The Man Who Smiled cover

The Man Who Smiled

Kurt Wallander • Book 4

4.00 ABR Score (27.4K ratings)
★ 3.95 Goodreads (26.3K) ★ 4.35 Audible (1.1K)
12h 27m Released 2006 Mystery

Why Listen to This Audiobook?

Dick Hill makes Wallander's breakdown feel less like backstory and more like something you're living through with him.

  • Great if you want: procedural crime with a detective in genuine psychological freefall
  • Listening experience: brooding and methodical — corporate conspiracy with a Scandinavian chill
  • Narration: Hill's weathered baritone suits Wallander's exhausted moral weight perfectly
  • Skip if: you prefer lighter mysteries — Wallander's despair is relentless here

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About This Audiobook

Inspector Kurt Wallander has reached his breaking point after shooting a man in the line of duty and is on the verge of leaving the Ystad police force permanently when a colleague is killed, apparently related to the death of a business tycoon's father. The fourth Wallander novel finds the detective at his lowest personally while the case around him escalates toward a confrontation with a smiling, powerful figure who has protected himself with money and reputation for years. Henning Mankell's crime fiction is as much about moral exhaustion as detection.

Dick Hill narrates with the leaden weariness that defines Wallander's character, a voice that conveys the detective's intelligence and his profound fatigue without glamorizing either. Hill's reading of the Swedish police procedural tradition emphasizes its quiet authority over dramatic peaks, matching Mankell's preference for accumulating detail over incident. At over twelve hours, the audiobook gives the psychological landscape as much space as the criminal one.