The silence of the sea

Yrsa Sigurðardóttir

Book - 2016

"A luxury yacht crashes into a Reykjavik pier. But the boat is empty; no one is on board. What has happened to the crew? And what has happened to the family who were very much present when the yacht left Lisbon? What should Thora Gudmundsdottir, the series sleuth, make of the rumors that the vessel was cursed? She is spooked even more when she boards the yacht and thinks she sees one of the missing children. Where is Karitas, the glamorous young wife of the yacht's former owner? And whose is the body that has washed up further along the shore?"--

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MYSTERY/Yrsa Sigurdardottir
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Subjects
Genres
Mystery fiction
Suspense fiction
Published
New York : Thomas Dunne Books/Minotaur Books 2016.
Language
English
Icelandic
Main Author
Yrsa Sigurðardóttir (author)
Other Authors
Victoria Cribb (translator)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Item Description
"A Thomas Dunne book."
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781250051486
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* When he's tasked with transferring a repossessed yacht from Lisbon to Reykjavik, regulatory official Ægir brings along his wife, Lára, and their young twin daughters to experience Lisbon. Then the family is unexpectedly forced to join the voyage to Iceland after Ægir is recruited to replace an injured crewman. Shockingly, after days of radio silence, the empty yacht enters Reykjavik harbor on autopilot. When the search for the passengers proves fruitless, Ægir's parents turn to attorney Thóra Gudmundsdóttir to help them claim Ægir's life insurance to improve their case for custody of Ægir and Lára's toddler, whom they were caring for during the trip. Thóra's investigation of the family's finances refutes any arguments that they've skipped out on debts, but the Reykjavik police's investigation yields only further questions. Is the headline-grabbing wife of the former owner missing or lying low? How did the yacht's radio malfunction? As Thóra methodically builds a case that the family has perished, Ægir chronicles the voyage as it evolves from hopeful beginnings to locked-room horror. Series star Thóra takes a backseat to Ægir's account, but fans of Sigurdardóttir's signature style of merging haunting supernatural elements with psychological thrills won't mind; this story's mystery is flawless and its eeriness unshakable.--Tran, Christine Copyright 2016 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When a yacht crashes into a Reykjavík harbor jetty in the prologue of Sigurdardóttir's outstanding sixth Thóra Gudmundsdóttir thriller (after 2015's Someone to Watch over Me), onlookers are shocked to find no one aboard-no captain, no crew, and no sign of the young family that was traveling with them. Margeir Karelsson and Sigrídur Veturlidadóttir retain attorney Thóra to investigate and provide proof of death for their missing son, his wife, and their twin granddaughters. At stake is the life insurance payout, as well as the fate of the twins' two-year-old sister, left behind in the grandparents' care. But why are there rumors that the yacht was cursed? Sigurdardóttir does a masterly job of weaving together the story of Thóra's painstaking investigation with an account of the voyage and its horrifying spiral into disaster. In effect a locked-boat mystery enhanced with a hint of ghosts, this deliciously eerie variation on Agatha Christie's Ten Little Indians won the Petrona Award for best Scandinavian crime novel in 2015. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Winner of the 2015 Petrona Award for best Scandinavian crime novel, this modern-day Mary Celeste sea story tells of a yacht that sails into Reykjavik's harbor; the crew and family members on board are all missing. Lawyer Thóra -Gudmundsdóttir is asked to investigate on behalf of the surviving relatives. Flashbacks revealing what happened to the vanished family compliment Thora's investigations and heighten the tension. VERDICT This eerie, suspenseful addition to the "Thóra Gudmundsdóttir" series stands on its own. For fans of Nordic crime fiction and horror writer John Ajvide Lindqvist. (Xpress Reviews, 2/12/16) © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Reykjavk attorney Thra Gudmundsdttir's sixth case (Someone to Watch Over Me, 2015, etc.) poses her a puzzle obviously inspired by the real-life 1872 case of the Mary Celesteand fully worthy of its mysterious original. The Lady K, a yacht seized from bankrupt businessman Gulam and sailed from Lisbon to Iceland by a skeleton crew, arrives in Reykjavk harbor without a soul aboard. There's no trace of Capt. Thrinn or of his crew members, Halli and Loftur, or of gir, a member of the bank's resolution committee who made the trip with his wife, Lra, and their 4-year-old twin daughters, Arna and Bylgja. Despite the absence of any corpses, gir's parents, Margeir Karelsson and Sigrdur Veturlidadttir, want the insurance company to pay the hefty policy he took out, and they want the court to name them guardians of Sigga Dgg, their surviving 2-year-old granddaughteran uphill battle, Thra warns them. But she finds she can't accept these commissions without discovering what actually became of gir and Lra and their shipmates. In alternating chapters, Sigurdardttir follows Thra's painfully matter-of-fact investigation and goes back a few days to cover the Lady K's ill-fated final voyage, as a series of escalating misfortunesa tangle with a container from a neighboring ship, the loss of radio communications, grisly discoveries on and off the yachtleads to a wholesale breakdown among the shipmates that turns the trip into a journey to hell. The trick of alternating chapters between the present and the very recent past shouldn't work, but it does, producing a tour de force capped by a haunting final scene that will linger in your mind long after the cumbersome explanation of how the trick was worked. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.