Blood ties A novel

Nesbø Jo, 1960-

Large print - 2025

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Published
Random House Large Print, 2025
Language
unknown
Main Author
Nesbø Jo, 1960- (-)
Physical Description
538 pages ; cm
ISBN
9798217070244
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Brothers Roy and Carl Opgard return in bestseller Nesbø's immersive and disturbing sequel to The Kingdom. Shortly after the events of the previous novel, the Opgards have settled into promising careers in the sleepy Norwegian town of Os: older brother Roy, who narrates, runs an auto repair shop and convenience store with dreams of building the world's largest wooden roller coaster on the property, while Carl owns a luxury hotel and spa with grand plans for expansion across Norway. The brothers' ambitions are threatened when they learn a planned highway is going to be routed away from Os, taking tourist dollars with it. Determined to keep his and Carl's dreams in sight, Roy reverts to his old role as the pair's "enforcer," engaging in violent schemes to control the highway project. Meanwhile, sheriff Kurt Olsen uncovers new evidence linking the Opgard brothers to old crimes, and launches a campaign to take them down. Nesbø brilliantly plunges readers into the psyche of a charming killer, leavening the bloodshed with pop culture references and dashes of the lacerating humor that suffuses his Harry Hole series. The result is a chilling and darkly funny noir that will haunt readers long after the last page. Agent: Niclas Salomonsson, Salomonsson Literary. (Feb.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

The prolific murdering brothers Roy and Carl Opgard--introduced inThe Kingdom (2020)--return for more bloody havoc in the Norwegian village of Os. When they were in their late teens, Roy and Carl, in retaliation for their father's longtime abuse of Carl and their mother's failure to do anything about it, sent the old man's Cadillac DeVille crashing into a ravine with both parents inside. When Roy, the supposedly protective older brother, was 35, he attempted to kill Carl for abusing his (Carl's) wife, Shannon--who was carrying Roy's baby. "I was a mass murderer who was absolutely ready to start a family," Roy says ruefully. Carl ends that hope by bashing Shannon's skull in, but the siblings quickly return to their default state, scheming together to save the hotel Carl runs and get financing for Roy to build an amusement park with the world's biggest rollercoaster. Potential investors resist Roy and Carl at their peril. Among them: the abusive father of Natalie, a drug-addicted singer Roy knows from childhood who now toys with his affections. Leave it to the crafty Nesbø, in deadpan mode, to treat Roy like any guy with problems--a "scrupulous" killer with a good heart and great taste in music (the late Eric Clapton crony J.J. Cale dominates the soundtrack). A populous novel that sometimes comes off like a twisted version ofOur Town, Nesbø's latest boasts a quirky comic edge. The book doesn't build to the kind of tense conclusion the Harry Hole creator is known for, but it's not that kind of story. At the start, Roy wonders, "Can anyone be a killer?" It takes a different type of murderer to ask that. A darkly entertaining thriller. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.