mjfmjfmjf's review against another edition
3.0
reasie's review against another edition
3.0
ericawrites's review against another edition
3.0
riverdogbookco's review against another edition
4.0
Aud Torvigen is hot, sexy, and in control. A 6-foot, ice blonde Norwegian-American, Aud grew up in Norway, and now makes her home in Atlanta, GA. After leaving the elite "Red Dogs" special police force at the age of 29, Aud now works for herself, taking on jobs that pique her interest, since she no longer needs them to pay the bills.
After running, literally, into a strange woman on a dark road in the middle of the night, only to have a house blow up a block away a few minutes after that, Aud gets tangled in a mess of a private investigation involving a highly-placed politican, international money laundering, art forgeries, and one Julia Lyons-Bennet, who is at once more than and also exactly what she seems. When the investigation turns deadly, Aud and Julia escape to Norway where an unexpected betrayal will bring their trip to an abrupt end. Though Aud solves the investigation, Julia has helped her learn it's no longer about that thrill you only get when you're in the Blue Place. Though heart-wrenching, the end will not disappoint, and will make you glad there are 2 other books out there about Aud for you to read.
Called a "new wave crime-writer" and an author of "literary noir," Nicola Griffith's writing is a sensory delight. Like Aud herself, Griffith's words are precise, exacting, and yet slow and senuous enough to have all of your senses enjoying the experience. You can feel the moist humidity of Atlanta and the icy breath of Norwegian fjords, the bump of rock 'n roll and the glide of skin against skin. Her writing has won her the Tiptree Award, the Nebula Award, the World Fantasy Award, and six Lambda Literary Awards. It is easy to understand why. Pick up The Blue Place. You won't be able to put Nicola Griffith or Aud Torvigen down.
gravys's review
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
3.5
egelantier's review against another edition
5.0
about fifty pages in this paperback airport thriller premise deepens and unfolds into a beautiful, dense, breathing narrative that had me swallow the whole trilogy in a day and then wander stunned for a couple of days more. it's a surprisingly - adult? grown up? - story about grief, and trauma, and breaking the violence taboos, and reconnecting with your own humanity, and limits of self-defense (half of the third book is practically a self-defense manual, and it's amazing), and mothers and daughters, and various shades of feminism, and the true terror of falling in love. aud's "disturbing lesbian-chick Übermensch" (to quote a goodreads review) traits start out as a potential titillating cliche and get honestly, painfully, respectfully explored and challenged and made real, and her offhand, practical, solid kindness turns out to be a just as solid and needed foundation of her personality.
i've also really loved that aud's orientation was absolutely taken for granted by the narrative, without either excess drama or coy subtlety; it just was there, solid and accepted. almost all the important relationships in the books - romantic, friendly, filial - are about women, in glorious variety.
wreathedinviolets's review
nocto's review against another edition
I've been looking forward to this book, and this author, for a long time as I've heard high praise of them from people I trust to have good taste in stories. And I'd saved the book up for holiday reading so I was almost expecting to be disappointed. I wasn't disappointed.
Griffith brings characters to life in realistic ways, her main character Aud Torvingen is supposed to be quite a cool headed character and could easily have come over as cardboardy even with first person narration to show us the woman inside, and also weaves a pretty decent mystery story around her characters. What I respected most was that the author knew when to stop regaling us with mystery and let the characters get on with doing their own thing, which in this book, was falling in love with each other. The love story could have been really cheesy but instead added depth to characters who were already three dimensional.
Definitely an author I'll try again.
mentat_stem's review
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.5