Tangled Web UK Review October 2002
File Updated: 06/10/02

Buy at Amazon Price One Step Behind by Henning Mankell
pbk out September 02 (Harvill) at £10.99

One Step Behind is Mankell’s purest crime novel to date. Like the others published so far in the UK (with the exception of The Dogs of Riga which edged more into Le Carré territory), it’s a police procedural in classic mode: police detective, a killer, patient policework and so on. And at last we have three consecutive Wallander novels from Mankell (Side-tracked, The Fifth Woman and this one), and it is clearer how Mankell varies these classic ingredients from book to book.
As in the previous two books, from the outset we know that a brutal act of murder, three in this case, has taken place. The police, several steps behind at this point, are not aware that the killings have taken place. A missing person or two perhaps, but a postcard appears to indicate to anxious parents that their offspring are at large in Europe.
Wallander, early on narrowly escaping death in a traffic incident and feeling mysteriously fatigued, is as introspective as ever. Here however the introspection is more personal, the overt political elements (not to mention the international concerns) of previous novels largely absent. Wallander is selling his dead father’s house, discovering old photographs redolent of happier times, and reflecting on the breakdown of his relationship with Baiba, the Latvian woman he met in The Dogs of Riga. “Something’s got to happen” he thinks, something that will enable him “to start thinking about the future again.”
What happens is the unexpected (and in terms of story, unconventional) murder of Svedberg, a member of the team and a close colleague. The murder of a police officer, of course, takes precedence and the team sets off to determine his killer. But how close a colleague was Svedberg? How well did Wallander and Svedberg’s other colleagues really know him? How well indeed can we know anybody? It’s a theme that recurs throughout the book right up until the book’s final chilling moments.
Mankell brings the two investigative strands of the story together in masterly fashion. For a book of this length it is remarkable how pace and tension are maintained throughout the book. There are further murders, of course, but there is no apparent connection. Rather suspense is maintained through Mankell’s iron control over the structure of his story: unexpected plot developments (developments that point first in one direction then another), the constant team meetings to review the evidence, the pauses for personal rumination, the skilfully deployed episodes featuring an anonymous killer, sometimes highlighting errors in the police investigation.
Most of all there is Wallander himself, continually battling with the evidence and trying to make the pieces fit, his energy flagging as he tries to cope with the early symptoms of yes, diabetes, on edge through lack of sleep and untypically snapping at his colleagues.
Finally, in a moving epilogue, we see Wallander struggling to make some sense of the case, drawing the wider social parallels that have so far eluded him, and seeking solace in human contact. It’s a poignant sequence that reveals just why this character has proved so popular across Europe. In spite of a translation that seems more utilitarian than usual (particularly in the dialogue), highly recommended.
Bob Cornwell interviews Henning Mankell



( Bob Cornwell )
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