Sunday, September 7, 2025

The Darkness by Ragnar Jonasson


Hulda Hermannsdóttir has been a detective inspector with the Reykjavík Police Department for many years. But she is approaching 65 when The Darkness ( 2015) by Ragnar Jónasson begins and retirement is mandatory. Hulda, a widow who lives alone, is dreading retirement. And her only child, a daughter, died years ago at age 13 and she continues to feel grief to this day. 

But Hulda's job as a detective, solving crimes and seeking justice for the victims, has given her life a purpose. Hulda doesn't know what she will do once she retires although she has been getting close to her neighbor Petur who is kind, a great cook and a good listener. Maybe Petur is the future Hulda has been hoping for and deserves.

Before Hulda retires the head of her department informs her that she can choose whatever cold case she wants to investigate. Hilda chooses the case of a young Russian woman, Elena, who came to Iceland seeking asylum and wound up dead a year ago. The police ruled it a suicide but Hulda doesn't agree and so her investigation begins.

I loved so much about The Darkness.  Ragnar Jonasson is a wonderful writer and his mysteries are international bestsellers. The Icelandic setting is haunting and cold and adds so much to this novel. And Hulda is such a well drawn and relatable character that I pretty much forgot about Elena's murder.  It was Hulda's life story and my hopes for her future that gripped me. 

But should you read The Darkness? This novel is certainly a fair play mystery in that the clues will lead you to the killer. But if you are waiting for a satisfying ending like I was (SPOILER ALERT) it doesn't come for Hulda, the victims or justice. That came as a shock by the time I got to the end of the novel.  A believable shock probably closer to what happens in real life.  Justice doesn't always prevail and people don't always get a second chance at happiness. But do I really want to be reminded of this in my mystery novels? 

I do intend to try another book by Ragnar Jonasson but maybe something a little more conventional. 

1 comment:

Moonflower Murders by Anthony Horowitz

Moonflower Murders (2020) is the second book in Anthony Horowiz's Susan Ryeland mystery series.  Susan when we first met her in Magpie M...