Horst is brilliant on the day-to-day details of investigation, while keeping tension to the end * Sunday Times *
Impeccably crafted police procedural * Sunday Times Crime Club *
A
well-crafted, atmospheric, character-driven thriller - I couldn't put it down! * Alex Dahl, author of The Boy At The Door *
Up there with the best of the Nordic crime writers
-- Marcel Berlin * The Times *
Jorn Lier Horst is one of the most brilliantly understated crime novelists writing today
-- Joan Smith * Sunday Times *
Plotting reigns supreme. Fortunately, that's Horst's primary skill * Barry Forshaw, Financial Times *
A good Nordic police procedural with well-drawn characters
* Choice Magazine *
A
nail biting deftly plotted thriller by a Norwegian police officer turned bestselling author * Saga Magazine *
Lier Horst's novels stand comparison with the best police procedurals from anywhere in the world . . . polished and stylish . . . Wisting is a cracking creation . . . this is a riveting police procedural, it's a page turner, inventive and thrilling by turns * NB Magazine *
If you liked
Wallander you'll enjoy this too * Crime Fiction Lover *
One of the finest novels in one of the best police procedural series out there and a more than decent slice of scandi-noir too * NB *
Jorn Lier Horst writes some of the
best Scandinavian crime fiction available. His books are superbly plotted and addictive, the characters wonderfully realised * Yrsa Sigurdardottir *
Another good, solid police procedural * Connaught Telegraph *
Praise for Jorn Lier Horst * - *
Up there with the
best of the Nordic crime writers -- Marcel Berlin * The Times *
Jorn Lier Horst is one of the most
brilliantly understated crime novelists writing today -- Joan Smith * Sunday Times *
A good Nordic police procedural with
well-drawn characters * Choice Magazine *
Pure evil in a solid Wisting crime novel. /..../ Jorn Lier Horst delivers credible crime fiction as always * Norway *
With
Ill Will, Jorn Lier Horst claims the
number one spot on the winner's podium. /.../
Ill Will is the most brutal and ruthless novel penned by Horst to date. A ruthlessness that Horst delivers with elegance. /.../ The interplay between father and daughter, the police man and the journalist, is once again brilliantly portrayed * Norway *