Woman with Birthmark: An Inspector Van Veeteren Mystery (4) (Inspector Van Veeteren Series)
Woman with Birthmark: An Inspector Van Veeteren Mystery (4) (Inspector Van Veeteren Series) book cover

Woman with Birthmark: An Inspector Van Veeteren Mystery (4) (Inspector Van Veeteren Series)

Price
$13.54
Format
Paperback
Pages
335
Publisher
Vintage Crime/Black Lizard
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307387233
Dimensions
5.21 x 0.77 x 8 inches
Weight
9.3 ounces

Description

“Nesser’s novels look for the roots of crime in the ills of society.... He has seized his chance to create his own dark poetry from these stark materials, and the effect is haunting.”xa0— The Wall Street Journal “Pulling readers’ loyalties in different directions.... Woman with Birthmark leaves no doubt that Nesser is a master of suspense.”xa0— The Sunday Times (London)xa0“Taut, fast-paced, and enthralling.... Devotees of Jo Nesbo and Henning Mankell will agree that Nesser belongs in that select circle of A-list Scandinavian crime novelists.”xa0— Booklist “Nesser has written a fascinating study in the psychology of personal suffering.... Another admirably drawn thriller.”xa0— The Washington Times Håkan Nesser was born in 1950 in Sweden. In 1993 he was awarded the Swedish Crime Writers’ Academy Prize for new authors for his novel Mind’s Eye , and is the only author to have won the Academy’s best novel award three times: in 1994 for Borkmann’s Point ; in 1996 for Woman with Birthmark ; and in 2007 for A Rather Different Story . In 1999 he was awarded the Scandinavian Crime Society’s Glass Key Award for the best crime novel of the year for Carambole . His novels have been published to wide acclaim in nearly thirty countries. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1.She felt cold.The day had started with a promising light snowfall, but as lunchtime approached, the strong wind blowing off the sea had turned the precipitation into diagonal, driving rain of the very worst kind. It chilled you to the bone, forced the stall owners down by the harbor to shut up shop hours earlier than usual, and in Zimmermann’s bar they were serving about three times as many hot toddies as on a normal December day.To make matters worse, the cemetery was facing southwest, on a gently sloping, treeless hillside, totally exposed to every kind of weather and wind. When the little group finally reached the newly dug, muddy grave, a thought struck her.At least it was sheltered down there. At least you didn’t have to take the wind and this damned rain into the grave with you. Every cloud has its silver lining.The clergyman snuffled, and his accomplice—or whatever you should call him—struggled with the umbrella. Tried to make it cover both the man in black and himself, but the gusts were capricious and the correct angle shifted from second to second. The bearers dug their heels into the soaking wet soil and started to lower the coffin. Her bouquet on the lid already looked a mess. Like a dollop of vegetables that had boiled for too long. One of the bearers slipped but managed to regain his balance. The clergyman blew his nose and started to read the liturgy. His accomplice fumbled with the spade. The rain grew even worse.It was typical. She couldn’t help acknowledging that as she clenched her fists in the pockets of her overcoat and stamped on the ground in an attempt to warm up her feet.Absolutely goddamned typical. A ceremony just as shambolic and undignified as the rest of the dead woman’s life had been. So she couldn’t even be granted a decent burial. The day before Christmas Eve. A patch of blue sky, or the light snowfall lasting into the afternoon—would that have been too much to ask? Would that have been too much trouble?Of course it would. Her mother’s life had been littered with defeats and messy failures; to be honest, all this was both fitting and expected, and she felt herself having to bite her lip so as not to burst out crying.A totally consistent and logical conclusion, then. In the same key all the way through. And no crying. Not yet, in any case.For some inscrutable reason her mother had urged just that. Don’t cry. Whatever you do, don’t stand there bawling at my funeral. Tears have never been any use in any circumstances, believe you me. I’ve sobbed bucketfuls in my lifetime. No, do something, my girl! Take action! Do something magnificent that I can applaud up there in heaven!She had squeezed her daughter’s hand with both her own chafed, weak ones as she said that. Fixed her with her dying eyes, and it had been clear that for once, this was serious. For once, her mother was begging her to do something; it was a bit late and the wording was hardly crystal clear, but there could be no doubt about what she meant. Or could there?Half an hour later she was dead.Do something, my girl. Take action!The clergyman fell silent. Looked at her from under the dripping umbrella, and she realized that he was expecting her to do something as well. What? It wasn’t easy to tell. It was only the second time in her life that she had attended a funeral; the first time, she had been eight or nine years old, and she was there for her mother’s sake on that occasion as well. She took several cautious steps forward. Stopped a safe distance short of the grave to avoid the farce of slipping and joining her mother down below. Bowed her head and closed her eyes. Clasped her hands in front of her.I expect the bastards think I’m standing here praying, she thought. Or at least, they’re pretending to. Goodbye, Mom! You can rely on me. I know what I have to do. You’ll be able to warm the palms of your hands up there with the angels.And so it was all over. The clergyman and his accomplice each held out a cold, damp hand to shake hers, and ten minutes later she was standing under the leaking roof of a bus shelter, longing for a hot bath and a glass of red wine.Or a brandy. Or both.One mourner, she thought. At my mother’s interment there was only a single mourner. Me. So that was that.But I sincerely hope that several more will be mourning soon.That was quite nicely put, and as she stood there fighting against the cold and the damp and her desire to cry, it was as if those words had lit a small flame inside her. Set fire to something combustible at last, something that slowly began to heat up all the old frozen and stiff lumber lying around in her soul.A conflagration, no less, that soon enough would spread, consuming others in its flames . . . making them fear this sea of anger that in due course would surround and destroy them all!She smiled at that thought as well. Something she had read, presumably; or perhaps it really was true what one of her very first lovers had maintained. That she had a gift. A sort of aptitude for poetry and putting things into words.For the truth, and passion. Or suffering, perhaps. Yes, that was more like it. She had suffered all right. Not as much as her mother, of course, but she had endured her due share. And more.I’m freezing cold, she thought. Come on, you fucking bus!But there was no sign of the bus. No sign of anything, and it dawned on her as she stood stamping her feet in the gathering dusk in the leaky shelter that this was exactly what her whole life had been like. This was the ideal image for what it was all about.Standing waiting for something that never came. A bus. A good man. A proper job.A chance. Just one damned chance to make something sensible of her life.Standing waiting in the darkness and wind and rain. And now it was too late.She was twenty-nine years of age, and it was too late already.My mother and I, she thought. One mourning at the side of the grave. The other lying in it. We might just as well have changed places. Or lain down beside each other. Nobody would have minded. If it weren’t for . . .And she felt the flame set fire to her resolve once more, and everything inside her welled up and filled her with warmth. A strong, almost tangible warmth, which caused her to smile in the midst of her grief and clench her fists even harder deep down in her overcoat pockets.She took one final look at the long bend but there was no trace of a headlight. So she turned her back on it all and started walking toward the town.2Christmas came and went.New Year’s came and went. Rain shower followed rain shower, and the blue-gray days passed in a state of monotonous indifference. Her doctor’s certificate ran out, and she had to sign on for unemployment benefits. There was no noticeable difference. Off work from what? Unemployed from what?Her telephone had been cut off. When she received the warning in October, she had purposely failed to pay the bill, and now the company had taken action. The wheels had turned.It was pleasant. Not only did she not have to meet people, she avoided having to listen to them as well. Not that there would have been all that many for her to put up with. There was no denying that her circle of acquaintances had shrunk recently. During the first fourteen days after the funeral she spoke to a grand total of two persons. Heinzi and Gergils; she had met both of them by accident in the square, and within thirty seconds they had both tried to cadge something off her. Heroin or a bit of hash, or a bottle of wine, at least—for fuck’s sake, surely she had something to give to an old mate? A shower, then, and a quick screw, perhaps?Only Gergils had gone so far as to suggest that, and for half a minute she had toyed with the idea of letting him have her for half an hour. Just for the pleasure of possibly infecting him as well.But, of course, it couldn’t be guaranteed that he would get it. On the contrary. The chances were small. It wasn’t easy to catch it, despite all the stories you heard; even the doctors had stressed that. But on this occasion she had managed to hold herself in check. Besides, there were quite a few people who had survived whose behavior entailed a much higher risk factor than hers.Risk factor? What a stupid expression. Hadn’t she spent the whole of her life taking one damned risk after another? But it was no doubt true what Lennie used to tell her many years ago: if you were born on the edge of a barrel of shit, you had to accept the likelihood of falling into it now and again. That was only to be expected. The trick was clambering out again.And, of course, eventually you didn’t. Didn’t clamber out. You just lay down in the shit, and then it was only a matter of time.But that was old hat now. Thought about and fretted about and left behind. October had changed a lot of things. And her mother’s death, of course.Or rather, her mother’s story. The words that came tumbling out of her like a thirty-year-old miscarriage the week before her time was up. Yes, if the news she had been given in October was what made her want to be alone, her mother’s story did the rest. Gave her strength and determination. Something had suddenly become easier. Clearer and more definite for the first time in her troubled life. Her willpower and drive had grown, and her drug addiction had ebbed away and died without her needing to exert herself in the least. No more of the heavy stuff. A bit of hash and a bottle of wine now and again, no more, but most important of all—no more of that accursed and desperate contact with all the rest of them perched on the edge of the shit barrel. It had been easier to shake them off than she could ever have suspected, just as easy as the drugs, in fact, and of course each of those developments had assisted the other. Maybe what all the quacks and counselors had been droning on about all those years was actually true: it all came down to your own inner strength. That alone, nothing else.Courage and resolve, in other words.And the mission, she added.The mission? She certainly hadn’t been clear about that from the start; it sneaked its way in later on. Difficult to pin it down precisely, and just as difficult to say where it came from. Was it her mother’s decision, or her own? Not that it mattered all that much, but it was interesting to think about.About cause and responsibility, things like that. About revenge, and the importance of putting things right. The fact that her mother had ten thousand guilders hidden away came as a surprise and also, of course, a helping hand. It was a nice round figure, and no doubt would come in very useful.Had done already, in fact. On January 12 she had spent two thousand of it; but it wasn’t wasted money. In a drawer of her bedside table she had a list of names and addresses and a fair amount of other information. She had a gun, and she had a furnished room waiting for her in Maardam. What more could she ask for?More courage? Resolve? A pinch of good luck?The night before she set off she prayed to a very much unspecified god, asking him to stand by her and grant her those precise things, and when she turned off the bedside light she had a strong feeling that there wasn’t very much in this world capable of placing obstacles in her way.Nothing at all, probably. That night she slept in a fetal position, warm and with a smile on her face, and in the knowledge that she had never felt less vulnerable in all her life. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • International Bestseller
  • Chief Inspector Van Veeteren is on the case once more in this breathless thriller of deception, blackmail, and cold murder. Van Veeteren and his associates are left bewildered by the curious murder of a man shot twice in the heart and twice below the belt. An utterly dull man, the only suspicious activity his surviving wife can report is a series of peculiar phone calls. Repeatedly the telephone would ring, offering no answer but an obscure pop song from the 1960s. This siren song would be linked to an identical murder, but the true connection remains unknown. With a cool, critical eye, Van Veeteren pursues his subject across the country, wading through outrageous leads and fruitless tips in this chilling mystery from master crime novelist Håkan Nesser.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(241)
★★★★
25%
(201)
★★★
15%
(120)
★★
7%
(56)
23%
(184)

Most Helpful Reviews

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15 Pages

When Nesser decides to write something that is actually mysterious, he is an exciting writer. Unfortunately in this novel that boils down to about 15 pages of real excitement. In the beginning of the novel he reveals who the murderer is and how the murders are (and will be) committed...and the motive is rather transparent... So where exactly is the mystery here? I am not a mystery connoisseur by any means- but to me, a mystery should have like you know...a MYSTERY to it!(?) Something exciting for the reader to figure out!(?) If you want a superior foreign mystery writer who not only develops interesting characters but also gives you more excitement AND an actual mystery to figure out, read one of R.D. Wingfield's Jack Frost mysteries.
7 people found this helpful
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Annoying and yet I can't hate it

From the back cover:
A young woman shivers in the December cold as her mother's body is laid to rest in a cemetery. A middle aged man is killed at his home, shot twice in the chest and twice below the belt. He had recently received a series of bizarre phone calls in which an old song is played down the line, evoking an eerie sense of both familiarity and unease. Before the police can find the culprit, a second man is killed in the same way. Chief Inspector Van Veeteren and his team must dig far back into each man's past - but with few clues at each crime scene, can they find the killer before anyone else dies? And as Van Veeteren muses on the complexity of the emerging puzzle, it falls to someone else to provide the first key insight....

Review:
I had heard this was a great read, but I wasn't that impressed. It grew on me over time - when I first finished reading I was going to give it 2 Stars - but in the end decided on 3 Stars. I had three major problems with this book. The first problem I had I suspect is a byproduct of issues with translation. There were lots of idioms used that seemed to me to be outdated or just slightly off - it really stuck me over and over again and pulled me out of the rhythm of reading which really annoyed me. The second problem I had was actually a personal dislike of the characters. I don't always have to like characters in the book I'm reading, being likable isn't a prerequisite for being readable, but the police force in this book irritated me almost to the point of throwing the book across the room. They just seemed to be so inept and lazy and drunken it was painful to read about them. The third problem I had was that this book just seemed so dated to me. About halfway through the book I realised that this was first published in 1996 (the year I graduated high school) when mobile phones and the Internet were not the vital tools they are today, and I actually felt like I was reading a book that was much, much older than its 14 years. I'm surprised that my enjoyment of the story was so effected by this lack of technology - I suppose my mind has become too used to modern crime shows/stories!

Overall I felt like I read a story about lazy, inept policemen blindly following a clever woman killing a bunch of people who, quite frankly, deserved what they got, all the way to the conclusion of the tale. And yet over time something sticks with me that makes me like it better than when I first finished it. I don't quite know what that is, I suppose if I ignore the fact that the wording is odd, the characters are annoying and it's a bit too old school, there is a good story in there. Once again this is a book I've read that I didn't like so much as a book but would probably enjoy as a TV series or a movie.
4 people found this helpful
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Done with Amazon!

I liked the book very much, but am so disappoiinted with Amazon that I doubt I will every use them for book orders again. This book was missing the last 30 pages! I mean, this is a mystery and you get to the last 30 pages of a brand new book and they aren't there. Amazon did give me a refund and then I bought it on Kindle just so I could at least finish the book. I purhcased another book previously and the book was supposed to be brand new and had slash marks on the pages, coffee or chocolate stains. It was ridiculous! A third instance, a book that I ordered had 5 of the pages fall completely out. Needless to say the quality is minimal at its very best and if I have any future orders it will be through our local book store to make sure they stay in business.
3 people found this helpful
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How A Person's Past Can Shape Their Future...Suspenseful Murder Mystery

I am a fan of Hakar Nesser, my first book of his being Mind's Eye. In Woman With Birthmark, it's Inspector Van Veeteren who is at the top of his game when men starting dropping dead with both a bullet to the head and a bullet to the nether region. It's January and Van Veeteren is cold and miserable, but not above solving this latest crime. Seems a young lady has not been listening nor playing well with others. The question is why. Why have these men been murdered? What do they have in common? What's with the mysterious music that was played to them over the phone in the weeks before they die? Will the murderer strike again? And finally, will Van Veeteren's team find her before it's too late for the next poor strapper?

In Nesser's proven, witty, and pithy style, Woman With Birthmark is a suspenseful mystery where the reader is somewhat sympathetic to the murderer. We learn a bit more about Van Veeteren's team in this one as well. This disturbing tale, and the implications of how what has happened in a person's past can shape their future is one you will be thinking about long after it is completed!
3 people found this helpful
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Was an interesting plot.

The plot of this novel was interesting. I was surprised when it was made known who the killer was. One thing I would like to add is that the characters could have been developed more, especially the team of detectives. After a while they each just seemed to blend into one another as most of them did not have well-developed personalities.
3 people found this helpful
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Didactic denouement detracts from drama

This work has many of the typical virtues of Nesser's writing, and yet falls short of his best. I am at a loss to understand how it won a prize, but fear that I do understand.

Van Veeteren and his squad of detectives do their interviews, have meetings, eat junk food and engage in soulful yet flippant conversations as they await the unraveling of the serial murders of four men, each shot twice or more in the head and then twice in the genitals. It is a tough nut to crack, as there is an interesting twist linking the killer, the victims and the reasons for the killings.

For much of the book the writing, ably translated by Laurie Thompson, is crisp and forceful. The action is detailed but still moves swiftly enough. The killer and killer's motives are finally unveiled, but I found the denouement less than compelling. There is a level of didacticism that was too much for this reader to endure. I still subscribe to the old tenet that the writer should show rather than tell. While Nesser's sentiments are ones I heartily subscribe to, they are much more suited to the pages of a liberal journal like The Atlantic Monthly than they are to the novel. Moreover, what happens to the killer in the end is unwarranted and unnecessary, and we are given no believable picture of how she got where she was in the first place.

Too many punches pulled.

The point was already well made. The writer should have left bad enough alone.
2 people found this helpful
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A Swedish Mystery

A great Swedish mystery. Our chief detective is divorced. He’s a chess player and classical music enthusiast. He seems like a great guy without the overwhelming quirks that a lot of literary and TV detectives have these days. Men from a military graduation class thirty years ago are being killed one by one; two shots to the chest; two to the groin. While the mystery unravels, we get a bit of the local color of urban Sweden. This story, one of a series of Inspector Van Veeteren mysteries, also has more assistant detectives than usual and we learn a bit about each one’s love life and home life. A good read.
2 people found this helpful
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misprinted copy of Woman with Birthmark

Missing 50 pages, last 50 pages printed twice, inserted in middle.......a bad copy of a good book! would like replacement
2 people found this helpful
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Puzzling thriller

A woman,upon the death of her mother, makes a decision that it's time for some people to pay. What wrong was done to her and her mother is not made known at the beginning, but as the killings start to take place, the motive begins to emerge.

Inspector Van Veeteren, battling a cold, and a team flummoxed by an almost total absence of clues as to the identity of the killer and the motive for the killings, helplessly stand by the sidelines, hoping this is not the work of a serial killer. Gradually though, connections between the victims start to emerge and as the race to find the killer heats up, will Veeteren's team find the killer in time before she kills again, or will they be too late?

Blackmail, murder and a clever killer make for great ingredients in this police procedural. I thought it read a little slow at times, but there's no denying the building tension in the book.
2 people found this helpful
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Woman with Birthmark is an Inspector Van Veeteren novel by Hakan Nesser a Swedish crime author

The Swedes have become known as excellent crime novelists. Among the best is Hakan Nesser. This book is not one of his most intriguing since it is easy to surmise why the victims are being murdered. Like so many other murder mysteries the answer lies in the distant past.
Severl seemingly normal middle aged men are murdered. All are shot twice in the heart and twice in the testicles.It is easy to surmise that the killer is a woman who has a grudge to solve against the victims. The answer to the crime is only solved when the Swedish police delve deeply in the past of each of the murdered men. The book is a police procedural which moves at a rapid pace. The team have to answer the queries, "What was the killer's motive? The end is mildly thrilling. The social issue of rape and abuse of women is a major theme of the novel.
The novel is a short read of 326 pages. Nesser is adept at dialogue and character analysis. Those of us who enjoy the cold atmospheric descriptions of Sweden will not be disappointed by this book dealing with grisley murder.
There is nothing great in these pages but it provides a good page turner until the mystery is solved.
2 people found this helpful