Once, when I picked up a book from the local library, the librarian asked to tell her what I thought about the book when I would bring it back. Well, why not write a few lines about all the books I read so everybody could see what I thought about it? I'm often also happy to have friends recommend a certain book or tell me this and that is not really worth reading. I won't comment about the tons of books I have read so far, but about books I read from now on.
highly recommended | sehr empfohlen | |
good reading | gutes lesematerial | |
average | durchschnittlich | |
not too interesting | nicht allzu interessant | |
recommended not to read it | empfehlung das buch nicht zu lesen |
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title | The Girl who kicked the Hornet's Nest |
author | Stieg Larsson |
ISBN-10 | 0-307-73996-1 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-307-73996-4 |
ASIN | |
rating | |
date | 2011-May-28 |
This third book in the trilogy is the best. If it were a book on its own, a slightly higher rating would be justifiable. But it simply is not a book on its own. It clearly is part two of the second book, 'The Girl who played with Fire'. The story goes on as if it continued on the next page rather than on the first page of another book.
After Salander has tracked down her father and they almost killed each other, they both end up in the same hospital. For Lisbeth, who needs to have a bullet removed from inside her brain, this means a very long stay in the hospital with no access to computers or the internet. On the other hand, people who want to harm her also don't have easy access to Lisbeth.
Because of the whole tumult about Zalachenko, some already retired staff from a secret unit inside the Security Police come aboard again and take command. The situation is exceptional and this calls for exceptional measures, not all of which are strictly legal.