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Reviews for The Girl Who Played with Fire

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  • Mindblowing!5

    J. Machnica The whole Millennium series makes you feel as if all the books that you have ever read so far missed something vital. It seems to me that what makes it so special is the depth of the characters and the minute details of their actions. You feel like you are there, in their minds, at all times. And the pace makes you swallow the lines with your mouth wide open!
    The Girl Who played with Fire, being the second in the series, continues the story of Salander and Blomkvist and slowly shows us the bigger picture of Lisbeth's character, that we all so crave to know better.
    You need to know that the book ends on a cliffhanger, so you'd better have the third book ready by you!
    It is a must read and you definitely need to inform family/friends that you will be unavailable until you've finished the series, as it is UNPUTDOWNABLE! Simply the best thing I have ever read. by J. Machnica

  • Staff review

    The Girl Who Played with Fire5

    Mark Thwaite

    Stieg Larsson's The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo has been a publishing sensation: literary thrillers by dead Swedish authors don't tend to sell very well, but The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo sold by the bucket-load, and was critically acclaimed to boot. The Girl Who Played with Fire is the follow-up to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and is, if anything, an even better book than its superb predecessor.


    Journalist Michael Blomkvist hasn't seen hide nor hair of the increasingly enigmatic Lisbeth Salander since she disappered nearly 2 years ago (after the events of the Vanger case told in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo). But then Salander is suddenly all over the headlines: she is, it seems, the prime suspect in three killings. Blomkvist, of course, believes none of this, and so he must get involved. In truth, neither he nor anyone else, it seems, knows the real Lisbeth Salander, and it is only by finding out that Blomkvist can get to the bottom of the case.


    An absolutely riveting, top-notch thriller. Not to be missed.

    by Mark Thwaite

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