The exhilarating conclusion to bestseller Larsson's Millennium trilogy
(after The Girl Who Played with Fire) finds Lisbeth Salander, the
brilliant computer hacker who was shot in the head in the final pages
of Fire, alive, though still the prime suspect in three murders
in Stockholm. While she convalesces under armed guard, journalist Mikael
Blomkvist works to unravel the decades-old coverup surrounding the man
who shot Salander: her father, Alexander Zalachenko, a Soviet
intelligence defector and longtime secret asset to Säpo, Sweden's
security police. Estranged throughout Fire, Blomkvist and
Salander communicate primarily online, but their lack of physical
interaction in no way diminishes the intensity of their unconventional
relationship. Though Larsson (1954–2004) tends toward narrative excess,
his was an undeniably powerful voice in crime fiction that will be
sorely missed.
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