sense of a hard, tight-knit community set against the harshness of the landscape. All this really came across in the book and definitely made it feel different.
To the plot! Hannah is half-Icelandic, sent to live with her father after the death of her ill mother. Imogen is all English and a social media influencer, in Iceland on business. I liked Imogen. She's good-looking and she makes the most of it via Instagram, but she's also sensible, recognising that these kind of jobs are short-lived and has flourishing career in the psychology of advertising using data. Interesting stuff. Their lives intersect when a man is murdered in Iceland; Hannah is working for the paper writing about the crime and Imogen is arrested as the prime suspect.
she is seen, she is heard, she is loved. The feeling is more invigorating than coffee. And just as addictive
What did I like? I liked the two women, tenacious and difficult and troubled in their own ways. I liked how the author dipped into different topics as she wove together the story of a murder - the role of family, the ethics of journalism, etc. A big part of the plot revolves around Imogen being sexually assaulted at work at never reporting it; I felt like this topic was handled maturely and respectfully.
What didn't I like? I found the actual 'answer' to the mystery to be entirely underwhelming, confusing, and a little bit far-fetched. I thought the book suffered from a lack of focus; Sigmarsdóttir tries to pack a lot into what is really quite a small book - sexual assault, a murder, family, mental illness, change, social media, the ethics of journalism, etc. There isn't room to adequately discuss and resolve all of these topics. I also found myself a little confused quite often; when each girl arrives in Iceland they are 'paired up' with an Icelandic boy, both of whom are pretty similar. I often got them confused.
Overall, The Sharp Edge of a Snowflake is a mature, thoughtful read. It had a lot to say and even though it had a few flaws, I did enjoy it.
My thanks to Netgalley, the publisher, and the author for an ARC of this book.
This book was a smooth read and thoroughly enjoyable for me in particular as it describes the Icelanders and their way of life from a third-person perspective. Hannah is a teenage girl born in Iceland but living in London for most of her life and the book begins with one of the two protagonists of the novel, Hannah, is forced to move from London back to Reykjavik in order to live with her father, the chief in a local paper, her step-mother and her two half-siblings. Hannah is an aspiring journalist who was in charge of her school newspaper back in England. Hannah is narrating her story in first-person and she is the only character in this book to do so.
This book was the BOTM for my book club and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I loved the exploration of Instagram and the image that can be created on it, alongside a murder mystery in Iceland. The pace of it was good, I didn't feel like I was missing any information as it changed between the POV of the two main characters. At the start of each chapter there was a page with a description of an Instagram post along with a caption and the likes, it also had a few possible captions of what was really going through the characters mind. I really liked this as it set up for the chapter ahead. It had me hooked feom the start and i finished it in about a day as i wanted to know what happened. . We follow the two main characters Imogen and Hannah who are both from different backgrounds and use Instagram in different ways. I did get confused a couple of times with which bits of info were for which character but as the story went on it was fine. The characters were developed well and it was interesting exploring there thoughts on Instagram and why they use it. Imogen's timeline is a bit behind Hannah's timeline but it flowed well and fitted the story. Kjarri and Orri were the love interests of the story, both from Iceland, who help Hannah and Imogen figure out what is going on and who committed the Murder. I didn't pick who committed the Murder which was good, it was done well. . Overall I enjoyed this one, it was suspenseful and well written.
2.5 out of 5 but didn't like it enough to round up in this case.
it sounds more like a preaching stream of consciousness than prose in several places which annoyed me a lot. i liked the concept but the delivery just wasn't there. i was neutral about Hannah, but i disliked Imogen a great deal. the ending was really unsatisfying.
also, it's described as a thriller. there was maybe one chapter in the whole thing that fit the thriller bill.
also also, did the unnecessary love interest thing that i hate. not once but twice.
Didn't really enjoy this. I felt it tried too hard to make a particular point and did so at the expense of believable characters or proper plot resolution. It also didn't entirely succeed at making the point it was trying to make, and the pacing felt off, and all in all I kind of resented the amount of time I spent reading it.
Part of the problem is that having villains lambast characters for being brainless millennials is all very well... but at seventeen and nineteen, I'm pretty sure both characters are actually Gen Z. And therein lay a lot of the problem. As characters, they might have been more believable if they were in their 20s, especially as a lot of the plot revolves around jobs and early career decisions and trying to prove themselves in a career setting rather than a school setting; it felt like they'd been artificially aged down to squash into a YA setting. The only real reason for the younger MC to be 17 was so that she'd have to live with her father; other than that, literally nothing in the plot supported her being this young, and the whole "millennial snowflake" thing seemed extra forced given that neither of the characters were really actually millennials... Maybe if NA was an actual genre, we could've had had a more convincing book about early 20-somethings, and it would have been more effective. Instead we got something that didn't entirely feel YA but was trying to be.
(For those who haven't read it, the author is *criticising* that anti-millennial viewpoint, I think, and trying to argue that social media can be a positive force as well as a highly negative one -- I don't want my review to be misleading there. Though to be honest, that latter point wasn't really made by the plot, just by the narration. There were other directions the plot could've gone that would have supported that idea more, and it ... didn't.)
Maybe I'm being particularly hard to please at the moment, but I also felt that the book tried to deal with some heavy themes (like sexual assault) in a way that just... didn't have the subtlety to do them emotional justice. It kept bludgeoning you with what the characters were feeling, but never really showed it, just told you repeatedly what they felt -- in terms that felt a little worn and unconvincing. Like I said above, the pacing felt off; several key things were resolved towards the end with new characters (or at least, very minor characters) appearing as if from nowhere, plus a couple of plot twists that completely failed to win me over emotionally.
This book wanted me to feel a lot of things. I didn't feel them, and began to get fed up with it repeatedly telling me what I *should* be feeling. I don't know. I just... didn't get on with this, at all.
Mobbing, Stalking und Missbrauch, Mord – harter Tobak für ein Jugendbuch. Aber sehr gut umgesetzt.
Das Cover ist genial! (Zwar schier unmöglich abzulichten mit dem Silberdruck auf kühlem Weiß – aber genial!) Minimalistisch und doch so aussagekräftig! Die Darstellung von Autorin und Verlag weist schon die Richtung, in die die Geschichte geht: Das Buch ist nicht nur beim Cover ganz auf Social Media eingestellt – auch im Innern sind immer wieder Postings der beiden Protagonistinnen eingefügt. Einmal wie sie eigentlich sein sollten, wenn man ehrlich wäre, und ein einmal wie sie dann tatsächlich veröffentlicht wurden um eine schöne heile Welt vorzugaukeln… Sif Sigmarsdóttir erzählt die Geschichte zweier Mädchen, die nicht unterschiedlicher sein könnten: Hannah und Imogen.
Hannahs Mutter ist gerade gestorben. Nun gerät ihre Welt aus den Fugen. Nicht, wie man vermuten könnte aus Trauer, sondern aus Wut. Ihre Mutter war psychisch krank und die Verantwortung und Scham hat Hannahs Leben all die Jahre überschattet. Nun könnte sie endlich frei sein. Doch sie wird aufgrund eines rebellischen Artikels in der Schülerzeitung von der Schule suspendiert und muss zu ihrem Vater nach Island ziehen. Eigentlich ja eine Belohnung, denn ihr Vater hat eine Zeitung, bei der sie ein Volontariat machen darf/muss in dieser Zeit… wären da nicht die neue Frau ihres Vaters und ihre verzogenen Halbgeschwister. Ein Mord in der beschaulichen Kleinstadt ist da eine überaus willkommene Abwechslung für die Hobby-Detektivin. Imogen ist intelligent, wunderschön und berühmt. Der Traum aller Mädchen… allein mit ihrem Job als Influencerin könnte sie bequem in Luxus leben. Dazu arbeitet sie noch als wissenschaftliche Mitarbeiterin bei einer Werbeagentur, die sich auf psychologisch angepasste Werbung spezialisiert hat. Doch die Schatten der Vergangenheit lassen sie nicht los – besonders ein Schatten, der muskulös gebaut ist…
Das Buch hat mich sofort in seinen düsteren Bann gezogen. Die tragischen Schicksale der beiden Mädchen wurden auf einmalige Weise miteinander verwoben. Nach ungefähr einem Drittel hatte ich eine Flaute, weil ich dachte, die Lösung des Rätsels um den Mord wäre viel zu offensichtlich und die Probleme der Protagonistinnen hatten mich zu sehr mitgenommen. Ich legte das Buch beiseite und las etwas anderes. Die Rückkehr dann ins kalte Island tat gut. Ich bin froh, dass ich bis zum Schluss durchgehalten habe, denn die Handlung hatte noch einige Twists zu bieten, die ich so absolut nicht vorhersehen konnte. Es geht um Selbstfindung, Tod, Mobbing, Stalking und nicht nur emotionalen Missbrauch – harter Tobak für ein Jugendbuch. Aber sehr gut umgesetzt. Definitiv kein leichter Lesestoff, aber dafür umso wichtiger. „Warum sind die jungen Leute von heute alle so besessen davon, wer sie sind? Statt immer irgendwer sein zu wollen, könntest du doch einfach mal nur sein.“
Instagram & Co. beherrschen unseren Alltag. Auch ich nehme mich nicht davon aus. Zwar richte ich mein Leben nicht nach Likes und Followern aus, aber ich gebe zu, dass ich mich schon freue, wenn meine Fotos gefallen und dadurch auch mein Blog Zulauf bekommt. Bestätigung tut gut. Doch was, wenn diese ausbleibt? Und wie viel von unserem Leben wollen wir überhaupt preis geben? Macht uns das angreifbar? Oder stumpft es uns für das „echte“ Leben ab? Fragen über Fragen… bleibt nur zu hoffen, dass wir alle die richtige Balance finden. Das dunkle Flüstern der Schneeflocken ist kein Feel-Good-Roman, keine Lovestory und aber auch kein harter Thriller… es ist ein Roman über den Weg zu sich selbst. Spannend, intelligent, mit Gänsehaut-Garantie! Und die kommt nicht von den isländischen Schneemassen ;-)
Mir fällt es wahnsinnig schwer, dieses Buch zu bewerten. Einerseits wollte ich es gar nicht aus der Hand legen (was ich auch nicht habe), andererseits war ich am Ende unheimlich enttäuscht.
Handlung Mein größter Kritikpunkt an diesem Buch ist die Handlung. Der Anfang wirkt auf mich stringent, aber zum Ende hin verzettelt sich die Autorin und wird keinem der angesprochenen Themen wirklich gerecht. Zum Ende hin wird alles etwas unübersichtlich und absurd. Zur Abwechslung habe ich diesmal gar kein Problem mit dem offenen Ende, es passt einfach wunderbar zur Geschichte.
Charaktere Man begleitet hier zwei junge Frauen, die eine erfolgreiche Influencerin, die andere eine unbekannte Nachwuchsjournalistin, beide sind nicht ganz freiwillig nach Island gekommen. Die Figuren verhalten sich ihrem Alter entsprechend, was nicht immer rational ist, aber für mich haben sie funktioniert. Beide tragen die Geschichte gut. Die Nebenfiguren sind zwar nicht ganz so sorgfältig ausgearbeitet, wirken aber trotzdem realistisch.
Schreibstil Der Schreibstil ist sehr flüssig und ich mochte das Buch nicht mehr aus der Hand legen. Wenn man es nüchtern betrachtet gibt es eigentlich keine richtige Spannungskurve, es ist viel mehr so ein Spannungsgummi, der die ganze Zeit leicht unter Spannung steht. Gerade genug um das Buch nicht wegzulegen, aber zu wenig um hektisch Passagen zu skippen, weil es zu langsam voran geht. Das Pacing ist, bis auf das Ende, vorbildlich. Was mir gut gefallen hat, waren die Instagram-Post und die Alternativtexte. Es gibt den Figuren mehr Tiefe und unterstützt den zeitlichen Verlauf noch einmal optisch.
Fazit Ein Buch mit einigen Problemen, sodass ich keine uneingeschränkte Empfehlung abgeben kann. Ich fühlte mich abgesehen vom Ende seht gut unterhalten, aber ich kann auch verstehen, wieso es manchen anders gehen kann.
Lovely use of language but gets a bit too heavy in the middle. The story was really intriguing but became quite far-fetched with no real explanation of the shady businesses. I liked the characters who were strong women but predictably they both had a love interest that really wasn’t necessary - they didn’t add much to the story and detracted from the independence of Hannah and Imogen. I like the Instagram perspective and the negativity that social media can spread but I felt it only offered one perspective and didn’t reflect on the good that social media can do too. Overall I enjoyed but I wasn’t rushing to finish because it was original but rather to simply finish it.
Kurzweilig-spannende Unterhaltung mit Island-Flair, aber jetzt auch nicht das ganz große Highlight. Kann man lesen, muss man aber nicht. Vielleicht bin ich für den Influencer-Kram auch einfach schon zu alt. ;)
Trigger warnings: Murder, death of a parent (in the past), mental health, violence, .
3.5 stars.
The concept of this was pretty gripping - two teenage girls in Iceland caught up in a mysterious death. I liked the characters, I liked the noir elements of the story. And honestly, this would have been a four star read if it wasn't for one very simple thing: each chapter starts with an Instagram post from either Hannah or Imogen. Which, like, FINE. They actually serve a purpose.
But.
The number of likes they get on the posts is ridiculous. Hannah gets 20-30 likes on her posts and she's all "WOW SO MANY LIKES". Imogen is supposedly an Instagram influencer with enough subscribers that she gets endless amounts of free stuff include a freaking Birkin bag. And yet she gets under 1000 likes on basically all her posts. Basically? I call extreme bullshit and it pulled me out of the story time and time again.
So honestly? Without a number of likes on those Instagram posts, it would probably have been a four star read. Alas.
That being said, I do really like the multiple layers to the title. So... *shrug*
Der Thriller wird aus zwei Perspektiven und zwei Zeitlinien erzählt. Nach dem Tod ihrer Mutter und einem Schulverweis muss Hannah zu ihrem Vater und seiner neuen Familie nach Island ziehen, wo sie jedoch ein Praktikum bei der Tageszeitung machen darf und die Influencerin Imogen kennenlernt. Kurz darauf wird diese jedoch verhaftet und Hannah ist plötzlich mehr involviert in den Fall als sie gedacht hätte.
Imogens Zeitlinie setzt bereits einige Zeit vor ihrer Reise nach Island und ihrer Verhaftung ein und erzählt zunächst viel über ihre Vergangenheit, ihre Ängste und ihre Arbeit. Sie ist unglücklich über ihren Job in einer Marketingagentur, beginnt aber auch an ihrer Influencer-Karriere zu zweifeln, da sie ein schlechtes Gewissen hat Produkte durch bezahlte Werbung zu vermarkten.
Der Thriller spricht wesentlich mehr gesellschaftliche Themen an, als ich erwartet hätte. So wird zum einen die gefälschte Perfektion von Social Media kritisiert, es werden aber auch Themen wie sexueller Missbrauch, Selbstfindung und psychische Krankheiten angesprochen. Jedes Kapitel beginnt mit einem Instagram-Post, bei dem beschrieben wird was auf dem Bild zu sehen ist, welche Caption die Protagonistin gewählt hat und was sie am liebsten geschrieben hätte, wenn sie ehrlich über ihre Gefühle und ihre aktuelle Situation gewesen wäre. Dies hat die eigentliche Story ein wenig aufgelockert und weitere Einblicke in die Gefühlswelt der beiden Frauen ermöglicht.
Der Schreibstil und das Setting waren sehr angenehm und bildlich, sodass ich mich beim Lesen gut nach Island denken konnte. Die Handlung hat schnell an Fahrt aufgenommen und während sich die beiden Zeitlinien immer mehr aneinander angenähert haben, wurde immer deutlicher wie es zu dem Mord gekommen sein könnte.
Für einen Jugendthriller fand ich den Schreibstil und die Thematik überraschend erwachsen und ernst, ich würde das Buch daher auch eher an Leser 14+ und junge Erwachsene empfehlen und nicht unbedingt an jüngere Leser. Es hat unheimlich Spaß gemacht es zu Lesen, es lag aber ein größerer Fokus auf der Ermittlung als auf Spannung. Das Ende war dann durch einige Plottwists doch recht überraschend und bietet viel Potenzial für eine Fortsetzung.
Insgesamt hat mich das Buch, insbesondere durch die Thematik und die sympathischen Protagonisten positiv überrascht. Da ich in der Regel Thriller für Erwachsene lese, die brutaler und spannender sind gibt es von mir aber einen kleinen Abzug und 4,5 Sterne.
I dnfed this at almost 50% not because it was not good, but simply because it did not hold my interest as much, not invested anymore in the characters. I did enjoy the social commentaries and the unique perspective mixing a social influencer, murder and mystery, but unfortunately it did not do much for me and I do not see the point in continuing.
“I guess things are never what they seem. Under the surface there are all kinds of stories. Never judge a book by its cover”
First of all can I just say what a beautiful and eye-catching cover this book has 😍(yes I see the irony of the quote I chose and this statement 😂) but I love the colours and design 💕
Secondly this book does not offer just a pretty cover, it was also a great read. From the vivid descriptions of the Icelandic landscape to the social media posts before each chapter, this book offered a bit of everything.
The two main characters had such different personalities, that I’m glad we got alternating chapters from both their points of view. This allowed for a well developed and well structured narrative. The language and tone was engaging and I particularly enjoyed that fact that this was told from an Icelandic natives point of view. It wasn’t all about the breathtaking Northern Lights and beautiful scenery, instead we got a real perspective of the good and bad of Iceland. As this has been high on my “must visit” destination list for some time, reading this book just made me all the more eager to get there and see it for myself!
The story itself, although not the most original of thriller plots, did have a twist at the end that I didn’t predict. I also felt there was enough mystery interwoven into the storyline to keep me interested as a reader. I normally read adult thrillers so I could have done with more blood and guts but as this was YA, I wasn’t really expecting it.
Additionally the introduction and commentary around the use of social media, psychology and the role influencers play in the online community was fascinating and left me eager to know more!
Overall I thought this was a great YA thriller and well worth a read, especially if you love Nordic noir and social media.
4 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Thank you to @darkroomtours @teambkmrk and the author, Sif Sigmarsdóttir for providing a copy as part of a Bookstagram tour. All opinions are my own and provided willingly.
Thank you to Hachette’s Children’s Group and Netgalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
This book sounded really interesting so I was excited when I got accepted for an arc of this book. Though I do have to say I have mixed opinions about the story.
This book sounded so interesting and we got to see the story unfold from both Hannah and Imogen’s point of view. So we get to see more than what the characters around them know. We see how appearances can be deceptive and not everyone is who they seem.
Even though the book seemed like it would be really intriguing I have to admit I was a little bored at times. I had issues with the pacing of the story and felt it dragged in the middle. I also found the different points of view a little confusing to keep track of who’s point of view I was reading at first though it did become clearer as the story went on.
I did really enjoy the setting, it’s set in Iceland and it was really atmospheric and gave that dark vibe that really went with the story. It also sounded really beautiful and made me want to visit even more!
Another thing I really loved was the Instagram posts that were included with the captions. What the captions actually say and what they were actually thinking about when posting it. The difference between what they actually write and what they are thinking and feeling was really great to see. Especially as social media is such a big part of many people, especially young people’s lives. What you post and what you say in your post can be seen by everyone and it makes people want to seem “perfect” at all times in the public.
There was quite a few themes in the story, from effects of social media, ethics of journalism, sexual assault, family and murder being among them. I really liked that they were included and spoken about especially how social media can influence people and the ethics of what journalists write as they are also influencing people’s views. Sexual assault was also a pretty big theme in the story and affected how Imogen was throughout the book and you can see the toll it takes on her yet she is blamed. And you can see the parallels in real life society currently, with everything happening in the media lately.
I did feel however that as the story is pretty short there was a lot of themes covered but not enough time dedicated to delving deeper into them. I wish we had gotten more conversation about the sexual assault and how social media affects people’s lives.
I think my biggest disappointment in the book was the ending. I felt underwhelmed with the ending and who actually turned out to be the murderer. I felt that it came out of nowhere and I just felt a little confused as to why this person decided to murder the man. I wish there was more build up and we got a bit more at the end to explain better the persons motives, especially as we barely see this person throughout the book.
Overall I did enjoy this book and thought there was some interesting themes explored in the book but I was a little disappointed by the ending.
I received this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
I enjoyed this a lot more than I thought I would - it’s got a noir sort of feel that I really liked. It does take a little while to get into, possibly due to the heavy focus on social media and the way it’s told with some jumps in time, but Hannah’s investigative nature really won me over.
I loved her journalism, and the way her brain worked. Her family was a really difficult relationship though- I wanted to dig into that a bit more. And what the curse her mum had was, specifically. I wanted resolution there on her defending herself.
Imogen was an interesting character - I didn’t connect as well to her, but I did find that I wanted her to succeed and to go on and be happy. And I loved her with Orri and his mum! So cute.
The best part for me was the ending! I sort of saw it coming and YET. 😱 So good.
I really dislike the term ‘snowflake’ and it’s of people not coping with life’s events. In this instance, the snowflake definitely shows its sharp edges. Imogen Collins is a social media influencer. She’s also someone who had to abandon her degree studies as she struggled to adjust to life after a sexual assault. Caught up in her own plan to bring down the man who was responsible, she ends up embroiled in some very dubious events. Hannah is determined to be a journalist and fed up that she has to go and live with her father in Iceland. On the day she arrives their journey home is disrupted by the sight of the police collecting a dead body that was dumped in a ravine. Naturally, the two girls’ stories merge and we get a pretty tense thriller. The setting was interesting, though there were elements of the characters/story that didn’t quite pull together for me. Thanks to NetGalley for the opportunity to review this prior to publication.
‘Hannah Eiriksdottir has been banished from her home in London to a place of eternal punishment for the wicked. No, not Hell, but close: Iceland. There, she faces a new life working as a journalist for her father’s newspaper – a man she barely knows. Imogen Collins has the perfect life as a social media influencer, showing off her glamorous London existence to adoring fans. But behind the filters lies a dark secret. She thought she’d buried it: But the Beast is back – a ghost from her past who’s threatening to ruin her future. When a man is found murdered at the edge of the road in snowy Iceland the girls’ lives collide. Imogen had the motive. Can Hannah find out the truth, and discover the reality of the girl beneath the filters?’
I thoroughly enjoyed this book.
I didn’t want this book to end. I honestly didn’t know what to expect going into this book but it was wonderful. I loved the writing in this book. I was well paced and filled with suspense. I loved all of the twists and turns in this book, and I was genuinely surprised by the ending.
I really enjoyed the addition of the Instagram posts throughout this book. I really helped to differentiate between the different character point of views.
The story itself was really interesting and actually kept me engaged and interested. Having such wonderfully written characters made for a fully rounded story.
I loved the different characters and what they brought to the story. The characters each had their own strengths and weaknesses and watching them work together made for a really interesting reading experience.
This was the first time I had read anything by Sif Sigmarsdottir but it definitely wont be the last. The Sharp Edge Of A Snowflake by Sif Sigmarsdottir will take you on a surprising journey and leave you wanting more.
Hannah zieht zu ihrem Vater nach Island, womit sie gar keine Freude hat. Wenigstens lernt sie durch ein Praktikum bei der hiesigen Tageszeitung die bekannte Influencerin Imogen kennen, die plötzlich zum Mittelpunkt eines Mordfalls wird.
„Das dunkle Flüstern der Schneeflocken“ ist ein Jugendbuch, das geschickt den Glanz von Instagram, Gefahren von Social Media und jugendliche Ängste, zu einem gelungenen Nordic-Noir-Thriller vereint.
In einem Lavafeld wird eine Leiche gefunden, die nicht den üblichen Funden der eisig kalten Umgebung entspricht. Normalerweise handelt es sich um erfrorene Touristen, die sich unabsichtlich der isländischen Natur ergeben. Diesmal ist es eindeutig ein Mordopfer, und alle Indizien weisen auf die bekannte Influencerin Imogen Collins hin. Hannah stößt eigenmächtig Ermittlungen an, weil ihrer Meinung nach manches Detail nicht sinnvoll ins Gesamtbild passt.
Die jugendliche Hannah zieht nach Island, was alles andere als freiwillig geschieht. Nach dem Tod ihrer Mutter muss sie wohl oder übel bei ihrem isländischen Vater leben, der sie zähneknirschend in der Familie willkommen heißt. Hannah hat ein anstrengendes Leben hinter sich, und sie merkt, dass ihr der Bezug zur hiesigen Verwandtschaft fehlt. Trotzdem findet sie sich halbwegs ein, und freut sich, dass sie bei der Tageszeitung vor Ort ein Praktikum absolvieren darf.
Menschlich betrachtet ist Hannah auf eine sympathische Weise schroff und verwirrt. Ihre miese Kindheit hat sie geprägt, und es fehlt ihr an Orientierung im neuen Umfeld. Meiner Meinung nach findet sie sich den Umständen entsprechend schnell in die Situation ein. Auch wenn sie selbst anders empfindet. Als Journalistin hat sie extremes Potential. Sie spürt sofort die richtigen Themen und Fragen auf, hat ein exzellentes Auge für Details, bringt Wagemut und Engagement mit, sowie eine unbändige Neugierde, die essentiell für fundierten Journalismus ist.
Imogen ist eine britische Influencerin auf Instagram, die weit oben am herzförmigen Like-Himmel glänzt. Zugegeben, sie ist mit dieser Rolle vollends unzufrieden, obwohl sie ihr bestens entspricht. Es wird deutlich, wie berechnend sie vorgeht und wie kritisch sie ihr eigenes Auftreten in Frage stellt.
„Dadurch setzt sie ihren Followern ein Ziel. Sie ermutigt sie, nach dem zu streben, was Imogen Collins verkörpert, darauf hinzuarbeiten, besser als die anderen zu sein wollen. Aber wie sollen sie dieses Ziel erreichen, wenn die Latte dermaßen hoch liegt? Das heißt, sie liegt nicht nur irrsinnig hoch - sie ist so fern jeder Realität, dass nicht einmal der echte Mensch Imogen Collins den Hauch einer Chance hat, tatsächlich ein Leben wie die Influencerin Imogen Collins zu führen.“ (S. 242)
Thematisch geht Autorin Sif Sigmarsdóttir Kritik an Social Media von mehreren Seiten an. Einerseits betrachtet sie die Rolle der strahlenden Influencerin Imogen Collins und den schönen Schein der quadratischen Bilderwelt auf Instagram. Andrerseits fließen die Gefahren von Social Media in die Handlung ein, was zum leitenden Motiv des Mordfalls sowie des Erzählrahmens wird.
Abwechselnd wird aus Hannahs und Imogens Sicht erzählt, wobei die Zeitstränge nicht parallel laufen. Nachwuchs-Journalistin Hannah ist der Follower zählenden Imogen einen Schritt voraus, wodurch sich mitreißende Dynamik ergibt. Jedes Kapitel beginnt mit einem Instagram-Post der jeweiligen Figur, was dem Buch meinem Gefühl nach ein originelles Merkmal verleiht.
Ich fand diesen Thriller sehr aufregend und Sigmarsdóttir schafft ein großartiges Puzzle, das sie dank Hannah vor dem Leser zusammensetzt. Mit den Hintergründen der Handlung bin ich nicht völlig zufrieden. Für mich war die Sache zu groß für einen Thriller auf Teenie-Niveau. Es gehen Intrigen, Betrug und Sexualität Hand in Hand, wobei der Level des Komplotts eher in der James-Bond-Liga angesiedelt ist.
Trotzdem hat es mir bis dahin enormen Spaß gemacht mit Hannah den Fall von Imogen Collins aufzudecken. Außerdem fand ich das Setting um Island perfekt in Szene gesetzt.
„Seit vor über eintausend Jahren die ersten Menschen nach Island gekommen sind, hat sich die Insel redlich bemüht, sie wieder umzubringen. Im Lauf der Zeit ist sie immer und immer wieder nur knapp daran gescheitert, den Homo sapiens durch eisiges Wetter, brodelnde Lava, Erdbeben, Überschwemmungen, Lawinen oder Seuchen von diesem Brocken Vulkangestein knapp unter dem nördlichen Polarkreis zu vertreiben.“ (S. 42)
Im Endeffekt handelt es sich um einen ausgesprochen gelungenen Nordic-Noir-Thriller auf Jugendniveau, der auf exzellente Weise Medienkritik verpackt und gleichermaßen mit rauem isländischen Ambiente, einer spannenden Handlung und dem originellen Stil zu fesseln weiß. Daher spreche ich eine Leseempfehlung aus.
‘’Normal is an ugly word. No one should aspire to be normal.’’ • It’s hard to write a review for a book when you think people should just go into it knowing as little as possible. • Our main characters, Hannah and Imogen – two girls from two completely different backgrounds, both sent to Iceland. With each chapter we discover the circumstances of how each of them ended up here and their own inner battles with their respective demons. • The use of Instagram reflects how current this book is and the eternal struggle of how we choose to be perceived on social media, and what is hidden behind every smile. • Oh boy, this book was so refreshingly good! It’s been a while since a book has kept me on the edge of my seat throughout the whole story and kept me thoroughly interested and engaged. It’s also very rare that I can’t figure out at least part of the mystery and here I was completely clueless. • I absolutely loved it and recommend that if you decide to pick it up, you don’t devour it. Take it easy, read a few chapters, then take a break – savour the moment. You won’t be disappointed!
A fantastically moody who dunnit that combines the sombre ambience of Iceland with a modern age look at social media and its place in current society. This book surpassed my expectations, it is very atmospheric and easy to read.
Liked the plot - some fun twists and turns. However, the message felt to me like it was trying to be virtuous but ended up being not genuine and lacking substance. Some holes in ideology and story; would have preferred if it focused on being a good story more, OR actually had more substance in the message. But may be perfect tone for some.