I just
finished Leif G. W. Persson's new mystery Linda, as in the Linda murder (Linda,
som i Lindamordet: 2013). It tells a story about Linda, a young police cadet being raped and strangled in her mother's
apartment. The cop-killing followed by two subsequent attempted and actual rapes led National Crime Center to believe that it was a true terrorist attack, so two teams were sent to assist the local police in Vaxjo located in Smaland,
a particularly religious part of Sweden.
The first team led by Evert
Backstrom relied heavily on modern technologies. It gathered hundreds of un-matching DNA samples until a lucky break came. Quietly on his own, a team member used conventional detective method to conduct indepth interviews to locate a real murderer. On the same day when the first
team arrested the murderer the relief team led by Anna Holt arrived.
The
story seems to tell us that there are always more approaches to deal with a
problem. Usually the more complicated approach is not the right one. Meanwhile
there are traditional and technological methods. More often than not, the
traditional method is still effective. Last but not least, there are always
conflicts between local and outside forces. But the one who does the real work
can be from either camp. Local knowledge is not a guarantee to solve a local crime.
I agree with the view that “LINDA, AS IN THE LINDA MURDER is witty and the dialogue is at
times devastatingly cruel. This is Scandinavian crime fiction at its very best
and it is appropriate that the dedication is 'to Maj Sjowall and Per
Wahloo - who did it better than almost anyone.' This novel reminded me of
my first discovery of the Martin Beck series with the not so subtle difference
that Backstrom is the anti-Beck, the classic anti-hero."
(http://www.eurocrime.co.uk/reviews/Linda_as_in_the_Linda_Murder.html)
No comments:
Post a Comment