Reviews for Blood On Snow

by Jo Nesbo

Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

Olav-a hit man, or "fixer"-narrates this thin standalone from Nesbo (The Son) set in 1970s Oslo. His boss, drug kingpin Daniel Hoffmann, has an unusual assignment for Olav: "He wanted me to fix his wife." Olav sets up surveillance on the beautiful Corina Hoffman from a hotel across the street and watches her let a man into the apartment. It's someone she clearly knows, but the man's first action is to strike her, then he sleeps with her, and Olav figures she's being blackmailed. Olav, whose sympathies shift to Corina, hopes to save her and double-cross his boss in a plot reminiscent of a 1940s American noir novel. A damaged loner, Olav is full of contradictions, but he's more intelligent and emotional than he'll admit, which gives the book a bit of humanity and humor. Nesbo fans will enjoy this slender story, though newcomers may find it altogether too macabre. Agent: Niclas Salomonsson, Salomonsson Agency (Sweden). (Apr.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Olav and his employer, a major crime boss, agree that Olav is good for one thing only-serving as a hit man who expertly "fixes" up messes. However, when Olav is commissioned to kill his boss's wife, things start to go south for him. Olav knows if he takes her out, he is in danger of knowing too much and will have to be eliminated as well. He has to figure out a plan that will allow him to please his boss and still survive the contract. Unfortunately when he tails the wife, Olav becomes smitten with his new target. Nesbo steps away from his popular "Harry Hole" series (Police) to create a sympathetic, soft-hearted assassin trying to endure while following orders. This title is one of three short novels Nesbo wrote under the pen name Tom Johansson that have been optioned for movie rights (they were purchased by Leonardo DiCaprio and the movies will possibly star him). -VERDICT Olav is not Harry Hole, but readers will love him just the same. This tender killer who tries to maintain reason and compassion in a brutal world will appeal to Nesbo's fans and generate new followers. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Alert, 11/17/14.]-Deb West, Gannon Univ. Lib., Erie, PA © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Versatile Nesb (The Son, 2014, etc.) switches gears yet again in this chilly whisper of a novella: a hit man's account of a job gone fatally wrong.Christmastide 1977. As the Norwegian days draw ever shorter, Olav Johansen, who in Smith's translation comes across as touchingly sensitive in his banality, reflects on his limitations. He can't drive a getaway car, execute a successful robbery, or have anything to do with drugs or prostitution, and he's dyslexic to boot. The only thing he can do consistently and successfully is kill peoplea skill that's made him very useful to Oslo heroin kingpin Daniel Hoffmann. But Hoffmann's latest request to his fixer is disturbing indeed: He wants Olav to fix his trophy wife, Corina. If he agrees, Olav will know far too much about his boss for comfort; if he refuses, he'll know almost just as much, putting himself in instant danger. So he temporizes, accepting the commission and settling in to watch the Hoffmann apartment. Soon enough he sees his target getting regular visits from a lover who beats and attacks her brutally. Thinking it over, Olav decides to alter the terms of the commission unilaterally, and disaster promptly ensues. The only way he can save himself, Olav decides, is to offer to fix Hoffmann himself for the Fisherman, an upstart rival in the heroin business. He's well-aware that this plan has its problems. In fact, it turns out to have additional problems he hasn't suspected, though many seasoned readers will be ahead of him here. A Nordic noir updating of James M. Cain's Love's Lovely Counterfeit (1942) with an equally sweet-natured killer at its improbably soft center. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

*Starred Review* Nesbø tends to serve both small plates and large. The latter are typically novels in the Harry Hole series, multidimensional thrillers that often jump from the present to the past as the many-demoned hero sinks his teeth into a new case; the small plates, on the other hand, like this jewel of a novel, have a much narrower focus, homing in on one character caught in crisis at one sharply lit moment in time. Olav is a killer for hire; it's not that he particularly wants the job, but as a criminal, he can't do anything else well. Too sensitive to rob innocents or feed them drugs; killing is simpler. Until, that is, the boss decides to kill his wife and gives Olav the job. Danger bells clang: too personal, too likely the boss will want to have Olav killed after the job is finished. Oh, and after Olav gets a look at Mrs. Boss, there's another problem: he's in love with her. Attempts to carve a separate peace rarely work; the world is too much with us. Olav knows that but tries anyway; we admire him for it, the horror of his chosen profession notwithstanding. Nesbø tells this small but ­razor-sharp story with precision and understated eloquence, even generating suspense despite the inevitability built into the plot: we know there will be blood on snow, but we're not quite sure whose and how much. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: A 60,000 first printing isn't that high for Nesbø, but expect this small plate to draw a big audience all the same.--Ott, Bill Copyright 2015 Booklist