Paperback, 280 pages

English language

Published April 2, 2000 by Harvill Press.

ISBN:
978-1-86046-756-1
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
632484835

View on OpenLibrary

One frozen January morning at 5 a.m., Inspector Wallander responds to what he expects is a routine call out. When he reaches the isolated farmhouse he discovers a bloodbath. An old man has been tortured and beaten to death, his wife lies barely alive beside hs shattered body, victims of violence beyond reason. The woman supplies Wallander with his only clue: the perpetrators may have been foreign. When this is leaked to the press, racial hatred is unleashed.

Kurt Wallander is a senior police officer at Ystad, a small town in the wind-lashed Swedish province of Skane. His life is a shambles. His wife has left him, his daughter refuses to speak to him, even his ageing father barely tolerates him. He works tirelessly, eats badly and drinks the nights away in a lonely, neglected flat. But now winter closes its grip on Ystad, and Wallandar, his tenacious efforts …

36 editions

reviewed Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell (An Inspector Wallander Mystery)

Didn't love it!

This is the first book of a series, so maybe they get better, but it wasn't great. The writing is very lazy. There's single sentences that cover things I wanted to know more about, and entire paragraphs where a word or two would've sufficed. There's a lot of casual racism and sexism throughout, which the reader is supposed to understand as problematic, but Wallander often seems to thinks to himself "Huh, that person is racist and/or sexist, but I'd rather not call them out right now." Perhaps the most interesting thing about the book is Wallander's own problems with women and minorities, which as a character he seems to recognize and want to address, but the structure around it isn't good enough to make that meaningful or interesting.

reviewed Faceless Killers by Henning Mankell (Kurt Wallander mysteries)

Review of 'Faceless Killers' on 'Goodreads'

3.5 stars. This was a very short book and unexpectedly found me page-turning, despite it not being very spectacular. The protagonist is Kurt Wallander, a middle aged police officer in the Swedish country side. His wife just left him, he is estranged from his daughter and has a problematic relationship to his aging father. He is confronted with the brutal murder of a farmer couple. As suspicion falls onto foreigners, the situation heats up because of rising antagonism towards foreigners seeking political asylum in Sweden in the 90s.

I have read far better crime stories. But this is not so much about the crime and solving it. This is about Kurt Wallander the person, the changes in his life and his country. So if you are looking for something along the lines of Girl with a Dragon Tattoo, this is not that book. It's bleak and it's easy to feel …

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Subjects

  • Crime & mystery
  • Mystery & Detective - Hard-Boiled
  • Fiction - Mystery/ Detective
  • Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective - Police Procedural
  • FICTION_MYSTERY & DETECTIVE_HARD-BOILED
  • FICTION_MYSTERY & DETECTIVE_POLICE PROCEDURAL
  • Fiction / Mystery & Detective / Hard-Boiled
  • Juvenile Nonfiction / Poetry / General
  • SWEDEN_FICTION
  • WALLANDER, KURT (FICTITIOUS CHARACTER)_FICTION
  • General