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Operation Napoleon

Front Cover
71 Reviews
Thorndike Press, 2012 - Fiction - 485 pages
When her brother goes missing after contacting her from the site of an Icelandic rescue mission, Kristin is pursued by vigilantes from the U.S. Army and discovers a conspiracy involving a crashed World War II plane and the fate of its survivors.

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5 stars
13
4 stars
14
3 stars
21
2 stars
14
1 star
9

And the ending is simply ludicrous. - Goodreads
Interesting premise but plot gets a little implausible. - Goodreads
... same old tired plot etc. Wrong. - Goodreads
The plot lacks credibility and seems half-cooked. - Goodreads
Indridason is a heckuva thriller writer. - Goodreads
Its well measured pace will keep your attention. - Goodreads

Review: Operation Napoleon

User Review  - Stein - Goodreads

Not having read any of Indridason's detective mystery books, this action/thriller/mystery novel with a WWII theme made me wonder about his acclaimed success. To his credit, he manages to keep readers ... Read full review

Review: Operation Napoleon

User Review  - Jennifer - Goodreads

Arnaldur Indridason is my favourite Icelandic author - well he is the only Icelandic author I have read. I have read almost all of his Erlendur murder mysteries and enjoy the bleakness of the ... Read full review

All 68 reviews »

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About the author (2012)

Arnaldur Indriğason was born in Reykjavík January 28, 1961 and writes crime fiction. He is the son of writer Indriği G. Şorsteinsson. Arnaldur graduated with a degree in history from the University of Iceland in 1996. Arnaldur's first published book, Sons of Dust (Synir duftsins) in 1997, is the first in the Detective Erlendur series. Arnaldur's books have been published in twenty-six countries and have been translated into Russian, Polish, German, Greek, Danish, Catalan, English, Italian, Czech, Swedish, Norwegian, Dutch, Finnish, Spanish, Portuguese, Hungarian, Chinese, Croatian, Romanian and French. He won the Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger Award in 2005 for the novel Silence of the Grave. Arnaldur lives in Reykjavík with his wife and three children.

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