About the book
Translated by David Warriner
THE STUNNING FINAL INSTALMENT OF THE MILLION-COPY BESTSELLING DARK ICELAND SERIES
'A world-class crime writer' Sunday Times
Ragnar Jnasson writes with a chilling, poetic beauty Peter James
Ragnar does claustrophobia beautifully Ann Cleeves
When the body of a nineteen-year-old girl is found on the main street of Siglufjr_ur, Police Inspector Ari Thr battles a violent Icelandic storm in an increasingly dangerous hunt for her killer The chilling, claustrophobic finale to the international bestselling Dark Iceland series.
Easter weekend is approaching, and snow is gently falling in Siglufjr_ur, the northernmost town in Iceland, as crowds of tourists arrive to visit the majestic ski slopes.
Ari Thr Arason is now a police inspector, but hes separated from his girlfriend, who lives in Sweden with their three-year-old son. A family reunion is planned for the holiday, but a violent blizzard is threatening and there is an unsettling chill in the air.
Three days before Easter, a nineteen-year-old local girl falls to her death from the balcony of a house on the main street. A perplexing entry in her diary suggests that this may not be an accident, and when an old man in a local nursing home writes She was murdered again and again on the wall of his room, there is every suggestion that something more sinister lies at the heart of her death
As the extreme weather closes in, cutting the power and access to Siglufjr_ur, Ari Thr must piece together the puzzle to reveal a horrible truth one that will leave no one unscathed.
Chilling, claustrophobic and disturbing, Winterkill marks the startling conclusion to the million-copy bestselling Dark Iceland series and cements Ragnar Jnasson as one of the most exciting authors in crime fiction.
Praise for Ragnar Jnasson
Nothing less than a landmark in modern crime fiction' The Times
'This is Icelandic noir of the highest order, with Jnasson's atmospheric sense of place, and his heroine's unerring humanity shining from every page' Daily Mail
Chilling, creepy, perceptive, almost unbearably tense' Ian Rankin
'This is such a tense, gripping read' Anthony Horowitz
'Fans of dark crime fiction that doesn't pull punches will be amply rewarded' Publishers Weekly
Traditional and beautifully finessed Independent
Jnassons true gift is for describing the daunting beauty of the fierce setting, lashed by blinding snowstorms that smother the village in a thick, white darkness that is strangely comforting New York Times