It's a bit of an odd couple of weeks and I didn't have much to tell you ... but in the last couple of days, all that has changed! I have, after what has seemed a long time, finished The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest, by Stieg Larsson, which I read in print. What a long book, and, as I was reading the hardback edition, it was very tiring to hold this tome whist reading (score one to the Kindle on that front!). This is the last of the Millenium trilogy by the Swedish author who sadly died before he could experience the worldwide phenomenon of his works about a most unusual heroine - Lisbeth Salander. The action picks up exactly where the previous book ended - with Lisbeth mortally injured by her father (Zalachenko), and in custody! Gradually, as she recovers, she realises that she is only a few rooms away from her father, who she had struck with an axe (these books are not for the faint hearted!). There is great tension as we wait to discover whether he will be able to finish what he started ... but events take an unexpected turn with the intervention of The Section - a secret unit of the secret police, who definitely do not want their dirty laundry (in the form of Zalachenko) aired in public. So begins the framing of Lisbeth, and it seems she is destined to spend her days in an institution - but her estranged lover, Mikael Blomkvist, fights her corner and uses all his investigative journalistic know-how to persuade, cajole and harrass at least some of the authorities to uncover the truth. This is a fitting end to the trilogy, with unexpected twists and turns that keep you going right to the last page. There is a certain genius at work here to make you root for the two main protagonists who are both exceptionally flawed individuals - particularly Salander. If you can stomach fierce violence and sexually adventurous characters then you can't go wrong with these thrillers.
My star rating: FOUR.
The stats bit:
Length: 602 print pages.
Price I paid: £0.00 (borrowed from my husband)
Other formats available in: Audio CD abridged; Audio download unabridged; Ebook (Kindle)
I so agree .. top read! and the films - the Swedish versions - aren't too bad either ;)
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