When the gutted body of a businessman is discovered in the Icelandic embassy in Berlin, Iceland’s best detectives are sent to Germany to investigate the crime. The stab wounds and the murder weapon—an elegant hunting knife —suggest a ritualistic killing. But the only suspects present in the sleek modern office building were some of the island nation’s cultural elite, including Jon the Sun Poet and ceramics artist Ludvik Bjarnason. The victim is someone few would miss, and investigators Birkir and Gunnar, joined by forensics expert Anna Thordardottir, wager they have an open-and-shut case on their hands. What they find is anything but: The crime reeks of premeditation and vengeance, and leads the team into a sordid tale of international child abuse, arson, and retribution.
This is the same team that solved the riddle of Ingolfsson’s Daybreak, which formed the basis for the popular Icelandic Man Hunt television series.
“Viktor Arnar has an unquestionable knack for writing historical or cultural crime fiction.” DV NEWSPAPER
“…an Icelandic revelation, wonderful and vivid. …Iceland, that little island in the North Atlantic has yielded some great authors, hitherto unknown in this country. Ingolfsson is one of them. His Flatey Enigma doesn’t only give us excitement, but also a deep insight into the Icelandic soul.” NDR, GERMANY
b.1955) is one of Iceland’s most accomplished crime fiction authors. Ingolfsson’s novel, House of Evidence, was nominated for the Glass Key – The Nordic Crime Novel Award in 2001 and The Flatey Enigma was nominated for the same prize in More about the author