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Unseen
Unseen
Oct 22, 2024 1:47 PM

Author:Mari Jungstedt

Unseen

'There is an icy, dispassionate grip to Jungstedt's writing that recalls Henning Mankell' Metro

The first body they found was the dog. The poor creature's throat has been cut, and one paw severed completely. Then they found the body of the woman. She had been stabbed, again and again; she was naked, a piece of cloth had been stuffed into her mouth.

The picturesque holiday island of Gotland is in the middle of a busy tourist season when the young woman is discovered murdered. Suspicion falls on her husband - the couple had been seen fighting the evening before. Inspector Anders Knutas is hoping it will be a straight-forward case; the local authorities are hoping so too, but more out of an interest in protecting the tourist trade than any desire to see justice served. Then another victim is discovered, again she is a young woman and she has been murdered in the same chilling manner. Inspector Knutas must face up to the horrifying prospect that there is a serial killer loose on the island.

Knutas, aided by investigative journalist Johan Berg, begins to piece together the tragic history that unites the two victims, and alarmingly points to more murders to come. The killer remains unknown, moving freely, unseen, on the island. All that is clear is that the two victims are just the beginning, unless Knutas and Berg find the killer before he strikes again.

Reviews

Just when I thought that the flow of impressive crime writers from the Nordic countries was slowing down, up pops another. Unseen is the Swede Mari Jungstedt's first novel, but it doesn't feel like it. She is in total control of plot and pace, conveys chilling atmosphere and her characters are well above average for believability.

—— Marcel Berlins , The Times

There is an icy dispassionate grip to Jungstedt's writing that recalls Henning Mankell.

—— Metro

John Harvey's Resnick novels are far and away the finest British police procedurals yet written

—— GQ

A rip-roaring entertainment - tongue in cheek and sword in hand

—— Mail on Sunday

Gene Kerrigan is a great writer

—— Roddy Doyle

Exhilarating... Pacy, suspenseful... Opens with a bang

—— Sunday Times

His style is taught and his dialogue pings and fizzes. I just have one question. When's the next instalment due?

—— Irish Times

Gene Kerrigan's writing is magnificent. It's graceful, tough, hardboiled and tender, razor-sharp and gritty as it is lyrical and truthful

—— Joseph O'Connor

One of the strongest stories of supernatural horror...the work bursts into life and does not flag until the end

—— Washington Post

Irresistibly dramatic... Susan Hill has done the genre real honour

—— Chicago Tribune

It is bursting with classic Gothic horror motifs and Susan Hill is a master of atmospheric descriptions. She evokes so cleverly the decrepit Eel Marsh House, the mention of its name enough to make the locals pause, their faces darken in unspoken wariness… The Woman in Black gives a thrilling sense of unease and provides just the right level of things that go bump in the night for a spine-tingling good read.

—— Khoollect

This spine-tingling novel… will certainly keep your nerves jangling

—— Woman's Weekly
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