The Blood Spilt Author:Asa Larsson It’s midsummer in Sweden—when the light lingers through dawn and a long, isolating winter finally comes to an end. In this magical time, a brutal killer has chosen to strike. A female priest—who made enemies and acolytes in equal number—has been found hanging in her church. And a big-city lawyer quite acquainted with deat... more »h enters the scene as police and parishioners try to pick up the pieces....
Not long ago, attorney Rebecka Martinsson had to kill three men in order to stop an eerily similar murder spree—one that also involved a priest. Now she is back in Kiruna, the region of her birth, while a determined policewoman gnaws on the case and people who loved or loathed the victim mourn or revel in her demise. The further Rebecka is drawn into the mystery—a mystery that will soon take another victim—the more the dead woman’s world clutches her: a world of hurt and healing, sin and sexuality, and, above all, of sacrifice.
In prose that is both lyrical and visceral, Åsa Larsson has crafted a novel of pure entertainment, a taut, atmospheric mystery that will hold you in thrall until the last, unforgettable page is turned« less
If you read the first book, Sun Storm, and didn't like the thing that happened to the dog, you will -not- want to read this one. There is quite a bit more needless description of a variety of animals being abused or killed and a certain point of Swedish law presented in the course of these descriptions will only serve to further enrage animal lovers. Of course, if you believe that animals are just animals and find the human murders and abuses more upsetting, I think you may be disappointed too. This time, I felt almost nothing for the murder which is the focus of the story. None of the potential murderers was, I felt, in-depth enough to care about, and there were so many that I quickly lost track of who was who. In addition, the murdered women herself raised no sympathy in me or most of the characters around her. The issues of misogyny and patriarchal predominance in the Church as well as the conflict between hunters' rights and the need for ecological conservation are prominent and hold the most emotional charge. A rather unimportant, needless, and cliched side story (which also gets entangled in the animal cruelty issues) brings in the sexual relationship between two women, one of whom is perceived to be a man-hater in a loveless, sexless marriage with a man, and the other who is your standard negatively-drawn lesbian-in-development who doesn't dress like a typical woman, whose hair is cut like a man's, and who was sexually abused as a child by a male family member (which of course we realize is the basis of her current lesbian longings). These two women are presented as somewhat emotionally unstable as one uses sex to get the other to do something for her politically and the other, upon losing her lover, takes it out on her animals and then takes it out on herself. What I -did- take away from this book is that Swedish culture is not any more enlightened than American culture despite significant differences in access to healthcare, education, labor rights, unemployment insurance, public spending, and parental (maternity) leave which most Americans, if told, would think is simply a gross exaggeration meant to make them look foolish. The more things change the more they stay the same, so the saying goes. I will not be reading more by this author mainly due to the frequent focus on and references to animal abuse and killing.