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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=The Summer of Kim Novak
|sort=Summer of Kim Novak
|date=June 2015
|isbn=978-9462380257
|website=|videocover=9462380252|amazonukaznuk=<amazonuk>9462380252</amazonuk>|amazonusaznus=<amazonus>9462380252</amazonus>
}}
Erik knew that the summer of 1962 was going to be a bad one. His mother was seriously ill and there was no hiding that she was likely to die. So, Erik and his friend Edmund planned to spend their holiday, accompanied by Erik's elder brother Henry, at the lake-side cottage. Both boys dreamed of their supply teacher, as fourteen-year-old boys are wont to do, particularly when she's the spitting image of the actress Kim Novak. But it wasn't just Erik's mother's health which was going to ruin the summer: The Terrible Thing was going to happen too.
There should be a special place in hell reserved for blurb writers who reveal too much of the plot of a book. I'd volunteer to stoke the fire. If you ''don't'' read the back of this book you will find an exquisite book, part right of passage story and part whodunit but with a reveal some 60% of the way through the book which tells you what The Terrible Thing was and completely changes the nature of the book. You'll enjoy Hakan Nesser's beautiful writing and the way that he captures the characters of the two boys, the clichés they resort too to to deal with problems and their attitudes to what is, and isn't gentlemanly. You'll smile: you might even laugh. Once you know about The Terrible Thing you'll be able to taste the suspense in your mouth and as you get closer to the end you'll not be able to turn the pages quickly enough: Nesser is a master at playing with your emotions.
If you've read the blurb on the back of the book you'll know about The Terrible Thing. You'll wonder why on earth Nesser doesn't get on with the plot, because you won't know that The Terrible Thing is not going to happen until you're 60% of the way through and - brilliant as the writing is - you'll feel that the plot ''drags'' just a little and then picks up dramatically in the remaining 40%. Instead of enjoying the boys you'll be watching for clues and mentally lining up your suspects. You might even be reasonably certain about who did what.

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