Tuesday, August 23, 2022

Five Deaths Affect 16 Lives in Thorpid, Anglicized The Girl Who Died


Summary: Five deaths affect 16 lives in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, first thriller in the stand-alone novels trilogy by Ragnar Jónasson.


Una ("happy") acquaints herself in Reykjavík with such alcohol-dispensing sources as Vínbúðin ("the wine shop") State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland-run legal retail vendors and in Skálar with the Co-op; April 25, 2017, image of Vínbúðin in Reykjavik: Skull33, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons

Five deaths, of which one in Reykjavík and three in Skálar, affect 16 lives in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, first thriller of three stand-alone novels by Ragnar Jónasson.
A doctor bathed in his own blood breaks the hearts of his bride, who ultimately becomes her second husband’s beloved, and of 13-year-old daughter Una (“happy"). Best friend forever Sara (“lady, princess”), married with one child, Rebekka (“captivating”), convinces 30-year-old Una to chance winter-teaching 700 kilometers (434.96 miles) northeastward from west-end Reykjavík. Una thereby develops savings by drawing rent from her rented-out apartment and salary, with lodging expenses covered, in presumably economically less distracting, financially less draining Skálar.
Her experiencing big-city Reykjavík (“smoky bay”) and her native, small-town, 11-person Skálar somewhat encourages Salka (Sally, literally “little lady, little princess, little Sara”) empathizing with Una.

Salka, as heiress to her maternal grandmother’s house, landlady, local council member and writer, furnishes Una with attic lodgings, hot meals and separate entry and exit.
Edda (“great-grandmother”), as classmate of Kolbeinn’s (“coal-dark bone”) and Inga’s (“lance-bearer”) nine-year-old daughter, Kolbrún (“black eyebrows”), and Salka’s seven-year-old daughter, gets chess lessons outside classroom instruction. Seven-year-old Thrá (“desire, yearning”), 1920-1927, haunts the home that housed her mother and her sister, younger by five years, and houses niece Salka and great-niece Edda. Nobody imparts any information about Salka’s, her mother’s or her grandmother’s husbands even as, apart Salka and her neighbor, Hjördís (“sword goddess”), identifiable couples inhabit Skálar.
The first and the second of five deaths respectively jeopardize two Reykjavíkingers and 10 of 16 lives in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died.

Four months into Una’s Skálar teachership, unlike Salka’s 1.5 years into her Skálar relocation, kindles keeping no secrets from Thórshöfn (“thunder [god’s] harbor”) policeman Hjalti (“Shetlander”).
The third death leaves Bjørg (“salvation") Helgadóttir (“holy man’s daughter”) and two men languishing respectively perhaps in Fangelsid Hólmsheidi (“prison islet-heath”) and Fangelsid Litla-Hrauni (“prison little-lava”). Patrekur (“patrician [member of the Roman noble and senatorial classes]”) Kristjánsson (“Christ-bearer[‘s] son”) motors from Reykjavík to Skálar for overnight lodgings and meal from ex-classmate Hjördís. First, second, third outsiders Thór, Una and Patrekur number as 11th, 12th, 13th villagers after Gudfinnur, Erika; Gudrún, Gunnar; Hjördís; Inga, Kolbeinn, Kolbrún; Salka and Edda.
The fourth and the fifth of five deaths in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, respectively obstruct overturning false prison sentences and overcoming underpopulation.

Guffi, properly Gudfinnur (“god wanderer”), pals with Gunni, properly Gunnar (“battle army leader”), and, until they perish presumably from natural causes, Hjördís’ father and Kolbeinn’s father.
Accommodations and produce through Hjördís and farmworker Thór, fishing under Guffi and supplies through the Co-op under Gunni’s wife Gudrún (“god secret”) qualify as quintessential businesses. Inga and wheelchair-bound Erika (“one ruler”) respectively reinforces or resists husband Kolbeinn ruminating about relocating to run a business elsewhere and relies upon husband Guffi’s resources. Hæstiréttur Íslands (Iceland Supreme Court, literally “Iceland’s Highest Court”) sentencing three suspects for slaughtering Hannes (“gracious God”) and sequestering Hilmar (“battle famous”) stresses one Skálar-sheltered Icelander.
Hannes thrown into a lava-field unmarked grave troubles 15 not 16 lives about five deaths, not six, in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died.

The State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland allows Gudrún (“god secret”) to sell alcohol in the Co-op since Skálar residents are not enough in number to accommodate a government-authorized wine shop. Gudrún answers Una's questions about wine with the assessment of French and Italian red wines as the best. Perhaps Una arranges for Cabernet Sauvignon, which accommodates Icelandic appetites for ham, lamb and ptarmigan meat; Dec. 31, 2006, image of lamb marinating in Cabernet Sauvignon, garlic, olive oil, rosemary, freshly squeezed orange juice and Fynbos honey: Dplanet::, 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:
Una ("happy") acquaints herself in Reykjavík with such alcohol-dispensing sources as Vínbúðin ("the wine shop") State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland-run legal retail vendors and in Skálar with the Co-op; April 25, 2017, image of Vínbúðin in Reykjavik: Skull33, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:FaçadeVinbudinReykjavik.jpg
The State Alcohol and Tobacco Company of Iceland allows Gudrún (“god secret”) to sell alcohol in the Co-op since Skálar residents are not enough in number to accommodate a government-authorized wine shop. Gudrún answers Una's questions about wine with the assessment of French and Italian red wines as the best. Perhaps Una arranges for Cabernet Sauvignon, which accommodates Icelandic appetites for ham, lamb and ptarmigan meat; Dec. 31, 2006, image of lamb marinating in Cabernet Sauvignon, garlic, olive oil, rosemary, freshly squeezed orange juice and Fynbos honey: Dplanet::, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Lamb_marinated_in_Cabernet_Sauvignon.jpg; Dplanet:: (Dplanet::), CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Flickr @ https://www.flickr.com/photos/32068310@N00/339602871

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