Karin Fossum

Hellfire

Helvetesilden

A rusty old caravan sits in a forest grove. The door is open and a four or five year old child lies inside. The child’s body has been chopped into pieces and is nearly drained of blood. An adult woman, presumably the child’s mother, lies on a sofa, also chopped into pieces through her chest and eyes. This is brutal even for Konrad Sejer. The deceased are Connie, who works as home help for the elderly, and Simon, her son. There are many characters in this book, but the central figures are Connie and Simon as well as Mamma Mass and her 21-year-old son Eddie. Both are single mothers not in contact with the fathers of their children. As Connie works as home help, we also encounter many other people and their destinies in the homes she visits. The author switches deftly between chapters set in 2004 and chapters set in 2005, or rather, before and after the murders. This increases the tension, and the reader is able to participate in solving the mystery of who the killer is. There are many clues leading in different directions. Hellfire deals with topics such as poverty in a wealthy Norway, the situation of the elderly and the absence of a father, but above all it makes for very exciting reading.

Photo: Arild Sønstrød

Karin Fossum made her literary début in 1974 with the poetry collection Kanskje i morgen, for which she won the Vesaas First Writer’s Award. She has published books in several genres, but is perhaps best known for her crime fiction about Konrad Sejer. Several of her books have been filmed. She has received a number of prestigious awards, including the LA Times Book Award for her novel The Indian Bride.