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March 8, 2009 6:25 PM
BOOK REVIEW: Shadow by Karin Alvtegen
Karin Alvtegen is a Swedish crime writer with a string of one-word titles (Shame, Betrayal, Missing) to her name. Shadow was actually my first foray into crime fiction (particularly Swedish crime fiction!) so I wasn’t sure what to expect.
Would it all be down to the Muppet Chef in the kitchen with the meat cleaver?
Well, no.
The story starts in 1975, with a small boy abandoned on the steps of an amusement park with just one note to explain his presence: “Take care of this child. Forgive me.”
The action then skips forward to the present. A solitary old woman has died, leaving a social worker of sorts to piece together the old woman’s life story. It turns out that she was the family housekeeper of a Nobel prize-winning author.
As the social worker seeks to uncover the old woman’s history, she unwittingly unlocks a series of devastating family secrets.
Shadow has no main character but several major players whose histories interweave to tell the story. In less skilful hands this would just be a dry series of character biographies, but Alvtegen deftly weaves all the strands together to create a compelling study of human motivation.
Although this novel suffers a little of what I always find with translated fiction – the prose seems a little stilted, and I can never tell if that’s a deliberate storytelling device or an effect of the translation process – it did flow very well, and at times I forgot that it wasn’t originally written in English.
Alvtegen bravely delays the plot twists and conclusion to great effect – this is no cut-and-dried crime novel, and the journey through the characters’ motivations is as rewarding as the results of their decisions.
A great read.
Rating: 4/5
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Posted by Robyn Wilder on March 8, 2009 in Books, Crime / Mystery, Modern Fiction, Rating: 4/5 | Permalink












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