“The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest”
Stieg Larsson’s “Millennium Trilogy”
All across America, readers are talking about Stieg Larsson’s best-selling novels, set in Sweden and featuring Lisbeth Salander — “one of the most original and memorable heroines to surface in a recent thriller”. The "trilogy" is an international sensation that will grab you and keep you “reading with eyes wide open”. It is intricately plotted, lavishly detailed, written with a breakneck pace and verve, but “be warned: the trilogy is seriously addictive.”
“The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest”
As the finale to Stieg Larsson’s “Millennium Trilogy”, “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest” is not content to merely match the adrenaline-charged pace that made international bestsellers out of “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” and “The Girl Who Played with Fire”. Instead, it roars with an explosive storyline that blows the doors off the series and announces that the very best has been saved for last. A familiar evil lies in wait for Lisbeth Salander, but this time, she must do more than confront the miscreants of her past; she must destroy them. Much to her chagrin, survival requires her to place a great deal of faith in journalist Mikael Blomkvist and trust his judgment when the stakes are highest. To reveal more of the plot would be criminal, as Larsson’s mastery of the unexpected is why millions have fallen hard for his work. But rest assured that the odds are again stacked, the challenges personal, and the action fraught with neck-snapping revelations in this snarling conclusion to a thrilling triad.
This closing chapter to The Girl’s pursuit of justice is guaranteed to leave readers both satisfied and saddened once the final page has been turned.
1 comments:
~ ‘Product’ of a brilliant mind: this engaging collection of stories shows Calvino’s versatility. playfully absurd fables, mind-bending exercises in combinatorics, "interviews" with somewhat deranged historical figures, glaciation interrupting a romantic encounter, an encyclopedia of all human knowledge...
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