Monday, January 2, 2012

The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest by Stieg Larsson


Just finished reading the third in the Millenium Series.  I know I am late, but considering how often I get to read for enjoyment, I am not too late.  So many of my friends still haven't picked up The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo as yet.  Thus, I am writing a review to follow the reviews of the first two I have written about this trilogy, Tatoo, just mentioned, and The Girl Who Played with Fire.  Question, am I still as blown away as I was with the first two?  Answer, I am still hooked.  Maybe I wasn't as blown away as I was with the first because I found the heroine to be so atypically captivating and so unexpected.  She wasn't the normal lady gumshoe, or the super-undercover agent, she was a hacker with a serious anti-social attitude. 

Stieg's last book was still worthy of its hardcover purchase, though I have to admit, getting through the background and the build-up taxed me at times.  Yet, I continued to read knowing that I would get the suspense that I craved.  This third in the series gave me the feeling that there was a fourth rolling around in his head before he passed, because there was one glaring question not answered about her sister.  Not satisfactorily to me, anyway.  But, if you are interested in political intrigue, and enjoy an ensemble of good, bad, and gray characters, this bunch of deceivers are right up your alley.  The journalist who threads all of the books together with his first sensational story is a middle aged love them and leave them womanizer named Mikhael Blomkvist who spends most of his time digging up dirt on the bad guys and trying to stay alive in the process.

I recently watched the Swedish version of the The Girl with the Dragon Tatoo, can't wait to see the American version to compare.  Without a doubt, I am still a fan. 

Dilsa Saunders Bailey