Gunna returns. It's winter in Iceland, the weather makes life difficult, and there are overlapping stories here which takes some concentration to keep on top of (but there's the usual wry humour too). A man vanishes, presumed dead, on holiday during the tsunami of 2004, yet here he is, returning incognito to Iceland (he appears to have murdered a Danish drug addict and assumed his identity, and has a new life in Spain). Of course his attempt to fly under the radar goes as well as you might expect, in a small country where people have long memories and many family connections, and he is recognised at the airport before even landing in Iceland. From there on he manages, just about, to keep one step ahead, and to re-establish contact with his family, particularly his daughter, and meets his baby granddaughter, perhaps for the only time. His wife and children all believed him to be dead (his wife, who has remarried, certainly doesn't want him coming back to life, not least because she has claimed his life insurance), but his brother (now a budding politician) did know that he was alive, and comes to his rescue as needed. Meanwhile the police team are also involved in a suicide case which leads them to a historic murder, with links to the same brother. Ingvar is a terrible rogue, of course, but somehow you do want him to get away with it (while wondering how he could ever have thought that reappearing in Iceland was a good idea!) As ever, a realistic and atmospheric slice of Icelandic life, although with perhaps a grimmer undertone than we would like to think there usually is. Oh, and there are a couple of murders - both of which escape official investigation!