Flickan som lekte med elden

631 pages

Swedish language

Published Nov. 3, 2007

ISBN:
978-91-7001-483-3
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4 stars (3 reviews)

Mikael Blomkvist på Millennium har fått korn på ett hett nyhetsstoff. Journalisten Dag Svensson och hans sambo Mia Bergman har hittat avslöjande uppgifter om en omfattande sexhandel mellan Östeuropa och Sverige. Många av de personer som utpekas i traffickinghärvan har höga positioner i samhället.

Samtidigt återvänder Lisbeth Salander till Sverige och händelser i hennes mörka förflutna börjar göra sig påminda. När Dag och Mia blir brutalt mördade riktas misstankarna mot Salander och en stor polisjakt drar igång. Salander bestämmer sig för att en gång för alla göra upp med det förgångna och straffa dem som förtjänar det. Blomkvist och Salanders vägar korsas ännu en gång. (back cover)

13 editions

Review of 'The Girl Who Played with Fire' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Millennium has another hot story to publish, a journalist has been researching and is about to expose a large network involving sex slaves and powerful people who have a lot to lose. When said journalist and his partner are found dead by Blomkvist, it just makes him want more than ever to publish the story and find the killer.

This book was so good! I confess I did not understand what the beginning had to do with the rest of the story, even though it would make a great short story. Was it for the readers to understand Salander's morals? To understand how she spent a year away? Nevertheless, it feels very disconnected to rest, which has a much faster pace than the previous volume and is impossible to put down. I loved every bit of it and when I could not read, I was thinking about the loose ends …

Review of 'The Girl Who Played with Fire' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Better than the first, but I was still very frustrated at the unnecessary amount of detail the author added. When reading crime books one tends to store every piece of information given, assuming that it's a richly-woven tapestry and everything is significant. The name of the lamp she buys for the kitchen at Ikea is, however, unrelated to anyfuckingthing. Why several pages needed to be devoted to this is beyond me. Is it humour, perverseness, poor editing? I can't tell.

Gripes aside, an action packed techno-political thriller with a broken anti-heroine at the core. You want to know about "all the evil" and you most certainly want Lisbeth to get her bloody justice.

(You don't want to know about the particular shade of her jacket. I'm just saying.)