I would like to thank Netgalley and Orion Publishing Group for an advance copy of For the Dead, the second novel to feature Stockholm detective Charlie Lager, set in her home town of Gullspång.
Journalist Johan Ro interests Charlie in a missing person’s case from 1989 where 17 year old Francesca Mild disappeared from her home near Gullspång, never heard from again. On holiday in Gullspång Charlie decides to investigate unofficially with help from Johan and meets a wall of silence.
I really enjoyed For the Dead which is more character driven than fast paced action and not my usual fare. It is told alternately from Francesca and Charlie’s point of view so the reader has more information than the investigator but rather than make it boring it makes it more interesting as both have an interest in events and a completely different angle.
Francesca is depressed after the death of her best friend, Paul, who drowned in the lake at their boarding school. An accident is the official explanation, suicide is the generally accepted solution and Francesca, alone, believes he was murdered and sets about investigating. Francesca, however, has a history of mental health issues so the reader never knows whether to believe what she says or not, her parents and doctor definitely don’t. She has a compelling story to tell and I found myself caught up in it, even though she wanders about her timeline over the course of her narrative. I guess it reinforces her fragility.
Charlie, on the other hand, is initially interested in the case because nobody mentioned Francesca when she was last in Gullspång looking for another missing teenager. She soon realises that her mother, Betty, has a role in Francesca’s story and that spurs her on. The novel is as much about her trying to reconcile her past and present to find some peace as it is about her investigation. I think she takes a few steps in the right direction in this novel but she’s still a troubled soul. I didn’t find her story as compelling as Francesca’s, perhaps because it’s mostly more mundane, but she’s certainly a more relatable character, making poor choices and trying to do better.
For the Dead is a good read that I have no hesitation in recommending.