Tuesday, May 3, 2022

Mistur, Anglicized as The Mist, Angles Ring Road Along Coastal Iceland


Summary: Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, second thriller in the Hidden Iceland series authored by Ragnar Jónasson, angles Ring Road along coastal Iceland.


Ring Road aids 20-year-old Unnur in accessing rural, small-town Iceland outside her suburban Reykjavík environment. She almost approaches the halfway mark, at 600-plus kilometers (372.82-plus miles) of the 1,322-kilometer (821.55-mile) total length, by arranging bus and hitched rides from Garðabær ("garden town") to Selfoss ("seal waterfall"), both within Suðvesturkjördæmi ("Southwest Constituency"), to Höfn ("harbor") within Suðurkjördæmi ("South Constituency"); Hringvegur, or Route 1, links 1-Reykjavik, 2-Borgarnes, 3-Blönduós, 4-Akureyri, 5-Egilsstaðir, 6-Höfn, 7-Selfoss: Bjarki S, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons

Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, second thriller in the Hidden Iceland series authored by Ragnar Jónasson, angles Ring Road from Selfoss (“seal waterfall”) southward, eastward, then northward, westward, southward along coastal Iceland.
Perhaps a bus from Garðabær municipality of Höfuðborgarsvæðið (“Capital Region,” Greater Reykjavík) brings Unnur Hauksdóttir to an artists' summer residence in Selfoss on the Ölfusá River. A vacationing German office worker conducts her coastally eastward in his white BMW (Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, “Bavarian Motor Works”) along Hringvegur (“Ring Road,” Route 1). He drops Unnur in Kirkjubæjarklaustur (“church farm cloister”), coastal southwest village where she delights in discerning Mýrdalsjökull (“Mýrdal’s glacier”) and Vatnajökull (“glacier of lakes”) ice caps.
Unnur enjoys the petrol station café’s coffee and cold sandwich before a bus ride, past Jökulsárlón (“glacial river lagoon”), to Höfn í Hornafirði (“horn fjord harbor”).

The Höfn youth hostel furnishes a fine night’s undisturbed sleep before Unnur follows the road from Höfn Co-op, library, police, post office, search-and-rescue team and supermarket.
Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir of Kópavogur police station’s Criminal Investigation Division (CID) goes to Höfn by Reykjavíkurflugvöllur (“Reykjavík Airport”) plane and inland by village police four-by-four. Hulda heads to Einar's and his Reykjavík-born wife Erla's red-roofed, white-walled farmhouse perhaps 2 kilometers (1.24 miles) from their daughter Anna’s blue- and white-walled, red-roofed farmhouse. Unnur itinerates autumn 1987 even as family matters that involve her husband, investor and wholesaler Jón, and their 13-year-old daughter, Dimma, impel Hulda eastwards February 1988.
Lawyer Haukur, like daughter Unnur in a white BMW, journeys in his white Mitsubishi, without wife Kolbrún, along Ring Road in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist.

The Höfn-area farmhouse keeping its trimmed tree with three-member family presents kindles Hulda’s bittersweet memories of three-member family Christmases along coastal Iceland at Álftanes (“swan peninsula”).
Erla locating boiled smoked ham, books, chocolates, malt and orange, roasted or smoked lamb likens Hulda looking for Christmas Eve gifts in Laugavegur (“Wash Road”) stores. Reykjavík means to Dimma hamburger-joint burgers and chips, to Hulda Kópavogur work and Laugavegur shopping and to Jón Hverfisgata (“farm-clustered street”) realty and Ríki (“State”) alcohol. Erla numbered among Reykjavikingers until 30 years ago, when Einar Einarsson, as a visiting southeast Icelander, and she noticed one another at a Hótel Borg-niched dance.
A Reykjavík boarding-school education through sixth-form college occasioned Anna, as bus or car passenger, observing coastal Iceland over Ring Road, before Mistur, anglicized as The Mist.

Erla, as 19-year-old fiancée and 50-year-old wife 31 years later, and like 20-year-old Unnur and 40-year-old Hulda, prefers Reykjavík even as 20-year-old Anna praises eastern Iceland.
Haukur and Unnur questioned quaint, quiet Austurland (“Eastern Region”) even as the latter quarters Egilsstadir (“Egil’s Stead”), administrative, service and transportation center and largest eastern settlement. Hulda relies upon her green, two-door Škoda (“damage") from the Czech Republic when Reykjavík responsibilities require her and local police vehicles when responsibilities relocate her elsewhere. Egilsstadir Police Inspector Jens shuttles Hulda in his police four-by-four between the airport, Anna’s farmhouse, Einar’s and Erla’s farmhouse and green jeep, guesthouse and petrol-station café.
Ring Road in Mistur, anglicized as The Mist, tempts Hulda as bus traveler and coastal Iceland trekker northward, eastward, southward from Álftanes-based personal, Reykjavík-based professional tasks.

Dómkirkjan í Reykjavík ("Reykjavík Cathedral") bells announce, for Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir and her family, Christmas Mass at 6:00 p.m. as official observation of Christmas Eve by the mother church of Hin evangelíska lúterska kirkja ("Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland"). Radio transmissions annually assure Einar Einarsson and his wife, Erla, that Christmas activities around the hangikjöt ("boiled [smoked] hung [lamb] meat") dinner and the trimmed tree are to begin in rural eastern Iceland: Bryan Ledgard, CC BY 2.0 Generic, 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:
Ring Road aids 20-year-old Unnur in accessing rural, small-town Iceland outside her suburban Reykjavík environment. She almost approaches the halfway mark, at 600-plus kilometers (372.82-plus miles) of the 1,322-kilometer (821.55-mile) total length, by arranging bus and hitched rides from Garðabær ("garden town") to Selfoss ("seal waterfall"), both within Suðvesturkjördæmi ("Southwest Constituency"), to Höfn ("harbor") within Suðurkjördæmi ("South Constituency"); Hringvegur, or Route 1, links 1-Reykjavik, 2-Borgarnes, 3-Blönduós, 4-Akureyri, 5-Egilsstaðir, 6-Höfn, 7-Selfoss: Bjarki S, CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Route1,_Iceland.png
Dómkirkjan í Reykjavík ("Reykjavík Cathedral") bells announce, for Reykjavík Detective Inspector Hulda Hermannsdóttir and her family, Christmas Mass at 6:00 p.m. as official observation of Christmas Eve by the mother church of Hin evangelíska lúterska kirkja ("Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland"). Radio transmissions annually assure Einar Einarsson and his wife, Erla, that Christmas activities around the hangikjöt ("boiled [smoked] hung [lamb] meat") dinner and the trimmed tree are to begin in rural eastern Iceland: Bryan Ledgard, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Iceland_December_2014_(15816308610).jpg

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