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The Cruel Stars of the Night: A Mystery (Ann Lindell Mysteries)
 
 
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The Cruel Stars of the Night: A Mystery (Ann Lindell Mysteries) [Bargain Price] [Paperback]

Kjell Eriksson (Author), Ebba Segerberg (Translator)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Ann Lindell Mysteries April 29, 2008

Winner of the Swedish crime Academy Award for Best Crime Novel, Kjell Eriksson received wide critical acclaim for his U.S. debut, the international bestseller The Princess of Burundi. Now, this spectacular follow-up thriller opens with the abrupt disappearance of an elderly professor, followed quickly by the suspicious deaths of two more old men. Inspector Ann Lindell instinctively knows that she is tracking a most cunning serial killer, and as she closes in on the demented murderer, a diabolical death trap awaits.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In Swedish author Eriksson's fine second ensemble procedural (after 2006's The Princess of Burundi), members of the Uppsala Violent Crime Division try to connect the dots linking the separate murders of two old men and the disappearance of a third. Eriksson eschews crackling dialogue and facile descriptions in favor of longer, slower developing profiles of the principal men and women of the police unit: Ann Lindell, Ola Haver, Sammy Nilsson, Allan Fredricksson and others. Their investigation proceeds in parallel with the story of Laura Hindersten, daughter of the missing man. Eriksson balances these stories nicely as the detectives reach for clues. Lindell, the single mother of a young boy, emerges as the most compelling investigator, but the others are also distinct individuals. The author's squad of detectives displays the kind of interdependency and fractious loyalty that endeared Ed McBain's 87th Precinct squad (Cop Hater, etc.) to fans for so many decades. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

This second procedural to appear in the U.S. from yet another Swedish crime fiction star follows in the substantial footsteps of the critically acclaimed Princess of Burundi (2006). This time Eriksson departs a bit from the Ed McBain-like ensemble focus used in the previous book; here the point of view stays mostly with police inspector Ann Lindell as she and her colleagues investigate the murders of three seemingly unrelated men in Uppsala. The connection, unclear to the police, is immediately apparent to the reader, as Eriksson alternates point of view between Lindell and a troubled woman, Laura, whose father has recently disappeared. Dramatic irony builds as we wait for Lindell to connect the dots. Once again Eriksson displays considerable finesse in portraying the inner lives of his cast and in showing how the various inspectors attempt to cope with the strains of the job. This time, though, the alternating focus on the civilian characters is less successful, with the detailed dissection of Laura's tangled psyche proving more distracting than compelling. Still, Eriksson is a major talent, and his feel for ensemble narrative will have McBain devotees enthralled. Bill Ott
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Minotaur Books (April 29, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 031236668X
  • ASIN: B002QGSWPQ
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.5 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,243,883 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good writing, excellent translation, May 25, 2010
This review is from: The Cruel Stars of the Night: A Mystery (Ann Lindell Mysteries) (Paperback)
When a book is translated into English from another language, often the transition can be easily seen. That happens when the translator can't quite get the tone of the original language, and thus makes the English version stilted. This book, howevber, has an excellent translator, and if you were unaware that it was originally written in Swedish, you would swear the author wrote in English.

This is the second book in the police procedural series about Ann Lindell, a female detective in the Swedish town of Uppsala. In this book, a series of seemingly random murders of elderly men takes place, and Lindell and her colleagues are attempting to find out what and why they happened, and to these men in particular. Initially it seems that they may be random killings, but as the story goes on it appears that there may be some reason, however odd, behind the murders.

As usual with this series, the writing is extremely well done, and the descriptive sentences flow easily across the page. We get to intermingle with Lindell and her associates on a somewhat intimate basis, and for a time it appears that the thread of the plot has been lost. That's not the case; it's just been under the surface, seething and getting ready to come alive again.

There is real danger to Lindell in this story, and the tension regarding her situation increases almost with every page near the end of the book. I found the ending a bit inconclusive, but it did not detract from the overall excellence of the book. I look forward eagerly to the next book in this series!
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A slow spiral of a mystery that pulls you in..., March 4, 2008
Petrus Blomgren had written a suicide note, but he was murdered before he could kill himself. The Uppsala Violent Crimes detectives begin looking for the killer. Soon there are two more similar murders of elderly men. Laura Hindersten reports her father missing. There appears to be nothing to link the victims together, there's little the police can do except to check and recheck every clue and every person they can find who knew the victims. The reader, as well as the various detectives, is left to try to fit the puzzle pieces together.

In some ways, this novel is frustrating with so many clues, so many detectives, so many victims, relatives, and interrelationships. But quickly, you become absorbed in the lives of the people involved. Laura Hindersten's father was a tyrant and now without him she's tasting freedom but years of repressed anger snaps out as we watch her spiral into insanity -- or so it seems. Stig Franklin, attracted to Laura, weighs the dangers of an affair against his bland relationship with Jessica. Ann Lindell accepts a date with another officer and begins to think perhaps the time has come to look beyond herself and her son. Each character is fully developed and while we may not get a chapter viewpoint into their life when they appear on the page it's obvious that they have a life off screen and this is just the intersection with the reader.

The tempo is slow and methodical throughout the investigation. The various threads circle and touch until they begin to weave through each other creating or adding to other threads that finally lead us to the solution. If you want pulse pounding action you get it in the last couple of chapters but otherwise it's a slow steady accumulation of people, snippets of lives affected by the death of a neighbor, a friend, or a family member. It's a book you can lose yourself in. The conclusion is satisfying -- the police identify the culprit but we don't tie up every end neatly and you're left wondering what happens to these people after you close the book and put it on the shelf.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Build slowly to WOW, July 19, 2007
By 
Laura Hindersten's professor father has gone missing and, while he may have just took off without telling her (though tyrannical, he is exceptionally eccentric), she is convinced something horrible has happened to him.

The members of the Uppsala Violent Crime Division are certain the professor - an expert on the Renaissance poet Petrarch - will turn up. But they are much more concerned with the murders of several elderly men in the region and how that may affect the upcoming visit by Queen Silvia, scheduled to arrive in a few days to open the new Academic Hospital.

Police Inspector Ann Lindell suspects there may be links between the murders and the missing professor, a hunch born out by evidence presented by the professor's colleague. As the body count and public anxiety increases, there's pressure on Inspector Lindell and the rest of the team to determine if the deaths are the work of a serial killer.

The Cruel Stars of the Night, the sequel to Kjell Eriksson's critically acclaimed debut, The Princess of Burundi, once again features the Uppsala Violent Crime Division and Police Inspector Ann Lindell.

Police procedurals are standard mystery fare, yet Eriksson takes this well-worn formula and crafts something extraordinary. His character-driven mysteries feature an ensemble "cast" and the personality and motivation of each member of the Uppsala Violent Crime Division is fleshed out in tandem with the details of the case. Eriksson's police men and women are very human, each with their own way of balancing work and home. Lindell, a single parent raising a young son, wonders if she is a "good" parent, while coping with loss and loneliness.

This is not an action-filled thriller. Eriksson lets the tension build slowly, playing out the psychological clues like an expert angler - ensuring his audience is hooked before ratcheting up the tension. Readers may be able to takes breaks from Eriksson's work in the early chapters; however, once the pieces begin to fall together, The Cruel Stars of the Night becomes impossible to put down.

Armchair Interviews agrees completely.
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First Sentence:
"Manfred OIsson." Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cruel stars, smoke divers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sammy Nilsson, Ann Lindell, Petrus Blomgren, Ulrik Hindersten, Ola Haver, Laura Hindersten, Jan-Elis Andersson, Kjell Eriksson, Charles Morgansson, Dorotea Svahn, Stig Franklin, Allan Fredriksson, Carl-Henrik Palmblad, Sivbritt Eriksson, Doctors Without Borders, Gusten Ander, Violent Crimes Division, Alice Hindersten, Arne Wiikman, Lovisa Sundberg, Miss Berg, Asa Lantz-Andersson, Beatrice Andersson, Botanical Garden, Föreningsspar Bank
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