Monday, December 23, 2024

Review of "Blood Ties: The Kingdom #2" by Jo Nesbø


This review was first posted on Mystery & Suspense Magazine. Check it out for features, interviews, and reviews. https://www.mysteryandsuspense.com/bl...


This book is the sequel to The Kingdom, about brothers Roy and Carl Opgard, who live in a Norwegian mountain town called Os.

Older brother Roy has always been the 'fixer' of the siblings, and over the years, Roy has taken care of Carl's mistakes; protected Carl from enemies; and committed and covered up murders on Carl's behalf. Carl relies on Roy, expecting to be rescued no matter what.



As young men, the siblings took different paths: Carl went to America to study business, and Roy became the manager of a gas station in Os. After fifteen years, Carl returned to Os with plans for a luxury resort.



Much has happened since then, and now that the Opgard siblings are approaching middle age, Carl is the CEO of a five-star hotel, spa, ski resort complex.





Roy has become successful as well, and he owns the gas station, the Meiergård apartment building, and the Fritt Fall bar. In addition, Roy has plans to build a roller coaster and amusement park in Os.



To attract more guests to his luxury hotel, Carl has hired Natalie Moe to be head of marketing. Natalie grew up in Os, went away to school, and is now back. Roy helped Natalie escape an abusive home when she was a pale skinny frightened adolescent, and Natalie has returned as a confident beautiful woman who catches Roy's eye.





Though things seem to be going well for the Opgard brothers, they have a problem. The Norwegian Roads Administration wants to build a tunnel through the city of Todde, to replace the road that runs through Os. Should this happen, Carl's resort hotel and Roy's amusement park will be toast. A company called GeoData is assessing the feasibility of the tunnel, and Roy offers a bribe to the surveyors, to say the tunnel isn't viable.



The Opgards have other concerns as well. Carl has mismanaged hotel funds, and needs a loan to cover the resort's running costs; and Roy needs a loan to pay the bribes to GeoData, and to finance his amusement park. The bank manager, Asle Vendelbo, is skeptical about lending the money, and Roy has to provide some incentive.



In the midst of all this, Carl and Roy's past homicides are on the verge of exposure. The brothers' method of committing (or covering up) murder was to send a car hurtling off a dangerous curve into a deep narrow valley. The victims' deaths were attributed to accidents, and the cars were left in the ravine.



The Highways Department is now building a crash barrier, and will winch the cars up first, making them available for forensic examination. Sheriff Kurt Olsen is convinced the Opgards killed his father, and is sure KRIPOS (The National Criminal Investigation Service) will find the evidence. This could well send the Opgard brothers to prison.



It's hard to empathize with either brother, but Roy at least has the excuse of blood ties, because to him, family trumps money, power and glory. Carl, on the other hand, who thinks of himself as the 'King of Os,' is self-centered, arrogant, and smug.



For instance, Carl's office, on the third floor of his hotel, is extremely impractical, given that all the administration takes place on the ground floor; moreover, Carl's office occupies what could have been the second-best suite in the hotel, with a view of the mountains that matched the one from the Bridal Suite.

Carl has also been having a blatant, long-term affair with Mari, the wife of newspaper editor Dan Krane. Everyone knows Carl fathered Mari's third child, and though the Cranes remain married, Dan is a broken man.



Roy notes, "I had started to feel sorry for [Dan]. Gone were the firm strides, the straight back, and those inspired editorials in the newspaper, their place taken now by a head one saw a little too often bent to a morning glass of beer at Fritt Fall, and badly written editorials.



As the narrative develops, there's double-dealing, threats, and additional murders. Fans of Nordic suspense won't want to miss The Kingdom and Blood Ties.

Thanks to Netgalley, Jo Nesbo, and Knopf for a copy of Blood Ties.

Rating: 3.5 stars

No comments:

Post a Comment