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Bezig met laden... The Mountain King: 1 (The Asker) (editie 2024)door Anders De la Motte (Auteur)
Informatie over het werkThe Mountain King: A Novel (1) (The Asker Series) door Anders De la Motte
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Meld je aan bij LibraryThing om erachter te komen of je dit boek goed zult vinden. Op dit moment geen Discussie gesprekken over dit boek. I loved this start to a new series. I loved Asker and her group of misfit cops. I loved how this story is filled with thrills and chills and lots of action. I love that Asker needs to figure out what to do in her life when she gets knocked down. I could not put this book down. I received a copy of this book from the publisher for a fair and honest opinion that I gave of my own free will. geen besprekingen | voeg een bespreking toe
"After a high-profile kidnapping case goes wrong, criminal inspector Leonore Asker is relegated to the so-called Department of Lost Souls where she, drawn into a peculiar case, one possibly linked to the kidnapping, is led to the darkest recesses of the city where an unusual kind of evil lurks in the shadows"-- Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)890.00Literature Literature of other languages Other LanguagesWaarderingGemiddelde:
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Which leads us to THE MOUNTAIN KING. What if you put the girl with the dragon tattoo in charge of Department Q? Anders de la Motte has the answer.
Leo Asker is a brilliant detective who rubs people the wrong way and has made enemies among her colleagues. (Yes, Leo's a woman, and her cousins are Saga Norén from The Bridge and Sarah Lund of The Killing.) Thanks to the machinations of a disgruntled rival, when the daughter of a wealthy family vanishes along with a friend, Leo finds herself "promoted" to a managerial position in the basement of Malmö's police headquarters where she inherits a strange group of misfit staff in what they call "the Department of Orphaned Cases and Lost Souls."
Though she has been sidelined, she picks up some key clues to the case of the missing girl, who we know through chapters told from alternate points of view, is being held in captivity by a twisted psychopath.
Yes, the ingredients are familiar, but de la Motte has stirred it all together skillfully. His pacing and plotting are deft, involving urban exploration, an abandoned military facility deep inside a mountain, and a killer who leaves his mark with carefully-painted figurines added to a vast model train display. Leo, while a recruit from the Brilliant but Prickly Women's Police Academy, comes into her own, along with a childhood with a reclusive prepper for a father who trained her to have superior survival skills but left her traumatized. Additional characters are distinctive (apart from the stock "girl in captivity" who hasn't much original material to work with) and the misdirection is nicely done, leaving readers hanging pleasurably on a cliff to await the next installment in the series.
In short, it's a well-constructed and gripping entertainment. Just don't expect anything especially new.
Reposted with permission from Reviewing the Evidence.