Book Review: Farewell to Freedom by Sara Blædel

December 3, 2012
Article first published as Book Review: Farewell to Freedom by Sara Blaedel on Blogcritics.

About:
Farewell to Freedom by Sara Blædel is a fictional book in a series featuring Copenhagen detective Louise Rick and her friend Camilla Lind, a reporter. This is the third novel translated to English written by the best selling Danish author.

The pub­lisher is giv­ing away one copy of this book –to enter fill out the Raf­fle­copt­ter form at the end of the post.

  • 384 pages
  • Publisher:Pegasus
  • Language:English
  • ISBN-10:1605984531

Book Review Farewell to Freedom by Sara Blaedel

My rating for Farewell to Freedom – 4
Buy this book in paper or electronic format*
More Books by Sara Blædel

Thoughts:
Farewell to Freedom by Sara Blædel (web­site|Face­book|@sarablaedel) is darker than the previous books I read in the series. Previously Ms. Blædel explored drugs, honor killings, online dating and more. This time however the author turns her sights on prostitution and trafficking women.

The book is very well written and it seemed to me that the author has upped a notch her research and storytelling. I was surprised that instead of writing fallacies and inaccuracies, as many others do, Ms. Blædel examined the issues objectively and inserted them into her novel. For example, the point that few prostitutes are victims of trafficking (even though I’m sure we can all agree that even one is too many).

The police procedural parts of the novel seem realistic – gray, boring, futile but necessary. This adds a touch of realism and does not distract or slow down the story which becomes personally involving the two heroines.

The world Ms. Blædel has created is becoming more complex with each book where to bad guys don’t always wear black and good guys don’t always win. The author did a great job telling this tale; her characters got a new perspective on life and I’m looking forward to see if this element changed the energy in the continuation of the series.

Related Reads:
Call Me Princess by Sara Blædel
Only One Life by Sara Blædel
The Ice Princess by Camilla Läckberg
The Stonecutter by Camilla Läckberg

Synopsis:
A woman is found with her throat brutally slashed, policewoman Louise Rick and her colleges from the Copenhagen Police start to investigate. During the beginning of the investigation, Louise gets a phone call from her journalist friend, Camilla Lind, who is deeply shaken after finding a baby abandoned in a church.

The clues point to prostitutes of Copenhagen, but the investigation stumbles upon the violent world of Balkan underground human trafficking, exploitation of women, cynical pimps and one vicious criminal with no morals or mercy.

Buy this book inpaperorelectronicformat*

More Books by Sara Blædel

Give­away

  • Give­away ends: December 10, 2012

  • US/Canada Ship­ping Addresses Only

  • No PO Boxes

  • Win­ners will have 24 hours to write back with their address, oth­er­wise an alter­nate win­ner will be picked

Congratulations: ayancey@

Zohar — Man of la Book
Dis­claimer:
I got this book for free fromTLC Book Tours
*Ama­zon links point to an affil­i­ate account

BOOK BLOGGERS – Have you read Farewell to Freedom? If so link up your review below:

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4 Comments

  • Andrew T. KuligowskiDecember 3, 2012 at 9:08 am

    Z, I haven’t seen you review fiction very often, but your thoughts on non-fiction are usually spot on. (At least in line with my thinking … which should make you shudder, if you think about it …)

    • Zohar - Man of la BookDecember 3, 2012 at 9:12 am

      Thanks for the compliment (I think) Andrew.

      I read both, fiction is a lot easier to read, for me, than non-fiction. I can sometimes finish a book in a day or two which is why you see fiction posts more often. I do like to mix them up a bit and also have blog tour dates, so sometime I’ll read 3 non-fiction books in a row but the posts will be spread out.

  • Jonathan @ I Read a Book OnceDecember 3, 2012 at 12:48 pm

    Great review, as always. I love police mysteries that include some of the drudgery of detective work. It adds a dose of realism to the narrative.

    Great to see you again, z. Keep up the good work!

    Jonathan
    http://www.ireadabookonce.com

    • Zohar - Man of la BookDecember 3, 2012 at 2:04 pm

      Thanks Jonathan, I agree with you about the realism, just have to be careful not to overdue it.

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