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The Drowned Boy

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A Norwegian police detective must unravel a grieving mother's shifting stories in a novel by "a truly great writer and explorer of the human mind" (Jo Nesbø)
Carmen and Nicolai failed to resuscitate their son after finding him floating in their backyard pond. When Inspector Skarre arrives, Carmen reports that Tommy, a healthy toddler with Down syndrome, wandered into the garden while Nicolai was working in the basement and she was cleaning the house. Skarre senses something is off with Carmen's story and consults his trusted colleague, the famed Inspector Sejer. An autopsy reveals Tommy's lungs to be full of soap.
When Sejer and Skarre revisit the couple, Carmen, an epileptic, changes her story, confessing that she'd been knocked unconscious by a seizure while bathing Tommy. When she came to, she found him drowned in the tub and, horrified and frightened, threw him into the pond.
But Skarre and Sejer's doubt is not appeased. What more could Carmen be hiding? And how far will she go to cover her guilt?
"Powerful . . . a riveting tale." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Will keep readers guessing. Grade: A." —Cleveland Plain Dealer
"In the end, the novel isn't about willful murder or even accidental death, but the psychological aftershocks for the living." —The New York Times Book Review
"Compelling work from the author who seems to have inherited the late Ruth Rendell's gift of spinning the darkest complications out of what might seem like nothing at all." —Kirkus Reviews
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from June 8, 2015
      The drowning of 16-month-old Tommy Brandt sets the mournful tone for Fossum’s powerful and disturbing 11th Insp. Konrad Sejer mystery (after The Caller). Tommy’s hysterical mother, Carmen Zita, insists that the toddler wandered away from her on a hot day after she suffered an epileptic seizure; she later found his body in a pond near the house that she shares with the child’s reticent father, Nicolai. Sejer assumes at first that the drowning is just a tragic accident, but the mother’s odd demeanor—she’s so eager to move on—makes him suspect foul play. The subsequent autopsy proves that Tommy, who had Down syndrome but was otherwise healthy and happy, was indeed murdered. Fossum explores the aftershocks of the boy’s death for Carmen and Nicolai in a riveting tale that’s more psychological study than police procedural.

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2015

      When a young boy is found drowned in a pond near his home, it is explained away as an accident. Insp. Konrad Sejer suspects there is more to the story, however. As the mother, Carmen, changes her story to fit new evidence and the father spirals down into depression, Sejer pursues the evidence, even as it looks like the truth may never be known. The story is unraveled slowly, intermingling Sejer's dogged investigation with diary entries written by the young mother. The real strength of the book lies in the characters Fossum has crafted. Sejer is not the typical unhappy, unhealthy Scandinavian detective; instead, he's a widower who is kind to his suspects and colleagues alike. VERDICT Fossom's 12th Sejer installment doesn't disappoint. Her writing style keeps the reader guessing to the final page. This title will appeal to mystery readers of all stripes. [See Prepub Alert, 3/2/15.]--Portia Kapraun, Monticello-Union Township P.L., IN

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Library Journal

      March 15, 2015

      In the first chronologically new entry since 2012's The Caller (recent Inspector Konrad Sejer mysteries published here have backtracked to earlier series titles), the parents of a boy with Down syndrome found drowned in the backyard pool keep changing their story. Norwegian author Fossum has won the Gumshoe Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and sold 300,000 copies of her work here in a decade; with a 30,000-copy first printing.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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