![]() ![]() Perhaps the translator could be partially to blame for the almost British feel to much of the book, but this was still the most readable translation of a crime novel that I've come across. Stockholm and Sweden were present in occasional small touches, but overall the setting could have been anywhere. I would have liked a better sense of place in Missing. The plot might be clichéd, but the character is anything but. The present day scenes alternate between the hope that Sibylla still retains for her future and the despair at her situation, and the result is an unexpectedly well rounded and memorable character. A series of flashbacks gradually reveal Sibylla's troubled and disturbing childhood and her reasons for escaping to homelessness. ![]() The plot is surely instantly familiar to crime fiction fans, but where Alvtegen excels is in creating a haunting yet engaging character portrait of a homeless person, her history, and the hopes and dreams that remain. The police are content to lay the blame on their most convenient suspect and somehow Sibylla must find the real killer to clear her name. The scam goes horribly wrong when the man who paid for her room is found murdered and mutilated, and when a second man dies soon after then Sibylla becomes the most wanted criminal in Sweden. Sibylla Forsenstrom is a homeless drifter who occasionally cons men into paying for meals and luxury hotel rooms. Swedish author Karin Alvtegen's English language debut is a fine psychological mystery/thriller. ![]()
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