Review: I Remember You, A Ghost Story by Yrsa Sigurdardóttir (Read by Lucy Paterson)

Cover of I Remember You by Yrsa Sigurdardóttir

You know when you get sucked into a creepy story and you don’t want to put it down and then you realize it’s nearly 3 a.m. and you do, in fact, have to work in the morning and you’re annoyed you have to put it down? Just me? Anyway, this is a creepy tale that starts off seeming like two very unrelated stories, except that they are sort of happening in the same place, the West fjords in Iceland. (Except they aren’t because they are taking place in the winter in the West fjords so at least part of the story is happening in an isolated location that is hard to reach.) So, while creepy ghost stuff is happening, you are also trying to work out, “How are these two lines of narrative at all related?” But, as the story unfolds, you come to realize how they are related and it is heartbreaking and infuriating.

So, one of the narratives follows Freyr, a psychiatrist who has moved to the West fjords following the disappearance and presumed death of his son and his subsequent divorce from his wife. As the only psychiatrist in the area, he sometimes consults with the police on crime. Freyr is called in when a preschool is vandalized. Speaking with one of his patients later in the day, he comes to find out that there had been a similar incident of vandalism decades before. He and his cop friend start digging into the earlier incident when a woman who turns up dead of an apparent suicide also seems related to the case and to Freyr’s missing son.

Meanwhile, in an abandoned village across the fjord, three friends arrive to begin renovations on a house they bought, hoping to turn it into a summer guesthouse. They… don’t seem like people who should be doing renovation work, but who am I to judge? As they work, and explore the abandoned village, it becomes clear that they are not alone. But who or what is there with them is the question.

The two stories are well integrated; I was interested in both plot lines. I had guesses about what would happen next and I was proved right a couple times, which is a feeling I enjoy. The setting was atmospheric. I could very easily picture the grey Icelandic setting and put myself in the situations the characters were in. The resolution was mostly satisfying. I’m happy with how it ended, although there was at least one character who I would have liked to see a bit more of a comeuppance and at least one character whose ending bummed me out. I enjoyed this and I’m already on the lookout for more books translated into English by this author. So, if you’re into a creepy tale of mystery, betrayal, ghosts, and the search for justice, this is a book you should try!