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"A new addition to the captivating Inspector Sejer series, the first since The Caller, from Norway's finest crime writer Carmen and Nicolai failed to resuscitate their son, Tommy, after finding him floating in their backyard pond. When Inspector Skarre arrives on the scene, Carmen reports that Tommy, a healthy toddler with Down syndrome, wandered into the garden while Nicolai was working in the basement and she was cleaning the house. Skarre senses something is off with Carmen's story and consults his trusted colleague, the famed Inspector Sejer. An autopsy reveals Tommy's lungs to be full of soap. When Sejer and Skarre revisit the couple, Carmen, an epileptic, changes her story, confessing that she'd been knocked unconscious by a seizure while bathing Tommy. When she came to, she found him drowned in the tub and, horrified and frightened, threw him into the pond. But Skarre and Sejer's doubt is not appeased and the case is reopened. What more could Carmen be hiding? And what lengths will she take to cover her guilt? As Carmen's own family starts to doubt her, Skarre and Sejer work to find the truth."--… (more)
User reviews
When Sejer discovers that Tommy had Downs Syndrome he can't help wondering if the drowning really was an accident.
This is a very readable story, where Fossum has taken a very plausible plot and explored the character of the mother in particular, but also the impact of the death of the little boy on the whole family.
Karin Fossum is back with her 11th book in the Inspector Sejer Novel and it is once again easy to see why she is regarded as the Norwegian ‘Queen of Crime’. The Drowned Boy is another vintage Fossum creation; this book is a really compelling read, where
For those who have never read the Inspector Sejer series need to understand that this is not a blood and gore crime story. This is a well thought-out intellectual detective who works the evidence and to solve the crime requires an element of luck. This is an old fashioned styled whodunit, it may seem pedestrian to some but this is an engaging and engrossing read.
Sejer reminds me of Poirot in that he is very calm, a hypochondriac at times, intelligent, kind hearted and very thoughtful. Unlike a lot of modern detective series he does not require brawn, guns or threats; he treats everyone with respect no matter who they are. At times Frank his dog is a scene stealer and even a calming affect up on the reader.
On a hot Wednesday in August Sejer is called out to a suspected drowning in Damtjern of a young child, usually his team could handle this without him but his assistant Jacob Skarre has a feeling that something does not seem right. When he arrives the child is layout on a tarpaulin, naked and dead. The child called Tommy looks fit for his age and he could see that he had ‘Down’s syndrome’ and he begins to wonder how he has managed to get to the pond on his own.
Tommy’s parents are young, the mother Carmen is only 19 and a waif, while his father Nicolai is 20 and both seem confused. The story they tell the police is identical but their reactions are different Nicolai is heartbroken, confused and lost while Carmen seems to be crying on demand. But they are sticking to their story.
Sejer knows that something is amiss and that all he wants to do is find justice for Tommy but he also realises that sometimes justice does not happen for the victim. He recognises that people handle grief in many different ways but Nicolai and Carmen are chalk and cheese especially in the way that they are handling Tommy’s death.
Karin Fossum has once again dug deep in to the human psyche and gives us some very interesting characters. We also seem an examination of a dominant personality on to someone who is not as strong and this dominance screams at you throughout the book and at times comes across as arrogant.
Does Tommy get justice? You will have to read to find out. One thing that does strike you is that Sejer and Frank really are the mirror image of each other!
This is a slow paced, psychological twisty novel. Is Carmen telling the truth or could a more nefarious purpose have been her intent? Good story about the secrets people hide, how those with little or no conscience can make their way through life with nary a blip. How will evidence be found, if in fact Carmen is lying? What is the truth and what is a lie, and how can we tell the difference? Very interesting case and well mixed with the private health travails of Sejer.
ARC from publisher.
Inspector Sejer takes hold of this one like a dog with a bone between its teeth, and holds on until what happened finally becomes clear. This is a far less
By all accounts the boy Tommy had been a healthy little boy, well cared for by his parents. His Down syndrome had
And when he shares his misgivings with Inspector Sejer, the older detective agrees and they both start pulling the threads of the case. And slowly, methodically, the story that everyone believes start to shatter - a lie is replaced by another, a half-truth start to emerge.
When the actual story emerges it is both awful and heart breaking. Old lies and misgivings prove to be the key to the case - and finding what really happened to Tommy.
The book is a later addition to a long running series and the two inspectors back story had become involved and complicated by now. As I had not read most of the previous ones, I had to guess about some of it. But the relevant pieces were mentioned and explained - unobtrusively but well enough to make the book readable on its own.
What I really dislike was the ending - the way in which Sejer finally found his proof and found the way to cut through the lies and reach the truth. Too coincidental, too staged. I almost wish that it was never added at the end - even a bad end is better than this one. And sometimes, even when you have the best detectives in the world and they know what happened, proving it may be impossible. But that probably does not fit into Fossum's plans for her series.
If you plan to read this book and don’t want to know any more than this brief plot summary then I advise you avoid the book’s publicity material which gives away much more. Fortunately I didn’t look at any of that material before embarking on the book and so was able to learn its secrets in the order and manner the author intended. That’s definitely a plus with a book like this which is not replete with plot twists and turns. I don’t mean nothing happens, rather that the book has a kind of realism to it in which events take time to unfold and people’s lives have moments of drama amidst the humdrum rather than being jammed full of Dramatic Elements. For me this slow burn is more satisfying, ensuring that when important developments do happen their full impact is felt and understood.
In a lesser author’s hands such a simple story would have the potential to present as dull but Fossum is a master at exploring the inner psychology of her characters and making the reader completely invested in learning everything there is to know about them. She unpicks how Tommy’s young parents – barely more than children themselves – dealt very differently both with their son’s condition and then his death. The subject of Tommy’s condition, and how various other characters including Tommy’s grandparents, might have handled having a child with Down syndrome, is explored in some depth, ensuring that the reader does not dismiss the confronting element of that subject or rush to judgement about any character’s guilt or innocence. I liked that even as things become clearer about who might have played a role in Tommy’s death Fossum makes it difficult to hate the one responsible. A situation in which a good person ‘goes bad’ is infinitely more complex – and interesting – than one in which some madman is making suits out of human skin or whatever it is fictional serial killers are up to these days.
As always Sejer takes time to build his case, working through all the possibilities, looking for evidence to support his theories. I always enjoy seeing his methodical approach in action, especially when it is contrasted by the way he addresses personal issues. Here he is concerned about his own health but is happy enough to put his worries on the back burner and concentrate on his work. Perhaps due to the subject matter of this story he and Skarre, who is openly religious, discuss God and faith in a way I don’t remember from earlier novels. I like the way Fossum weaves this into the main story, leaving the question of whether or not there is a God and what role s/he may or may not have played in the life of Tommy completely unresolved.
I finished THE DROWNED BOY in a couple of sittings, ably assisted by David Rintoul’s excellent narration of the audio book, and recommend it to anyone interested in books which explore what particular circumstances might make a good person do something rotten and how that might present to the world.
Tommy Brandt, a healthy 16-month-old
The problem is that something is not quite right about Carmen's behavior. She's crying, but it also appears to be an act rather than true mourning. The boy's father is seriously grieving and never considered a suspect. The two present a stark contrast in their different behavior. The drowning may be an accident, as Carmen claims, but she seems to be having a hard time remembering exactly what she was doing when Tommy would have wandered down to the pond and drowned. She also seems very eager to pack up and move out all of Tommy's things.
Carmen's story changes after the autopsy. The inspectors are even more suspicious, but have nothing to definitively prove Carmen is lying. Complicating the interpersonal dynamics is Papa Zita, Carmen's father. Carmen's a daddy's girl, and her father is right there, supporting her every statement as fact and trying to help. Papa Zita owns a fast food restaurant where Nicolai and Carmen both work.
The writing in this series is very much to the point and concise. There is not a lot of extra verbiage and descriptions beyond just what is needed to propel the story forward. It should also be noted that The Drowned Boy is more psychological study than a police procedural. Carmen's odd behavior will stand out in stark contrast to Nicolai's grief. She is determined to move on, maybe have another child, while Nicolai is completely overwhelmed with grief. The incongruity between the two is startling. When the question is raised if it would have been better for Carmen to have aborted Tommy, she thinks it would have been better while Nicolai most decidedly says no. (Those following the series will also be concerned about Sejer's recent dizzy spells and his reluctance to go to the doctor.)
Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt for review purposes.