"Some Kind of Peace" is a psychological thriller that attempts to elevate itself from its genre into more literary heights, and it doesn't quite succeed, although the writing talent of the authors, Camilla Grebe and Asa Traff, is evident. Grebe is an economist and publisher, and Traff is a psychologist specializing in cognitive behavioral therapy. This is their first American novel, as they are already well-known authors in their home country of Sweden. Maybe its an over-saturation of the market for dark Scandinavian thrillers, or maybe this just isn't their best novel, but "Some Kind of Peace" is, at best, mediocre. It's rather slow-moving, and the ending seemed rather forced. That said, I think there is much to like in this novel: the smoothness of the prose, for one, and the authors' obvious in-depth knowledge of the human psyche. The main character, Siri Bergman, is a psychologist who has not dealt well with the death of her husband several years before. She lives in a beautiful cabin on a lake, far from the busy city streets of Stockholm, where she works. She has a cat and an irrational fear of the dark. She has to sleep with the lights on. Her fears aren't totally irrational, though. She fears that someone is watching her. When one of her patients, a young girl suffering from anxiety and cutting, is found murdered in the small lake by her cabin, Siri's fears appear to be justifiable. Gradually, more things occur---her cat disappears, one of her friends is viciously attacked and falls into a coma, and one of her male patients, she discovers, may have a very strange link to her past. As suspense novels go, this one is pretty tepid. Grebe/Traff succeed, though, in bringing a believability and likability to the story. Siri is a very real, fleshed-out character, with her own issues, and, as the novel is written in first-person from her perspective, Grebe/Traff has some fun with the possibility of Siri's unreliable narration.