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He Who Fears the Wolf: An Inspector Sejer Mystery (Inspector Sejer Mysteries)
 
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He Who Fears the Wolf: An Inspector Sejer Mystery (Inspector Sejer Mysteries) [Audiobook] [Audio Cassette]

Karin Fossum , David Rintoul
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Audio Cassette
  • Publisher: Sound Library; Unabridged edition (July 2005)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0792736974
  • ISBN-13: 978-0792736974
  • Product Dimensions: 22.1 x 12.4 x 3.3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Karin Fossum
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Product Description

Review

"Fossum's highly atmospheric and involving books are among the best being produced in the crime genre today."
--Barry Forshaw, "Crime Time" --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Book Description

'As yet, the crime novels of Karin Fossum are something of a well-kept secret, known to a growing band of aficionados but not to the larger crime readership. In fact, Fossum's highly atmospheric and involving books are among the best being produced in the genre today. Don't Look Back was a psychological thriller that was both economical and forceful, and He Who fears the Wolf is an even more persuasive piece of writing. Like the best of Ruth Rendell, this is a dark and unsettling novel...' Barry Forshaw, Crime Time --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 21 people found the following review helpful
By RachelWalker TOP 1000 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Fossum comes from an impressive backlist of Scandinavian writers, all of whom have won the Glass Key Award for Best Scandinavian crime novel. She's in the company of Peter Hoeg, Henning Mankell and Arnaldur Indridason, to give you just three. If you were asked to name any one place in the world that's, crime-fiction wise, in the ascendant, Scandinavia would, without a doubt, qualify.

He Who Fears the Wolf is the second novel in translation; I've no idea where in the series it comes, as so little information about that has filtered into English. One suspects it might not matter - both books I've so far read have been complete within themselves. Possibly, we are missing development of Inspector Konrad Sejer, but I'm not sure that matters: he's pretty much an archetype, which could be considered either a good thing or a bad. On the one hand, we've met his like before (there are definite touches of Rendell's Wexford about him, as well as P.D. James's Dalgleish, and other of the more genteel elder detectives) and so know pretty much what we're in for, but, on the other hand, we've met his like before, and so he's nothing hugely original. That doesn't really matter, though - after all, we've met the likes of Rebus and Bosch many times before as well, and yet all-too-willingly lap up more. What matters is how he's put in the story, and the story itself.

One morning, an old woman is murdered outside her cottage in the woods. A young boy finds her, and rushes to the police station, where he also reports seeing the neighbourhood loon lurking around among the trees. That same morning, a young man robs a bank. Panicked when escaping, he snatches a hostage, who so happens to have just escaped from a mental institution.

Somewhat implausible, possibly, but the way Fossum handles it, and the way the one investigation begins to pale when faced with the great urgency of the other, is very well done indeed. Too, Fossum shows a marked ability at getting beneath the skin of her characters, the result being that each scenario is charged with the bizarre psychology of the pivotal characters. This ability for psychological insight is another factor which gives these books hints of Ruth Rendell. As gentle elders, Sejer and Wexford share a lot, and fans of Rendell's series will without question find a lot to admire here.

Fossum's writing has a soft clarity to it, and occasional streaks of poetry. I've seen these books criticised for being too pedestrian as mysteries, but I really can't see it. True, despite it's psychological depth and surprising turns, the tone's as soft and gentle as cotton, which is why it's so powerful. Because occasional peaks of brutality lance out of it, as sharp a contrast as blood on fresh snow. Horrifying touches crash out of the blue and drop your jaw (for those in the know: consider the story of Errki's mother). The overall effect is of not only a sucessful (and atmospheric, may I add!) crime novel, but a great thriller as well. Karin Fossum is another import from Europe that I've been all too happy to add to my "must read" pile.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By Mary Whipple HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
JFrom the dramatic opening paragraphs, in which a person believes that his face is sliding off and his insides are falling out, Fossum captures the bizarre inner worlds of several characters barely holding onto their sanity. Errki Johrma, a 24-year-old who has been committed to a residential lockup for the disturbed, escapes the residence in rural Norway and seeks solitude in the woods. There he sees an elderly woman, Halldis Horn, working outside her cabin.

Suddenly the point of view shifts, and a 12-year-old boy, Kannick Snellingen, runs into the police station saying that Halldis is dead, with a hoe embedded in her face, and that he has seen Errki lurking nearby. Kannick, like Errki, is also disturbed, living in a home for children with behavioral problems. A sudden shift to the next morning, and Detective Inspector Konrad Sejer, after noting a strange person entering the bank, soon hears a gunshot and learns that it has been robbed and a hostage taken--Errki.

The intersecting worlds of Errki, the robber (known as Morgan), Kannick Snellingen, and Inspector Sejer and his assistant, Jacob Scarre, create a fascinating series of psychological portraits and interactions. Morgan and Errki, hiding out together in an abandoned cabin, try to avoid the police and stay alive, remaining wary of each other but starting to communicate about the voices Errki hears from The Coat and a spirit named Nestor. Kannick, who wants to become a national archery champ, wallows in the attention he gets from his peers at the home, describing the gory condition of Halldis's body in exchange for candy. At the same time, Sejer, a widower for eleven years, confers with Errki's psychiatrist in order to understand Errki more fully, and finds himself powerfully drawn to her as he tries to solve Halldis's murder and the robbery of the bank by apprehending Errki and Morgan.

Developing the story in clean, straightforward prose, Fossum reveals the disturbing thoughts of Errki, Morgan, and Kannick, along with their traumatic backgrounds, stories which need no additional melodrama. As the reader comes to know the characters and feel empathy for them, she creates fine dramatic tension and a suspense-filled story in which nothing is as it appears to be. Occasionally, the ironies are leavened with dark humor. A climactic meeting involving all the major characters leads to a full resolution and, ultimately, a greater understanding of the characters' interior worlds. Fascinating, well-drawn, and concise, this novel, the second in the Inspector Sejer series, is a psychological mystery of the first order, filled with intriguing characters and unusual plot twists. Mary Whipple

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Tightly plotted 1 Mar 2009
Format:Paperback
This is the second Karin Fossum book I've read. She's very good at taking plots in a different direction from what you expect. I often find tightly plotted books a bit tiresome, as character can be sacrificed to coincidence, but this is terrific: the characters are all convincing, even the stranger ones, and when they bump into each other one is surprised and gripped, not unconvinced.

I thought I was going to find this too unpleasant to read at the beginning, and I nearly gave up, but I'm very glad I didn't. I genuinely didn't guess what was going to happen at the end - any of it - and the balance between tension and normality is very well maintained. I think it would make a very good film and after you've finished it you can wean yourself away from it by casting the main roles.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
`He who fears the wolf shouldn't go into the forest.'
Chief Inspector Konrad Sejer and his team are called into investigate the murder of Halldis Horn, an elderly woman who lives alone in the woods near a small village. Read more
Published 9 months ago by J. Cameron-Smith
Another winner for Karin Fossum!
The first victim in this tale is Halldis Horn, an elderly woman who has been horrifically murdered for no apparent reason. Read more
Published 10 months ago by Caz Mysteries
he who fears the wolf
As usual compulsive reading from Karin Fossum - excellent portrayal of psychology of social misfits and how they are seen from the outside. Read more
Published on 20 Feb 2010 by Mrs. H. A. Dickinson
An unusual combination of damaged people
This is a story of a roller-coaster journey when three disfunctional people who are thrown together by chance. Read more
Published on 24 Sep 2007 by Bluebell
Deep in the middle of the dark, dark woods...
...there lived a buxom woman in her third bloom of life.

Halldis Horn (for that was her name) was an independent woman, who lived alone after the death of her husband, quietly... Read more

Published on 11 Dec 2005 by Amanda Richards
A little bit too much like Nicci French
Errki Johrma is crazy, very crazy: he hears voices, is practically unreachable for normal people and bites when he feels threatened. Read more
Published on 14 Oct 2005 by Linda Oskam
A good psychological thriller
In Mrs Fossum's psychological thriller, the main character is a schizophrenic man of 24 called Errki Johrma. Read more
Published on 22 Jun 2005 by HORAK
Solid, but Too Many Coincidences
The latest Inspector Sejer novel to appear in English is just as suspenseful and moody as Don't Look Back, and yet isn't as strong. Read more
Published on 24 Jan 2005 by A. Ross
Good psychological thriller but lacks suspense
This is a cross between a police procedural and a psychological thriller, with more emphasis on the latter. Read more
Published on 22 July 2004 by A. Butterfield
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