Tuesday, March 22, 2022

Fjords and Isles Are Accessible in Drungi, Anglicized as The Island


Summary: Fjords and isles are accessible in Drungi, anglicized as The Island, second thriller in the three-book Hidden Iceland series authored by Ragnar Jónasson.


Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir accesses Dagur's, Katla's, Vera's and Veturlidi's summer cottage by plane from Reykjavík City Airport to Ísafjördur airport and by car, with Ísafjördur Police Inspector Andrés Andrésson to Heydalur valley. The Ísafjördur airport appears on the left side of the panoramic view above Ísafjördur town, birthplace of Ólafur Ragnar Grimsson, fifth president (Aug. 1, 1996-Aug. 1, 2016) first elected June 29, 1996, the year before Hulda analyzes the 10-year-old crime scene where Katla's bloody remains appalled Inspector Andrésson October 1987; June 12, 2019, image of town of Ísafjörður, viewed from the top of Kubbi Mountain: Sturlast~iswiki, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons

Fjords and isles are accessible in Drungi, literally associated with drowsiness, heavy weather or lethargy but anglicized as The Island, second thriller in the three-book Hidden Iceland series authored by Ragnar Jónasson.
Klara Jónsdóttir babysits in a second-floor flat the next street from her basement flat in her parents Agnes’ and Vilhjálmur’s home in Greater Reykjavík’s Kópavogur municipality. Nine years later, on the tenth anniversary of their companion Katla’s death October 1987, Alexandra, Benedikt and Dagur Veturlidason call home residences other than their parents’. Maternal relatives domicile in Kópavogur even as Alexandra dwells with her husband, their two sons and her parents on her maternal grandparents’ farm in eastern Iceland.
An engineering degree enables Benedikt to enjoy a basement flat in a blue- and white-painted house in town center and establish his small software enterprise elsewhere.

Dagur, with his west-town flat a few blocks from his bank job and 63-year-old widowed mother Vera in a nursing home, favors selling the family home.
No one goes to the family summer cottage since Dagur’s older, 20-year-old sister Katla fatally fell there and since Dagur’s father and Vera’s husband, Veturlidi, died. Benedikt, with Katla, headed his Toyota from south Reykjavík, over west coast gravel roads, to West Fjords, where Djúp hugs northernmost coastlines and the Arctic Circle. Dagur, Katla, Vera and Veturlidi perhaps always itinerated there by car even as Hulda Hermannsdóttir incurs Criminal Investigation Division (CID) travel expenses by her Reykjavík-Ísafjördur flight.
Some journey to Vestfirðir (“West Fjords”) by car or plane and Vestmannaeyjar (“Westman Islands”) by car or plane and ferry, in Drungi, anglicized as The Island.

Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir knows the drive from her north Reykjavík bakhús (“back-house") flat to the police union summer house at Hvalfjördur (“Whale Fjord”) and northward.
Hulda launches her green Škoda past Akrafjall, Esja and Skardsheidi summits, around Hvalfjördur tunnel and Hafnarfjall shoulder, to her boss’ Borgarfjördur (“Fortress Fjord”) cottage near Borgarnes. Flying misses that part of coastal western Iceland and the part beyond, through Mjóifjörður (“Narrow Fjord”), to Heydalur valley, where Vera and Veturlidi maintain their cottage. It necessitates a 1- to 1.5-hour drive from Ísafjördur airport to Heydalur valley, west of the uninhabited northern peninsula from Hornstrandir to Snæfjallaströnd (“Snowy Mountains Coast”).
Drungi, anglicized as The Island, observes Hulda occupying plane seats Reykjavík to Heimaey, ferry seats Heimaey to Ellidaey to Heimaey and car seats Thorlákshöfn to Reykjavík.

West Fjords possesses petite Aedey and Videy islands even as Westman Islands possess petite Bjarnarey island, photogenic Eyjafjallajökull glacier and protective Heimaklettur, Midklettur and Ystiklettur summits.
Álftanes (“Swan Peninsula”) quarters Bessastadir, the Icelandic president’s official residence since 1944, even as it once fictitiously quartered Hulda’s home with husband Jón and daughter Dimma. Hulda relished that residence, which spousal reticence about business debts required her to release and reside in a fourth-floor flat behind a rich, roomy, street-fronting residence. She never skirked from climbing Akrafjall, Esja, Heimaklettur and Skardsheidi summits even as Benedikt, Dagur and Klara summit Ellidaey island’s cliff-top, erosion-hollowed Háubæli, which scares Alexandra.
Hulda thinks of tackling northern fjords and southern isles, but not with University Hospital Department of Pathology lab worker Saemundur, in Drungi, anglicized as The Island.

Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir appreciates driving in her green Škoda along coastal Iceland, in Reykjavík and to Álftanes peninsula, where the president of Iceland abides. She nevertheless avails herself of an accidental- or violent-death scene on Ellidaey island by flying to Westman Islands airport and ferrying from Heimaey to Ellidaey; July 29, 2014, image of Elliðaey: Szilas, Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Acknowledgment
My special thanks to talented artists and photographers/concerned organizations who make their fine images available on the internet.

Image credits:
Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir accesses Dagur's, Katla's, Vera's and Veturlidi's summer cottage by plane from Reykjavík City Airport to Ísafjördur airport and by car, with Ísafjördur Police Inspector Andrés Andrésson to Heydalur valley. The Ísafjördur airport appears on the left side of the panoramic view above Ísafjördur town, birthplace of Ólafur Ragnar Grimsson, fifth president (Aug. 1, 1996-Aug. 1, 2016) first elected June 29, 1996, the year before Hulda analyzes the 10-year-old crime scene where Katla's bloody remains appalled Inspector Andrésson October 1987; June 12, 2019, image of town of Ísafjörður, viewed from the top of Kubbi Mountain: Sturlast~iswiki, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ísafjörður_12_June_2019.jpg
Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir appreciates driving in her green Škoda along coastal Iceland, in Reykjavík and to Álftanes peninsula, where the president of Iceland abides. She nevertheless avails herself of an accidental- or violent-death scene on Ellidaey island by flying to Westman Islands airport and ferrying from Heimaey to Ellidaey; July 29, 2014, image of Elliðaey: Szilas, Public Domain, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Vestmannaeyjar,_Elli%C3%B0aey-2.jpg

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