Posts Tagged ‘financial crimes’
THE OSLO CONSPIRACY by Asle Skredderberget: Book Review
Milo Cavelli, the son of a Norwegian father and an Italian mother, is a detective in the Oslo Police Department. The only one on the force who is fluent in Italian, he’s asked by a superior officer to fly to Rome to bring home the body of a Norwegian woman who was killed there.
That’s straightforward enough, although it doesn’t seem as if the death of Ingrid Tollefsen is connected to Milo’s area of expertise, financial crimes. But the truth of the adage follow the money is proved once again, for in fact the strangulation of the young scientist is more than the tragic local murder it seems at first; it is a crime with repercussions that will spread across the globe.
The Tollefsen family would seem to be under a devastating curse, with early deaths following three of its four members. Ingrid’s mother died in childbirth, putting the thirteen-year-old girl in the position of being a mother to her newborn brother. All went well until the night that her brother, then a high school student, was killed by a street gang; another victim of the gang was a popular high school teacher who was thought to have been trying to protect young Tormod. The police knew the killers were the Downtown Gang but were unable to prove it, and its members went free.
Ingrid seems to have had no enemies, according to the executives at the pharmaceutical giant where she worked. She was in Rome to attend a conference, Milo and his fellow officer Sørensen are told by her boss in Research and Development, Anders Wilhelmsen. During the interview Anders tells them that after the death of her brother two years earlier, she had received the customary two weeks’ leave of absence; however, after that, she had asked for an additional two months’ leave. She didn’t explain why or what she was doing during that time, and Milo thinks that this may be an important part of the puzzle.
But there are many other parts of the puzzle that also need to be solved. Was it Ingrid’s medical vial that is found on the street outside the hotel room where she died? What does Verba on the vial’s torn label mean? Is it simply a terrible coincidence that two members of the Tollefsen family were murdered, or is there a connection that has yet to be found?
There are other questions in the novel too, although they may not have a direct bearing on Ingrid’s death. Who was the woman who bequeathed a Manhattan apartment to the Cavalli family? Who is the person Milo’s semi-estranged father wants him to meet? What is the connection between Milo’s family and a merchant ship that exploded in Italian waters in the 1970s?
Asle Skredderberget has written the third Milo Cavalli thriller, and it’s outstanding. Milo is an original protagonist, brilliant in his field but conflicted in his personal life. The other characters are totally realistic, with believable motives for their actions that move the plot along at a fast pace. The Oslo Conspiracy will keep you spellbound until the end.
You can read more about Asle Skredderberget at this web site.
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