Lethbridge Herald

‘Sandman’ is a page-turner

KEY CHARACTER WILL REMIND READERS OF HANNIBAL LECTER

- Jonathan Elderfield THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

and believed to be one of Walter’s victims, reappears, stumbling along a snow-covered railroad bridge, frozen and bloodied. Mikael had gone missing 13 years earlier and was declared dead some half-dozen years later.

Detective Inspector Joona Linna, who captured Walter red-handed as he was forcing an elderly woman into a grave, comes back on the case. Mikael reveals that his sister, Felicia, who was also kidnapped, is likely still alive. And if Walter is in prison, then he must have an accomplice — something Linna suspected when working the original case.

With time running out for Felicia, the police work to locate her and hatch a plan to place an undercover agent, the tough-asnails Inspector Saga Bauer, posing as a violent patient, into the psychiatri­c hospital with Walter. It’s a risky attempt to reveal details of Walter’s crimes and clues to Felicia’s whereabout­s as Walter is a master of worming his way into his victims’ heads.

If Jurek Walter reminds you of Hannibal Lecter, with his ability to impel people to act against their own impulse, you’ll be forgiven, as this comparison is made in the book’s promotiona­l materials by writer Lee Child. Doctors in the maximum security prison wear earplugs when interactin­g with Walter so as not to hear his words. As with Jurek Walter’s powers of persuasion, I felt impelled by Lars Kepler to finish “The Sandman.” The characters got into my head and I couldn’t rest until the mystery was revealed.

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