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The Other Son

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The exciting follow-up to The Andalucian Friend, a breakneck thriller that follows Sophie Brinkmann as she faces the consequences of joining Hector Guzman's crime empire
From the moment Hector Guzman entered a coma, Sophie Brinkmann has regretted joining his crime family. Hector's right hand, Aron Geisler, is doing all he can to keep the sinking ship afloat and keep Sophie in their steely grip. But when Hector's brother is murdered in Biarritz, Sophie gains the upper hand, and intends to use it. 
Sophie becomes a player in a game where the rules are constantly changing, where loyalty and friendship are rendered meaningless. In order to survive, she must look inward and find her inner darkness. If not, she will be swallowed whole by the forces closing in on her: vengeful mobsters, cunning detectives, charismatic arms dealers, and possibly her own son.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 25, 2015
      Stockholm nurse and single mother Sophie Brinkmann paid dearly for her romance with Hector Guzman—the seductive criminal she met when he landed in her hospital after being run down by a competing gang—in Söderberg’s acclaimed debut, The Andalucian Friend (2013). In this propulsive, Tarantino-esque sequel, Hector lies comatose after a second botched hit, and his associates have strong-armed Sophie into functioning as the Guzman syndicate’s mouthpiece to help maintain the illusion that Hector continues to run things. Sophie has to make some hard choices amid kidnappings, assassinations, and collateral damage to innocents, all of which mushroom as the remnants of the Guzman cartel come under fire from Colombian drug baron Don Ignacio Ramirez and the German Hanke brothers’ gang. Meanwhile, Tommy Jansson, a former associate of corrupt cop Gunilla Strandberg, embarks on a crime spree that threatens one of his few honest colleagues, dedicated Det. Insp. Antonia Miller. As the blood-splattered action accelerates across Europe and beyond, a shell-shocked Sophie tries to outmaneuver her adversaries with the help of a ragtag band of allies, including her first love, Jens, a smuggler. Readers won’t want this fast and furious—and fitfully funny—roller-coaster ride to end. Agent: Leyla Belle Drake, Salmonsson Agency (Sweden).

    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2015
      A clearer picture of a fuzzy moral universe emerges in the middle of this thriller trilogy shot through with bad cops, good gangsters, and Scandinavian chill. Following the conclusion of this series' opening salvo, The Andalucian Friend (2012), gangster Hector Guzman is in a coma in Spain after being attacked by rivals while his lover, Sophie Brinkmann, tries to carry on with her son, Albert, in Stockholm. German, Russian, and South American gangsters are once again angling for control of Hector's syndicate, and Sophie's talks with them to buy time has her under suspicion as a traitor-a status that gets more complicated when Hector's eyes flicker open again. Approximately two dozen characters of substance flow through this story, which largely turns on the kidnappings of Albert and of Lothar, a son of Hector's. But despite all the globe-trotting and moving parts, which often bogged down his debut, Soderberg here works in tighter and cleaner prose. And this time he has a subplot that in some ways trumps the main story, following Tommy, a corrupt cop who tries to shut down an investigation of Hector by replacing go-getter detective Antonia with Miles, a stripper-addicted piece of deadwood. Tommy's scheme backfires, which is no surprise. But Soderberg's treatment of the backfiring, particularly Miles' redemption, is marked by thoughtful characterization and the kind of black-hearted inside-out morality that's defined the recent Scandinavian crime boom; Soderberg can make you cheer for a man urinating on a beaten corpse. Sophie remains a frustratingly passive character in this milieu-Soderberg has deliberately made her untouched by such machinations, and here, she's mostly wringing her hands over Albert. But the pieces seem to be in place for her to fully claim the stage in Book 3. A thriller with plenty of vectors but a better sense of direction than its predecessor.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 2015
      At the end of Soderberg's masterful The Andalucian Friend (2014), we left Stockholm nurse Sophie Brinkman, whose involvement with a patient, Hector Guzman, drew her into the world of international crime, reeling from an attack that left Guzman in a coma and her on the run. As we pick up the story, she is in hiding with Guzman's inner circle. Matters accelerate to crisis proportions when Sophie's son, Albert, is kidnapped, as is Guzman's other son, whose existence was unknown to Sophie and who unwittingly forces Sophie to make her own Sophie's choice. Meanwhile, the Stockholm police are closing in, despite the presence of corrupt officials trying to impede the investigation. Soderberg juggles multiple stories and characters, new and old, in a novel that is perhaps a bit overstuffed with plotand with backstory, as the author struggles to bring new readers up to speed. Still, as the complex plot unspools and the many characters, all vividly drawn, vie for stage time, there are spectacularly choreographed and shocking bursts of action. In many ways, this is a transitional episode, skillfully setting up a finale that will find Sophie and her small cadre of friends hoping to forge a separate peace.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      February 1, 2015

      Swedish TV screenwriter Soderberg, who got some stand-out praise for his debut thriller, The Andalucian Friend, follows up with a sequel. Sophie Brinkmann, now tangled up in Hector Guzman's crime family, grabs hold of her fate when Hector's brother is murdered.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 31, 2015
      Book two in Soderberg’s announced trilogy (after 2014’s The Andalucian Friend) throws us into the middle of protagonist Sophie Brinkmann’s continuing struggle for survival, caught in the middle of a violent turf war between two Scandinavian drug cartels. A working knowledge of the first book may not be a necessity but it will help in understanding how Sophie, a nurse and single mother, could have fallen in love with her patient, Hector Guzman, the leader of one of the cartels. It would also provide clues as to her relationship to Jens Vall, who seems to be a good-guy arms dealer. Without that and other info, the best way to enjoy this dense thriller is to ignore the past and let reader Jackson’s crisp, dramatic British delivery whisk you along at a breakneck pace that manages to speed up as Sophie’s situation grows ever darker. Jackson smoothly adds the appropriate accents as the action hops from Istanbul to Berlin; Biarritz, France; Sonora, Mexico; and Stockholm, simplifying this complex, overpopulated tale so that most listeners will be ready for book three. A Crown hardcover.

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