The Preacher (novel)

The Preacher (Swedish: Predikanten) is a 2004 psychological thriller by Camilla Läckberg, and translated into English by Steven T. Murray in 2009.

The Preacher
Camilla with her French translator
AuthorCamilla Läckberg
TranslatorSteven T. Murray (English)
SeriesPegasus Crime
SubjectPopular Fiction-Contemporary Thrillers
GenreCrime
Publication date
2004
Published in English
2009
Pages432
ISBN978-1-60598-173-4
Preceded byThe Ice Princess 
Followed byThe Stone Cutter 

A young child who discovers a female cadaver in the Swedish countryside starts a cataclysmic chain of events: When the police arrive, two skeletons are discovered underneath the woman's body. It is believed they are the remains of two female teens, Siv Lantin and Mona Thernblad, who vanished in 1979.[1] Clues point to the Hult family, comprising patriarch Gabriel, spouse Liane, and children Linda and Jacob, as well as Gabriel's estranged nephews Robert and Stefan and their mother, Solveig.[2] When another young girl goes missing, Patrik Hedström, a detective, finds himself pitted against dead ends plus literary conundrums in a race to save her life.[3] There is also Erica Falck's sister Anna, and her marriage problems, which form an internal theme.[4][5] Läckberg acquaints us at the outset with what at first might seem an unlikely Swedish import: a pair who feed off holiday-makers from the metropolis, the head of a clan, now overweight yet acerbic.[6] Patrik's task is hampered by a heat wave, Erika being with child (their first), and sycophantic relatives. Office machinations abound: a chief who likes getting all the kudos for cases just for himself; a resentful veteran cop who can't see that he's been kept back by his own slothfulness and ineptitude; and an otherwise dull colleague who defers to that veteran because of his higher rank. Patrik is smart and caring, but not always good. Faced with multiple sense impressions, he sometimes has trouble staying focused.[7]

Plot

Almost every subplot focuses on a parent-child relationship: central we have three generations of misogynist father/ son in which violations of young girls is almost enshrined; ramifications occur involving a parent/child relationship with a dysfunctional sliding scale.[8] The plot successfully exposes the pitfalls that can have deadly consequences when we take an end justifies the means approach. Erica, the central character of The Ice Princess, becomes more of an adjunct, very much intimidated by her pregnancy, finding dealing with guests or unraveling the crime daunting. Instead it's down to Patrick and his trusty sidekick, Martin.[9] As Patrick pursues ancient leads, his sixth sense tells him the Hults have something to do with these ugly murders. Their grandfather, titled The Preacher, moved into the community when one of his acolytes, died leaving both land and property for him to disperse.[7] Soon it is found out the Hults have more dark secrets than can be realized.[10] Which of this family's skeletons will decide this is a perfect time to exit the closet?[11]

gollark: Also, it spreads through... breathing, as well as surfaces, so...
gollark: And apparently may have *some* effect in reducing how likely you are to get it.
gollark: Also, the "disaster is inevitable" thing seems... wrong. I think if stuff is handled correctly humanity can weather the problems we currently are and are going to experience and, er, do well. Problem is that there are lots of ways to do things very wrong.
gollark: *Probably* still better than before cities and stuff. Diseases spread anyway then, but less so, and we can actually treat them and have hygiene and sanitation now.
gollark: Still, I think on the whole we're better off disease-wise than the people of, say, 400 years ago.

References

  1. Klausner, Harriet (2012-01-30). "The Mystery Gazette: The Preacher-Camilla Lackberg". Themysterygazette.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  2. "The Preacher book by Camilla Lackberg buy and read review - Lovereading UK". Lovereading.co.uk. 2011-03-01. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  3. "The Preacher: Camilla Lackberg: Amazon.com: Books". Amazon.com. 2008-01-01. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  4. "Reviews of The Preacher by Camilla Lackberg - Timeless Books & Ravens Parlour". Timelessbooks.com.au. Archived from the original on 2014-08-09. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  5. "IT'S A CRIME! (OR A MYSTERY...): The Preacher - Camilla Läckberg". Itsacrime.typepad.com. 2009-05-06. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  6. Tursten, Helene (2011-05-15). "THE PREACHER by Camilla Läckberg | Kirkus". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  7. Drabelle, Dennis (2011-06-12). "Book review: 'The Preacher' by Camilla Lackberg". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  8. Peters, Lisa (2012-02-07). "Book Him Danno!: Book Review - The Preacher - Camilla Lackberg". Bookhimdanno.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  9. "The Preacher (Camilla Läckberg)". markwollacott.com. 2012-02-05. Archived from the original on 2012-07-20. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  10. "Blackwater, Kerstin Ekman, The Preacher, Camilla Lackberg,The Shadow in the Water, Inger Frimansson,Asa Larsson, Sun Storm, The Savage Altar,Erik Winter | Swedish Crime writer, book reviews, mysteries". Scandinavianbooks.com. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.