A huge bestseller in England, France, and Australia, the fourth book in the Ari Thor thriller series from a spectacular new crime writer.
Hailed for combining the darkness of Nordic Noir with classic mystery writing, author Ragnar Jónasson's books are haunting, atmospheric, and complex. Rupture, the latest Ari Thór thriller, delivers another dark mystery that is chillingly stunning with its complexity and fluidity.
Young policeman Ari Thór tries to solve a 50-year-old murder when new evidence surfaces. But the case proves difficult in a town where no one wants to know the truth, where secrets are a way of life. He's assisted by Ísrún, a news reporter in Reykjavik who is investigating an increasingly chilling case of her own. Things take a sinister turn when a child goes missing in broad daylight. With a stalker on the loose, and the town in quarantine, the past might just come back to haunt them.
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Creators
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Series
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Publisher
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Release date
January 22, 2019 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781250193360
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781250193360
- File size: 5096 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
October 29, 2018
When a foreign visitor to Siglufjördur, Iceland, dies of a highly infectious disease that he must have picked up on a trip to Africa, the town is quarantined, in Jónasson’s gripping fourth crime novel featuring policeman Ari Thór Arason (after 2018’s Blackout). With little work to do as a result, Ari Thór takes the opportunity to follow up on a 50-year-old cold case. In 1957, a woman named Jórunn, who lived in a remote region, died after drinking rat poison in her coffee. Jórunn’s nephew, Hédinn, who was only a year old at the time, doubts the official verdict that the poisoning was accidental. Hédinn has recently come across an old family photo showing him being held by a stranger, who he hopes might have more information about the tragedy. Ari Thór soon has his hands full, as he also begins looking into a child abduction and a murder case with political implications. Jónasson manages to resolve the plot lines plausibly, and is as strong as ever at combining fair-play with psychological depth. Agent: David Headley, DHH Literary (U.K.). -
Kirkus
November 1, 2018
Jónasson returns from his recent Icelandic stand-alone (The Darkness, 2018) to an equally bleak puzzle for Ari Thór Arason, of the Siglufjördur police.Just in case the northern Icelandic town isn't isolated enough by geography and climate, Siglufjördur has been under quarantine ever since a wealthy traveler arrived with a particularly virulent strain of haemorrhagic fever. It seems only appropriate that at a time when Ari Thór's department (Nightblind, 2017, etc.) is in virtual lockdown, a man named Hédinn pressed him to reopen the ice-cold case of Jórunn, Hédinn's aunt, who got a fatal dose of rat poison more than 50 years ago in nearby Hédinsfjödur. Nearby, but even more isolated, the place, devoid of electrical and telephone wires, has been uninhabited ever since Hédinn's father, Gudmundur, retired from the fishing industry to settle his wife, Gudfinna, her sister, Jórunn, and Jórunn's husband, Maríus Knutsson, in the godforsaken spot. Ari Thór's attention immediately focuses on a family photograph from 1957 that includes a young man Hédinn can't identify. But his exploration of the past is sidelined by the hit-and-run death of Snorri Ellertsson, an aspiring musician whose scandalous abuse of alcohol and drugs ended the career of his father, prominent politician Ellert Snorrason, and the kidnapping of Kjartan, a little boy taken from his pram while it was parked outside a cafe in which his mother, Sunna, was having coffee with her sister, trusting in Iceland's low incidence of crime outside the pages of genre fiction. Along the way, Ari Thór's inquiries will repeatedly crisscross those of Ísrún, an ambitious TV reporter whose initial assignment to report on the quarantine blossoms into a series of revelations much darker and deadlier.Readers disappointed in the present-day subplots, which are wound up with remarkable dispatch, will be rewarded by the even more disturbing revelations from half a century ago.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Booklist
November 1, 2018
Siglufj�rdur, Iceland, police officer Ari Th�r Arason and ambitious Reykjavik reporter �sr�n return (following Blackout, 2018) to investigate a mystery woven into local lore and a scandal linking Iceland's prime minister to murder. Siglufj�rdur, in Iceland's far north, is quarantined after a tourist succumbs to a deadly, highly contagious virus. With the town's residents reluctant to venture out, Ari Th�r has few peacekeeping demands. So, when a beloved local, H�dinn, asks Ari Th�r to help identify a mysterious teenager in an old family photograph, he welcomes the diversion. Soon, Ari Th�r is immersed in a mystery; around the time the photo was taken, H�dinn's aunt, J�runn, died after accidentally ingesting rat poison. Ari Th�r's investigation into the locals' stories about H�dinn's isolated family farm reveals unanswered questions, including whether the teen could have had a role in J�runn's death. Against the backdrop of the quarantine and the contrasting bustle of �sr�n's Reykjavik investigation, Ari Th�r's dive into haunting oral history cloaks Siglufj�rdur in eeriness; evocative Nordic crime fiction.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.) -
Kirkus
November 1, 2018
J�nasson returns from his recent Icelandic stand-alone (The Darkness, 2018) to an equally bleak puzzle for Ari Th�r Arason, of the Siglufj�rdur police.Just in case the northern Icelandic town isn't isolated enough by geography and climate, Siglufj�rdur has been under quarantine ever since a wealthy traveler arrived with a particularly virulent strain of haemorrhagic fever. It seems only appropriate that at a time when Ari Th�r's department (Nightblind, 2017, etc.) is in virtual lockdown, a man named H�dinn pressed him to reopen the ice-cold case of J�runn, H�dinn's aunt, who got a fatal dose of rat poison more than 50 years ago in nearby H�dinsfj�dur. Nearby, but even more isolated, the place, devoid of electrical and telephone wires, has been uninhabited ever since H�dinn's father, Gudmundur, retired from the fishing industry to settle his wife, Gudfinna, her sister, J�runn, and J�runn's husband, Mar�us Knutsson, in the godforsaken spot. Ari Th�r's attention immediately focuses on a family photograph from 1957 that includes a young man H�dinn can't identify. But his exploration of the past is sidelined by the hit-and-run death of Snorri Ellertsson, an aspiring musician whose scandalous abuse of alcohol and drugs ended the career of his father, prominent politician Ellert Snorrason, and the kidnapping of Kjartan, a little boy taken from his pram while it was parked outside a cafe in which his mother, Sunna, was having coffee with her sister, trusting in Iceland's low incidence of crime outside the pages of genre fiction. Along the way, Ari Th�r's inquiries will repeatedly crisscross those of �sr�n, an ambitious TV reporter whose initial assignment to report on the quarantine blossoms into a series of revelations much darker and deadlier.Readers disappointed in the present-day subplots, which are wound up with remarkable dispatch, will be rewarded by the even more disturbing revelations from half a century ago.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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