Will Dean returns us to the horror nightmare that is the remote Swedish town of Gavrick, featuring his deaf protagonist, the newspaper journalist, Tuva Moodyson. She has returned to the Gavrick Posten, now promoted to Deputy Editor by Lena, delighted to be back in the company of friend, Tammy, local cop Thord, and the woman she is in a relationship with, Noor. She has a new apartment with arguing neighbours with a young son, Dan. With what unfolds in the dark forests, echoing with constant gunfire, it is elk hunting season, with the secrets harboured in the hill town of Visberg, and characters that would fit right into the darkest of fairytales, you have to wonder what Tuva was thinking in coming back. It all begins with Tuva thrashing through the foggy forests, following the ghostly sounds of a screaming woman, finding her covered in blood, next to a decapitated dead man.
The victim turns out to be plumber Arne Gustav Persson, a resident of the creepy town and closed community of Visberg, where everyone knows and is related to everyone, with its strict divisions between the wealthy Edlands and the rest of the locals. The stench of rotting apples pervades the place in the approach to Halloween, as Tuva endeavours to get to know the people and embed herself as the go to person and primary contact, hoping to be privy to the secrets and gossip, and the below the radar shadowy adult celebrations of Pan Night, an ancient cult like darkness. The makers of gruesome trolls, Cornelia and Alice Sorlie have opened a pop up shop, where Tuva acquires a mask to infiltrate the pagan and demonic Pan celebrations, the chanting, the bladder balloons, wild sex, and so much more, a people let off the leash for one night, to be uninhibited and glorying in becoming savages. Once again Tuva is to find herself in danger, being shot at, with worse to come.
Dean has written the perfect spine chilling read for the dark Autumn and Winter nights, particularly Halloween, the narrative heaves with atmosphere, and the location is a menacing and malevolent character in its own right. His wide array of characters that inhabit the story are inspired, the strange and offbeat locals, new and old, ensure that the series will remain a favourite with readers. This is for those who want their crime fiction to be at its darkest, a fright fest to savour. Highly recommended. Many thanks to the publisher for an ARC.