Available Formats
The Swell: A captivating mystery set in Iceland and steeped in myth
By (Author) Kat Gordon
Bonnier Books Ltd
Manilla Press
17th June 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary
Icelandic and Old Norse sagas
823.92
Paperback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 24mm
407g
In places of darkness, women will rise . . .
Iceland, 1910. In the middle of a severe storm two sisters - Freyja and Gudrun - rescue a mysterious, charismatic man from a shipwreck near their remote farm.
Sixty-five years later, a young woman - Sigga - is spending time with her grandmother when they learn a body has been discovered on a mountainside near Reykjavik, perfectly preserved in ice.
Moving between the turn of the 20th century and the 1970s as a dark mystery is unravelled, The Swell is a spellbinding, beautifully atmospheric read, rich in Icelandic myth.
Praise for THE SWELL
'Thoroughly bewitching. Kat Gordon's spare prose is as beautiful as it is haunting' Freya Berry, author of The Birdcage Library
'Gripping, bewitching, and laced with atmosphere, reading The Swell was a wonderfully sensory experience' Harriet Constable, author of The Instrumentalist
'A skilful, measured atmospheric mystery set in Iceland. . . Kat Gordon is a master storyteller' Cathryn Kemp, author of A Poisoner's Tale
Thoroughly bewitching. Kat Gordon's spare prose is as beautiful as it is haunting. * Freya Berry, author of The Birdcage Library *
A skilful, measured, atmospheric mystery set in Iceland and weaving across two timelines. Kat Gordon is a master storyteller. * Cathryn Kemp, author of A Poisoner's Tale *
Gripping, bewitching, and laced with atmosphere, reading The Swell was a wonderfully sensory experience. * Harriet Constable, author of The Instrumentalist *
Beautiful and powerful, a story of courage and survival that echoes across generations. Kat Gordon presents us with a compelling tale of two women living in very different times in the 20th century, both striving for change in the face of danger and oppression. The harsh, often lightless, landscape mirrors the struggle for liberation for these young women. I am sure this haunting, melancholic yet ultimately hopeful novel will appeal to readers of Elizabeth O'Connor's Whale Fall. * Emily Critchley, author of The Undoing of Violet Claybourne *
Kat Gordon worked briefly at Time Out, as a gymnastics coach, an HIV counsellor, and as the world's worst bartender before publishing her first novel, The Artificial Anatomy of Parks. Her second novel, An Unsuitable Woman, was picked by Richard and Judy for their Book Club. Having lived in Budapest and Reykjavik, she is currently settled in London with her partner and their son.