Women detectives -- Fiction. |
Missing persons -- Investigation -- Fiction. |
Humorous fiction. |
Mystery fiction. |
Female detectives |
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Summary
Summary
A gripping and timely novel that follows Sigrid--the dry-witted detective from Derek B. Miller's best-selling debut Norwegian by Night--from Oslo to the United States on a quest to find her missing brother.
She knew it was a weird place. She'd heard the stories, seen the movies, read the books. But now police Chief Inspector Sigrid Ødegård has to leave her native Norway and actually go there; to that land across the Atlantic where her missing brother is implicated in the mysterious death of a prominent African American academic--America.
Sigrid is plunged into a United States where race and identity, politics and promise, reverberate in every aspect of daily life. Working with--or, if necessary, against--the police, she must negotiate the local political minefields and navigate the backwoods of the Adirondacks to uncover the truth before events escalate further.
Refreshingly funny, slyly perceptive, American by Day is "a superb novel on all levels" (Times, UK).
"Ingenious. Humorous. Wonderful."--Lee Child
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
In the summer of 2008, 40-ish Chief Insp. Sigrid Odegård, the heroine of this outstanding crime novel from Miller (Norwegian by Night), travels from Oslo to upstate New York to look for her missing brother, Marcus. Marcus is the prime suspect in the murder of his African-American lover, Syracuse State University professor Lydia Jones, who was thrown out of the window of a building that Marcus was seen entering shortly before. Damning evidence includes traces of skin under Lydia's fingernails that match Marcus's DNA. A specialist in race relations, Lydia was tormented by the recent death of her nephew, shot by a white policeman. Sigrid soon joins forces with Sheriff Irving Wylie, a former biblical scholar with a deceptively aw-shucks manner. Wylie is quick to rebut her laconic Norse insights on such matters as American individualism and police methodology. Leavened throughout with Miller's wry reflections on Norway's "chronic sense of discontentment," this incandescent exposé of European and American mores profoundly entertains and provokes disturbing questions about personal and societal values. Agent: Rebecca Carter, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (U.K.). (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
*Starred Review* The plot starts out simply enough. Oslo Chief Inspector Sigrid Ødegård, exonerated after killing a man in a hostage-taking incident, takes time off to visit her widowed father. But her father has other plans for her and sends Sigrid to America to find her missing older brother, Marcus, whose last letter to his father was disturbing. In upstate New York, where Marcus is an adjunct professor, Sigrid encounters Sheriff Irving Wylie, an unlikely lawman with an MA in divinity studies, and learns that Marcus is a suspect in the death of his lover, African American professor Lydia Jones, who was bereft after her 12-year-old nephew was shot and killed by a white cop, who was later cleared of all charges. What lifts this well above average are the characters, notably Sigrid and Irv, and their relationship and discussions, ranging from the investigative process to the characteristics of their respective countries, as they determine to what extent they can work together to achieve their desired goals. Miller (Norwegian by Night, 2013) offers a slightly different spin on Scandinavia-set crime fiction, wrappinga thriller plot around the character-driven substance of literary fiction to produce a hybrid that is compelling from any angle.--Leber, Michele Copyright 2018 Booklist
Guardian Review
A supernatural element has long been present in John Connollys excellent Charlie Parker series. The 16th title, The Woman in the Woods (Hodder & Stoughton, £16.99), is no exception: evil takes many forms here, from the depressingly familiar men who abuse and kill women to a demonic figure brought into being for the sole purpose of finding the Fractured Atlas, a book that will change the world by replacing the Old God with the Not Gods. When a womans body is discovered in a forest in Maine, private eye Parker is tasked with finding the child she gave birth to shortly before her death. Meanwhile, in Cadillac, Indiana, malevolent Quayle and his aptly named and memorably revolting sidekick, Pallida Mors, with her mortuary-white skin and lifeless eyes, are on the trail of pregnant young Karis Lamb, who came to the town to find sanctuary from the devil himself. And in an isolated cabin, a small boy is receiving calls from a dead woman on his toy phone. Beautifully written, with a complex plot and a large cast of richly drawn characters, this is Connolly at his sinister best. As if the fate of the real Donner Party a grisly footnote in the American story of westward expansion were not bad enough, Alma Katsu adds a rich vein of horror to her imaginative retelling of the 1846 wagon journey across the continent to California. The Hunger (Bantam, £12.99) is astonishingly atmospheric, with a strong sense of claustrophobia, despite the vast prairies and mountains. The power struggles that break out among the travellers as they jettison unnecessary baggage and fight over dwindling food supplies harden into suspicion and loathing after a lost child is found dead and mutilated. It gradually becomes clear that, whatever cannibalistic shapeshifter may be lurking outside the circle of wagons, the real danger lies within the group itself. Despite carrying some unnecessary baggage of its own in the form of back stories that reveal what is already obvious, this is an enthralling and chilling read. The spectral presences in Julia Haeberlins Paper Ghosts (Penguin, £12.99) arent phantoms, but missing girls. When Rachel was 19, she disappeared from her Texas hometown as though a lasso dropped from the clouds and snatched her up, and her younger sister, the unnamed narrator, has spent half her life trying to find her. The culprit, she thinks, is 61-year-old photographer Carl Louis Feldman, who was tried but not convicted of another girls murder and whose work links him to several crime scenes. He claims to have no memory of the past, but the young woman springs him from a halfway house for dementia patients and takes him on a road trip across the county, convinced that revisiting the locations of his eerie photos will unlock his secrets. The conclusion may prove a damp squib, but strong characterisation, haunting images, a wonderful sense of place and some dark comedy make this travelogue-cum-psychological thriller well worth the read. Derek B Millers first novel, Norwegian by Night, was the story of a New Yorker transplanted to Oslo. American by Day (Doubleday, £16.99) is a reverse culture clash, with Norwegian detective Sigrid Ødegaard travelling to upstate New York to find her missing brother, Marcus, who is suspected of killing his African American lover, prominent academic Lydia Jones (those wishing to avoid spoilers relating to the debut novel, in which Sigrid plays a part, may want to read that first). The local police seem convinced that Marcus is guilty, and Sigrid is perturbed by the prevailing gun culture, and especially by the killing of Lydias 12-year-old nephew by a white police officer. Working with and sometimes against the down-home, folksy sheriff, and using a variety of unorthodox methods, she sets out to track down Marcus. Engaging characters, a cracking plot and some interesting insights into the differences between the values of the two cultures more than compensate for Millers occasional outbreaks of didacticism. Four years ago, in Darkness, Darkness, John Harvey gave us the swan song of veteran copper Charlie Resnick, and now, in Body & Soul (Heinemann, £14.99), its the turn of his other series detective, Frank Elder. Frank is disconcerted when his estranged daughter turns up at his Cornish hideaway, traumatised but truculent and with bandaged wrists. He still feels guilty for his failure to prevent her abduction and rape as a teenager by a man named Adam Keach, and in the intervening years the two have lost touch, with Katherine drifting through temporary jobs in London. When Frank tries to question her, she catches the train back home. He follows, and discovers that shes been modelling for, and having a relationship with, controversial artist Anthony Winter. Shortly afterwards, Winter is found bludgeoned to death in his studio, and Katherine is the prime suspect. Franks instinct is to protect her, but theres little he can do and then he discovers that Keach has escaped from prison Written in an economical style, this is an expertly plotted and moving final act for an old-school investigator of the best sort, from a true master of the genre. - Laura Wilson.
Kirkus Review
Seasoned Norwegian cop Sigrid degrd travels to upstate New York to find her missing older brother, Marcus, a troubled soul suspected of pushing his African-American girlfriend, Lydia Jones, to her death.Sigrid teams up with Sheriff Irving Wylie, a folksy, quit-witted good guy with hip musical tastes to go with his master's in divinity, who's been looking for Marcus in relation to Lydia's death. Having recently shot to death a hostage-taker back in Norway, where such acts are rare, she is quickly indoctrinated to American gun cultureand heated racial politicsby a white cop's fatal shooting of Lydia's 12-year-old nephew. The boy was playing with a cap gun. An analytical type in whom Irving sees a "neo-Zen-pragmatism" (there's also a touch of Fargo's Marge Gunderson in her), Sigrid surprises with action moves seemingly learned from the American cop shows streaming back home. To prevent SWAT vehicles from following her to her brother, who she's sure is innocent of any crime, she treats them to a hail of Molotov cocktails. Miller, an American living in Oslo, can get didactic at times, but he more than makes up for that with his lively discussions of the sometimes-odd differences between American and Scandinavian cultures and his ability to blend lighthearted exchanges and dark drama. The bantering between cops is lifted by sure comedic timing. "It's hard to ignore the moose sitting on your waffle," says Sigrid. "What?" says Irving. "That might not translate," Sigrid says.Like his acclaimed debut, Norwegian by Night (2013), Miller's highly enjoyable new book is a solid mystery wrapped up in musings about individuality and freedom, grief and sadness. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
In Norwegian by Night, Norwegian police chief inspector Sigrid Odegård shoots a man while protecting herself from a perceived attack. He dies in her arms, a moment she's never been able to get past. If he'd only understood her warnings-he didn't speak Norwegian-would she have reacted so quickly? Now Sigrid is in America, looking for her estranged brother: he's missing after the suspicious death of the woman he loved, a professor of African American studies. Miller's latest novel is about redemption, both Sigrid's and her brother's. It's also about differences, how being young and black in America paints a target on your back and how difficult it is to get beyond color here even if one is trying to. Lastly, it's a novel about detection: Sigrid is a solid sleuth but so is the sheriff in upstate New York, whose contrarian ways irritate but also attract her. VERDICT If Tocqueville had written a police thriller, it might look something like this engrossing and wryly humorous but also deeply serious work. For fans of Miller and his previous works (e.g., The Girl in Green), which were deservedly acclaimed. [See Prepub Alert, 10/22/17.]-David Keymer, Cleveland © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.