English Translations of Scandinavian/Nordic Mysteries & Thrillers discussion

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About Nordic cop characters

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message 51: by Ken, Moderator (U.S.A.) (new)

Ken Fredette (klfredette) | 6967 comments Mod
Michael wrote: "Kenneth wrote: "OK, so I've read both of Michael's and James books. Both of you are fantastic writers. Michael you are amazing the way you handled all the action making it real. My hats off to y..."

I've already ordered the next book in the series.


message 52: by Sharon, Moderator (Netherlands) (new)

Sharon | 2533 comments Mod
Kenneth wrote: "Michael wrote: "Kenneth wrote: "OK, so I've read both of Michael's and James books. Both of you are fantastic writers. Michael you are amazing the way you handled all the action making it real. ..."

Which of the two series are you referring to?


message 53: by Ken, Moderator (U.S.A.) (last edited May 19, 2012 07:42PM) (new)

Ken Fredette (klfredette) | 6967 comments Mod
Where the Shadows Lie by Michael Ridpath an then all of James Thompson's books.


message 54: by Anna (new)

Anna (aetm) | 228 comments ... except the ones that aren't available in English, Ken? ;)


message 55: by Ken, Moderator (U.S.A.) (new)

Ken Fredette (klfredette) | 6967 comments Mod
Well spoken Anna, did you stop to have a beer with Jim? :)


message 56: by Anna (new)

Anna (aetm) | 228 comments I might have had a pint or a few with my hubby and Inspector Vaara at Hilpeä Hauki. :)
(While I discovered most of the stores next to my high school two minute walk from there were still the same than they were when I went to high school...)


message 57: by Arjun (last edited Jul 27, 2012 07:30AM) (new)

Arjun Kumar (the_snowman) | 21 comments I gotta go with Harry Hole on this. Harry seems to have everything going against him; he's an alcoholic and he has issues with authority in a job where politics are very profound. His personality doesn't help his cause either. He's stubborn and very anti social. He's even described by many different characters as being ugly.

Despite all of this he finds ways to succeed. He manages to stay sober most of the time, he is very successful in his line of work, and he even finds himself as the love interest of some very beautiful women. You also seldom find him moping around feeling sorry for himself. He usually just rolls with the punches. I think his charm, persistence and dedication along with his many flaws make him an extremely likable yet human character.


message 58: by Carol (new)

Carol (ladygyn) | 25 comments Just started my first Wallander, but read all the Harry Hole series and the Carl Morck book by Adler-Olson and the detective in Jar city. All seem to be of the same ilk, loners, poor interpersonal relationships , flawed. Either that is a Nordic type or it just works in this genre. Anyone know a friendly outgoing detective from the Northern countries?


message 59: by Sharon, Moderator (Netherlands) (new)

Sharon | 2533 comments Mod
Carol wrote: "Just started my first Wallander, but read all the Harry Hole series and the Carl Morck book by Adler-Olson and the detective in Jar city. All seem to be of the same ilk, loners, poor interpersonal..."

Yes, the Helene Tursten books of Inspector Irene Huss...read in order they are a refreshing treat!
Helene Tursten
Detective inspector Huss
The Torso
The Glass Devil
Night Rounds *****late 2012

Liza Marklund books are good, Red Wolf for example.


message 60: by Carol (new)

Carol (ladygyn) | 25 comments She is on my tbr list


message 61: by Michael (new)

Michael Ridpath Arjun wrote: "I gotta go with Harry Hole on this. Harry seems to have everything going against him; he's an alcoholic and he has issues with authority in a job where politics are very profound. His personality..."

Seems to me that Harry Hole is a Nordic take on an American type (stereotype?). Chandler's Marlowe and in particular James Lee Burke's Robicheaux or Michael Connelley's Bosch are similar characters, with the Vietnam vet experience thrown in. It's been tried and it works. Harry is original because he is Norwegian, not American, and the Nordics can bring a whole new enthusiasm to heavy drinking.


message 62: by Anna (new)

Anna (aetm) | 228 comments Nesbø's take on Harry: "I was sort of considering the idea when I invented the character, the idea of the, you know, traditional, hard-drinking American hard-boiled detective," he says. "But I decided that I didn't want that. So I made him a full-blown alcoholic."

http://www.npr.org/2012/07/23/1569100...


message 63: by Michael (new)

Michael Ridpath Anna wrote: "Nesbø's take on Harry: "I was sort of considering the idea when I invented the character, the idea of the, you know, traditional, hard-drinking American hard-boiled detective," he says. "But I deci..."

Interesting. Harry's drinking is of a different order to the romanticized whisky swigging of Marlowe.


message 64: by Ian (new)

Ian (pepecan) | 350 comments Harry isn't an alcoholic as he's able to switch his drinking on and off seemingly at will. It makes for interesting fiction, but that's what it is.


message 65: by Sharon, Moderator (Netherlands) (new)

Sharon | 2533 comments Mod
Ian wrote: "Harry isn't an alcoholic as he's able to switch his drinking on and off seemingly at will. It makes for interesting fiction, but that's what it is."

IMO similar to how Rebus used his whisky to numb out the events .....


message 66: by Arjun (last edited Jul 27, 2012 07:34AM) (new)

Arjun Kumar (the_snowman) | 21 comments Ian wrote: "Harry isn't an alcoholic as he's able to switch his drinking on and off seemingly at will. It makes for interesting fiction, but that's what it is."

I agree with you on some level. I think he is an alcoholic, but he does seem to have a better handle on his drinking than the typical alcoholic. I imagine this would be very hard to pull of in real life if someone was an alcoholic, but as you said, its fiction. The only time we hear of alcohol causing harm to his life is at the beginning of devil's star.


message 67: by Sharon, Moderator (Netherlands) (new)

Sharon | 2533 comments Mod
IMO there are a lot of characters with drink problems. Not just Rebus although IMHO his drinking comes close to Harry Hole. Big bouts and trouble because of it. If memory serves, Kay Scarpetta (Patricia Cornwell) had a drink problem and certainly Temperence Brennen (Kathy Reichs) is an alcoholic!


message 68: by Sharon, Moderator (Netherlands) (last edited Jul 27, 2012 07:44AM) (new)

Sharon | 2533 comments Mod
Arjun wrote: "Ian wrote: "Harry isn't an alcoholic as he's able to switch his drinking on and off seemingly at will. It makes for interesting fiction, but that's what it is."

I agree with you on some level. I ..."


I think HH is an addict and serious drinker that just escapes both ruining his life and career but certainly does mange to destroy his relationships. How he pulls himself up and out with huge focus time after time has always disturbed the credibility for me of the stories and most certainly his end. Look fwd to the first finally being translated to see a glimpse of who HH was in the very beginning....and when available, the second. How flawed was he .....


message 69: by Anna (new)

Anna (aetm) | 228 comments The flaws in the detectives' characters are interesting I think. No flaws = boring. Drinking but smart = interesting. Other flaws - please find me some that make them still interesting...
Of the other flaws... hmm, Montalbano is sort of a loner and against them all; that works. Adamsberg (reading Have Mercy on Us All by Fred Vargas now - fabulous characters) just seems cutely flawed in so many ways... now would we have anyone like Adamsberg in the Nordic cop characters?
Yet I have not found a female detective/cop with flaws that I'd like. Either it's a Stephanie Plum or then it's some bridgetjonesy thing like in Yrsa Sigurdardottir's series, or in so many Swedish ones of which I forget the names (Åsa Larsson? Kjell something-or-other etc).


message 70: by Ken, Moderator (U.S.A.) (new)

Ken Fredette (klfredette) | 6967 comments Mod
I've run into two sisters that have a new kind of hero - heroine in the mix it's two female psychologists, the sisters are from Sweden. I'm drawn toward them because of what I use to do, worked with female cutters. Camilla Grebe & Åsa Träff wrote Some Kind of Peace: A Novel Can't wait for the next book.


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