The Night Man by Jorn Lier Horst


The Night Man by Jorn Lier Horst
Publisher: Penguin Books
Genre: Contemporary, Mystery/Suspense/Thriller
Rating: 3 Stars
Reviewed by Fern

Gruesome happenings in the quiet town of Larvik. Only one man is capable of solving Chief Inspector William Wisting.

Before long, more bodies are found. Media frenzy sweeps the locals into panic. And when Wisting’s investigation leads him to a deadly underground crime ring, he fears the whole town may be in danger.

But at the heart of it is the gang’s elusive The Night Man. Who Wisting must find if he wants to stop the murders.

That is, if The Night Man doesn’t get to him first . . .

Two bodies are found in a distressingly gruesome manner in the small, quiet township of Larvik, Norway. William Wisting and his police team immediately investigate the shocking murders, but when that leads them to a highly organized crime ring Wisting fears for his small town, and in particular his journalist daughter.

I have been a great fan of this William Wisting series, the first ever Scandinavian Noir series I found many years ago and it has always been a great annoyance to me that the English translations only began at the sixth book. So, when I recently found that the fifth book had been translated, I quickly scooped it up. Even knowing this book was actually written before every other novel in the series which I had read, I still found myself greatly enjoying this earlier story and I sincerely hope the first four are soon also translated.

Even though this book was originally written back in 2009 I really feel like it has held up remarkably well. It didn’t feel dated to me and indeed many of the core elements to this police procedural plotline – trafficking, drugs, local crime that is made harder and more brutal by larger gangs and even international elements – all is still very much in the forefront nowadays as well. I really feel this book is equally relevant now than when it was published nearly fifteen years ago.

In many other respects this is a well written, but very normal type of police procedural story. I did enjoy William Wisting’s character as always and I equally enjoyed the strong storylines – almost a second plotline – as his adult daughter, Line, followed the same murder inquiry but from a journalistic perspective. The way the two definitely fed each other information while trying to keep their professional boundaries and not cross any lines was quite emotional and very well balanced, I felt.

With some strong secondary characters and a very interesting, and still strongly relevant, plotline this was a good book.

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