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The Boy In The Suitcase: Nina Borg #1

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Boy In The Suitcase: Nina Borg #1

Contributors:

By (Author) Lene Kaaberbol
By (author) Agnete Friis

ISBN:

9781616954918

Publisher:

Soho Press Inc

Imprint:

Soho Press Inc

Publication Date:

15th October 2017

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

839.8138

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

338

Dimensions:

Width 127mm, Height 191mm

Weight:

260g

Description

Nina Borg, a Red Cross nurse, wife and mother of two, is trying to live a quiet life. The last thing her husband wants is for her to go running off on another dangerous mission to help illegal refugees. But when Nina's estranged friend Karin leaves Nina a key to a public locker in a Copenhagen train station and begs her to take care of its contents. Nina gets drawn into a brutally violent underworld. Inside the suitcase is a three-year-old boy: naked, drugged, but alive. Nina's natural instinct is to rescue the boy, but she knows the situation is risky.

Reviews

Praise for The Boy in the Suitcase

A New York Times Bestseller
The New York Times Book ReviewNotable Crime Book of 2011
Strand Magazine Critics Award Nominee
Indie Next List November 2011 Pick
Barry Award Nominee for Best First Novel
Harald Morgensen Award for Best DanishThriller of the Year
Glass Key Crime Fiction Award Nominee


Heres something you dont often see in Nordic noir fictiona novel written by two women about the criminal mistreatment of women and children, compassionately told from a feminine perspective and featuring female characters you can believe in . . . The first collaborative effort of Lene Kaaberbl and Agnete Friis, and it packs an almighty punch.
The New York Times Book Review, Notable Crime Book of 2011

Fans of Nordic crime fiction, rejoice: Something is rotten in Denmark. But never fear, Red Cross nurse Nina Borg is on the case . . . A wild ride.
New York Post

Terrific . . . Whats for sure is that, once you start reading, you cant stopits as if the poor kids life depends on your getting to the end as fast as possible . . . looks like another winning entry in the emotionally lacerating Scandinavian mystery sweepstakes.
The Washington Post

Written in that sparse, uniquely Scandinavian style sure to draw comparisons with a certain blockbuster trilogy (this is better), this story packs plenty of emotional suspense and interpersonal friction without veering into melodrama. Kaaberbl and Friis know when to reveal and when to pull back, presenting just enough back story about Sigita's upbringing and marriage, just enough about Nina's relationship with her family and friends, without ever interrupting the action. The disparate perspectives do as much to humanize all the action as they do to disorientand I mean that in the best possible sense.
Associated Press

A frightening and tautly told story of the lengths to which people will go for family and money.
USA Today

A terrific central character and a great plot . . . As the story builds, each storyline is woven in, and no character, including Nina Borg, is what we think . . . A series to watch.
Toronto Globe and Mail

"Soho is known for high-quality crime fiction set around the globe, so it's no surprise that this gripping Danish thriller kept me turning pages while its poignant characters lodged in my heart. Denmark has never looked so sinister!"
Denise Hamilton, Edgar-winning author of the Eve Diamond series, The Last Embrace and Damage Control

"Stunning. Hooked me from the beginning. The Danish bourgeoisie and the criminal underworld collide in a moving, fast-paced thriller with psychological depth."
Cara Black, bestselling author of Murder in the Marais

"Lene Kaaberbl and Agnette Friis have created a dark shimmering gem of a crime thriller in The Boy in the Suitcase. Using the reliable skills weve come to expect from their Nordic brethrenclean tight prose, recognizably human characters, a fierce social conscience and airtight plottingtheyve fashioned as engaging a story as youre going to read anytime soon. The pages blur you read them so quickly, and yet the wallop to your mind and heart is real and deep. There must be something in the water up therefor which we should all be profoundly grateful."
David Corbett, Edgar-nominated author of Do They Know Im Running

A must for Scandinavian crime fiction aficionados."
Library Journal, Starred Review

A great introduction to an award-winning team of Danish authors.
November 2011 Indie Next List

Women characters get star turns in this book, with the most poignant being Sigita, the young single mother desperate to find her missing son. Realizing how acutely alone she is in this pursuit, Sigita summons a pugilistic tenacity in the face of the indifference of family and police to her sons plight as well as her own.
Boston Globe

Among the best crime novels of the year . . . marks Kaaberbl and Friis as serious talents to be reckoned with, ready to be discovered by an American audience.Publishers Marketplace

Stieg Larsson fans will find a lot to like in The Boy in the Suitcase . . . [Nina Borg] will strike many, particularly female readers, as a more appealing version of Lisbeth Salander.Publishers Weekly

Of all the recent Scandinavian thrillers that have been rushed into translation for fans of Stieg Larsson, heres one whose pair of strong heroines taking on a monstrous conspiracy of men behaving badly is actually reminiscent of the Millennium Trilogy . . . A debut thats a model of finely tuned suspense.
Kirkus Reviews

This past-paced, suspenseful thriller intertwines several stories, gradually revealing the motivations of multiple characters and building tremendous suspense. The novel should be recommended to anyone who enjoys Asa Larssons Rebecka Martinsson series and, especially, Christian Jungersens The Exception (2007), another Danish thriller focused on a group of female characters.
Booklist

The Boy in the Suitcase ratchets along at a breathless pace, skillfully switching points of view in a tightly choreographed arrangement.
Daily Beast

"This is a thrilling and most urgent novel reflecting a terrifying reality."
Maj Sjowall, bestselling co-author of the Martin Beck series

"Warning! If you open this book, your life will be on stand-by."
Elle (Denmark)

"Extraordinary . . . A crime novel where everything is perfectly done."
The Weekend Newspaper (Denmark)

The Boy in the Suitcase, cements Scandinavias reputation as a new hunting ground for tautly-plotted, well-written mysteries . . . A fast-paced thriller written in tight and sparse prose that seems to be the hallmark of Scandinavian mystery authors. A compelling read that youll find hard to put down.
Mystery Cime Librarian

"The first in a series of mysteries from Denmark is a highly emotional story of secrets and bad decisions. It is also about women: desperate, scared women; women who refuse to look at choices theyve made; and most of all, a very determined, brave woman who has to get involved in the lives of others. It starts with a series of short chapters from the viewpoints of seemingly unconnected characters. The writing is sparse, never telling the readers more than they must know at the moment and the action and emotion are continuous. The surprise ending is perfect. You wont be able to put this down."
Romantic Times

The Boy in the Suitcase is an exceptional crime fiction debut that shines a light on a tragic and real social issue. It manages to address this problem with a seriousness and social conscience that add significant weight to the story. It is an engaging, suspenseful, and excellently written crime fiction novel with complex and well-drawn characters which has been a bestseller throughout Scandinavia. The Boy in the Suitcase is definitely worth a read!
Scandinavian Books' Nordic Book Blog

The Boy in the Suitcase by Lene Kaaberbl and Agnete Friis is another exemplary Scandinavian mystery with a seriously driven heroine, and a most unusual plot and premise, that will keep you guessing until the very end.
BookLoons, Recommended Read for November 2011

A fast paced thriller that keeps the reader interested and invested from the moment Nina discovers the life stolen away inside that suitcase . . . Lene Kaaberbl and Agnete Friis have written a story about motherhood, immigration, crime and punishment and redemption that needs no comparison.
Literate Housewife

Author Bio

Lene Kaaberb l and Agnete Friis are the Danish duo behind the Nina Borg series, which also includes Invisible Murder, Death of a Nightingale, and The Considerate Killer. Friis is a journalist by training, while Kaaberb l has been a professional writer since the age of fifteen, with more than two million books sold worldwide.

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