• Booklish
  • Index
  • Blog
  • Shelf
  • About
  • Ratings
  • Contact
Menu

Booklish

Delectable reads for bibliophiles
  • Booklish
  • Index
  • Blog
  • Shelf
  • About
  • Ratings
  • Contact

Macbeth by Jo Nesbo

Macbeth | clever, bloodthirsty, corruptive

April 14, 2019

Review: 3 stars

My good friend Patrick, with whom I exchange books every Christmas, recently became a father! In advance of being sucked into the black hole of parenthood, he gifted me ‘Macbeth’, a very apt selection given I’m a fan of Nesbo’s “Harry Hole” series.

‘Macbeth’ is a modern day retelling of Shakespeare’s tragic classic - this time set in a drug-plagued 1970s small Norwegian town. The main players are all present, from Macbeth (a high-performing “SWAT” team leader), Banquo (his “trusty” sidekick), to Duncan (head of the police force). Nesbo makes clever reference to the original cast and circumstances, while ensuring his own story maintains its fidelity. For example, Hecate is now recast as the lord of a mysterious drug ring, selling “brew”, and his workforce is comprised of blind Chinese workers - an interpretation on the other blind witches who cast Macbeth’s fate. Lady Macbeth, assumes the mononym “Lady”, and as the fiery proprietor of a high-end casino in town, propels her lover Macbeth to maddening heights of power.

I last studied Macbeth in ninth-grade English class, so it was truly nostalgic to read Nesbo’s version. His elaboration on each character’s back stories created much rounder characters of the secondary cast - Duff, Lady and Banquo are each imbued with noble ambitions and self-destructive flaws. I found myself constantly shifting allegiances to the characters as I learned more about the regrets and motivations that defined each. This made it difficult sustain my sense of “true North”, which Nesbo offers to define as the betterment of the town and its people. The novel also poses the central question of what does “good” truly look like, when leaders trade one gang for another and claim victory for one population while sacrificing another. A question of democracy and transparency vs. efficient autocracy also arises - when is it rational for a leader who can truly effect change, to turn to mercenary means to achieve them? Does that in and of itself negate that leader’s progress towards good?

I thoroughly enjoyed this read. As always, Nesbo delivers high-octane plot development and careless bloodshed in this “game of thrones” thriller. HIs descriptive writing heightens the readers’ senses - placing us firmly in the rain-drenched chill of the Fife container yard, or in the backyard after a family’s massacre; the wet laundry still listing in the breeze, pockmarked with bullet holes. There are a few flaws - for example, the positioning of the various antagonists in the final battle scene is difficult to render, the interjections of the supernatural feel tangential, and the repeated missteps of a modern, well-equipped police force are not credible. However, by in large, ‘Macbeth’ gave me several days of engrossed, page turning escape, which was exactly what I was looking for.

In fiction Tags modern shakespeare, crime, thriller, page turner, 3 stars, scandinavian lit
← Becoming | moral, candid, awareA Separation | slow, melancholic, fading →

Latest Posts

Featured
3 stars, Japanese literature, crime, mystery, love
The Devotion of Suspect X
3 stars, Japanese literature, crime, mystery, love
3 stars, Japanese literature, crime, mystery, love
fantasy, apocalypse, life & death, family, los angeles, magic, 4 stars
Catchpenny
fantasy, apocalypse, life & death, family, los angeles, magic, 4 stars
fantasy, apocalypse, life & death, family, los angeles, magic, 4 stars
italian literature, motherhood, marriage, infidelity, identity, strong female lead, 5 stars, family
Forbidden Notebook
italian literature, motherhood, marriage, infidelity, identity, strong female lead, 5 stars, family
italian literature, motherhood, marriage, infidelity, identity, strong female lead, 5 stars, family
LGBTQ, man booker prize, womanhood, spain, NYT notable book, 4 stars, coming of age
Hot Milk
LGBTQ, man booker prize, womanhood, spain, NYT notable book, 4 stars, coming of age
LGBTQ, man booker prize, womanhood, spain, NYT notable book, 4 stars, coming of age
spiritual, BBC 100 Novels, love, mysticism, 4 stars
The Forty Rules of Love
spiritual, BBC 100 Novels, love, mysticism, 4 stars
spiritual, BBC 100 Novels, love, mysticism, 4 stars
short stories, science fiction, apocalypse, asian literature, 3 stars
Your Utopia
short stories, science fiction, apocalypse, asian literature, 3 stars
short stories, science fiction, apocalypse, asian literature, 3 stars
romance, millennial, 4 stars, abuse, mental health, NYT notable book
Normal People
romance, millennial, 4 stars, abuse, mental health, NYT notable book
romance, millennial, 4 stars, abuse, mental health, NYT notable book
historical fiction, britain, man booker prize, politics, 5 stars, religion
Wolf Hall Trilogy | magnificent, vivid, audacious
historical fiction, britain, man booker prize, politics, 5 stars, religion
historical fiction, britain, man booker prize, politics, 5 stars, religion
science fiction, NYT best book, 5 stars, technology, humanity
Exhalation | visionary, brilliant, inquiring
science fiction, NYT best book, 5 stars, technology, humanity
science fiction, NYT best book, 5 stars, technology, humanity
russia, communism, 4 stars, fatherhood, historical fiction
A Gentleman in Moscow | elegant, charming, witty
russia, communism, 4 stars, fatherhood, historical fiction
russia, communism, 4 stars, fatherhood, historical fiction