Describe Books Conducive To The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5)
| Original Title: | Elskede Poona |
| ISBN: | 0151011826 (ISBN13: 9780151011827) |
| Edition Language: | English |
| Series: | Konrad Sejer #5 |
| Characters: | Konrad Sejer, Jacob Skarre, Gunder Jomann, Poona Bai |
| Setting: | Norway India |
| Literary Awards: | Brageprisen for Open Category - Crime and Thriller (2000), Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Mystery/Thriller (2007) |
Karin Fossum
Hardcover | Pages: 297 pages Rating: 3.8 | 6390 Users | 611 Reviews
Narrative Supposing Books The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5)
When perpetual bachelor Gunder Jomann goes to India for two weeks and comes home married, the town of Elvestad is stunned. On the day the Indian bride is supposed to arrive, the battered body of a woman is found in a meadow on the outskirts of town. None of the "good people of Elvestad" can believe that anyone among them would be capable of such a brutal murder. But in his quiet, formal way, Inspector Konrad Sejer understands that good people can commit atrocious deeds, and that no one is altogether innocent—including the café owner who knows too much, the girl who wants to be a chief witness, and the bodybuilder with no outlet for his terrible strength. Another brilliantly conceived, dark novel from one of Europe’s most successful crime writers.
Mention About Books The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5)
| Title | : | The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5) |
| Author | : | Karin Fossum |
| Book Format | : | Hardcover |
| Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
| Pages | : | Pages: 297 pages |
| Published | : | July 2nd 2007 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (first published 2000) |
| Categories | : | Mystery. Crime. Fiction. European Literature. Scandinavian Literature. Thriller |
Rating About Books The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5)
Ratings: 3.8 From 6390 Users | 611 ReviewsPiece About Books The Indian Bride (Konrad Sejer #5)
More, more! Must immediately seek out her other books. I loved the Norwegian, small-town sensibility. And I loved that she demands you be a close reader. Without a close read, I think you will not enjoy the ending. It is not just a detective novel, but a character study. Lovely.Fossum takes quite a different approach to the murder mystery genre than we usually see, built in a different sensibility. Yes, there is a murder, a brutal murder. There is an investigation. But the focus here is more on the quirks of fate that led the victim to be where she was, when she was, and on the husband left behind. The tale is also about the people in this small Norwegian town/village, what they've seen, what they imagine, and why they don't talk; the level of secrecy is astonishing.
More, more! Must immediately seek out her other books. I loved the Norwegian, small-town sensibility. And I loved that she demands you be a close reader. Without a close read, I think you will not enjoy the ending. It is not just a detective novel, but a character study. Lovely.

When I had finished reading the last page, I felt like I had been dumped out of a moving vehicle onto a quiet countryside road in the middle of nowhere. For an instant I thought, "Is there a Part II?" This book is a quick, fun read and you become addicted to the situation and the characters early in the book; the addiction becomes increasingly stronger as you continue to read on. But there are no easy answers to who is the guilty culprit. Someone confesses, but is he a victim of mind control?
4.5 starsThis fifth entry in the series featuring Inspector Konrad Sejer and Jacob Skarre and is a slightly more traditional police procedural in contrast to some of the earlier offerings from Karin Fossum. However, in her true style she takes readers on a tumultuous journey to the heart of the small rural town of Elvestad, home to just over two-thousand residents. Calling Out For You appears on outset to bear all the hallmarks of an uplifting love story but is quickly followed by an act of
I have to admit a tiny tear escaped my eye on the last page of The Indian Bride. A 50-something Norwegian tractor salesman, goodnatured and a bit of a simpleton, goes to India to procure himself a wife. She flies to Norway but he can't meet her at the airport due to unforeseen circumstances, whereupon she is violently killed in a field. Near the end of the book her Indian brother comes to Norway to claim her body, and brings with him a letter she has written him explaining why she married this
"Later, she would never forget this. The last moment when life was good."I had read Karin Fossum's The Indian Bride (2000) for the first time about 10 years ago, long before Kat helped me find Goodreads. Totally swept off my feet by the sheer emotional impact of the story I was unable to notice some weaknesses of the novel and decided it was a masterpiece of psychological crime genre. This time no five stars from me despite the fact that Ms. Fossum's writing resonates with my sensibilities


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