Arnaldur Indriðason Books in Order
Explore Arnaldur Indriðason's books in order, with reading guides, short summaries, series overviews, and tips on where to start with his Icelandic crime novels.
Last updated: December 25, 2025
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
19 books
Ferðalok
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2024
After a late‑night fall leaves a poet bedridden in hospital, he drifts through memories of his youth in rural Öxnadalur and later years in Copenhagen. Past love, a shepherd boy’s tragic fate and shifting fortune blend into a quiet historical tale about chance and loss.
The Girl by the Bridge
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2023
An elderly couple ask Konrad to trace their missing granddaughter, a young woman tied to drug smuggling on Reykjavík’s fringes. His search collides with an old case of a girl who drowned by a city bridge and with unresolved questions about his own murdered father.
The Quiet Mother / Þagnarmúr
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2020
A terminally ill woman begs retired detective Konrad to find the baby she gave up for adoption nearly fifty years ago. When she is soon found murdered, his regret turns into obsession as he searches for her lost child and the truth behind her death.
The Darkness Knows
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2017
When a body long buried in a glacier is identified as a businessman who vanished thirty years ago, retired detective Konrad is dragged back to the case he never solved. New testimony forces him to face old mistakes and poisonous secrets.
The Shadow Killer
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2015
In 1941 Reykjavík, a travelling salesman is found shot in a rented room, a swastika smeared on his forehead and an American pistol nearby. Detective Flóvent and military policeman Thorson follow a trail of spies, experiments and wartime grudges.
Into Oblivion
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2014
In 1979, newly promoted detective Erlendur investigates a mechanic’s death linked to the American military base while privately probing a schoolgirl’s long‑ago disappearance. As Cold War tensions loom, both cases circle the themes of loss, silence and buried guilt.
The Shadow District
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2013
A young woman is strangled in wartime Reykjavík’s rough shadow district, and an Icelandic detective teams up with an American military policeman to hunt her killer. Decades later, retired detective Konrad reopens the case when a new death revives the old crime.
Reykjavík Nights
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2012
In this prequel, a young Erlendur patrols Reykjavík’s night shift, dealing with drunks, crashes and petty crime. When a homeless man he knows is found drowned, Erlendur quietly investigates, entering the city’s underbelly and discovering the instincts that will shape his career.
Einvígið
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2011
Reykjavík in the summer of 1972 is obsessed with the world chess championship between Spassky and Fischer, but a local teenage boy is brutally attacked after a night at the cinema. As the city watches the chessboard, detective Marion Briem quietly pursues a far deadlier duel.
Strange Shores
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2010
Erlendur returns to the remote eastern fjords of his childhood to investigate a woman who vanished in a storm decades earlier. Camping among ruined farmhouses, he follows rumours and half‑truths that echo his brother’s disappearance and force him toward long‑avoided answers.
Black Skies
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2009
Detective Sigurdur Óli agrees to do a favour for a friend and is pulled into a blackmail scheme involving swingers, bankers and old classmates. When a woman is killed, he must untangle greed and humiliation while his own career and relationships crumble.
Outrage
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2008
With Erlendur away, detective Elínborg leads a disturbing case: a young man is found with his throat cut, traces of a date‑rape drug nearby. Her search uncovers serial predation, village secrets and the lengths people will go when anger finally boils over.
Hypothermia
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2007
A woman is found hanged in her lakeside cottage, apparently driven to suicide by grief. When a friend brings Erlendur a recording from a séance she attended, he begins an unofficial inquiry that links her death to old missing‑person cases and his own ghosts.
Arctic Chill
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2005
On a bitter January day, a young boy of Thai descent is discovered stabbed and frozen outside his Reykjavík apartment block. Erlendur and his team investigate, uncovering racism, fear and uneasy immigration debates beneath Iceland’s outwardly tolerant surface.
The Draining Lake
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2004
After an earthquake lowers an Icelandic lake, a skeleton weighted with an old radio transmitter surfaces from the mud. Erlendur’s investigation reaches back to Cold War student exchanges in East Germany, exposing idealism, betrayal and a disappearance no one ever explained.
Voices
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2002
Just before Christmas, the hotel Santa is found stabbed in a cramped basement room at a Reykjavík luxury hotel. Erlendur checks in as a guest, peeling back the murdered man’s past as a child star and the respectable façade of staff and visitors.
Silence of the Grave
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2001
When a child finds a human bone on a building site outside Reykjavík, excavations reveal an old skeleton and an even older crime. Erlendur’s team investigates while a parallel story of a battered woman unfolds, slowly revealing how violence can echo across generations.
Jar City / Tainted Blood
by Arnaldur Indriðason
2000
A seventy‑year‑old man is murdered in his Reykjavík flat, leaving only a photo of a girl’s grave and a cryptic note. Erlendur’s search connects a decades‑old rape case, genetic research and a community where the past is never as distant as it seems.
Operation Napoleon
by Arnaldur Indriðason
1999
In 1945 a German plane carrying both German and American officers crashes on an Icelandic glacier, its wreckage lost in the snow. Decades later, the US military secretly returns to recover it, and lawyer Kristin is forced into a deadly chase for the truth.
Where should I start?
If you are new to Erlendur: Jar City / Tainted Blood → Silence of the Grave → Voices
If you want Erlendur’s story from the beginning: Reykjavík Nights → Into Oblivion → Jar City / Tainted Blood → Strange Shores
If you like historical wartime mysteries: The Shadow District → The Shadow Killer
If you prefer cold cases with a retired sleuth: The Darkness Knows → The Girl by the Bridge → The Quiet Mother / Þagnarmúr
If you want a high‑stakes standalone thriller: Operation Napoleon
Author bio
Arnaldur Indriðason was born in Reykjavík in 1961, the son of writer Indriði G. Þorsteinsson, and grew up surrounded by stories about ordinary people in harsh landscapes. That mix of family, work and weather runs through almost everything he has written since.
Before he turned to fiction, he spent years looking at other people’s work. He studied history at the University of Iceland, finishing his degree in the mid‑1990s, and wrote about Icelandic film. At the same time he worked as a journalist and then as a film critic, watching how plots were built and how small visual details could carry a whole scene.
Those habits carried over when he started writing crime novels in the late 1990s. His first book about Detective Erlendur, published in Iceland in 1997, introduced a Reykjavík policeman who is as interested in the past as in the crime scene in front of him. Indriðason kept his day jobs for a while, writing at night and in the early mornings, until the books found such a large audience at home that he could focus on fiction full time.
Readers outside Iceland met him through Jar City, in which an old man is found murdered in his flat and the trail leads into decades‑old crimes and genetic research. The novel became a hit in translation and was later adapted for film, bringing both Erlendur and Reykjavík’s rain‑soaked streets to a much wider audience. Silence of the Grave, which uncovers a long‑buried skeleton at a building site, confirmed how strongly readers responded to his way of linking family violence, social change and cold‑case investigation.
Across the Erlendur novels, the detective’s own history matters as much as the murders he solves. As a child he survived a blizzard in which his younger brother vanished, and that loss shapes his obsession with missing people and unexplained disappearances. Books such as Arctic Chill, about the killing of a young boy from an immigrant family, and Hypothermia, which begins with an apparent suicide in a lakeside cottage, show him circling around themes of guilt, abandonment and the pull of the past.
Indriðason has never stayed with only one corner of Icelandic life. In the Reykjavík Wartime Mysteries, beginning with The Shadow District and The Shadow Killer, he moves back to the 1940s, when Allied forces flooded into Reykjavík and the quiet capital became a crowded garrison town. These books pair Icelandic detective Flóvent with Canadian‑born military policeman Thorson, and use murder investigations to explore occupation, espionage and the uneasy meeting of cultures.
More recently he has written the Detective Konrad novels, starting with The Darkness Knows. Konrad is a retired policeman drawn back into old cases, and the books mix present‑day Reykjavík with unresolved crimes and a painful family history. Alongside the crime series he has also produced standalone thrillers such as Operation Napoleon and later a historical novel, showing the same interest in how big political events land on individual lives.
Over the years his work has reached readers in dozens of languages and earned major crime‑writing awards, including the Glass Key for best Nordic crime novel and the CWA Gold Dagger. The numbers are impressive, but on the page he stays quiet and plain‑spoken, more interested in the way a tired detective makes coffee at midnight than in big speeches about justice.
He still lives in Reykjavík with his family, working close to the streets and suburbs he writes about. Again and again his stories return to people who have been forgotten, to bodies that surface from lakes, glaciers or old building sites, and to the question of what the living owe the dead. That steady focus, on memory and responsibility in a small, weather‑beaten country, is a big part of why readers keep coming back.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.




































Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts