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My faith in the excellence of Mankell’s earlier works was not misplaced. The Man Who Smiled is one of his best.
Wallander . . . is one of the most credible creations in contemporary crime fiction, and The Man Who Smiled is vintage Nordic storytelling.
Mankell’s novels became the standard bearer for foreign crime in translation . . . the writer is a man of rare skills. . . . Plotting here is as impeccable as ever.

The Man Who Smiled
A Kurt Wallander Mystery
Translated by Laurie Thompson
hardcover
$24.95
—MICHAEL ONDAATJE
The New York Times called Henning Mankell “that unusual thing: a European thriller writer whose work holds up as literature and who has broken out as an international phenomenon,” and his brilliant creation Detective Kurt Wallander is worthy of comparison to Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö’s Martin Beck and P.D. James’s Adam Dalgliesh.
The Man Who Smiled begins with Wallander deep in a personal and professional crisis after killing a man in the line of duty; eventually, he vows to quit the Ystad police force for good. Just then, however, a friend who had asked Wallander to look into the death of his father winds up dead himself, shot three times. Ann-Britt Höglund, the department’s first female detective, proves to be his best ally as he tries to pierce the smiling façade of his prime suspect, a powerful multinational business tycoon. But just as he comes close to uncovering the truth, the same shadowy threats responsible for the murders close in on Wallander himself.
All of Mankell’s talents as a master of the modern police procedural—which have earned him legions of fans worldwide—are showcased in The Man Who Smiled, which is the fourth of the eight Wallander books published thus far in English.
Henning Mankell has written thirty-six novels, including nine Kurt Wallander mysteries, and many plays. His books have been published in thirty-six countries with over 25 million copies in print worldwide. He has received the Crime Writers’ Association’s Macallan Gold Dagger and the German Book Prize, and has been a three-time finalist for the Los Angeles Times Mystery/Thriller Book Prize. Mankell lives in Sweden and Mozambique.
hardcover
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 336 pages
978-1-56584-993-8
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