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The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets' Nest

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Author: Stieg Larsson
Publisher: Quercus Publishing Plc
Category: Book

List Price: £7.99
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Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 543 reviews
Sales Rank: 4

Media: Paperback
Pages: 656
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5 x 2

ISBN: 1849162743
EAN: 9781849162746
ASIN: 1849162743

Publication Date: April 1, 2010
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days

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Editorial Reviews:

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Amazon.co.uk Review
A young girl lies in a hospital room, her tattooed body very close to death -- there is a bullet lodged in her brain. Several rooms away is the man who tried to kill her, his own body grievously wounded from axe blows inflicted by the girl he has tried to kill. She is Lisbeth Salander, computer hacker and investigator, and the man is her father, a murderous Russian gangster. If Salander recovers from her injuries, she is more than likely to be put on trial for three murders -- the authorities regard her as a dangerous individual. But she won't see the inside of a courtroom if her father manages to kill her first.

This is the high-tension opening premise of the third book in Stieg Larsson’s phenomenally successful trilogy of crime novels which the late author (a crusading journalist) delivered to his publisher just before his death. But does it match up to its two electrifying predecessors, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and The Girl who Played with Fire? The success of Larsson’s remarkable sequence of books is, to some degree, unprecedented. Crime fiction in translation has, of course, made a mark before (notably with Peter Hoeg’s Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow, published, in fact, by Larsson's British publisher, Christopher MacLehose). But even the success of that book gave no hint of the juggernauts that the Salander books would be (the late author's secondary hero is the journalist Blomqvist -- who bears more than a passing resemblance to Stieg Larsson himself).

There are two overriding reasons for the hold that this massive trilogy has attained on the public: machine-tooled plotting which juggles the various narrative elements with a master's touch and (above all) the vividly realised character of Lisbeth Salander herself. She is something of a unique creation in the field of crime and thriller fiction: emotionally damaged, vulnerable and sociopathic (all of this concealed behind a forbidding Goth appearance), but she is also the ultimate survivor, somehow managing to stay alive despite the machinations of some deeply unpleasant villains (and the new book has a slew of those) as well as the hostility of often stupid establishment figures, who want her out of the picture quite as passionately as the bad guys. She is, of course, aided by the protective journalist Blomqvist, despite the fact that she had dumped him as a lover. The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest brings together all the elements that have made the previous books of the sequence so successful. Its relentless pace may be a bit exhausting for some readers, but most will be happy to strap themselves in for the ride. It's just a shame that this will be the final book in the sequence (though conspiracy theorists are hinting that Larsson began another manuscript before his untimely death…) --Barry Forshaw


Customer Reviews:
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5 out of 5 stars Excellent service   September 3, 2010
Linda E. Cox (UK)
The service was excellent and the book itself is a must. This trilogy is a fantastic read, such a shame the author did not leve to see how successful it has become.


4 out of 5 stars The end of a saga   September 2, 2010
M. Stevens (Bath)
Having read The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo on holiday last year, and having enjoyed it enough to want to read the next instalments in the trilogy (although admittedly not having been blown away by it, initially finding it difficult to "get into"), I read The Girl Who Played with Fire earlier this year, and could not put it down; the characters had all been developed nicely from the first book, and there was little introduction needed as to who was who.

The second book ends on something of a "cliffhanger" and therefore I quickly got round to reading the final, and longest, book of the trilogy. It is difficult to write a review for those not having read the second book and therefore runining the surprises within, but this one concerns conspiracy and cover up with the Swedish Secret Service, and refers to a number of events which have actually happened in Swedish politics (for us reading in England, and unaware of these events, there is a useful page or two of notes at the end, so we understand the events being referred to!), adding further weight to how things are covered up by those in power.

Personally, I found this one the most in-depth of the series, and it suffered a little (and I really do mean a little) for this - there are so many different stories going on, and so many characters with similar sounding names, it is sometimes difficult to keep up, particularly if you are not blessed with the ability to be able to sit down and devour it in sizeable chunks; it will be interesting to see how the film has been adapted, as it surely cannot cover every story going on here in two (or so) hours! In addiiton, the "Girl" is more of a side-story in this one (although the events of her past, and which have been covered in earlier books, certainly form a main part of the story), spending much of the time where she ends the second one (sorry, don't want to give away again!). However, the pace really ramps up come around page 500, and the last 240 (or so pages) are some of the most exciting of the trilogy.

Another minor gripe; some of the stories which have appear in earlier novels (remember Blomkvists daughter, who plays an important part in solving "the Harriet mystery" in Part I? Salander's twin?) are left hanging, and you wonder whether the purported unfinished fourth novel developed on them.

In all, a fantastic trilogy (which as a trilogy would certainly receive 5 stars), which has brought something different to the overcrowded crime genre market, with my personal favourite being the second instalment.



5 out of 5 stars The Girl who kicked the Hornets' Nest   September 1, 2010
sadie scinders
Now this is the best part of the trilogy. How can you put it down once you have started!


1 out of 5 stars A letdown   August 31, 2010
Entertainme (UK)
The third of the trilogy, while still using a very fast pace and page-turning techniques, is badly flawed. Everything the baddies are planing and doing is shown with the result the book is shorn of suspense and the main goodies are either seen leaping from one flash of intuition to another - or they simply get everything by hacking into a computer (hardly Sherlock Holmes stuff). The first part of the book builds the Section into something to take seriously; the rest shows it to be clownish and amateurish. Against the baddies are arrayed: a magazine, hackers that could apparently bring a country down (if they felt like it), police, security agents, the Swedish PM, the ex-Swedish PM, a first-class security company: real drama or struggle is virtually non-existent. The court case has a defense lawyer scoring points off a baddy before bringing out a sledgehammer piece of evidence the reader knows is coming. And does anyone believe that Mikael has really fallen in love by the end? The couple enjoy a bit of banter and a lot of sex, but not much else.
It all feels like an overwritten plan that didn't get the editing it should. Such a shame after the first in the series.
Read Nora Ephron's The Girl Who Fixed the Umlaut for an antidote.



5 out of 5 stars Girl who kicked the hornets' nest   August 31, 2010
Mrs. G. Thomas (Penarth Wales UK)
Easy to see why this is best seller. Read the whole trilogy on holiday. Want to see the films now

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