Wolf Hour: A Novel by Jo NesboMy rating: 3 of 5 stars
2.5 stars
The purpose is to try to get inside the head of a killer.
If you're from the Twin Cities area in Minnesota, you're going to want to read this because of all the “I recognize that!” going on here, non-residents might not get as much from the setting and get lost in the slower moving mystery-thriller. Wolf Hour had two competing timelines, 2022, where an author from Norway is visiting the Minneapolis area to do research on a book he's writing about, the other timeline, 2016 serial murders. This had multi-povs but the two main ones were the 2022 author and the 2016 detective, Bob. Bob's a hardened detective who's going through a divorce, obviously has anger management problems and an incident from his past constantly hovering on the edges that is clearly leading him into depression.
“What did he say about being lonely?”
“Lots. That it was slowly driving him crazy.”
While this was a murder mystery of following along with Bob as he tries to catch up to the killer with some thriller and splashes of horror, I felt this was more of a humanities study on grief. The story mostly follows Bob and while the explicit reveal of what lead to where he is in life now is left until the end, I think it started to become obvious, which lead to a different reading lens view and will have readers connecting other dots. With each character that gets brought in through Bob, his wife, peer Kay, taxidermist, and bartender Liza, it only strengthened that humanity feeling for me. What I'm saying is maybe read this less for thrills and chills and more for emotional working through.
“I’m looking Chicago,” sang Bob as he raised his glass in a salute, “and feeling Minnesota.”
For most of the story, especially since their pov all but disappeared I was feeling like the author from Norway angle wasn't really needed but it will come back at the end to connect; not sure it ended up feeling structurally worth it to me. I think there was also a problem of feeling like the story got a bit rambling and seemed to get sidetracked with dissertations at times but, if you don't show up for a straight-lined murder mystery, you'll probably be more receptive to the musings. A fun story for a Minnesotan to read and emotional meat on grief, gun control, and other societal issues.
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