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sallyysimpson's review against another edition
dark
mysterious
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
3.25
vanvicki's review against another edition
dark
mysterious
slow-paced
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
3.0
evelum's review against another edition
2.0
Luin ja arvostelin tämän kirjan silloin, kun ainoa mistä välitin rikoskirjallisuudessa oli se, kuinka nopeasti pystyin ratkaisemaan arvoituksen, ja jos se tapahtui liian nopeasti, en pystynyt pitämään kirjasta. Jos lukisin tämän nyt uudestaan, arvostaisin luultavasti enemmän kaikkea muuta, kuten sitä kuinka paljon poliisityöhön liittyvää tutkimusta kirjan taustalla on.
syyskuu's review against another edition
3.0
Raskautta pohdiskeleva dekkari. Kieleen olisin kaivannut pedofilian ja lasten hyväksikäytön käsitteellistä erottamista toisistaan.
cricci's review against another edition
4.0
Yet another great read by Leena Lehtolainen. I'm loving this series more and more. Lehtolainen (or maybe the translator, Owen Witesman) matures as a writer throughout the series, and as a result, her characters appear to have more depth, compassion, and interest.
I truly enjoy these novels because they are a fun suspenseful read. They aren't too gory, the plot isn't too heavy, and the "whodunit" keeps me guessing the whole story long. I would say this is a light read, but not quite "cozy mystery" light. I enjoy it as a good break between heavier novels.
One of the main reasons I love this series is the main character, Maria Kallio. She is fantastic. I love how she grapples with being a woman in a male-dominated career, deals with people (even sometimes getting a little too heated or ahead of herself), and balances her family life with her work life. I can relate a lot to her, her relationships with other (my spouse and I are also both very passionate about our work), and her feelings towards motherhood.
It is perhaps that last point about Maria's feeling towards motherhood that made me feel the epilogue is the most beautifully written part of the novel.Lehtolainen writes a fantastic description of Kallio giving birth to her daughter. I absolutely loved it as I balled my eyes out. To me, it perfectly describes the primal act of giving birth in the most beautiful way possible. It's not easy; it's painful. It's not all rainbows and butterflies; there's vomit, fecal matter, blood, and vernix. Yet, it's a wonderful part of nature that does not seem to get the raw beauty it deserves.
Throughout the series, I think Maria's reflections on her relationships, and now her newfound motherhood as a pregnant and soon-to-be mother, are more mature. She reflects more and does see how her actions could affect other people. It is likely because I relate so much to the main character that I enjoy the books, but I also think the plot is interesting. Lehtolainen keeps me guessing throughout the novel no matter the story line. I waiver between characters as much as Maria does, even as I try to outsmart her.
I enjoy the series. I think they're fun. Therefore, I would recommend this series to someone looking to read a light whodunit.
I truly enjoy these novels because they are a fun suspenseful read. They aren't too gory, the plot isn't too heavy, and the "whodunit" keeps me guessing the whole story long. I would say this is a light read, but not quite "cozy mystery" light. I enjoy it as a good break between heavier novels.
One of the main reasons I love this series is the main character, Maria Kallio. She is fantastic. I love how she grapples with being a woman in a male-dominated career, deals with people (even sometimes getting a little too heated or ahead of herself), and balances her family life with her work life. I can relate a lot to her, her relationships with other (my spouse and I are also both very passionate about our work), and her feelings towards motherhood.
It is perhaps that last point about Maria's feeling towards motherhood that made me feel the epilogue is the most beautifully written part of the novel.
Throughout the series, I think Maria's reflections on her relationships, and now her newfound motherhood as a pregnant and soon-to-be mother, are more mature. She reflects more and does see how her actions could affect other people. It is likely because I relate so much to the main character that I enjoy the books, but I also think the plot is interesting. Lehtolainen keeps me guessing throughout the novel no matter the story line. I waiver between characters as much as Maria does, even as I try to outsmart her.
I enjoy the series. I think they're fun. Therefore, I would recommend this series to someone looking to read a light whodunit.
flying_monkey's review against another edition
adventurous
mysterious
tense
medium-paced
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.5
The series continues after Book 1, as a straight-down-the-line crime series in many ways, although it takes a while to settle, like Maria herself. From being a part-time police officer in Helsinki in Book 1, she moves through being a lawyer in a small-town firm in Book 2, to being the local Sheriff in her (even smaller) hometown in the dreary ex-idustrial of Finland in Book 3 to (finally?) in Book 4 and 5, settling down to a longer-term job as a police detective in Espoo, a municipality next to Helsinki of which the small town in Book 2 is also part. In Book 2 and 3, you almost get the feeling, as people she knows always seem to get killed, that this might end up being like a Finnish version of Murder, She Wrote, but by Book 4, this seems to have been abandoned. It might not be so much Maria who has settled down, as Leena Lehtolainen.
Maria's character definitely starts to become more defined too. She's fierce and impulsive and a little careless of her own safety sometimes, but perceptive and caring for the safety of other's. Like almost everyone in Finland it seems from these books, she is super-fit and loves the countryside and the lakes and sea. Her relationship with her partner, an old friend who she reconnected with in Book 1, goes from being difficult to being increasingly loving and necessary to both. It's actually good to see an uncomplicated relationship painted well. Her relationship with her colleagues and her struggles as a female officer in the face general arseholery are well done. There is a lot more social observation in these books too, with class and racial tensions playing important roles in both the background and increasingly in the foreground too.
As I said though, these are still pretty much straight-ahead: everything is always seen through Maria's eyes, with the occasional exception of a prologue; there is a murder and while initially baffled or even misled, the plot proceeds to the resolution. In a couple of the books, almost exactly the same thing happens, which is that Maria tells us that she has worked out who the killer is but then doesn't tell us the name as she proceeds onwards, which just reads weirdly when you are supposed to be 'in her head'. It breaks the atmosphere and the link we have to the character. There are better ways of doing this. Another one: we know the author is a huge figure-skating fan and even writes about it for newspapers. In Book 5, she suddenly makes Maria a bit of a figure-skating fan out of nowhere, solely for the sake of the plot, which concerns the death of a promising teenage skater - I think skating was mentioned once before in the entire series to this point.
Maria's character definitely starts to become more defined too. She's fierce and impulsive and a little careless of her own safety sometimes, but perceptive and caring for the safety of other's. Like almost everyone in Finland it seems from these books, she is super-fit and loves the countryside and the lakes and sea. Her relationship with her partner, an old friend who she reconnected with in Book 1, goes from being difficult to being increasingly loving and necessary to both. It's actually good to see an uncomplicated relationship painted well. Her relationship with her colleagues and her struggles as a female officer in the face general arseholery are well done. There is a lot more social observation in these books too, with class and racial tensions playing important roles in both the background and increasingly in the foreground too.
As I said though, these are still pretty much straight-ahead: everything is always seen through Maria's eyes, with the occasional exception of a prologue; there is a murder and while initially baffled or even misled, the plot proceeds to the resolution. In a couple of the books, almost exactly the same thing happens, which is that Maria tells us that she has worked out who the killer is but then doesn't tell us the name as she proceeds onwards, which just reads weirdly when you are supposed to be 'in her head'. It breaks the atmosphere and the link we have to the character. There are better ways of doing this. Another one: we know the author is a huge figure-skating fan and even writes about it for newspapers. In Book 5, she suddenly makes Maria a bit of a figure-skating fan out of nowhere, solely for the sake of the plot, which concerns the death of a promising teenage skater - I think skating was mentioned once before in the entire series to this point.