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Mind's Eye
Inspector Van Veeteren Mystery Series, Book 1
by 
Hakan Nesser
  
Average rating: 
Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Subject(s):  Fiction
Mystery
Language(s):  English
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Format Information

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Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   856 KB
ISBN:   9780307377586
Release date:   Jun 10, 2008

Description

The highly anticipated first novel in the Inspector Van Veeteren series in now available in English. At last, American readers will be able to enjoy, from its very beginnings, this addictive series by one of Europe's most beloved and best-selling crime writers.

Chief Inspector Van Veeteren knew that murder cases were never as open-and-shut as this one: Janek Mitter woke one morning with a brutal hangover and discovered his wife of three months lying facedown in the bathtub, dead. With only the flimsiest excuse as his defense, he is found guilty of a drunken crime of passion and imprisoned in a mental institution.

But Van Veeteren's suspicions about the identity of the killer are borne out when Mitter also becomes a murder victim. Now the chief inspector launches a full-scale investigation of the two slayings. But it may only be the unspoken secrets of the dead--revealed in a mysterious letter that Mitter wrote shortly before his death--that will finally allow Van Veeteren to unmask the killer and expose the shocking root of this sordid violence.

From the Hardcover edition.

If you like this title, you might also like...

Borkmann's Point
Hakan Nesser
The Return
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Excerpts

From the book...

He woke up and was unable to remember his name.His pains were legion. Shafts of fire whirled around in his head and throat, his stomach and chest. He tried to swallow, but it remained an attempt. His tongue was glued to his palate. Burning, smoldering.

His eyes were throbbing. Threatening to grow out of their sockets.

It's like being born, he thought. I'm not a person. Merely a mass of suffering.

The room was in darkness. He groped around with his free hand, the one that was not numb and tingling underneath him.

Yes, there was a bedside table. A telephone and a glass. A newspaper. An alarm clock.

He picked it up, but halfway it slipped through his fingers and fell onto the floor. He fumbled around, took hold of it again, and held it up, close to his face.

The hands were slightly luminous. He recognized them.

Twenty past eight. Presumably in the morning.

He still had no idea who he was.

...

He didn't think this had happened before. He had certainly woken up and not known where he was. Or what day it was. But his name . . . had he ever forgotten his name?

John? Janos?

No, but something like that.

It was there, somewhere in the background, not only his name but everything. . . . Life and lifestyle and extenuating circumstances. Lying there waiting for him. Behind a thin membrane that would have to be pierced, something that had not woken up yet. But he was not really worried. He would know soon enough.

Perhaps it was not something to look forward to.

The pain behind his eyes suddenly got worse. Possibly the strain of thinking had caused it; but it was there, whatever. White hot and excruciating. A scream of flesh.

Nothing else mattered.

The kitchen was to the left and seemed familiar. He found the pills without difficulty; he was becoming increasingly sure that this was his home. No doubt everything would become clear at any moment.

He went back into the hall. Kicked against a bottle standing in the shadow cast by a bookcase. It rolled away over the parquet floor and ended up under the radiator. He shuffled to the bathroom. Pressed down the handle.

It was locked.

He leaned awkwardly forward. Put his hands on his knees to support himself, and checked the indicator on the door.

Red. As he'd thought. It was occupied.

He could feel the bile rising.

"Open . . ." he tried to shout, but could produce no more than a croak. He leaned his forehead against the cool wood of the door.

"Open up!" he tried again, and this time managed to produce the right sounds, almost. To stress the seriousness of his situation he belted several times with his clenched fists.

No response. Not a sound. Whoever was in there obviously had no intention of letting him in.

There was a sudden surge from his stomach. Or pos- sibly from even lower down . . . It was obviously a matter of seconds now. He staggered back along the hall. Into the kitchen.

This time it seemed more familiar than ever.

This is definitely my home, he thought as he vomited into the sink.

With the aid of a screwdriver he succeeded in unlocking the bathroom door. He had a distinct feeling that it was not the first time he'd done this.

"I'm sorry, but I really had to . . ."

He entered the room and just as he switched on the light, he became quite clear about who he was.

He could also identify the woman lying in the bathtub.

Her name was Eva Ringmar and she was his wife of three months.

Her body was strangely twisted. Her right arm hung over the edge at an unnatural angle. The well-manicured fingernails reached...

 

Reviews

The New York Times...
"Nesser had a penetrating eye for the skull beneath the skin."
 
San Francisco Chronicle...
"Keeps you on the edge of your seat... You don't want it to end."
 
Colin Dexter, author of the Inspector Morse mysteries...
"Inspector Van Veeteren seems destined for a place amongst the great European detectives."
 
Richmond Times-Dispatch...
"A blast... His plots are addictive, his writing admirably economical, his characters complex and engaging."
 
Booklist...
"Another solid example of why Swedes have become the talk of crime fiction."
 
Entertainment World...
"Every bit as enjoyably creepy as his previous offering... For anyone looking for something new in a mystery or detective series."
 

About the Author

Hakan Nesser was awarded the 1993 Swedish Crime Writers Academy Prize for new authors for Minds Eye published in Sweden as Det Grovmaskiga Natet); he received the best novel award in 1994 for Borkmanns Point and in 1996 for Woman with Birthmark. In 1999 he was awarded the Crime Writers of Scandinavias Glass Key Award for the best crime novel of the year for Carambole. Nesser lives in Sweden and New York.


From the Hardcover edition.

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