Houston Chronicle Sunday

‘The Kingdom’ a slow-burn thriller from Jo Nesbø

- By Oline H. Cogdill

The kingdom, as it is often called, is a massive piece of land owned by two brothers, just outside of Os, a small mountainto­p village in Norway. The land, mostly forest, is the inheritanc­e of Roy and Carl Opgard, who have co- owned it since their parents were killed in a car accident not far from the house.

The brothers’ dynamic, fostered by their controllin­g father and, in many ways, their meek mother, fuels the intricatel­y plotted “The Kingdom,” a stand-alone novel by Norwegian author Jo Nesbø, best known for his compelling police procedural about Inspector Harry Hole.

Nesbø’s affinity for dark stories takes another leap as he explores the unshakable bonds of Roy and Carl that go beyond being siblings. In ways, “The Kingdom” has roots in the biblical stories of Cain and Abel, the Prodigal Son and myriad Greek and Shakespear­e tragedies. The Opgard brothers were always told that it “was us against them,” and both took this to heart, confiding only to each other. Roy, one year older, also has spent a lifetime cleaning up after Carl — a situation without end.

Roy has never left Os, running a service station and convenienc­e store, still living in the bedroom that the brothers shared as children.

Carl fled to the U.S., and then Canada as soon as he could. Now, he’s come back with a wife and, as a surprise to Roy, a grandiose plan to turn their land into a luxury spa and hotel. For Carl’s plan to work, the village residents, most of whom have little cash, have to agree to put up their land — in a sense their own kingdoms — for the bank to lend the money.

The contrast between the brothers elevates the plot of “The Kingdom.” Roy doesn’t have friends, yet Carl appears to be friends with everyone, his “homecoming” a true celebratio­n. Each wears a different face to each other and outsiders.

With “The Kingdom,” Nesbø builds a slow-burn thriller that leaps to myriad twists as he peels back the brothers’ strong relationsh­ip that is partially built on terrible secrets and tinged with violence. The villagers’ secrets also are revealed as mysterious deaths, abusive families, sexual dalliances and hatreds seethe below surface.

“Am I my brother’s keeper?” takes a new meaning with “The Kingdom.”

 ?? Jens Kalaene / Getty Images ?? Author Jo Nesbø peels back his protagonis­t brothers’ strong relationsh­ip that is partially built on terrible secrets and tinged with violence.
Jens Kalaene / Getty Images Author Jo Nesbø peels back his protagonis­t brothers’ strong relationsh­ip that is partially built on terrible secrets and tinged with violence.
 ??  ?? The Kingdom
By Jo Nesbø, translated from Norwegian by Robert Ferguson Knopf
549 pages, $28.95
The Kingdom By Jo Nesbø, translated from Norwegian by Robert Ferguson Knopf 549 pages, $28.95

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