The Man on the Balcony
First edition (Swedish) | |
Author | Sjöwall and Wahlöö |
---|---|
Original title | Mannen på balkongen |
Country | Sweden |
Language | Swedish |
Series | Martin Beck series |
Publisher |
Norstedts Förlag (Swedish) Pantheon Books (English) |
Publication date | 1967 |
Published in English | 1968 |
Pages | 199 pp |
Preceded by | The Man Who Went Up in Smoke |
Followed by | The Laughing Policeman |
The Man on the Balcony is the third novel in the detective series revolving around Swedish police detective Martin Beck, and was written by Sjöwall and Wahlöö and originally published as Mannen på balkongen in 1967.
Plot
Martin Beck and his team realize that a paedophilic murderer may have been seen by an unidentified serial robber who was watching for prey in the area, at the time. The pressure is turned up when more child murders begin to occur.
Synopsis
At the beginning of the book Beck goes to a peaceful mission with colleague Ahlberg in Motala. His colleagues are meanwhile looking for a handbag robber who makes the Stockholm parks unsafe. In the same park, which hosted his last robbery, a child's body is discovered soon after by two tramps. The 9-year-old girl has been abused and strangled. Shortly thereafter, another child befalls the same fate. As Beck returns, the machinery of the police investigation is already running.
The police are initially lacking any clues as the abduction of the second girl was only viewed by a three year old boy. Only an elderly exhibitionist is briefly detained, but has nothing to do with the murders.
Only a coincidence brings the investigation continues: Gunvald Larsson, who first appears in this novel, has telephoned at the very beginning of the investigation with an elderly lady who complained about a man in an opposite flat, standing all day on his balcony and looking at the road and playing with the children, among others. After Martin Beck recalled this call; with difficulty the note written by Larsson is found and by a mixture of obstinate investigating and the coincidence that the caller had the uncommon name Andersson is the killer found, just before he can attack a child again.
Characters and their development
The boorish detective Gunvald Larsson is introduced, as is Einar Rönn, who comes from a rural part of the country and likes his life quiet. Larsson was Sjöwall's favourite character, whereas Rönn was Wahlöö's. Also, two regular street cops are introduced, Kristiansson and Kvant, who will provide some of the comic relief throughout the rest of the series.
Film adaptation
On 26 November 1993 the film with the same name premiered in Sweden. The film starred Gösta Ekman as Martin Beck and Rolf Lassgård as Gunvald Larsson. It was a great success and won the Swedish Guldbagge Award for Best Actor (Gösta Ekman), Best Screenplay (Daniel Alfredson & Jonas Cornell) and Best Film (Hans Lönnerheden, producer).
Preceded by The Man Who Went Up in Smoke |
"Martin Beck" timeline, part 3 of 10 | Succeeded by The Laughing Policeman |
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