Tangled Web UK Review November 2004
File Updated: 15/04/2005

Buy at Amazon Price Before the Frost Before the Frost by Henning Mankell
pbk out April 05 (Vintage) at £6.99

We first came across Linda, Inspector Kurt Wallander's daughter, in Faceless Killers, the first Mankell crime novel. Though Linda is little more than a distant voice on a phone, that voice is enough for her father to recall her 'defiant beauty' and her troubled history, in particular her suicide attempt at age 15. It's not surprising then, as Linda, now 30, having survived police college, prepares to join her father's force in Ystad, that the relationship between fathers and daughters is at the centre of Before the Frost. And not only that between Linda and her father, but that of Linda's friend, the 'vulnerable...secretive' Anna Westin and her father, who abandoned her as a five year-old child. And there it is, summed up in the following exchange as Linda and her father warily circle each other early in the book, both contemplating yet another dripping Swedish afternoon. "It's Noah and the flood all over again," he said. "I don't remember rain like this since I was a child." replies Linda, "it rained a lot when I was young." There is a tension throughout the early pages of this novel which perfectly complements the tension of the story as, against a background of some vicious attacks on birds and animals, a woman is reported missing. Anna, meanwhile, confides to Linda that she has recently seen a man resembling her long-lost father. Shortly after, Anna too goes missing from her flat. Preoccupied with his investigations, Linda's father dismisses her fears. So it is Linda who discovers a possible link to her absent friend when she finds the missing woman's name in a diary kept by Anna... This is the first of perhaps three novels where Linda, as her father approaches retirement, will play a leading role. She proves to be no less an interesting character than her father, with some of the same traits, and throwing new light on both her father and her own childhood. She also brings her own unique perspective to the investigation. And nor does Mankell ignore his usual broader themes, this time rooted in the fugitive who, in the opening pages, escapes from the mass suicides that took place at the charismatic Jim Jones's People's Temple in Guyana back in 1978. But it is frustrating that the conventions of the crime novel (which ones will become clear as you read the book) only allow Mankell to explore the relationship of Anna and her father in a limited way. Nevertheless it's another utterly gripping piece of work, fascinating on several levels, with a climax that, as George Bush is elected for a second term, brings both story and theme together in grim relevance.


( Bob Cornwell )

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