Tuesday, October 4, 2022

House and Job for Two Years Are Alluring in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind


Summary: House and job for two years are alluring to a new hire in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, first thriller in the Dark Iceland sextet authored by Ragnar Jónasson.


Akureyri ("sandbank field") Hospital abounds with social and work opportunities. Just about anybody acquaints herself/himself with advanced medical attention. Perhaps 60-year-old Nína Arnardóttir (“goddess eagle-warrior’s daughter”), alone in social housing and on social benefits what with her father, mother, stepfather and perhaps a step-sibling dead and what with adoring an anonymous older man from her volunteer sales booth at Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) Amateur Dramatic Society, acquired an insurance policy there. An insurance salesman acted amiably and authoritatively enough summer 2008 to arrange insurance policies for Akureyri Hospital nurses Guðrún (Romanized Gudrún, “god secret”) and Linda and for Anna Einarsdóttir (“mercy one-army’s daughter”), Akureyri Hospital part-time shift-taker and Co-op part-time employee; Aug. 3, 2008, image of Akureyri Hospital: Ingveldur T., CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons

House and job for two years are alluring to a new hire, the Reykjavíkingur Ari Thór Arason, in Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, first thriller in the Dark Iceland sextet authored by Ragnar Jónasson.
Becoming the successor to Eiríkur (“one kingdom”) at Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) Police Station brings Ari Thór (“thunder”) Arason (“eagle’s son”) there November 2008. Twenty-four-year-old Reykjavíkingur (“Reykjavík inhabitant”) Ari (“eagle”) Thór, without girlfriend Kristín (“Christian”), in her final medical training year, and her yellow Toyota, counts upon the police jeep. His mother died and his father disappeared 15 years ago even as the bank dismisses Kristín’s father and her mother dreads likewise from her architecture-practicing employer.
Fifty-plus-year-old Siglufjördur-born Police Sergeant-in-Charge Tómas, his elder son in southern Iceland, enjoys his 15-year-old namesake and his wife, excepting their Siglufjördur college and Reykjavík university enrollments.

Hlynur (“maple tree [Acer spp]”) figures as a 30-plus-year-old policeman who favors a Reykjavík journalist who forgives him his childhood bullying and fears an unforgiving victim.
Keflavík (“driftwood bay”) airport police training graduation perhaps guarantees Ari Thór gaining Tómas’ (“twin”), the state prosecutor’s and the Akureyri (“sandbank field”) police chief’s good graces. Perhaps it helps having Hrólfur’s attorney, Thorsteinn (“thunder stone”), honor Ari Thór with coffee, milk, sugar, sugar-rolled pancakes hand-prepared by the estate lawyer’s wife, Snjólaug (“snow-bath”). Twenty-plus-year-old Ugla (“owl”), fish-processing plant clerical and factory worker and Hrólfur’s (“glory wolf”) Siglufjördur Amateur Dramatic Society production lead actress, imbibes red wine with Ari Thór.
Ari Thór judges as judicious in Snjóbinda, as Snowblind, not joining Ugla jabbering about boyfriend Agúst (“great, magnificent, venerable”) and parents in Patreksfjördur and Ísafjörður college.

Ari Thór in his Eyrargata (“gravel-bank street”) house keeps Reykjavíkingur Kristín in his Öldugata apartment not knowing about Norðurgata (Romanized Nordurgata, “north street”) piano-playing with Ugla.
Ugla leaves 91-year-old Hrólfur’s basement let-out apartment in his Hólavogur (“compliments bay”) house for the central, furnished, lovely Nordurgata apartment with its garden and its piano. Novelist, poet and short-story writer Hrólfur Kristjánsson (“Christian’s son”) meets Sandra, child herring-barrel salter, 95-year-old widow with children and grandchildren and old people’s home wheelchair-bound resident. He nestles into coffee- and wine-drinking niches with Dramatic Society colleagues, 69-year-old director Úlfur (“wolf”) and 73-year-old playwright Pálmi (“[hand’s] palm” or “palm tree” or “Pole”?).
Retired schoolteacher Úlfur Steinsson (“stone’s son”) occupies a Hvanneyrarbraut (“gravel-bank way”) house nearer to Hrólfur than to retired diplomat Pálmi’s on Norðurgata (Romanized Nordurgata, “north street”).

Rosalinda (“famous/flower[ing] lime-tree”), pal with Pálmi’s father, who perished from tuberculosis at 24, and 60-year-old son Mads (“god’s gift”) pass one week in Pálmi’s basement apartment.
His dead mother’s quarters qualify the diplomat divorced before retirement from 12-years-younger Sonja (“wisdom”), remarried to an Oslo engineer, as neighbor to Karl, Linda and Leifur. Forty-three-year-old lead actor Karl resides, below Leifur, with Linda (“lime-tree [Tilia spp]”) legally in Kópavogur (“seal pup inlet”) and secretly on Þormóðsgata (Romanized Thormódsgata, “thunder-spirit street”). Twenty-four-year-old Anna Einarsdóttir (“mercy one-army’s daughter”) suits 30-plus-year-old Leifur (“heir”), Arni’s (“eagle, fireplace”?) surviving brother, Dramatic Society handyman and understudy, filling-station worker and Gunni’s (“battle) neighbor.
Snjóblinda, as Snowblind, tethers nurse Guðrún (Romanized Gudrún, “god secret”), apart with Anna and Linda, and 60-year-old Nína Arnardóttir (“goddess eagle-warrior’s daughter”), apart with Theatre cast.

Two couples accept rentable and rent-free accommodations in Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) even as they still avail themselves of accommodations in Reykjavík or the Reykjavík area. Ari Thór Arason allows his girlfriend, Kristín to abide in his Öldugata ("century street") apartment in west Reykjavík ("smoky bay"). The appealing neighborhood amasses such aesthetic architecture as that of one of Arason's neighbors, the Russian Orthodox Church. Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-warrior's son") and Linda Christensen ("lime-tree [Tilia spp] Christ-bearer's son") anchor themselves legally in the Höfuðborgarsvæðið (Romanized Höfudborgarsvædid, Greater Reykjavík, "The Capital Region" literally) municipality, Kópavogur ("seal pup inlet") town; Aug. 7, 2017, image of Rússneska Rétttrúnaðarkirkjan á Íslandi (Русская Православная Церковь в Исландии; Russian Orthodox Church in Iceland), Öldugata 44: Vera de Kok (1Veertje), CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, 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:
Akureyri ("sandbank field") Hospital abounds with social and work opportunities. Just about anybody acquaints herself/himself with advanced medical attention. Perhaps 60-year-old Nína Arnardóttir (“goddess eagle-warrior’s daughter”), alone in social housing and on social benefits what with her father, mother, stepfather and perhaps a step-sibling dead and what with adoring an anonymous older man from her volunteer sales booth at Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) Amateur Dramatic Society, acquired an insurance policy there. An insurance salesman acted amiably and authoritatively enough summer 2008 to arrange insurance policies for Akureyri Hospital nurses Guðrún (Romanized Gudrún, “god secret”) and Linda and for Anna Einarsdóttir (“mercy one-army’s daughter”), Akureyri Hospital part-time shift-taker and Co-op part-time employee; Aug. 3, 2008, image of Akureyri Hospital: Ingveldur T., CC BY SA 4.0 International, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:SAk_loftmynd_2008_web.jpg
Two couples accept rentable and rent-free accommodations in Siglufjörður (Romanized Siglufjördur, “mast, sailing fjord”) even as they still avail themselves of accommodations in Reykjavík or the Reykjavík area. Ari Thór Arason allows his girlfriend, Kristín to abide in his Öldugata ("century street") apartment in west Reykjavík ("smoky bay"). The appealing neighborhood amasses such aesthetic architecture as that of one of Arason's neighbors, the Russian Orthodox Church. Karl Steindór Einarsson ("army stone-thunder one-warrior's son") and Linda Christensen ("lime-tree [Tilia spp] Christ-bearer's son") anchor themselves legally in the Höfuðborgarsvæðið (Romanized Höfudborgarsvædid, Greater Reykjavík, "The Capital Region" literally) municipality, Kópavogur ("seal pup inlet") town; Aug. 7, 2017, image of Rússneska Rétttrúnaðarkirkjan á Íslandi (Русская Православная Церковь в Исландии; Russian Orthodox Church in Iceland), Öldugata 44: Vera de Kok (1Veertje), CC BY SA 3.0 Unported, via Wikimedia Commons @ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Russian_orthodox_church_Reykjavík.jpg

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