Headhunters By Jo Nesbo

With Headhunters, Jo Nesbo has crafted a funny, dark, and twisted caper story worthy of Quentin Tarantino and the Coen brothers.

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Roger Brown is a corporate headhunter, and he’s a master of his profession. But one career simply can’t support his luxurious lifestyle and his wife’s fledgling art gallery. At an art opening one night he meets Clas Greve, who is not only the perfect candidate for a major CEO job, but also, perhaps, the answer to his financial woes: Greve just so happens to mention that he owns a priceless Peter Paul Rubens painting that’s been lost since World War II—and Roger Brown just so happens to dabble in art theft. But when he breaks into Greve’s apartment, he finds more than just the painting. And Clas Greve may turn out to be the worst thing that’s ever happened to Roger Brown.

FIRST TIME PUBLISHED IN THE U.S. NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE FROM MAGNOLIA PICTURES.

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The Leopard - Harry Hole

The Leopard is a crime novel by Norwegian novelist, Jo Nesbo. Its Norwegian title is Panserhjerte, which does not directly translate to The Leopard. It is the seventh novel featuring Nesbø's crime detective, Inspector Harry Hole.

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Synopsis

Following the events of the previous novel, Detective Harry Hole has gone on leave of absence and has disappeared. He is found by a new Crime Squad officer, Kaja Sollness, in Hong Kong, where he has become addicted to opium.

After failing to convince Harry to return to Norway by describing the identical murder of two women, Sollness informs him that his father is seriously ill in hospital and will not live much longer. This convinces Harry to return to Norway with Kaja Sollness.

Harry returns to Crime Squad to find that it is in a tussle with the Norwegian Police Department, Kripos. The head of Kripos, Mikael Bellman, and Harry's own supervisor are at odds regarding the murders. Harry himself claims to have no interest in the murder cases, but when a female Norwegian MP is murdered in a public park, he is drawn into the case.

The third murder initially seems unrelated to the previous two. The previous victims had been found with 24 small incisions emanating from the mouth, but the actual cause of death was by drowning in their own blood from those wounds, whereas the MP was found having been hanged, though the fall had been considerable and she had been decapitated by the rope.

Harry, Sollness and one of Harry's former colleagues at Crime Squad work under cover to try and find the killer. They discover that all three women were at the same ski lodge some time previously all on the same night and Harry deduces that the murders are part of the killer's attempts to cover up his (or her) trail. Suspicion falls on a man known to have been at the ski lodge at the time, but he is eliminated from the enquiry when he also is found murdered having been super glued to his bath and then slowly drowned, returning to the killer's previous style of murder.

Harry finds another person who had been at the ski lodge at the time who is now in Australia. She refuses to be bait for the killer, but Harry - who has begun working for Kripos - and Sollness (who Harry has recently discovered has been feeding information to her married lover, Mikael Bellman) instigate a sting operation to draw out the killer - which fails and almost costs them their lives when they are trapped by an avalanche which was started deliberately.

Harry finally determines that the murderer is someone that he knows and who has become close to him, following a discussion with The Snowman from his previous case. He realises who he believes to be responsible and has him arrested.

Unfortunately, Harry's instincts have proved wrong and the real killer is discovered to have fled to the Congo. Harry and Sollness follow them and Harry is kidnapped by associates of the killer. He manages to escape, but Sollness has been captured herself. Harry follows the clues given by one of the killer's associates and finally confronts and kills the murderer at the lip of a live volcano.

Despite having become lovers during the investigation, Harry cannot commit himself to a life with Kaja Sollness. Following the death of his father, Harry spots his former partner, Rakel, and her son, Oleg, at the funeral and manages to confirm that they are alive and happy away from Norway - having fled following the events of The Snowman murders. Harry himself returns to see The Snowman, who is gravely ill and it is tacitly suggested that he helps The Snowman to commit suicide, which Harry feels is payment for having failed to follow his father's previous request for him to perform euthanasia. At the end of the novel, Harry returns to Hong Kong.

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The Snowman - Harry Hole

The Snowman (2007) is a novel by Norwegian crime-writer Jo Nesbø. It is the seventh entry in his Harry Hole series.

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Plot

Norwegian detective, Harry Hole investigates a number of recent murders of women around Oslo. His experiences on a course with the FBI lead him to search for links between the murders, and finds two - each victim is a married mother and after each murder a snowman is found at the murder scene.

Going through historical murders, he comes to realise that he is on the case of Norway's first official serial killer, as he discovers more women who have also disappeared and are believed to have been abducted or murdered in a similar pattern. Almost all of the victims vanish after the first snow has fallen and a snowman is found near the scene, although this is usually ignored as not being indicative during the original investigation.

Further investigation leads Harry and his team - including newcomer to the Department, Katrine Bratt, recently transferred from the Police Department in Bergen, to suspect that paternity issues with the children of the victims may be a motive for the murders. They discover that all of the victims children have different fathers to the men they believe to be their father. Following DNA Testing results leads the investigation down a few wrong routes and several murder suspects are eliminated from the enquiry.

During the investigation, Harry continues to meet, clandestinely, with his ex-girlfriend, Rakel, despite the fact that Rakel has a new boyfriend, Mathias.

Eventually, suspicion falls on Katerine Bratt after she attempts to force a confession out of one of the innocent suspects. Harry chases her across Norway and finally catches up with her at a previously discovered murder site. She is apprehended and sent to see a psychiatrist. After initially seeming to be unresponsive, she eventually informs the psychiatrist of the reasons for her behaviour.

At the same time, Harry's superior officers decide that the scandal of allowing a long-time serial killer to work on the murder case will be damaging and determine that they require a scapegoat to appease the press. Due to his previous issues with alcoholism, Harry is put forward in absentia.

Harry comes to realise that the murderer is still at large when another victim is discovered. Purely due to a random thought triggered by a comment from Mathias, Harry makes a vital connection that ultimately leads him to the true perpetrator. His success in finally apprehending the killer prevents any need for a scapegoat and Katrine Bratt, following further mental stability checks is sent back to Bergen PD.

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The Redeemer - Harry Hole

The Redeemer is a novel by popular Norwegian crime-writer Jo Nesbo, it is an entry in his popular and critically acclaimed Harry Hole series.

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Plot

The Redeemer begins a number of years in the past, at a youth camp run by the Norwegian Salvation Army. A young, 14-year old girl - the daughter of a senior offical in the Salvation Army - is raped in a public toilet on the site by an un-named assailant. Due to the Salvation Army's strict hierarchical setup, she does not tell anyone about the ordeal.

Now in the present day, a hitman calling himself Stankic from Croatia kills a Salvation Army officer duing a Christmas street concert. The hitman has a facial anomoly known as hyperelasticity, wherein his facial muscles can be manipulated voluntarily to stop people from recognising him. As such, despite the murder happening in a public place the Norwegian police get little useful information regarding the murderer.

Meanwhile, the senior Police Inspector from the Oslo Police, Bjarne Møller, retires. As a parting gesture, he gives his three main officers, Jack Halvorsen (called Halvorsen by his colleagues), Beatte Lønn - Halvorsens girlfriend - and Harry Hole gifts. Harrys' is a wristwatch which grows to annoy Harry due to the incessant ticking of the second-hand. At one point, he even throws it out of the window of his apartment, though later recovers it from the packed snow. Møller is replaced by Gunnar Hagen.

Harry, Halvorsen and Beatte are assigned to the murder of the Salvation Army officer - a man called Robert Karlsen. When a murder attempt is made on Roberts' brother, Jon Karlsen it is believed that the Karlsen family is being attacked.

Harrys' former girlfriend, Rakel, has now left him and is with another man, Matthias Lund-Helgesen (a major character in the next Harry Hole novel, The Snowman) and Harry meets up - and eventually begins a relationship - with Martine, the young woman who (unbeknownst to Harry) was raped at the start of the novel.

Harry finds clues that lead him to Croatia and he makes contact with the hitmans' minder who is revealed to be the Stankic's mother. He makes a deal with her to save her sons' life, but upon returning to Norway discovers that a man wearing Stankic's clothes has been shot and killed by an armed police marksman. The dead mans' face is all but obliterated and identification is near-impossible.

There is a clue, however, in the dead mans' DNA, after Halvorsen is fatally wounded outside Jon Karlsens' flat. The blood of the dead man does not match that of Stankic, whose blood was found at the scene of the attack on Halvorsen. Harry continues to follow Stankic, but now knows that Stankic was contracted to kill Jon Karlsen by Jon Karlsen himself. Jon switched places with his brother (the two looked very similar so Stankic did not notice the difference) in order for that murder of his brother could not be blamed on him. When in Croatia, setting up the hit, Jon had posed as Robert.

Jon is also swindling the Salvation Army out of 5,000,000 Krone for an apartment block. On the night of an indoor Christmas concert in a concert hall, Jon Karlsen stands up his girlfriend, Thea, claiming that his father - in Singapore - is ill and that he is going to fly out to him. Stankic and - later - Harry Hole both get the details from Thea that Jon is about to fly out of the country.

Stankic catches up with Jon Karlsen in a toilet block some distance from the main airport terminal. Harry also catches up with the two of them there. He gets Jon Karlsen to give a full confession, stating that anything said with a gun (Stankic's) to his head is inadmissible in court. Jon tells everything, believing that he will be set free, but Harry instead tells Stankic that Jons' bag contains the 5,000,000 Krone and walks away. Behind him a single shot is heard.

Part of the confession includes how it was Jon Karlsen, not Stankic, who fatally wounded Halvorsen. Harry also knows that it was Jon who raped Martine some years earlier, and that he has been raping young girls regularly ever since.

Due to the high valuation that an antique dealer puts on the watch given to him by Bjarne Møller, Harry also realises that his former boss was involved in the same group of corrupt police officers as his former nemesis, Tom Waaler. Harry goes to Bergen to speak with Møller but - after Møller describes that he was trying to do what was best for the Force, Harry elects not to arrest him.

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The Devil's Star - Harry Hole

The Devil's Star (2003) is a crime novel by Norwegian writer Jo Nesbø, the fifth in the Harry Hole series. The story revolves around a serial killer. An English-translated version of the book named The Devil's Star was translated by Don Bartlett.

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Blurb

A young woman is murdered in her Oslo flat. One finger has been severed from her left hand, and behind her eyelid is secreted a tiny diamond in the shape of a five-pointed star - pentagram, the devil's star.

Detective Harry Hole is assigned to the case with his long-time adversary Tom Waaler and initially wants no part in it. But Harry is already on notice to quit the force and is left with little alternative but to drag himself out of his alcoholic stupor and get to work.

A wave of similar murders is on the horizon. An emerging pattern suggests that Oslo has a serial killer on its hands, and the five-pointed devil's star is key to solving the riddle.

Synopsis

Following on from his suspicions during the Nemesis investigation, Inspector, Harry Hole attempts to convince the Chief Inspector that his colleague, Tom Waaler is a smuggling kingpin known as the Prince, who has been involved in smuggling weapons into Olso, as well as the murder of a number of witnesses (including Harrys' former partner) who threaten his position. Due to a lack of evidence, the response is less than positive and Harry goes on an alcoholic binge and is missing for several days. His superior reluctantly sends termination of employment papers to the Chief Inspector, but Harry gets a short reprieve as the Chief Inspector is on holiday for three weeks and cannot sign them.

A murder victim is discovered, dead in her shower on the fifth floor, having been shot in the head. Tom Waaler leads the investigation, but Harry and his partner, Beate Lønn are assigned to work with Waaler's team. Harry, upon investigating the scene and the victim discovers a small, red five-pointed diamond under the eyelid and that a finger is missing from the left hand.

Another murder victim is assumed when the director of a musical, My Fair Lady reports that his wife has gone missing. Her finger is later sent to Kripos. The director, Wilhelm Barli, is most upset, especially since his wife, Lisbeth, was due to take the lead in My Fair Lady a role he later gives to his wife's sister. A few days later a third victim is found, this time in the female toilets at a local law firm. She is found on her hands and knees, with her head also on the floor and a five-pointed red diamond on the body. Yet again a finger has been removed.

Meanwhile, Tom Waaler - who has heard about Harry's investigation of him - has offered Harry a position in his illegal dealings - especially as Harry's police career seems to be over. He informs Harry that, should he - Harry - wish to be involved, he will be given a specific task to prove his loyalty. Tom indicates the financial benefits of his criminal activities as an inducement. Harry is initially confused as to why Tom Waaler is effectively admitting his guilt, but is reminded that, as an alcoholic, Harry's evidence would not be sufficient to convict Waaler if he went to his superiors. Harry agrees to think about the offer.

A chance sighting of a pentagram brings Harry a flash of inspiration. The five-pointed diamonds found on the victims are in a similar shape - known as a Devils' Star - and Harry remembers having seen the same symbol at the murder scenes. Drawing a pentagram on a map of Oslo, where three of the points are over the murder scenes, Harry indicates that he may be able to find the murderer by keeping the other two points of the star under surveillance. One is in a student halls of residence and the other a house on the outskirts of the City, owned by Olaug Sivertsen.

Checking on Olaug Sivertsen, Beate Lønn discovers that the likely murderer is Olaugs' son, Sven. She informs Harry whilst he and Tom Waaler check out the other prospective crime scene, the student Halls of Residence. Harry lets the information slip to Tom, who immediately leaves to "help" Beate. Harry, using recently installed CCTV cameras, notices another pentagram on a students' door. An investigation of the scene eventually exposes the body of the first victim of the murderer. Meanwhile, Tom Waaler apprehends Sven Sivertsen, though several threats to shoot Sven bring Beate to the arrest. She notes her suspicions and informs Harry that she felt Tom was intending to shoot Sven Sivertsen instead of arrest him.

Harry is given his initiation task by Tom Waaler; get a confession and then kill Sven Sivertsen in custody using a poison. Waaler's influence is such that he apparently can guarantee Harry will succeed in this. Instead, Harry is told by Sven that he is innocent of the crimes and is able to put doubt in Harry's mind. Instead of killing Sven, Harry takes him away from the custody cells and goes into hiding.

Harry is now a hunted man. Sven Sivertsen is willing to testify against Tom Waaler, though he doesn't know who the actual murderer is. Tom Waaler eventually resorts to kidnapping Oleg, the son of Harrys' girlfriend, Rakel to convince Harry to meet him and hand Sven Sivertsen over. Harry arranges a meeting in the student Halls of Residence.

Using the CCTV cameras as a bargaining chip, Harry tries to convince Waaler that his position is hopeless. More and more outrageous cover stories are proposed by Waaler to explain how he intends to cover up what has happened, but eventually Harry manages to hit Waaler and take Sven and Oleg into the nearby lift. Due to the grill-front on the lift, Tom Waaler is able to grab hold of Oleg inside the lift and Harry appears to be prepared to give up. However, he tricks Waaler and instead of returning to the upper floor, forces the lift downwards, eventually severing Waaler's arm. Waaler later dies from loss of blood.

Harry, meanwhile, has worked out who the murderer is - Wilhelm Barli - who committed the murders to avenge the affair his wife was having with Sven Sivertsen. Before Harry can arrest Barli, he commits suicide, as does his wife's sister, who found Lisbeth Barli's body inside a water bed in Wilhelms' home - the pair were by now having an affair of their own.

Having exposed Tom Waaler and solved the murder case, Harry's termination of employment is rescinded and he returns to the force.

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Nemesis - Harry Hole

Nemesis (2002) is a crime novel by Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo, the fourth in the Harry Hole series.

Plot introduction

This time there's a bank robbery in Oslo, but Harry also has to deal with two females that are important to him, while trying to stay away from the alcohol that he loves so dearly.

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Synopsis

A bank robbery takes place by a single robber in a balaclava. Holding a bank teller as a hostage he demands that the bank ATM be emptied within 25 seconds, or he will kill the hostage. To cover his voice, he makes the hostage voice his demands, whispered into her ear. The bank manager empties the ATM, but it takes him 31 seconds. Having been given the money, the robber whispers again to the hostage before shooting and killing her.

Initially given to the robberies unit, the case is unsolved. However, a video evidence expert, Beatte Lønn, determines that, since the robber and hostage are intimately close together, the robber knew his victim very well and the case is moved to a dual-investigation with Lønn and Harry Hole working on the case as a murder investigation.

Further bank robberies occur in the same way. However, successful emptying of the ATMs within the specified time mean that no other tellers are murdered.

Whilst his girlfriend, Rakel, and her son, Oleg, are in Russia on a parental custody case (Olegs' father, a Russian businessman has demanded custody of his son), Harry Hole goes to see an old girlfriend, Anna Bethsen at her flat. Anna, an artist of some apparently limited skill, intends to have an art show which she wants to call Nemesis for reasons that she does not truly explain.

Harry awakens in his own flat the following morning with the classic signs of a hangover, headache and short-term memory loss regarding the events of the night before. Later that day, Anna Bethsen is found, apparently murdered in her flat. Attempts by the murderer to make the death look like a suicide are apparently foiled as Harry knows Anna was left-handed, but the gun is held in her right hand.

Harry, who has managed to cover up his presence in Annas' flat on the night of her death now is in a race against time to discover the murderer before he is implicated himself. With no memory of the night in question he is even uncertain that he himself, is not the murderer. Since Anna was a gypsy, Harry enlists the help of Annas' uncle, Raskol, a former bank robber who is in prison.

Evidence linking Annas' murder with the bank robberies sends Harry and Beatte Lønn on a visit to a suspect in São Paulo, Brazil, but the suspect has apparently committed suicide, and is found hanging from a beam in his home.

Harry receives a number of e-mails from the murderer, signed S2MN, which give Harry some level of insight to the murderer. Eventually, Detective Tom Waaler, a thorn in Harrys' side in the previous novel discovers Harry was in Annas' flat on the night of her death and prepares to arrest him. Harry now finds himself on the run.

He sends the incriminating e-mails to Beatte Lønn as evidence of his innocence, but it is discovered that the e-mails were being sent from Annas' laptop, via a modem connection in Harrys' own (missing) mobile phone, found located in the cellar under Harrys' flat. The mails were sent on a time-delay. Tom Waaler, meanwhile, finds another former lover of Annas', but shoots him dead when he seems to resist arrest, just as he had a murder suspect in the Redbreast investigation.

Eventually, Harry discovers that the bank robber is, in fact, the husband of the murdered bank tellar from the first robbery, who was threatening to leave him for his brother. Annas' death is revealed as a suicide, which she planned to confuse and convict Harry and two other former lovers who had apparently abandoned her. The strange signature on the e-mails, S2MN is revealed when Harry catches sight of the signature in a mirror. Now reading NM2S, he deduces that the 2 is representing an S, and that running the letters - NMSS - together phonetically, sounds like the word Nemesis, the name of Annas' intended art show. His "hangover" symptoms are shown by forensic evidence to be the effects of having been drugged.

Thanks to Raskols' gypsy contacts, Rakel wins the custody battle for Oleg and returns to Norway with him. Harry, however, has heard of a witness to the murder of his former colleague, Ellen, who was killed in the Redbreast investigation by a mysterious gun smuggler baron known as the Prince. The witness may have seen Ellens' murderer with the Prince and shows them a picture of his new prime suspect...

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The Redbreast - Harry Hole

The Redbreast (2000) is a crime novel by Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo, the third in the Harry Hole series.

This one begins during former President Clinton's visit to Norway, where Harry reluctantly ends up playing an important role. Ramifications of the mission Harry is tasked with lead to him investigating neo-Nazi activity in Norway, and delving into a crime that has its roots in the battlefields of Eastern Front WWII.

The novel was voted Best Norwegian Crime Novel ever. Upon translation into English, by Don Bartlett, the novel was shortlisted for the Crime Writers' Association Duncan Lawrie International Dagger.

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The novel begins with a reference to a fable about how the robin first got the red feathers on its breast, when one of their number removed a thorn from the brow of the "crucified one" and drops of blood landed on the breast of the small bird.

The timeline of the novel moves forwards and backwards from the Nazi-led Norwegian front against the Soviet army in late 1944 to the modern day, culminating on 17 May 2000, during the first half of the novel. However, once the majority of the WWII back story has been told, the novel concentrates on the modern day events.

Prologue

President Bill Clinton comes to Norway for a Middle Eastern Peace Conference with Yasser Arafat and Ehud Barak. Policeman, Harry Hole is assigned to security detail and mistakes a Secret Service agent in a toll booth for an assassin. He shoots the Secret Service agent, but the event is later covered up and Harry is promoted to the rank of Inspector.

World War II

The Nazi occupation of Norway is entering the final stages, though none of the Norwegian soldiers fighting on the German side are willing to accept that this is the case. A small group of Norwegians who have been together for some time are manning trenches just a short distance from the Western limits of the Soviet army. Details of their lives are given, mostly in conversation between the soldiers.

One of their number, a man called Daniel Gudeson, claims to have shot a Russian sniper in no man's land and goes into no man's land to bury him. This endears him to some of his colleagues, but causes others to dislike him. However, at the point of midnight on New Years' Eve, when Daniel - on watch with one of his colleagues - stands up to celebrate the New Year, he is shot through the head and killed. His body and face are covered up and he is laid to wait for a burial committee who take the body away later that day.

On the same night, another soldier, Sindre Fauke, disappears and is reported by his Watch colleague to have defected to the Russians. Oddly, a couple of days later a body appears in the trench, covered and waiting for the burial committee. When the soldiers investigate, it is the body of Daniel Gudeson which was known to have been removed earlier. This mystery remains unexplained until the climax of the novel.

A hand grenade lands in the trench and explodes, and, although the solders survive, they are wounded and hospitalised. One, who calls himself Uriah, falls in love with a nurse, who is being blackmailed by her supervisor. They elope, but are forced to return when they realise that they do not have the papers required to go to their initial destination; Paris. Their love somehow survives the war, but they are separated and eventually live separate lives.

Modern day

New Inspector, Harry Hole investigates a crime in which a very expensive Märklin rifle has been purchased and is being tested. In addition, a group of Neo-Nazis is suspected of plotting trouble, one member of which - Sverre Olsen - has recently had a trial against them collapse on a legal technicality, Harry himself having been involved in the investigation.

An elderly drunk is found murdered, his throat having been slit with almost surgical precision at the back of a bar where the Neo-Nazis are known to congregate. During the investigation, a man known only as "the Prince" is mentioned and Harry and his colleague, Ellen Gjelten, try to find out the identity of the Prince.

Harry, meanwhile, has met a work colleague called Rakel with whom he has become infatuated. At a work party, he and Rakel talk openly and it becomes obvious that they are interested in each other. However, Rakel does not take the matter further as she is concerned by a custody battle of her son, Oleg, who is wanted by his Russian father, a matter that has actually been orchestrated by Rakel's superior who also wants to sleep with her.

Ellen, meanwhile, accidentally discovers the identity of the Prince, tries to call Harry, but fails to get through. She leaves a message on his answer phone but crucially neglects to name the Prince himself. On the way to her boyfriend's flat she is beaten to death with a baseball bat.

Her murderer, Sverre Olsen, is soon discovered by Harry and his new assistant, Halvorsen. However, when they prepare to arrest him, they discover that another senior Inspector, Tom Waaler, has tried to do so. Apparently, Olsen tried to shoot Waaler, prompting Waaler to kill Olsen in self defence. Harry's only link to the Prince has been lost.

Nevertheless, the murder of Rakel's superior - shot with the Märklin rifle at close range, along with an elderly woman - Signe Juul, the wife of a friend, also shot with the rifle - leads Harry to investigate the events of the Norwegian/Nazi collaborators, many of whom were imprisoned after the war as traitors. He is also led to follow a lead that suggests that the murderer has a split personality and that one personality is doing the killings - possibly without the knowledge of the other, such as in the story The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde

As Rakel's father tells Harry that Signe Juul's husband, Even, was obsessed with Daniel Gudeson, other clues lead Harry to believe that he has discovered the murderer: Even Juul. However, when he goes to arrest Even Juul, he discovers that Even has apparently committed suicide, and Harry believes that Even discovered that his "other personality", Daniel Gudeson, had been committing the murders and that he had committed suicide in order to stop Daniel.

However, Harry realises that he was wrong when he stumbles across the journal of the actual murderer. He sees that the split personality route of his investigation was correct, but the murderer is not Even Juul. The murderer is obsessed with revenge after believing that the Norwegian Royal Family had betrayed the country by fleeing to England during the Nazi occupation, and then later condemning those who fought for the Nazis during the war.

The murderer also reveals the details behind the mysterious reappearance of Daniel Gudeson's body in the trenches during the war and the truth behind the defection of Sindre Fauke.

Finally, the murderer makes it clear in his journal that he intends to assassinate the Crown Prince of Norway at the Norwegian Constitution Day celebrations later that day (17 May). Harry rushes to prevent the assassination, managing to stop the attempt at almost the last second in a hotel room. To keep the assassination attempt out of the press - and to prevent any problems for the assassin's surviving family - Harry's success is covered up, much as his actions at the start of the book were.

It should be noted that the true identity of the Prince is revealed during the novel, although not to Harry, and the Prince continues to be a thorn in Harry's side in later books.

Buy The Redbreast: A Harry Hole Novel here

The Cockroaches - Harry Hole

The Cockroaches (1998) is a crime novel by Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo, the second in the Harry Hole series.

Here we can read about Harry's journey to Thailand, where he is asked to solve the murder of the Norwegian ambassador. As usual, he mingles among the shadier neighbourhoods and eventually realizes that important people are involved. The novel is not yet available in English.

The Bat Man - Harry Hole

The Bat Man (1997) is a crime novel by Norwegian writer Jo Nesbo, the first in the Harry Hole series.

The story revolves around the Norwegian police officer Harry Hole, who is asked by the Australian police to help them solve the murder of a Norwegian B-celebrity. In King's Cross, one of Sydney's more shady suburbs, he walks the streets among prostitutes, pimps, and pushers. It does not take long before he realizes that he has become an important part of a dangerous game that he will just have to survive - one way or another. The novel is not yet available in English.