Disclaimer: Pan Macmillan SA kindly sent me a copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.
This is Scandinavian crime writer Hakan Nesser's fifth book in his Inspector Gunnar Barbarotti series. The novel takes place in 2012 (when it was originally published) in Sweden, a few months after the sudden death of Barbarotti's beloved wife Marianne. Struggling to deal with the death, and attempting to comfort the couple's five children, Barbarotti goes back to work.
Chief Asunander is about to retire, but before he leaves he gives Barbarotti a cold case to work on - something that will keep him busy, but won't be too stressful for the grieving widower. Unlike the case that newly divorced Eva Backman is working on: the death of a high-profile Swedish politician, Barbarotti is asked to investigate the case of a person who went missing five years ago.
Arnold Morindor is an electrician who went missing five years ago. His case is especially interesting because he was married to the infamous 'Axe Woman of Little Burma', Ellen Bjarnebo when he disappeared. Bjarnebo spent 11 years in prison for murdering her first husband Harry Helgesson, back in 1989, with an axe. After the murder, her son Billy was taken away from her when she was arrested, and their relationship never fully recovered. Billy also struggled to speak after the horrific incident, but years later he is an adult with a wife and child of his own.
Barbarotti is convinced that Morinder's disappearance and the murder of Helgesson must be connected, and Bjarnebo's reputation doesn't help her case. It especially doesn't help that Ellen Bjarnebo seems to be avoiding him - or perhaps she is simply tired of discussing dead husbands? Either way, the inspector truly believes that the Axe Woman of Little Burma didn't tell all her truths all those years ago.
As Barbarotti tackles this cold case - a case he believes was given to him to keep him distracted during his mourning period - he focuses on his relationship with a higher power and finds comfort in communicating with his late wife. Besides his children and the distraction of the case, Barbarotti's only other comfort is his enduring friendship with colleague Eva Backman.
The Axe Woman is perhaps one of this reviewer's favorite of Hakan Nesser's novels (so far). There is so much to love about Gunnar Barbarotti, and his struggles with loss and grief are very relatable. It is also just as possible to feel an overwhelming amount of empathy for Ellen Bjarnebo, a woman who spent years in an abusive relationship, and whose son was considered 'different', and therefore suffered the consequences of prejudice and mistreatment. The question remains: Do we blame Bjarnebo for her ultimate act?
Nesser's novel deals with a lot of issues, and the most prominent ones include abuse, women who are incarcerated, spiritualism and religion, and grief. The morally grey character is also a prominent feature - and Ellen Bjarnebo's past will evoke an interesting mixture of emotions. The author knows exactly how to weave a thriller together effortlessly, allowing the plot and the characters to play prominent roles in this well-written addition to the Barbarotti series.