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Sara Blædel

Author of The Forgotten Girls

37 Works 3,125 Members 137 Reviews 7 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Sara Blædel

The Forgotten Girls (2011) 724 copies
Call Me Princess (2005) 346 copies
The Killing Forest (2013) 299 copies
The Midnight Witness (2004) 239 copies
The Lost Woman (2014) 204 copies
Undertaker's Daughter (2016) 160 copies
The Running Girl (2009) 155 copies
The Stolen Angel (2010) 125 copies
Her Father's Secret (2017) 87 copies
A Harmless Lie (2019) 70 copies
The Third Sister (2018) 47 copies
Dissolved (2021) 21 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1964-08-06
Gender
female
Nationality
Denmark
Awards and honors
Bog & Idé-prisen (2007)

Members

Reviews

Well it was ok, not very heavy on the mystery, but maybe I was distracted by this description of Racine as a rundown small town on the prairie.
 
Flagged
Kiramke | 8 other reviews | Jan 12, 2024 |
A pretty good police procedural. I also thought it felt very authentic to how the Copenhagen police department might go about solving multiple crimes. If I have a complaint it’s that one of the murders wrapped up a little too easy but then again....I am sure that actually happens.
 
Flagged
cdaley | 4 other reviews | Nov 2, 2023 |
I received a copy of this novel from the publisher via NetGalley.

This did not start off well for me: junior detective Nassrin's first task in the book is updating intelligence about hundreds of people of 'Arab roots' in the area. It wasn't clear to me if this was because they were Arab, or because they also happened to be criminals, or if it was the position of the Danish police that all Arabs were likely to be criminals. Next Nassrin witnesses a woman being sexually assaulted, and steps in (so far, so good) only to take the perpetrator home to sober up, telling him he has been making a nuisance of himself.

I also struggled with the translation - presumably there is more work to be done before publication, since surely even spellcheck would have caught 'shined' for 'shone', but what on earth does 'a hippie pastor with spaghetti in her pockets' even mean? Also, the term 'residential school' has a specific meaning here in Canada. If the translator just meant boarding school, they should have said that.

As for the plot itself, I thought it was pretty good. The peril of the situation of the people who disappeared was well-described, and things moved along at a good pace. However, the female detectives spent the entire book squabbling with each other in a very immature fashion, which was tiresome, and I was left with a few unanswered questions at the end. Also, it was pretty obvious who the baddie was - apart from anything else there was no one else left to suspect after a certain point in the story.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
pgchuis | Jun 14, 2023 |
I enjoyed this latest entry in the Louise Rick series. Even though Louise is on leave from her police job, she becomes involved in a case involving her sister-in-law who is missing from her home. The case is extremely personal because Louise's brother is a suspect, and Louise can't be officially involved. Other personal issues complicate solving the case, but Louise and her journalist friend, Camilla, cooperate to locate two missing women and discover the connection to a historical case in the area.
Both women deal with the work/home conflict and family relationships and struggle with feelings of doubt about their parental decision-making.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
terran | 3 other reviews | Apr 12, 2023 |

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Statistics

Works
37
Members
3,125
Popularity
#8,179
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
137
ISBNs
358
Languages
15
Favorited
7

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