The Girl Who Lived Twice by David Lagercrantz

The Girl Who Lived Twice (Millennium, #6)

by David Lagercrantz

NATIONAL BESTSELLER • Lisbeth Salander must face the most important battle of her life, and will finally put her past to rest in this Milliennium series thriller that will “leave Salander’s legion of followers clamoring for more” (The Wall Street Journal).

Mikael Blomkvist is trying to reach Lisbeth Salander—the fierce, unstoppable girl with the dragon tattoo. He needs her help unraveling the identity of a man who died with Blomkvist's phone number in his pocket—a man who does not exist in any official records and whose garbled last words hinted at knowledge that would be dangerous to important people. But Lisbeth has disappeared. She's sold her apartment in Stockholm. She's gone dark. She's told no one where she is. And no one is aware that at long last she's got her primal enemy, her twin sister, Camilla, squarely in her sights.

Reviewed by Kim Deister on

5 of 5 stars

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This book puts Lisabeth Salander’s past in the forefront of the story, pitted against the one person who, in a different reality, should be her greatest support. Instead, her twin sister Camilla is her biggest enemy. But enemy or not, blood ties can make resolution complicated and fraught with emotional obstacles, for Camilla, too, is another damaged member of the Zalachenko family. Lisbeth has always been a sort of anti-hero hero, her perceptions of the world and ways of handling it often extreme and violent. But there’s always been an underlying sense of good beneath it, in her quest to right the wrongs of the world. However, there’s no such sense with Camilla. Unlike Lisbeth, who used her powers for (mostly) good, Camilla has taken a very different path. Like many, I haven’t loved the Lagercrantz novels with the same ferocity as I did the Larsson. For me, there’s just no avoiding the fact that Lisbeth is somewhat less intense, less colorful than her OG version. More than once, I’ve encountered moments in the stories where I felt that the OG version would have reacted differently, made different choices. I encountered those moments in this book, too. And it’s often felt as if Blomkvist has almost become an afterthought, which I also don’t love. But it is what it is. It doesn’t make the books bad, just different. The stories are still engrossing, and I keep turning the pages!

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Reading updates

  • 1 May, 2023: Started reading
  • 11 May, 2023: Finished reading
  • 19 July, 2023: Reviewed