Amazon.com Review
After Martin Molberg's girlfriend is murdered, he stumbles upon evidence of her double life, items that include a photograph of her having sex with a strange man and papers revealing a covert bank account. As he simultaneously drowns his sorrows in pharmaceutical cocktails and attempts to learn her true identity, Martin uncovers an industrial espionage ring involving high-tech computers and high-definition TV. The dark side of digital society is revealed as Martin discovers how easily images can be manipulated to create the seamless appearance of dual realities.
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From Publishers Weekly
A bestseller in Denmark and Germany, this bleak Danish thriller lives up to its title right from page one, by offering the point of view of an unreliable narrator who washes down Dexedrine, Thorazine and other drugs with straight shots of whiskey. Cynical, mistrustful, technology-hating Martin Molberg, a Copenhagen newspaper reporter, is suspected by the police of having murdered his girlfriend, SAS flight attendant Monique Milazar. Martin, who's both innocent of the crime and in therapy for a "minor nervous breakdown," begins his own search for the killer of the woman he loved. He has two clues: a piece of paper, found among Monique's effects, that lists a man's name and a room number at a swank L.A. hotel; and a picture of Monique having sex with a man in that room. Traveling to L.A., Martin meets another beautiful SAS flight attendant, Natasha Noiret, whom he believes may be using the same hotel room in which the photograph placed Monique. But matters aren't necessarily as they appear, and nothing and no one can be trusted in Larsen's illusion-filled world. At last, Molberg discovers the conspiracy behind his girlfriend's death, only to find himself trapped in a nightmare world infused with a cold and twisted spirit. Despite snappy translation and intense debate over the merits and drawbacks of technological progress, it's the metallic taste of paranoia that readers will carry away from Larsen's effective, vaguely repellent tale. 35,000 first printing; foreign rights sold in Brazil, England, Finland, France, Greece, Holland, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Norway, Poland, Spain and Sweden; translation rights: Samleren Forlag.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.