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The Man Who Smiled
Henning Mankell

Vintage, 2006 - 448 pages

average customer review:based on 31 reviews
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   highly recommended  highly recommended






A prodigious talent continues...

Although this is the fourth book in the Inspector Wallander series (that now numbers nine, I believe), it is the most recent to be translated and published in English. I'm not sure why it was withheld but I think I can guess. In this book, the dour Swedish Inspector Wallander has suffered a fairly complete and debilitating breakdown after having shot and killed a murderer in the line of duty and in self-defense. Perhaps it was thought that American and English readers wouldn't resonate with such a complete breakdown in character over something that we accept as a fact of police life. In truth, most police officers have never fired their guns in self-defense and, like most people, would recoil at the thought of taking a life. But a greater truth in this book may be that the killing was the crystallizing event in a life that was already off the rails. There is no joy in watching Wallander hit bottom and, after more than a year in increasingly disability, no surprise that he will quit the police force and probably drink himself to death. But redemption comes in a very small package. A man seeks him out to ask Wallander to look into the death of his father, a death that has taken place in the first pages of the book and has been called accidental. When the son is killed, the accidental death comes into question and Wallander has his first stirring of a life and purpose outside his own self-destruction.

From this beginning, we follow parallel stories as a totally fragile Wallander tries to rebuild his professional relationships at the same time as he tries to regain his life. As trust is reestablished in fits and starts and the facts of the potential murders are teased into meaning, we meet a man who is the complete antithesis of Wallander: an industrialist named Harderburg, aka "The Man Who Smiled". We assume without being told that this man could mow down anyone who stood in his way and still get a good night's sleep. But is he a killer? Wallander must take great personal and professional chances to figure out the answer.

It is hard for me to sufficiently express my appreciation for the storytelling of Henning Mankell. I smile a little when I think of how I didn't really care for his writing so very much when I first started reading him. The simple, declarative sentences don't necessarily flow like some of our more prosaic writers but behind the slightly awkward structure (to English ears) is a powerful conscience and social commentator who also tells a whopping good story. Mention should also be made of the skill of the translator, Laurie Thompson, who retained so many important nuances.

This may be the best book in the brilliant Wallander series. For my money, The Return of the Dancing Master is his very best book and it is a standalone, whose main character, Stefan Lindeman, joins the Wallander series in Before the Frost.

P.S. I just found out this past year that Henning Mankell is the son-in-law of the late Ingmar Bergman. I guess talent attracts talent!



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Wonderful Reading For A Cold Winter Night

At the beginning of THE MAN WHO SMILED, another of Henning Mankell's brilliant Kurt Wallander mysteries, the Swedish detective is on leave from the Ystad Police Force and is contemplating resigning because of remorse over having killed someone in self-defense. Full of self-pity and angst, he is as dark and gloomy as a cold Swedish winter night. He has even stopped listening to his beloved operas. A visit from Sten Tortensson, an attorney he has known professionally, urging Wallander to investigate the so-called accidental death of his father Gustaf, another attorney, on a lonely foggy road, however, gets him back on track, especially when the younger Tortensson, is murdered shortly after his visit to Wallander.

The detective is a real fleshed-out human being with doubts and fears and character flaws. He doesn't get along very well with his aging father, a "kitsch" artist, who paints the same autumn landscape over and over "with or without a grouse in the foreground." On the other hand, Wallander is very helpful and gives good advice and counsel to a new female recruit on the police force, when another jealous officer attempts to do her in. As always, he does not always tell his superiors all he knows about the case, bends the rules when it is to his advantage and is, without actually lying, "economical with the truth." Methodical to a fault, he ultimately by his diligence solves the crime.

Mr. Mankell through Wallander always gives the reader a kernel or two of truths worth remembering. Wallander on his father's mediorce art that he had seen hanging in many apartments in Sweden, pictures of a landscape where the sun never set: "For the first time he thought he had gained an insight. Throughout his life his father hade prevented the sun from setting. that had been his livelihood, his message. He had painted pictures so that people who bought them to hang on their walls could see it was possible to hold the sun captive." Another of Wallander's insights into his father that has universal implications: when his father makes a comment about dying, he remembers that he has never heard his father refer to either his age or his death and sees, sadly, that he has no idea who his father is or how he thinks, a situation so many of us understand too clearly. Finally, on a more hopeful note, Wallander says that every friendship is a miracle. We get all this in addition to a fine crime story.


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Another winner

Another very good mystery - since reading this book I have finished the entire series on Kurt's crime solving adventures in Sweden






Wallender comes out of his depression

Begins with a depressed Wallender taking a 'Kur' on the beach in north Juteland, he plans to quit police work. Why he's depressed was developed in Mankell's previous book 'The White Lioness'. Wallender is drawn against his will into a new case, and ..... . As usual, Mankell is entertaining, worth reading.

This review is based on the Norwegian version 'Silkeridderen' ('The silk rider').


reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7



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