Tuesday, May 10, 2022

Accidental and Violent Deaths Aggrieve Mistur, Anglicized as The Mist


Summary: Accidental and violent deaths aggrieve Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, third thriller in the Hidden Iceland trilogy series authored by Ragnar Jónasson


Hulda and her mother arrange for Dimma, as their respective daughter and granddaughter, to avail herself of traditional Christmas gifts with their respective book and knitted jumper. The latter assumes a talismanic appeal since Icelander folklore augurs a Yule Cat anxious about children without new clothes by the Christmas season, from the four Advent Sundays through Epiphany Day (January 6); depiction of Yule Cat: LeksaArt, CC BY 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons

Accidental and violent deaths aggrieve Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir before and after Christmas in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, third thriller in the Hidden Iceland trilogy series authored by Ragnar Jónasson.
Bizarre behaviors by 42-year-old husband Jón and by 13-year-old daughter Dimma bother Hulda as she belatedly begins in February 1988 the missing-person case of Unnur Hauksdóttir. Twenty-year-old Unnur convinces her parents, Haukur and Kolbrún, that she carefully, cautiously can complete a novel and catch coastal buses along eastern, northern, western, southern Iceland. Her lawyer father and her nurse mother dislike the few dispatches that the post office delivers after she departs Garðabær (“garden town”) and Selfoss (“seal waterfall”).
Unnur enjoys a hitched ride with a German office worker in a white BMW, like her father’s before his white Mitsubishi, to Kirkjubæjarklaustur (“church farm cloister").

Kolbrún files a second missing-person report when Haukur, with a frightened letter from Unnur, flees perhaps December 22nd-23rd in his Mitsubishi for coastal Iceland’s Ring Road.
Hulda’s mother gets Christmas Eve off from cleaning houses, early morning through late night every day, to give Dimma a knitted jumper and the traditional book. She has chocolates and traditional malt and orange brew before the traditional Christmas dinner of caramelized potatoes, gravy and smoked ham with Hulda at 6 p.m. Some 600-plus kilometers (372.82-plus miles) eastward Einar Einarsson and his Reykjavík-born wife, Erla, invite inside their farmhouse storm-imperiled passerby Leó, self-identified as Reykjavík university psychology professor.
Hulda, under Criminal Investigation Division (CID) boss, Snorri journeys to eastern Iceland to judge fatalities as accidental or violent deaths in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist.

Hulda and Egilsstaðir (“Egil’s Stead”) Police Inspector Jens respectively know about two missing persons and two fatalities in the Höfn í Hornafirði (“horn fjord harbor”) area.
Jens lodges Hulda and two forensic technicians from Greater Reykjavík’s Kópavogur police station at an Egilsstaðir guesthouse, from which the quartet lunch at a petrol-station café. Hulda perhaps misses her Czech Republic-made, green, two-door Škoda (“damage”) when she moves around Einar’s and Erla’s green jeep in Jens’ police cruiser with four-wheel drive. Nasty weather from December 23, 1987, until December 26, 1987, necessitates Ásgrímur opening the town Cooperative for village and village-area occupants needing batteries, candles and matches.
Obnoxious weather occurring two months later, in February 1988, occasions 30-year-old Hjörleifur, as search-and-rescue team local head, organizing countryside operations in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist.

Hulda perceives Anna as sixth-form college-graduated 20-year-old no longer present at the blue- and white-painted, red-roofed farmhouse proximitous to parents Einar’s and Erla’s red-roofed, white-walled farmhouse.
Anna, like Haukur and Unnur, qualifies as a missing person whom Hulda quests until Jens quotes questionable conversations between Erla and Höfn í Hornafirði librarian Gerdur. Hulda relishes the coastal southwest, at Álftanes (“swan peninsula”), and regrets not at all not residing elsewhere even as relocating inland for mountain hikes revives her. Jens stays in Egilsstaðir since villagers seek him as popular singer of one hit, which Hulda sees as symbolizing the 1970s, and as their police inspector.
Accidental and violent deaths in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, trouble Hulda, who perhaps thinks of one self-inflicted, two accidental and three violent deaths as tragic.

Erla and Hulda adhere to Christmas tradition in availing immediate family and impromptu or invited guests of Jólaöl ("Christmas ale"), assembled from Malt og Appelsín (sweet soda and orangeade). Appelsín, Jólaöl and Maltektract drinks all are available from Ölgerðin Egill Skallagrímsson ("Egill Skallagrímsson Brewery") of Reykjavík, Iceland: Olgerdin, CC BY SA 4.0 International, 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:
Hulda and her mother arrange for Dimma, as their respective daughter and granddaughter, to avail herself of traditional Christmas gifts with their respective book and knitted jumper. The latter assumes a talismanic appeal since Icelander folklore augurs a Yule Cat anxious about children without new clothes by the Christmas season, from the four Advent Sundays through Epiphany Day (January 6); depiction of Yule Cat: LeksaArt, CC BY 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Yule_Cat_illustration.jpg; LeksaArt, CC BY 3.0 Unported, via DeviantArt @ https://www.deviantart.com/leksaart/art/Yule-cat-901246388 (replacement for: light sculpture of Jólaköttur (Yule Cat), annually placed for Christmas season in Lækjartorg Square, downtown Reykjavik, since 2018, imaged by TKSnaevarr, CC BY SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jólaköttur_Reykjavík.jpg -- image deleted per "No freedom of panorama in Iceland A1Cafel (talk) 06:08, 27 October 2022 (UTC); Deleted: per nomination. --Krd 08:21, 12 November 2022 (UTC)")
Erla and Hulda adhere to Christmas tradition in availing immediate family and impromptu or invited guests of Jólaöl ("Christmas ale"), assembled from Malt og Appelsín (sweet soda and orangeade). Appelsín, Jólaöl and Maltektract drinks all are available from Ölgerðin Egill Skallagrímsson ("Egill Skallagrímsson Brewery") of Reykjavík, Iceland: Olgerdin, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mynd_af_höfuðstöðvum_+_fánar.jpg; Olgerdin, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mynd_af_höfuðstöðvum_%2B_fánar.jpg

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