Thirty Days of Darkness by Jenny Lund Madsen
A snobbish Danish literary author is challenged to write a crime novel in thirty days, travelling to a small village in Iceland for inspiration, and then a body appears an atmospheric, darkly funny, twisty debut thriller, first in an addictive new series.
An original and thoroughly enjoyable treat Guardian
Dark and sharp A lot of funVal McDermid
Witty, dark, meta, ingenious and hugely compelling. I LOVED the Icelandic setting and satirical observationsWill Dean
Hilariously scathing. Satirises genre fiction while creating a first-class example of it, full of suspects, red herrings and twists wit and originality make it a joy to readMark Sanderson,The TimesCRIME BOOK OF THE MONTH
**Winner of the Harald Mogensen Prize for Best Danish Crime Novel**
**Shortlisted for the Glass Key Award**
Copenhagen author Hannah is the darling of the literary community and her novels have achieved massive critical acclaim. But nobody actually reads them, and frustrated by writers block, Hannah has the feeling that shes doing something wrong.
When she expresses her contempt for genre fiction, Hanna is publicly challenged to write a crime novel in thirty days. Scared that she will lose face, she accepts, and her editor sends her to Husafjour a quiet, tight-knit village in Iceland, filled with colourful local characters for inspiration.
But two days after her arrival, the body of a fishermans young son is pulled from the water and what begins as a search for plot material quickly turns into a messy and dangerous investigation that threatens to uncover secrets that put everything at risk including Hannah
Atmospheric, dramatic and full of nerve-jangling twists and turns,Thirty Days of Darknessis a darkly funny, unsettling debut Nordic Noir thriller that marks the start of a breath-taking new series.
____________________________________
Dark and atmospheric a bleak and beautiful evocation of Iceland, and Hannah is a pitch-perfect depiction of the bombastic neurosis that we writers know so very wellHarriet Tyce
Such a clever, original twist on the Nordic Noir tradition darkly humorous and utterly captivatingEva Bjorg gisdottir
A fantastic debut Darkly funny, tense and a lot of poking fun at crime-writingTariq Ashkanani
Delightfully darkAntti Tuomainen
So atmosphericCrime Monthly
An absolute gem a superb mix of humour and dark, twisty crime fiction with an added layer of contemplation regarding what makes books 'literary'. The Icelandic setting is perfectly drawn Not to be missed'Yrsa Sigurardottir
Shades ofFargoandTwin Peaks and theres no higher praise than that. Absolutely brilliant!Rod Reynolds
A truly original thriller that perfectly balances humour and suspenseVogue
A hugely enjoyable read with thrills and laughs, as Hannah sticks her nose in where its not welcomeMichael J. Malone
So satisfying a truly great readLilja Sigurardottir
A skilful, witty mash-up, playing with tropes of romantic fiction (yes, that popular genre writer turns up in the village and is not so bad after all) and crime fiction (closed community, dark secrets) really entertainingAly Monroe
'This reminded me somewhat of the more recent, meta efforts of the great Anthony HorowitzThe Bookbag
The most original thriller of the year: realistic, suspenseful and romantic to the very last page.And just when you think you've got the plot figured out, the plot twists again'Politiken
An original and thoroughly enjoyable treat Guardian
Dark and sharp A lot of funVal McDermid
Witty, dark, meta, ingenious and hugely compelling. I LOVED the Icelandic setting and satirical observationsWill Dean
Hilariously scathing. Satirises genre fiction while creating a first-class example of it, full of suspects, red herrings and twists wit and originality make it a joy to readMark Sanderson,The TimesCRIME BOOK OF THE MONTH
**Winner of the Harald Mogensen Prize for Best Danish Crime Novel**
**Shortlisted for the Glass Key Award**
Copenhagen author Hannah is the darling of the literary community and her novels have achieved massive critical acclaim. But nobody actually reads them, and frustrated by writers block, Hannah has the feeling that shes doing something wrong.
When she expresses her contempt for genre fiction, Hanna is publicly challenged to write a crime novel in thirty days. Scared that she will lose face, she accepts, and her editor sends her to Husafjour a quiet, tight-knit village in Iceland, filled with colourful local characters for inspiration.
But two days after her arrival, the body of a fishermans young son is pulled from the water and what begins as a search for plot material quickly turns into a messy and dangerous investigation that threatens to uncover secrets that put everything at risk including Hannah
Atmospheric, dramatic and full of nerve-jangling twists and turns,Thirty Days of Darknessis a darkly funny, unsettling debut Nordic Noir thriller that marks the start of a breath-taking new series.
____________________________________
Dark and atmospheric a bleak and beautiful evocation of Iceland, and Hannah is a pitch-perfect depiction of the bombastic neurosis that we writers know so very wellHarriet Tyce
Such a clever, original twist on the Nordic Noir tradition darkly humorous and utterly captivatingEva Bjorg gisdottir
A fantastic debut Darkly funny, tense and a lot of poking fun at crime-writingTariq Ashkanani
Delightfully darkAntti Tuomainen
So atmosphericCrime Monthly
An absolute gem a superb mix of humour and dark, twisty crime fiction with an added layer of contemplation regarding what makes books 'literary'. The Icelandic setting is perfectly drawn Not to be missed'Yrsa Sigurardottir
Shades ofFargoandTwin Peaks and theres no higher praise than that. Absolutely brilliant!Rod Reynolds
A truly original thriller that perfectly balances humour and suspenseVogue
A hugely enjoyable read with thrills and laughs, as Hannah sticks her nose in where its not welcomeMichael J. Malone
So satisfying a truly great readLilja Sigurardottir
A skilful, witty mash-up, playing with tropes of romantic fiction (yes, that popular genre writer turns up in the village and is not so bad after all) and crime fiction (closed community, dark secrets) really entertainingAly Monroe
'This reminded me somewhat of the more recent, meta efforts of the great Anthony HorowitzThe Bookbag
The most original thriller of the year: realistic, suspenseful and romantic to the very last page.And just when you think you've got the plot figured out, the plot twists again'Politiken