Sensitive and shocking. Wall Street Journal In the end, the novel isnt about willful murder or even accidental death, but the psychological aftershocks for the living. New York Times Book Review Fossums descriptive prose is a reminder, for criminals and re
Sensitive and shocking. Wall Street Journal
In the end, the novel isnt about willful murder or even accidental death, but the psychological aftershocks for the living. New York Times Book Review
Fossums descriptive prose is a reminder, for criminals and readers alike, that the details that damn us are likely to be the ones that escaped us. Washington Post
Carmen and Nicolai found their son, Tommy, floating in their garden pond, but it was too late to save him. Inspector Skarre arrives on the scene, and Carmen says that Tommy, a healthy toddler with Down syndrome, was playing alone and drowned. But an autopsy reveals that Tommys lungs are full of soap, prompting Skarre and his trusted colleague Inspector Sejer to revisit the couple. When they return, Carmen, an epileptic, changes her story: she had a seizure while bathing Tommy, came to, and found him dead in the tub. Terrified, she threw him into the pond. But Skarre and Sejer are skeptical. What could Carmen be hiding? And what lengths will she take to cover her guilt?
[The Drowned Boy] will keep readers guessing. Grade: A. Cleveland Plain Dealer
Simple but gripping story, balanced, believable and compassionate. Guardian
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