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Ridpath thriller set in Iceland

By Mary Ann Gwinn / The Seattle Times
Published: September 02. 2012 4:00AM PST

“Far North" by Michael Ridpath (St. Martin’s Minotaur, 384 pgs., $25.99)

British crime writer Michael Ridpath has entered a crowded field with his new novel, “Far North," — that of thrillers based in Northern countries, featuring ice, intrigue and violence. While the Sweden-based “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo" set this trend on fire, Ridpath’s terrain is Iceland, an insular country recently devastated by the collapse of the world economy.

“Far North" takes up where Ridpath’s first Icelandic novel, “Where the Shadows Lie," left off. In 2011’s “Shadows," Ridpath introduced Magnus Jonson, a Boston police detective working with the Reykjavík police department. Magnus was loaned to that force after, as a witness in a police-corruption scandal, he was targeted for execution. This made it expedient for him to get out of Beantown.

Magnus was born and raised in Iceland, but at age 12 his father moved Magnus and most of the family to the United States for some not very well-explained reasons. This background enables Ridpath to interweave two stories — that of Magnus’ family’s history and a contemporary mystery involving Iceland’s financial downfall. Magnus’ position as an insider-outsider makes him an astute observer of Icelanders, a proud, independdent and eccentric people whose lives play out against the bleak but spectacular Icelandic landscape.

Iceland purists may point out that they have their own best-selling thriller writer, Arnaldur Indridason, author of “Jar City" and other brooding mysteries. Test-drive them both — this ancient land has a lot of secrets to be discovered.

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