In Valhalla's Shadows
A Novel
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- $22.99
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- $22.99
Publisher Description
Ever since the accident, ex-cop Tom Parsons’s life has been crumbling around him: his marriage and career have fallen apart, his grown children barely speak to him, and he can’t escape the dark thoughts plaguing his mind. Leaving the urban misery of Winnipeg, he tries to remake himself in the small lakeside town of Valhalla, with its picturesque winter landscape and promise as a “fisherman’s paradise.” As the locals make it clear that newcomers, especially ex-RCMP, are less than entirely welcome, he throws himself into repairing his run-down cabin.
But Tom has barely settled in the town when he finds the body of a fifteen-year-old Indigenous girl on the beach, not far from his home. The police write off Angel’s death as just another case of teenagers partying too hard. But the death haunts Tom, and he can’t leave the case closed—something just doesn’t add up. He begins visiting the locals, a mix of Icelandic eccentrics, drug dealers and other odd sorts you’d expect to find in an isolated town, seeking out Angel’s story. With the entitled tourists with their yachts and the mysterious Odin group living up the lake, Valhalla is much more than it originally seemed. And as Tom peels off the layers, he hopes to expose the dark rot underneath.
W.D. Valgardson’s expert manipulation of metaphor and imagery brings a mythic scale to the murder mystery at the heart of In Valhalla’s Shadows. He shapes a portrait of small-town living with frank depictions of post-traumatic stress, RCMP conduct, systemic racism and the real-life tragedies that are too often left unsolved.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Valgardson (The Girl with the Botticelli Face) examines one man's depression in this sprawling novel, which incidentally concerns a mysterious death. Tom Parsons, a former Mountie who is suffering from PTSD, is separated from his wife and estranged from his children. Tom leaves home in Winnipeg, Manitoba, and, through a series of chance encounters, winds up living in the tiny enclave of Valhalla, about an hour's drive from the city. Just a few weeks after his arrival, he discovers the shoeless body of a 15-year-old girl lying face down in a puddle of muddy water. Tom becomes a person of interest for the local Mounties. From that premise, the story settles into its real purpose: allowing Tom to meet his eccentric neighbors, explore Icelandic-Canadian culture, dig into the darker strata of life in an isolated community, and come to terms with his own conflicted past. While this is not for readers looking for a whodunit, it will resonate with those seeking a poetic slice of the Great White North.