3.5 stars
I confess to having a fairly mixed relationship with the writing of Anne Holt and having read several novels from both the Hanne Wilhelmsen and the Vik and Stubo series I find her lack of consistency a source of frustration. Having come to her work only recently I have read the series so far in the order that it was written, unlike many readers who came to her more recent novels firstly through the translation out of order headache. The first Hanne Wilhelmsen novel, Blind Goddess, was penned in 1993 and translated in 2013 and the only sign of it appearing dated was in the technological arena, with the use of golf-ball typewriters and a lack of mobile phones. I thought the second novel is the series, Blessed Are Those Who Thirst, showed a marked improvement on the first instalment and I was similarly hopeful that Hanne might have found her feet, so to speak after finally allowing a glimpse of personality to peek through her buttoned-up exterior. Sadly Death of the Demon, written in 1995, was a return to the form of the first novel and a disappointingly lacklustre affair. Newly promoted to Chief Inspector, thirty-six year old Hanne Wilhelmsen is still growing accustomed to her increasingly administrative duties and finding it somewhat of a challenge to lead others in the investigative arena, being more comfortable with a hands-on role. Prior to her promotion she effortlessly impressed, being acknowledged as a diligent and thorough investigator who kept her head down and never shirked. Sadly there is no escape route from mediation, decisions and controversy in her new role.
Death of a Demon sees Billy T. making a return to his former role as a detective, however, he never seems wholeheartedly engaged in doing so and I find him a difficult lead character to connect with. When the director of Spring Sunshine Foster Home in Oslo is discovered stabbed in the back with such force that it pierces the wall of her heart, the frightening brutality shocks Hanne and her colleagues. With a career of twenty-three years in child welfare services, Agnes Vestavik, was charged with the care of the most behaviourally challenged children and those that it has become almost impossible to place with foster families. Run by the Salvation Army and operated by a workforce comprising of students, part-time and night staff, often with slapdash standards, she was known to have staff issues and was in the process of conducting appraisals with every employee. Alongside these issues Agnes was known to have marital problems and the rather sizeable issue of the grossly overweight twelve-year-old new arrival, Olav Håkonsen. Olav has always been different from other children, in terms of his immense size and his lack of impulse control, and consequently his behaviour is often misinterpreted. Having lasted just three-weeks in the foster home, Agnes has already made an enemy of Olav, and when he is discovered missing from his bed in the wake of her murder, his guilt seems a foregone conclusion. What follows is a rather straightforward investigation into the private lives of Agnes and her staff and the operations of the foster home. Needless to say staff infringements and marital strife come to light, not to mention a platonic friendship with a married used-car salesman and the three separate ten-thousand kronor withdrawals from her personal bank account. As Billy T., Erik Henriksen and Tone-Marit Steen drill down, Hanne is frustrated by the slow progress and not a natural as regards man-management. As the search for Olav is made public, the subsequent suicide of one of the main suspects has all the hallmarks of a confession, but Hanne and the team aren't so convinced...
Whilst I want to warm to Hanne Wilhelmsen and invest in the character she lacks charisma and her life outside of work seems to follow a regular pattern of bickering with her girlfriend of seventeen-years about coming out to her colleagues and family. The foster home setting this time presents lover and emergency doctor, Cecilie Vibe with the opportunity to rehash her desire for a child. Given the length of their union, surely Hanne and Cecilie would have already made a conscious decision on the 'big' issues and they do nothing for the image of positive same-sex relationships! I was disappointed that Hanne's working relationship with police attorney Håkon Sand, which showed signs of flourishing in the second novel, was not revisited in Death of the Demon, with Holt belatedly informing her readers of his year long paternity leave and the birth of his son. I sorely missed his personality and sadly the overblown and quickly irritating Billy T.'s increased presence brought little to the novel. Although he has known Hanne since police college, his demeanour is ill-suited to being a detective and he was far more credible employed in the drugs intervention unit. Also in his new role his overfamiliarity with his superior was rather grating! Interestingly though, Anne Holt let's her readers in on one secret in the closing pages - namely what exactly the T. in Billy T. stands for!
I appreciate Anne Holt's social conscience and there was a number of pertinent observations throughout Death of the Demon as regards social services, from their initial unsatisfactory treatment of Olav Håkonsen and his mother, Birgitte when her plea for support was swiftly followed by her son's removal. With the headline grabbing double murder being the current focus of the majority of the Oslo homicide detectives and its acknowledged priority it is not lost on Hanne that an old-fashioned stabbing of a middle-aged Christian state employee no longer attracts the outrage that it once would have. The short extracts in the voice of Olav's mother, Birgitte Håkonsen, provided another side to the story and illustrated her frustrations with a system which has intervened straightaway with little assessment or offer of other support. Likewise the divergent attitudes of the staff towards the children in their care was a source of consternation, with the benevolent Maren Kalsvik appearing as the only one with a real vocation in the profession.
Death of the Demon is a solid but rather routine investigation, lacking in complexities and dark intrigue of much of the Nordic Noir genre. Beyond the initial events very little of pivotal interest occurs and once the police have moved on from assuming that twelve-year-old Olav was the perpetrator the case losses much of its fascination.