Warning: The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is not a book for everyone. There are many intense graphic scenes. Murder, sex, and violence are major themes and foul language is used throughout the book. If you do not feel comfortable with any of these elements, I highly recommend you do not even open the book. Once you start, it will be hard to put down.
I started and stopped reading The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo a few times last summer, mainly because of time constraints. This is a complex novel with several storylines and two main characters, and I wanted to be able to read it in its entirety without too many interruptions. So, when I finished my novel in October 2024, this was the first book I pulled off the shelf.
The story begins with disgraced reporter Mikael Blomkvist. He used unverifiable and untrue sources to slander a large company and its owner. For this, he was prosecuted and found guilty of libel. After the trial, Blomkvist semi-retires to north Sweden at the invitation of the Henrik Vanger, head of the wealthy Vanger family, and is given the opportunity to write Henrik’s autobiography.
But there’s a twist. Blomkvist is asked to try to solve the mystery of sixteen year old Harriet Vanger who disappeared forty years ago. Was she murdered? No body was found. Did she run away? If so, how was it that absolutely no one had seen or heard from her since?
Enter the girl with the dragon tattoo that wraps up her back and around her neck: Lisbeth Salander. Lisbeth specializes in research – but not the kind in libraries with old books. She can dig up anything out of anyone’s past with a few quick strokes on her laptop keyboard. She was originally hired by the Vanger’s lawyer to research Blomkvist, but eventually Blomkvist hires her to research the Vangers, especially Harriett.
What they uncover falls into my Best Plot Twist Ever list. Sorry, I can’t say more.
The author, Stieg Larsson was Swedish and the editor of the magazine Expo. From the introduction: “He died in 2004, shortly after delivering the manuscripts for The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl who Played with Fire, and the third novel in the series.” (The third novel is The Girl who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest.) Other authors have carried Lisbeth Salander’s character into more sequels, but that is a subject for another day.
Did you read The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo or its sequels? Let me know what you thought of them in the comments below.