• Home
  • Bio
  • Journalism
  • Contact
Menu

Jo Furniss

Street Address
City, State, Zip
Phone Number
Author. Journalist. Coffee Snob.

Your Custom Text Here

Jo Furniss

  • Home
  • Bio
  • Journalism
  • Contact

Review: The Darkness, Ragnar Jonasson

April 16, 2018 jofurniss

A novel that unflinchingly lives up to its name.

There is lightness in the sympathetic main character of Hulda Hermannsdottir, a police detective in the final days of her long and distinguished career. Her world view feels fresh to crime fiction even while it is jaded to police work.

But all else is bleak - Hulda's unwelcome retirement, the Icelandic landscape, the loneliness of a bereaved mother, the struggle of a woman in a male-dominated job, the social isolation of an older single woman. Add to that a dead refugee and a police force that doesn't much care, and the tragic story unfolds right onto the final page, with its bold final twist. 

This is the first in a series and I await the next instalment, hoping it leaves me as thoughtful as this story. The Darkness is a compelling read and Hulda is a magnetic personality, but, goodness, it's pitch black in her world.

My favourite line: "The advantage of the darkness is that there are no shadows."

With thanks to #NetGalley for a review copy
In Book Review Tags crime, crime fiction, Icelandic noir, scandi noir, amreading
← Review: Our Kind of Cruelty, Araminta HallReview: The Essex Serpent →

Copyright 2014-2025 Jo Furniss. Site by Authorclicks. See our privacy policy.