Summary: Ring Road accesses northeast Iceland for Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, first of three stand-alone novels authored by Ragnar Jónasson.
Una ("happy") accepts a teaching assignment in northeastern Iceland's Skálar village, 800 kilometers (497.097 miles) north=northeastward from her accommodations in west-end Reykjavík. She arrives within two days, thanks to her yellow Toyota Starlet; Oct. 2, 2014, image of 1982 Toyota Starlet DL: Riley from Christchurch, New Zealand, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons |
Ring Road, by north-northeastward and south-southeast-north-northwestward routes from Reykjavík, accesses northeast Iceland for Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, first thriller in the stand-alone novels trilogy by Ragnar Jónasson.
Una (“happy”) begins a medical degree but becomes a teacher based in the Reykjavík (“smoky bay”) west end, then in Skálar ("halls, huts, lodges, sheds”) village. Her father dying on her 13th birthday caused creditors claiming her paternal grandparents comfortable house and Una choosing apartment life with, until remarried, her widowed mother. Perhaps Una devotes herself to teaching nine-year-old Kolbrún (“black eyebrows”) through school-leaving examinations and then does her medical degree while dwelling at her Reykjavík west-end domicile.
Perhaps Thór ("thunder") ends his farm-hand employment on Hjördís’ (“sword goddess”) farm to escort Una to Reykjavík and end up with his dreamed-of history degree there.
Perhaps Hæstiréttur Íslands (Iceland Supreme Court, literally “Iceland’s Highest Court”) and area prison facilities for female criminals and male felons foil Thór’s and Una’s professional fantasies.
Iceland’s Supreme Court gave Bjørg (“help, salvation") Helgadóttir (“holy man’s daughter”) and two men 16-year sentences for Hannes’ (“gracious God”) death and Hilmar’s (“battle famous”) disappearance. The Supreme Court had Bjørg, who hopes to halve her sentence by early release for good behavior, convicted in 1981, when Iceland still had Fangelsid Akureyri. Predecessor agencies to Fangelsismálastofnun ríkisins (“Prison and Probation Administration”) institutionalized inmates at Akureyri (“sandbank field”), Árborg (“river town”), Grundarfjörður (“ground fjord”) and Reykjavíkurborg (“smoky bay town”).
South Icelanders in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, journey on Ring Road past Árborg’s Fangelsid Litla-Hraun, Grundarfjördur’s Fangelsid Kvíabryggju and Reykjavíkurborg’s Fangelsid Hegningarhúsid.
Perhaps Thór and Una know, from police sources behind newspaper articles, that the killer killed Hannes in the house where Bjørg and Hannes knew one another.
Langanes (“long peninsula”) lodged American servicemen during World War II (Sep. 1, 1939-Sep. 2, 1945) at Camp Greely, where they launched Melar (“lyme grass”) film-showing night. Gudfinnur’s (“god wanderer”) and Gunnar’s (“battle army leader”) living-history memories about military sites muster meaningful material for matriculators at University of Iceland’s history and philosophy faculty. Una notifies Reykjavík police, who notify Thórshöfn (“thunder [god Thor’s] harbor”) policeman Hjalti (“Shetlander”), about Patrekur Kristjánsson navigating gravel roads between Akureyri and Fontus (“land’s end”).
Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, observes gravel roads to the Thórshöfn doctor and Ring Road to Akureyri hospital and Egilsstadir (“eagle['s] place”) cemetery.
Perhaps Gudfinnur and Erika (“one ruler”) and Gunnar and Gudrún (“god secret”) provided children and grandchildren who prefer Akureyri or, like Salka’s relatives, Egilsstadir or Thórshöfn.
Perhaps Skálar one day soon quarters a husband and a child or two for Hjördís and a second husband and another child or two for Salka. Perhaps remote Skálar reaps three new residents by Una’s best friend forever, Sara (“lady, princess”), and the latter’s daughter, Rebekka (“captivating”), and husband relocating from Reykjavík. Perhaps Thór and Una stay in Salka’s second-floor rental apartment or the guest house on Hjördís’ farm until they start a family in their own house.
Gravel roads and Ring Road in Þorpið, Romanized Thorpid, anglicized The Girl Who Died, tie a transplanted Reykjavíkinger perhaps conveniently, economically, emotionally, professionally to northeast Iceland.
Una ("happy") accesses Reykjavík police by telephone in landlady Salka's (Sally, literally "little lady, little princess, little Sara") house. She agonizes over a female prisoner and two male prisoners whom she assumes as falsely imprisoned -- Árborg’s Fangelsid Litla-Hraun ("prison little-lava"), Grundarfjördur’s Fangelsid Kvíabryggju ("prison enclosure pier") and Reykjavíkurborg’s Fangelsid Hegningarhúsid ("prison the penalty house") -- for a murder or two in 1979 or 1980. She never analyzes the consequences for Skálar of attracting the attention of big-city police, 700 kilometers (434.96 miles) away, to an 11-person, isolated, vulnerable village where a seven-year-old, a nine-year-old, a couple in their 40s, two couples in their 60s and one man and two women in their 30s abide. Reykjavík police ask Thórshöfn (“thunder [god Thor’s] harbor”) police to attend personally to what Una asserts; July 16, 2016, image of Polizeistation Þórshöfn (Þórshöfn Police Station): Prokura nepp, 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:
Image credits:
Una ("happy") accepts a teaching assignment in northeastern Iceland's Skálar village, 800 kilometers (497.097 miles) north=northeastward from her accommodations in west-end Reykjavík. She arrives within two days, thanks to her yellow Toyota Starlet; Oct. 2, 2014, image of 1982 Toyota Starlet DL: Riley from Christchurch, New Zealand, CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:1982_Toyota_Starlet_DL_(15258531949).jpg; Riley (NZ Car Freak), CC BY 2.0 Generic, via Flickr @ https://www.flickr.com/photos/nzcarfreak/15258531949/
Una ("happy") accesses Reykjavík police by telephone in landlady Salka's (Sally, literally "little lady, little princess, little Sara") house. She agonizes over a female prisoner and two male prisoners whom she assumes as falsely imprisoned -- Árborg’s Fangelsid Litla-Hraun ("prison little-lava"), Grundarfjördur’s Fangelsid Kvíabryggju ("prison enclosure pier") and Reykjavíkurborg’s Fangelsid Hegningarhúsid ("prison the penalty house") -- for a murder or two in 1979 or 1980. She never analyzes the consequences for Skálar of attracting the attention of big-city police, 700 kilometers (434.96 miles) away, to an 11-person, isolated, vulnerable village where a seven-year-old, a nine-year-old, a couple in their 40s, two couples in their 60s and one man and two women in their 30s abide. Reykjavík police ask Thórshöfn (“thunder [god Thor’s] harbor”) police to attend personally to what Una asserts; July 16, 2016, image of Polizeistation Þórshöfn (Þórshöfn Police Station): Prokura nepp, CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Polizeistation_Þórshöfn.jpg
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