"I shall never find a house, he thought. No house, no dog, no new woman either. Everything will remain the same as it always has been."
The last Wallander mystery, Troubled Man, was published in 2011, but this novella was released in 2014, and fits in chronologically just before that last novel. Written for a Dutch Crime Festival, it features an (of course) aging Wallander, living now in Ystad with his daughter and now police colleague, Linda. He's been thinking of moving out of the city for many years (as his father did), finding a mate (he's been living alone for a long time, as his father did) and getting a dog. It's beginning to feel like the autumn of his life, as he is now older than any other colleague on the force.
Looking at a house he's considering buying, he finds a human hand in the back yard emerging out of the ground. Mystery! And the crime, while grisly, is rather straightforward. It's a well done story, welcomed by all Wallander fans. Solid, with the sad character of Wallander emerging more and more. One bonus that makes this a must for fans is an essay he appends here about how he began writing the series initially to combat racism, which he saw really emerging in Sweden after the fall of the Soviet Union. He thought: This is like a mystery that needs to be solved, so imagined a detective who sees the need to confront it as it comes into his country.
The essay, published after Troubled Man, includes the sad sentence: “There are no more stories about Kurt Wallander.” He said he wouldn't miss Wallander, but knew his readers would. Mankell died of cancer in 2015. I just learned (from Wikipedia) that his father-in-law was Swedish movie and theatre director Ingmar Bergman, one of my favorite directors of all time!