Labouring under the perpetually draining heat of a stifling summer in Maardam, a jaded and typically morose Chief Inspector Van Veeteren is clearly in the autumn of his career and contemplating retirement more seriously than ever before. Approaching sixty and with thirty-five-years service in the bag the advertisement offering a potential partnership in Krantze's antiquarian bookshop and more time to enjoy the simple pleasures in life, which for introspective Van Veeteren include beer, playing chess, classical music and a cigarette, takes a firm hold. Thwarted in his desire for a peaceful summer sojourn at the family cottage by ex-wife, Renate, he books a fortnight in Crete with high hopes on the romance front. With two-weeks remaining before his holiday is due to begin avoiding responsibility for investigations which might run into his departure date is a must, hence a request for his expertise in the idyllic tranquility of the forests of Sorbinowo, reassuring the acting Chief of Police, sounds like the perfect start to his break. If only life was that simple... but it never is for Van Veeteren.
In the absence of his boss, stand-in Chief of Police in Sorbinowo is Merwin Klugge whose three-years service to date have amounted to little more than paper pushing and finds himself daunted by an anonymous caller reporting a disappearance of a girl from the summer camp that plays host to a religious sect by the name of the Pure Life at Waldingen. Enquiring and having his fears allayed Klugge thinks no more about the matter but consults Van Veeteren whose famous intuition leads him to assign a couple of days to running his eye over matters. Venturing out to the summer camp at Waldingen to take a closer look at just what is going on does nothing but incur the wrath of Van Veeteren when the long-haired and remarkably supercilious "priest" in the shape of Oscar Yellinek refuses to cooperate or even answer questions and refutes any claims of a girl being missing. Likewise, the three adult sisters who run the camp alongside Yellinek seem a similarly recalcitrant bunch, refusing to even confirm the names of the girls staying at the camp and Van Veeteren is faced with a wall of silence by the twelve teenage girls who make up the party with concerns over "betraying their faith".
Despite Van Veeteren's distaste for the Pure Life camp and his view that Yellinek is brainwashing the emotionally unstable girls who attend, the rumoured speaking in tongues, driving out of the Devil and sex rituals worries him more, but significantly none of that in and of itself amounts to a crime. However, Yellinek's previous brush with the law causes Van Veeteren to dig deeper into just what goes on at Waldingen. Chancing upon a friend of his chess partner's at the cinema, himself a journalist and learned gent by the name of Andrej Przebuda, Van Veeteren finds a man of enviable intelligence whose intention of reporting on the goings on at the camp the previous summer paints a keener picture of an unedifying setup with the cornerstone beliefs of "prayers, self-denial and purity" preached. More of a marathon than a sprint, this investigation sees Chief Inspector Van Veeteren descend on Sorbinowo before any crime has even been confirmed and with so little of substance to go, he is half minded to steer clear.. that is until Klugge's anonymous caller picks up the phone again out of frustration at the lack of police response and reports the exact location of a dead girl. Naked, placed against a tree trunk lies the body of Clarissa Heerenmacht, a girl of twelve raped and with her larynx crushed. Given that she is the self same girl that Van Veeteren spoke to just days earlier and the most outspoken of the group, how is he to interpret this if not an attempt to silence dissent?
Clearly not the first reported disappearance that the anonymous caller spoke of, Van Veeteren's intuition tells him that life in the Waldingen camp is not quite so idyllic as the Pure Life sect are eager to portray. Just as he starts to worry that there could be a previous girl missing, the "divine" leader Oscar Yellinek flees the camp before the police arrive, supposedly on a personal mission of mercy from the main man himself. With the three sister taken into isolation at a psychiatric hospital and the girls being supported by numerous psychologists, breaking through the wall of silence surrounding Yellinek proves an arduous endeavour. And even after the discovery of Clarissa's body there is still no proof linking the murder back to the Pure Life sect, leaving Van Veeteren with some serious thinking and a very short fuse.
Given the sensitivity in an age of political correctness where even venturing into an investigation of this nature is often cited as being nothing more than driven by groundless accusations and discrimination, Nesser draws this strand out astutely. Even Van Veeteren cannot help but compare how the psychologists and those assigned to looking after the minors act more like bodyguards and seem to work against the police interests of a thorough examination. Van Veeteren knows that the eyes of the media will be on the sensitive handling by the police and this certainly adds an urgency to just how much of strain the investigation proves to be. Nesser illustrates the frustrations that effectively handcuff the officers investigating and necessitates that they jump over hurdles alongside investigating. The discovery of a second girls body in a similar condition but evidently murdered prior to that of Clarissa Heerenmacht brings the full media circus to town and frustrated by the slow pace the angst of the investigating team is readily apparent and confirms a fear that the reported disappearance of ten days prior was accurate.
Some readers may find themselves frustrated by the length of time it takes for the investigation to come to a head and how difficult it is to prove a crime has been perpetrated in the hostile environment where speaking out is perpetuated by the myth of being a supposed betrayal of faith. Despite it slow-burning development this is a fine opportunity for Van Veeteren to showcase his analytical methods and to go about the case from different angles in order to tackle the root of the problem and when things aren't going well to trust his intuition. A brilliantly trivial detail holds the key to making the crucial breakthrough but faced with the two teenage girls brutally raped and strangled, can the legendary Van Veeteren really face another case of this nature?
I would not recommended The Inspector and Silence being read without some appreciation of what has gone before in the series as on balance readers could construe that Van Veeteren is an infernal moaner who doesn't really have too much to complain about. However, through the course of his prior outings regular readers will have picked up on his feelings of impotence and futility as a crime fighter seemingly resigned to awaiting the next impending fatality that winds up on his door. Increasingly despondent about his limited power in the grand scheme of thing perhaps it may well be time for the great man to ride off into the sunset or indeed an antiquarian bookshop! Another excellent instalment of a consistently high quality series.
Whatever the nature of the current investigation Nesser manages to mine a rich vein of dry humour throughout his narrative and despite unsettling events the character of Chief Inspector Van Veeteren manages to ruminate on his life and whatever else takes his fancy, something which ensures a quirky offbeat humour to spending time in his company. With Laurie Thompson being as familiar with the characters in play and the irascible Van Veeteren this superb translation brims with warmth.
Review written by Rachel Hall (@hallrachel)
Apologies for the length!!
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The Inspector and Silence: 5 Audio CD – Unabridged, 1 March 2015
by
Håkan Nesser
(Author),
Allan Corduner
(Reader),
Laurie Thompson
(Translator)
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In the heart of summer, the country swelters in a fug of heat. In the beautiful forested lake-town of Sorbinowo, Sergeant Merwin Kluuge's tranquil existence is shattered when he receives a phone-call from an anonymous woman. She tells him that a girl has gone missing from the summer camp of the mysterious The Pure Life, a religious sect buried deep in the woods. Chief Inspector Van Veeteren is recruited to help solve the mystery. But Van Veeteren's investigations at The Pure Life go nowhere fast. The strange priest-like figure who leads the sect – Oscar Yellineck – refuses even to admit anyone is missing. Things soon take a sinister turn, however, when a young girl's body is discovered in the woods, raped and strangled; and Yellineck himself disappears. Yet even in the face of these new horrors, the remaining members of the sect refuse to co-operate with Van Veeteren, remaining largely silent. As the body count rises, a media frenzy descends upon the town and the pressure to find the monster behind the murders weighs heavily on the investigative team. Finally Van Veeteren realises that to solve this disturbing case, faced with silence and with few clues to follow, he has only his intuition to rely on ...
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherBolinda/Macmillan audio
- Publication date1 March 2015
- Dimensions13.2 x 1.4 x 12.2 cm
- ISBN-101509801952
- ISBN-13978-1509801954
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Review
'A satisfying novel from a rising Swedish star.' -- The Guardian
'The novel is as much about his [Detective Van Veeteran] thought processes and private pleasures as it is about a murder enquiry. The result it wry, thought provoking and often surprisingly funny.' -- The Spectator
'Van Veeteran is a reluctant and sometimes cynical genius "destined", in the opinion of Morse's creator Colin Dexter, "for a place among the great European detectives".' -- London Review of Books
'The fashion for imported crime fiction is still booming with the Swede Håkan Nesser one of its most successful models.' -- Literary Review
'The novel is as much about his [Detective Van Veeteran] thought processes and private pleasures as it is about a murder enquiry. The result it wry, thought provoking and often surprisingly funny.' -- The Spectator
'Van Veeteran is a reluctant and sometimes cynical genius "destined", in the opinion of Morse's creator Colin Dexter, "for a place among the great European detectives".' -- London Review of Books
'The fashion for imported crime fiction is still booming with the Swede Håkan Nesser one of its most successful models.' -- Literary Review
Book Description
In this chilling case, Chief Inspector Van Veeteren has only his intuition to rely on ...
About the Author
Hakan Nesser is one of Sweden's most popular crime writers, receiving numerous awards for his novels featuring Inspector Van Veeteren, including the European Crime Fiction Star Award (Ripper Award) 2010/11, the Swedish Crime Writers Academy Prize (three times) and Scandinavia's Glass Key Award. The Van Veeteren series is published in over 25 countries and has sold over 5 million copies worldwide. Hakan Nesser lives in Uppsala with his wife and two sons, and spends part of each year in the UK.
Allan Corduner is a character actor who has worked extensively in theater (in London's West End and on Broadway), his numerous feature film credits include Daniel Deronda, Moonlight Mile, Topsy Turvy, Talk Radio, Yentl and The Imposters. He has also appeared in several BBC Radio 4 plays, including The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui and Insignificance.
Laurie Thompson (26 February 1938 – 8 June 2015) was a British academic and translator,[1] noted for his translations of Swedish literature into English.
Allan Corduner is a character actor who has worked extensively in theater (in London's West End and on Broadway), his numerous feature film credits include Daniel Deronda, Moonlight Mile, Topsy Turvy, Talk Radio, Yentl and The Imposters. He has also appeared in several BBC Radio 4 plays, including The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui and Insignificance.
Laurie Thompson (26 February 1938 – 8 June 2015) was a British academic and translator,[1] noted for his translations of Swedish literature into English.
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Product details
- Publisher : Bolinda/Macmillan audio; Unabridged edition (1 March 2015)
- Language : English
- ISBN-10 : 1509801952
- ISBN-13 : 978-1509801954
- Dimensions : 13.2 x 1.4 x 12.2 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 551,859 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 10,198 in Crime Action & Adventure
- 93,244 in Mysteries (Books)
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Read and Reviewed
4.0 out of 5 stars
Irascible Chief Inspector Van Veeteren finds himself deep in the forests of Sorbinowo & faced by a wall of silence. Excellent.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 4 June 2017Verified Purchase
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Steve M
4.0 out of 5 stars
Disturbing murder hunt
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 22 January 2017Verified Purchase
Many will find the subject matter dusturbing, as I did-tracking down the murder of teenage girls at a Summer camp of a Christian religious cult. Van Veeteren and colleagues spend days and weeks getting nowhere, despite the best efforts of our detective,s fearsome and successful thinking power. In the end, things slip into place after some magnificent deductions, but it still leaves Van Veeteren thinking it may be time to move on. An unusual mixture of description of the characters, set in a small town in Sweden.

Yorkshire Rose
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Hakan Nesser's best but still good
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 23 May 2012Verified Purchase
I have been hooked on all the Van Veeteren series and started this one just as eagerly as the others. I knew from the outset that this wasn't as unputdownable as the others but plodded on regardless. The pace only picks up about half way through the book and I enjoyed it from thereon in. It's not a bad book by a long way, it's just not as good as I've come to expect. I didn't particularly like the subject matter either, as did VV.
One suspects HN couldn't possibly keep up with the brilliant writing he has done prior to this, so I'm just about to start The Unlucky Lottery (some editions are called Munsters Fall) in the hope that he is back to his best.
You don't have to read these books in order but as there is an ongoing thread, I would strong advise that you do.
One suspects HN couldn't possibly keep up with the brilliant writing he has done prior to this, so I'm just about to start The Unlucky Lottery (some editions are called Munsters Fall) in the hope that he is back to his best.
You don't have to read these books in order but as there is an ongoing thread, I would strong advise that you do.
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Gordon Williams
5.0 out of 5 stars
Outstanding
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 28 July 2015Verified Purchase
I have given this book five stars because as an intense novel about good and evil, self doubt, rejection, acceptance and many other conflicts of the human psyche, it is extraordinarily well written. But I found the nature of the crimes, child abuse and murder of the victims of this horrific craving, outside the scope of my taste for fiction. I am very glad I read it and I commend the author for writing it. It disturbed me too much to say I enjoyed it.

margaret holmes-middleton
5.0 out of 5 stars
Not Hollywood hype
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 21 April 2019Verified Purchase
Just a regular routine dose of intuition and brilliance.
Frustrating slow but so realistic its refreshing real people and pure plodding police work
Frustrating slow but so realistic its refreshing real people and pure plodding police work