The Redbreast by Jo NesbøMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
Harry Hole’s third mystery is the first one set predominantly in Norway, although it also features a few international jaunts (South Africa being a prominent one), as well as lots of flashbacks to WWII to showcase a few Nazi traitors in the country that made Quisling’s name synonymous with such. Additionally, there’s the backdrop of the Oslo Accords, and the present day neo-Nazis of 1999/2000 turning their hatred towards Muslim immigrants from Pakistan and other countries. It’s easy to see this book in particular as having influenced Stieg Larsson’s work, particularly in an anti-fascist context. And now that I’m watching the new Netflix adaptation, now I can really see how Joel Kinnaman’s Waaler started out as Harry’s first great nemesis, and this before the book of that title comes up in the series…
View all my reviews





