The Forgotten Girls

Sara Blaedel

Pages

352

Year

2011

Difficulty

Easy

Themes

institutional abuse, mental health, missing persons, Danish society, justice

Louise Rick has just taken over Copenhagen’s Missing Persons Department when an unidentified woman is found dead in a remote forest near Hvals. The victim’s face bears a distinctive large scar, but no one has reported her missing. When a former caretaker from a state mental institution recognizes the dead woman, the investigation uncovers a decades-old pattern of abuse and abandonment.

Why Start Here

“The Forgotten Girls” represents Blaedel at her best: a tightly plotted procedural grounded in genuine social concern. The institutional backdrop is drawn from real Danish history, where state-run facilities for mentally disabled people were sites of documented neglect and abuse. Blaedel channels that history into a thriller that is both gripping and genuinely important.

This is often recommended as the entry point for Blaedel because it works as a standalone novel despite being part of a longer series. Louise Rick is established quickly and efficiently, and the case does not depend on knowledge of previous books. The original Danish title, “De glemte piger,” was published in 2011, and the novel won wide critical acclaim in Denmark.

The pacing is notably accessible. Unlike some Nordic noir that requires patience with slow openings, Blaedel gets the investigation moving quickly and maintains momentum throughout. This makes it an excellent gateway for readers new to Scandinavian crime fiction.

What to Expect

A police procedural that balances investigative detail with emotional depth. Louise Rick is a capable, determined detective, and the supporting characters, particularly journalist Camilla Lind, add texture to the story. The twin sisters at the heart of the mystery are rendered with real compassion. Expect a novel that moves steadily forward, with each chapter revealing new layers of a case that grows more disturbing the deeper it goes.

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