Anne Holt - Death In Oslo

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Death In Oslo: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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To appreciate DEATH IN OSLO as an English-language reader, one must note that the book was first published (in Norwegian) in 2006, being written and set in the spring of 2005. Only now (December 2009) is it available in an English-language version. In those times, 9/11 was a much closer, and more raw, memory than it is now, and DEATH IN OSLO takes place in the context of international and personal relations that have not settled down to a new norm after that dreadful atrocity.
Helen Bentley has recently been elected as the first woman president of the United States, beating George W. Bush. Preoccupied with internal stability, Bentley has not made any state visits abroad since her inauguration until the opening of this novel. She’s decided to visit Norway, the safest country in the world from the point of view of its dearth of terrorist attacks and its internal stability. Mysteriously, Bentley travels very light, refusing to let her husband and teenage daughter accompany her, and allowing only the minimum in terms of her own security. Abruptly, she vanishes from her hotel room on the first night of her visit, during the preparations for Norway’s national midsummer day holiday celebrations.
The rest of the book deals with the aftermath of this shocking event. The author is mainly interested in looking at the United States in relation to the rest of the world, in particular the country’s response to the 9/11 atrocities in terms of its sudden legislation to remove many civil liberties as the authorities seek to track and monitor any possible attack from within. After Helen Bentley disappears, the Norwegian police and security services begin an immediate and exhaustive investigation, soon discovering witnesses who saw the president travelling in a car (oddly, in a very wide-ranging trip around the country) and pulling the perpetrators in for questioning. Although progress in this sense is very fast, these leads go nowhere and the authorities are left in total ignorance of the president’s whereabouts, as well as how and why she was kidnapped.
At the same time, the Americans themselves are piling into Norway, quickly brushing aside offers to share the investigation and setting up their own system from their embassy. Warren Scifford, who we know from previous novels by reputation as a senior “spook” of some kind in the USA, is called in as he’s become the president’s special adviser and is also her friend – one of the small circle who helped her to get elected. As soon as he arrives, Warren asks for Johanne Vik, his ex-student, to be his liaison between the US and Norwegian investigations. Not only does Johanne refuse this request because of their past history, but when Warren instead asks Adam Stubo, Johanne’s husband and a senior policeman, to take the role (no doubt hoping Adam will discuss the case with Johanne and pass on her insights), Johanne tells Adam she and their baby daughter will leave him if he accepts. Adam has no choice but to accept his boss's instruction to accompany Warren. As soon as he does, Johanne takes her baby and goes to the only person she knows will take her in and not ask questions. Her decision brings her right into the centre of events in the most incredible (unlikely) sense, and her skill as a profiler becomes crucial in the hunt for the missing woman.
DEATH IN OSLO is a book that I find hard to assess. On the one hand it is extremely good and had me reading keenly to the end. It is very strong on its analysis of the international political scene and of the motives and modus operandi of the perpetrators. I don’t usually like these “who kidnapped the president?” thrillers but this one is certainly superior, partly because of the author’s confidence in constructing the scenario in all its disparate scenes that slowly come together, and partly because of the attractive character of Helen Bentley and the flashbacks to her campaign and political manoeuvrings. In other ways, however, the plot is unbelievably weak. Without giving away spoilers, the whole book depends on two massive coincidences- where the president goes after her disappearance; and Adam’s closeness to the investigation. As well as this, too many puzzles that the author creates are simply left, not even unanswered, but just ignored. The character of Warren is an enigma – we know he has done something unspeakable to Johanne in the past, but not what. Now he is apparently a close friend of the president – is he in fact a double agent? Is he operating with or against the FBI? Why does he want to work with Adam and then ignore him, regularly disappearing? And, more generally, why is the apparently very persuasive briefing document about the most likely source of threats to the president ignored by the authorities, even though it is on file? And why is the person behind the killing, who obsessively plans for many years and has endless failsafes in place for various aspects of the plans, so casual about how the crucial final piece of information is to be disseminated? (Though this part of the plot does include a lovely character sketch of a widower and his daughters.) And why did the president travel with minimum security against advice?
These and many other issues are left hanging – in addition, the spectre of Wenke Benke (see THE FINAL MURDER) hovers over the novel – yet is not developed. The actions of the president are very hard (impossible, in my case) to comprehend, both before and after her disappearance – too much is simply left unexplained. And although we receive a throwaway piece of vital information about why Johanne hates Warren so much, most of the details are not shared with the readers.
In many respects, DEATH IN OSLO is an tight, convincing and readable thriller with good characterisations (particularly Adam and Johanne), yet in others, it seems incredibly careless – which is incomprehensible to me as I (not the most imaginative of people) can think of several ways in which some of the more implausible elements of the plot could have been made more authentic, and in particular, it isn’t hard to think of how the last part of the puzzle could be made more robust on the part of the bad guys given all their previous careful planning. All in all, I’m left confused as to why some parts of this well-translated book are so good, whereas others have a casually unfinished air to them, leaving the reader feeling a bit cheated, even though the read itself is so exciting.
Death in Oslo has just been reviewed by Karen Meek at Euro Crime.

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Finally, he started to cry.

‘Ali, listen to me. I’m on a plane, crossing the Atlantic. That’s why the connection is bad.’

‘I didn’t let you down,’ he shouted. ‘I promised you I would never tell anyone, and I haven’t broken that promise.’

‘I believe you,’ she said calmly. ‘But you realise that we’re going to have to investigate this. And the first thing I want you to do is-’

‘It was my brother,’ he said. ‘My brother spoke to my mother on her deathbed, and…’

He stopped and held his breath. He could hear the hum of an engine in the distance. A cloud of dust rose behind the hillock with maple trees. A dull, rotating noise made him turn to the west. A helicopter was circling over the trees. The pilot was obviously looking for a place to land.

‘Listen to me,’ Helen Bentley said. ‘Listen to me!’

‘Yes,’ Al Muffet said and stood up. ‘I’m listening.’

‘The FBI are coming. Don’t be frightened. OK? They got their orders directly from me. They’re coming to talk to you. Tell them everything. If you’re not involved in this, everything will be fine. I promise you.’

A black car swung into the drive and drove slowly up towards the house.

‘Don’t be frightened, Ali. Just tell them what there is to tell.’

The phone was cut off.

The car stopped. Two dark-suited men got out. One smiled and held out his hand as he approached.

‘Al Muffet, I presume!’

Al took his hand, which was warm and firm.

‘I hear that you’re a friend of Madam President,’ the agent said and did not let go of his hand. ‘And a friend of the President’s is a friend of mine. Shall we go inside?’

‘I think,’ Al Muffet said, and swallowed, ‘I think that you should take care of these.’

He handed him the three envelopes. The man looked at them without giving anything away, and then took them by the corner between his fingers and indicated to his colleague to find a plastic bag.

‘Fayed Muffasa,’ he read quickly, his head cocked. Then he looked up. ‘Who’s that?’

‘My brother. He’s in a chest in the cellar. I killed him.’

The FBI agent looked at him, long and hard.

‘I think it’s best we go in,’ he said and patted Al Muffet on the shoulder. ‘Seems there’s a lot to sort out.’

The helicopter had landed and all was quiet again.

XVI

There was only one hour left of Thursday the 19th of May 2005. The intense summer heat had lasted the whole day, leaving a balmy, still evening in its wake. Johanne had opened all the windows in the sitting room. She had had a bath with Ragnhild, who was exhausted and had fallen asleep happily as soon as she was put down in her own familiar bed. Johanne felt almost as euphoric as the one-year-old. Coming home felt like purification. Just walking through the front door had almost made her cry with relief. They had been held by the PST for so long that Adam had eventually called Peter Salhus and threatened to rip up the pile of confidentiality papers they had signed if they weren’t allowed to go home immediately.

‘I think we can forget the idea of any more children,’ Adam said, as he padded, flat-footed, over the floor, dressed in only a pair of wide pyjama bottoms, which had been cut open at the groin, just in case. ‘I don’t think I’ve ever experienced anything so painful in all my life.’

‘You should try giving birth.’ Johanne smiled and patted the place next to her on the sofa. ‘The doctor said you’d be OK. See if it’s comfortable to sit down here.’

‘… proved to be a conspiracy in America’s own ranks. At a press conference at Gardermoen, President Bentley stated …’

The TV had been on since they got home.

‘They don’t know for certain yet,’ Johanne said. ‘That there are only Americans involved, I mean.’

‘That’s the truth they want us to know. The most convenient truth right now. It’s the truth that will allow oil prices to fall, in other words.’

Adam lowered himself down on to the sofa as carefully as he could, and sat with his legs wide open.

‘… following a dramatic shoot-out in Krusesgate in Oslo, where the American FBI agent Warren Scifford …’

The picture they showed must have been his passport photograph. He looked like a criminal, with a surly expression and half-closed eyes.

‘… was shot and killed by a Norwegian intelligence officer who has not been named. Sources at the American embassy in Norway have said that the plot involved only a very small number of people, and that all of these are now being questioned by the authorities.

‘The most impressive thing, really, is that they managed to cook up this story so quickly,’ Johanne said. ‘Especially the fact that the President wasn’t kidnapped at all, but had “disappeared” in order to help uncover the planned assassination. Do they have scenarios like that ready, just in case?’

‘Maybe. But I doubt it. We’ll witness a masterful smokescreen over the next few days. And if they don’t have the stories there already, they certainly have experts in the field. They’ll put something together and tighten all the nuts and bolts, so that in the end they have a story that most people will be happy with. And then the conspiracy theories will follow. This will be a feast for the paranoid. But no one listens to them. And so the world will continue to limp on, until it’s no longer possible to know what’s true and what’s false, and no one is that bothered any more. It’s easiest that way. For everyone. Bloody hell, that hurts!’

He winced.

‘… expected that President Bentley, who will arrive back in the States in a few hours, will offer an unconditional apology to Saudi Arabia and Iran. The American people have been informed that she will give a speech tomorrow morning at …’

‘Turn it off,’ Adam said and put his arm round Johanne.

He kissed her on the temple.

‘We’ve heard enough. It’s all just stories and lies anyway. I can’t be bothered.’

She picked up the remote control. There was quiet in the room. She snuggled in to him and gently stroked his hairy arms. They sat like this for a long time, and she breathed in Adam’s smell and was happy that summer had finally made an appearance.

‘Johanne,’ Adam said quietly. She was nearly asleep.

‘What?’

‘I want to know what Warren did to you.’

She didn’t answer. But she didn’t pull away either, as she always had done before, at the slightest mention of the hornets’ nest that had hung between them since they met on a warm spring day almost exactly five years ago. She didn’t hold her breath, or turn away. He couldn’t see her face, but he didn’t feel that she had closed up and was pursing her lips tight, as she normally did.

‘I think it’s time,’ he said and put his mouth to her ear. ‘It’s high time, Johanne.’

She took a deep breath.

‘I was only twenty-three, and we were in DC to…’

It was three in the morning by the time they went to bed.

The new day had just started to peek over the trees to the east, and Adam would never know that he wasn’t the first to share Johanne’s painful secret.

It didn’t matter, she thought.

The first was the President of the United States of America, and they would never meet her again.

FRIDAY 20 MAY 2005

When the news that President Bentley was still alive had made its way round the world on Thursday evening, European time, Abdallah al-Rahman had stopped all his usual activities and locked himself away in his office in the east wing.

It was now nearly six in the morning. He didn’t feel particularly tired, despite having been awake all night. He had tried to take a nap several times, on the low divan in front of the plasma screen, but a growing unease had kept him awake.

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