Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Die Schattenfrau: Der zweite Fall für Erik Winter (Ein Erik-Winter-Krimi, Band 2) (original 1998; edition 2002)by Ake Edwardson (Author)
Work InformationThe Shadow Woman by Åke Edwardson (1998)
None Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Working with a similar narrative pattern, this second book in the series is even more successful in showing how police work relies on endless hours of tedious detail-searching that can stretch on for months, come to a complete stand-still and then, through a new series of events starts up again, triggered by the occasional intuition that most likely is just the way all these details form a different image. Quite fascinating and exhausting to read. Die Leiche einer Frau ohne Namen. Spuren, die alle ins Nichts zu weisen scheinen. Die aufgeladene Atmosphäre eines heißen schwedischen Sommers. Und ein verängstigtes Mädchen, das sich in dem Versteck, in dem es festgehalten wird, nach seiner Mutter sehnt. Kommissar Winter, dessen Vorliebe für guten Jazz und elegante Anzüge sich in Göteborg herumgesprochen hat, setzt sein ganzes psychologisches Feingefühl ein, um den Mörder - und das Mädchen - zu finden. Book # 2, in Inspector Erik Winter series and book #5 in the English version The order in which this series is translated in English is quite bizarre but don’t let this concern you this is a decent police procedural, intricately constructed and stuffed with details of crime investigations (way too much in my books). Most of all, this mystery stands on its own, no worries if you start here. In a prose that is bleak, Mr. Edwardson takes as its backdrop the Biker War in Sweden in the mid-1990 however he only mentions this in the opening pages. As the tradition imposes the story opens with the discovery of a woman’s body and the following pages are taken up with Winter and his colleagues investigation into her identity and solving the murder. Their efforts are slow, excruciating slow, minutia details, pages after pages of boring discussions, interrogations, etc.…. As the story plods along there are talks about illegal immigrants, relations between Swedes and Danes and some personal anecdotes. We need persistence to be rewarded. Mr. Edwardson does come through in his own time but far too late for my enjoyment. With its stilted dialogue, choppy narrative, plot twists that are hard to follow and a story without charismatic characters, I would describe “The Shadow Woman” as a lackluster installment to this series and by far not my preferred. Having said this, I will nevertheless see what “Sail of Stone” has in store for me….one day… no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesErik Winter (2)
The second installment of the internationally best selling Erik Winter series It's August and the annual Gothenburg Party is in full swing. But this year the bacchanalian blowout is simmering with ethnic discord spurred by nativist gangs. When a woman is found murdered in the park-her identity as inscrutable as the blood-red symbol on the tree above her body-Winter's search for her missing child leads him from sleek McMansions to the Gothenburg fringes, where "northern suburbs" is code for "outsider" and the past is inescapable-even for Sweden's youngest chief inspector. Psychologically gripping and socially astute, The Shadow Woman puts this master of Swedish noir on track to build an American audience on par with his international fame. No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)839.73Literature German literature and literatures of related languages Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fictionLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
This book has been published in English as The Shadow Woman.
The case is interesting enough: A young woman is found murdered on the shore of a lake in Göteborg, and there is no clue about who she is. Erik Winter, a wealthy investigator in his late thirties, is drawn into the case immediately and does his best to find out who the woman was, but it is proving to be very difficult. The stakes are even higher because the autopsy shows that the woman has given birth, so somewhere there might be a child in grave danger.
So yes, the premise is intriguing, but after a while the story just dragged on and on and I just hoped that something would happen. Moreover, I don't mind reading about the private lives of detectives, but in this novel it is too much, especially because it is equally depressing as the case. I know that this is nordic noir, but still, there must be something that creates a spark and that makes me want to read on. There are a few points where the plot does become more gripping, but as it evolves, it is taken over by
Having said that, I still somewhat like Erik Winter as a character, although I liked him much more in the first novel.
I will read the third book for three reasons: First, I enjoyed the first one immensely and am not ready yet to give up on this series. Second, my husband owns the third book as a physical copy and because of that I started reading this series, wishing to read it in order. Third, from that book onwards the series has been translated by another German translator who, according to the reviews, does a much better job and makes the books more readable, so I am curious about that.
If I don't like the third book considerably more than this one, I will abandon the series. ( )