Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Millennium, #1) (original 2005; edition 2008)by Stieg Larsson
Work InformationThe Girl with the Dragon Tattoo by Stieg Larsson (2005)
» 83 more Female Protagonist (13) Books Read in 2015 (21) Books Read in 2016 (53) Best Family Stories (14) Favorite Series (77) A Novel Cure (40) Books Read in 2014 (71) Best Noir Fiction (11) Carole's List (25) Pageturners (3) Books Read in 2013 (126) Books About Murder (10) Movie Adaptations (44) 2000s decade (26) Best family sagas (124) Overdue Podcast (109) Detective Stories (33) Murder Mysteries (35) Books Read in 2018 (2,733) First Novels (63) Books Read in 2011 (10) BbBooBooks (24) Books Read in 2022 (4,350) Winter Books (111) Secrets Books (58) Books Read in 2010 (509) Books tagged favorites (274) Missing Person Books (11) BitLife (27) Favourite Books (38) Plan to Read Books (41) books read in 2019 (46) Books I've read (71) living room bookshelf (122) Secret Histories (24) Unread books (756) Best of World Literature (332) Biggest Disappointments (567) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book.
I'm not particularly pleased with how the book is initially presented, taking a view of the story from 3 different perspectives and hardly mentioning "the girl with the dragon tattoo" until more than halfway through the book. It's incredibly misleading :( Overall, though, it's a worthwhile read. ( ) This is the first book of the best-selling Millennium series by Stieg Larsson, who died in 2004, at the age of 50, of a heart attack. It was published in Swedish in 2005 and in English in 2008. The Swedish title is Män som hatar kvinnor (Men who hate women), which is more descriptive of the story but perhaps less appealing to potential readers. It’s a long but engrossing book about the mysterious disappearance of a teenage girl and the deaths of a series of other women, which a journalist (Mikael Blomkvist) is paid to investigate, although the events took place in the fairly distant past and were long ago dropped by the police. Blomkvist accepts the help of an eccentric young tattooed woman (Lisbeth Salander) who happens to be an expert at infiltrating computer systems, and the two of them are the main characters of the story. There's an unrelated subplot about a crooked businessman (Hans-Erik Wennerström), who at the start of the book has just won a libel action against Blomkvist. The story takes place partly in Stockholm and partly in and around the fictional town of Hedestad, on the coast “a little more than an hour north of Gävle”. As I’ve lived in Stockholm myself, I was amused to recognize a number of the street names and a restaurant referred to in the text. Familiarity with Sweden in general and with Stockholm in particular isn’t necessary when reading this book, but it adds a little something. The book gives a distinctly unflattering portrait of Swedish society. Readers may come away with the impression that most Swedish men are evil or unpleasant, and that Swedish women are eager to jump into bed with the first non-evil man they can find, but are touchy, unpredictable, and hard to cope with. My own impression of real-life Swedish men and women has been completely different. However, our hero Blomkvist is relatively normal, and similar in personality to some Swedish men I’ve known. There’s some unpleasant violence in this book, most of it in the past and so not described vividly, but some of it happens in the present in the course of the story. On two occasions in the book, Salander (who is unusually small and thin) physically attacks evil men and gets away with it. Although in both cases she has a weapon of some kind and her opponent hasn’t, at close quarters a weapon can be countered by an unarmed man with quick reactions, so I reckon that some goddess must give her luck when she needs it. This book has an interesting story to tell, and it’s a page-turner once it gets going, but it’s not really my kind of novel (it was given to me as a present). The best thing about it is the character of Lisbeth Salander, who’s eccentric, touchy, unpredictable, and aggressive, but intelligent and courageous and somehow likeable underneath. I don’t feel an active desire to meet any of the other characters again. Blomkvist is amiable but, as a hero, not particularly interesting. (Review written in 2009) I waited a very long time to get this book from my library. When I finally had it in hand, it was hard to put it down. A very well done story that spins not only the crime/mystery aspect, but also adds the human element and the journalism issues. Add in a quirky young girl who has some serious issues and you've got a great story! I really enjoyed and was interested to see it has a sequel. Hmmm, when will my book list ever get smaller??!
[Richman reviews several Scandinavian novels, including Larsson's.] Why have readers taken to these writers? The novels are not formally innovative: With a few exceptions, these are straightforward whodunits, hewing closely to conventional models from the English tradition. Nor does their appeal depend on a "relentlessly bleak view of the world," as a writer for the London Times has put it. Bleak worldviews are not particularly hard to come by in crime novels, no matter what country they come from. What distinguishes these books is not some element of Nordic grimness but their evocation of an almost sublime tranquility. When a crime occurs, it is shocking exactly because it disrupts a world that, at least to an American reader, seems utopian in its peacefulness, happiness, and orderliness. It’s Mr. Larsson’s two protagonists — Carl Mikael Blomkvist, a reporter filling the role of detective, and his sidekick, Lisbeth Salander, a k a the girl with the dragon tattoo — who make this novel more than your run-of-the-mill mystery: they’re both compelling, conflicted, complicated people, idiosyncratic in the extreme, and interesting enough to compensate for the plot mechanics, which seize up as the book nears its unsatisfying conclusion. The novel offers a thoroughly ugly view of human nature, especially when it comes to the way Swedish men treat Swedish women. In Larsson’s world, sadism, murder and suicide are commonplace — as is lots of casual sex. (Sweden isn’t all bad.) The first-time author's excitement at his creation is palpable, strangely, in the book's sometimes amateurish construction. There are frequent long digressions in this big book (more than 500 pages) in which he laboriously fills in back-story details. Then there is the Vanger family; what might have seemed like a bit of fun gets out of hand as easily more than 20 people with the surname Vanger are mixed into the story. To his credit, though, he always regains control and restores momentum. Belongs to SeriesMillennium (1) Belongs to Publisher SeriesColumna (762) Farfalle [Marsilio] (130) Heyne Allgemeine Reihe (43245) Áncora y Delfín (1124) Is contained inHas the adaptationIs abridged inIs parodied inHas as a reference guide/companionHas as a studyHas as a student's study guideAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
The disappearance forty years ago of Harriet Vanger, a young scion of one of the wealthiest families in Sweden, gnaws at her octogenarian uncle, Henrik Vanger. He is determined to know the truth about what he believes was her murder. He hires crusading journalist Mikael Blomkvist, recently at the wrong end of a libel case, to get to the bottom of Harriet's disappearance. Lisbeth Salander, a twenty-four-year-old, pierced, tattooed genius hacker, possessed of the hard-earned wisdom of someone twice her age--and a terrifying capacity for ruthlessness--assists Blomkvist with the investigation. This unlikely team discovers a vein of nearly unfathomable iniquity running through the Vanger family, an astonishing corruption at the highest echelon of Swedish industrialism--and a surprising connection between themselves.--From publisher description. No library descriptions found.
|
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)839.738Literature German & related literatures Other Germanic literatures Swedish literature Swedish fiction 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |