Posts Tagged iceland

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The Killer Icelandic Pimp

February 4, 2013 by

Edward Weinman looks back on the Icelandic inspiration for his character Jon Kari, a morally corrupt entrepreneur who forever changes the life of Hobson, the American protagonist in Weinman’s The Ring Road, a Nordic thriller set in Iceland after a glacial volcano erupts with a vengeance.

I met my first pimp when I was in middle school.

As a sixth grader, my friends and I would sit outside Superette, a convenience store located on Monroe Street, across from Oregon State’s campus, and drink 32 oz. cups of Mt. Dew.

Amped on caffeine and sugar, we watched an amazing world pass us by: beefy football players walking with their petite girlfriends; hippies slurping coffee while riding bikes; and Frat guys buying cases of beer for parties that I would, years later, sneak into in order to meet girls.

But nothing sparked my imagination as much as the man who looked like the zoot-suit and hat-wearing pimp Huggy Bear from the ’70’s American cop drama “Starsky and Hutch.”

Our pimp drove a pink Cadillac up and down Monroe, day after day. He always had two pretty women riding shotgun. When he stepped out of his car to pick up some road snacks at Superette, my friends and I would pester him with all sorts of questions about what he was doing.

“Who are the girls?” and “Can we ride along?” and “How much does it cost?”

He’d casually respond with a cool smile and a wink. Sometimes, he’d even buy us chocolate bars.

Flash forward to my life in Iceland where I worked as a journalist for Iceland Review and Atlantica magazine. Out on the razzle one night, I ran into a friend of mine at Kaffibarinn. My friend used to work sales for a publishing company. Like myself, he was on a pub-crawl, although he was, unlike me, sitting next to two drop-dead, sexy blonde women, along with two American tourists with wide smiles plastered to their faces and bloodshot eyes, a sure sign of either jetlag or intoxication.

My friend began telling me all about his new business, “Reykjavik Nightlife.”

“For a small fee I show tourists around Reykjavik,” he told me.

My friend was dressed in a sharp suit. His “clients” also wore suits, too smart for Kaffibarinn, the popular drinking hole frequented by the “it” people who live in 101 Reykjavik: artists, filmmakers, musicians—those who normally wear jeans, T-shirts and ratty jackets to prove to everyone that they are hip enough not to care about appearances.

I told my friend that his business model would fail, because the bars with the highest cool-quotient were pretty much all located in a cluster, like a herd of sheep walking down the main shopping street.

“Why would anyone pay you to take them on a pub-crawl? All the pubs are right here,” I said, gesturing with my hands to indicate the close proximity of Reykjavik’s nightspots.

He looked at the drop-dead gorgeous women next to him, women who belonged on the cover of a glossy magazine, women who are ubiquitous in Reykjavik. He then glanced over at the two tourists, who at this point were buying rounds of hot shots (2 parts Galliano, 2 parts coffee, 1 part whip cream and 1 pinch nutmeg) for their “dates.” Turning back to me, my friend smiled. Then he winked.

I understood. My friend had metamorphosed into that man who drove a pink Cadillac through Corvallis, into the Icelandic version of Huggy Bear.

Before leaving, I said “Góða skemmtun” to the ladies of the evening, only to notice they didn’t understand my simple Icelandic, which meant nothing more than “have fun.”

The women, I figured, were from Eastern Europe and probably moonlighting from their job at Odal, what was then one of Reykjavik’s posh gentleman clubs.

(Iceland’s lesbian prime minister has since outlawed these gentlemen clubs.)

Later that night, as I was drinking beer with friends in a crowded bar, and over the live music trying to chat up an extremely attractive woman who, too, belonged on the cover of a glossy magazine, I thought to myself:

Why the hell spend money on Reykjavik Nightlife when you can hit up just about any bar, café or disco in Iceland’s capital and roll the dice with a simple twist of fate.

Edward Weinman is a former staff writer for Iceland Review. He now writes for Whitman College, and occasionally blogs for huffingtonpost. His debut novel The Ring Road is available now.


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The Devilish Icelandic Landscape

January 21, 2013 by

BY EDWARD WEINMAN

 

Mt. Hekla erupted and lava spewed down the face of Iceland’s most notorious volcano.

The February 2000, volcanic explosion was an open invitation for me, only one year into my new life in Reykjavík writing for Iceland Review, to jump in an SUV and speed towards what Europeans once called the ‘Gateway to Hell.’

Mt. Hekla has erupted over 20 times since 874 A.D., making it Iceland’s most active volcano. The stratovolcano has belched up 10 percent of the tephra produced in Iceland over the last 1000 years. The nearly 5,000-foot mountain has also accounted for one of the largest lava outflows in the world over the last millennium, around 8 km3.

None of these facts were in my mind after news of the eruption broke. I wanted to see lava.

I could barely contain myself during the drive through the electric, winter-white landscape. The bright sunlight reflecting off the snowy tundra made me understand the definition of snow-blind.

About 30 minutes outside of Selfoss, a small town in South Iceland on the road to nowhere, the landscape turned black. It looked burnt. The scorched earth meant the mountain lurked ahead.

After a spinout in the ice that forced us to shovel the SUV out of a snow-bank, we arrived.

We could only drive so close to Mt. Hekla, but from where we stopped the SUV, I could see lava bubbling over.

This is Iceland, I thought to myself. All was quiet, as my travel partners and I stood watch. So silent was the landscape I could nearly hear my heart beat. With my pulse quickened, it felt beguiling to breathe. The mountain was alive. Threatening.

Twelve years after this spellbinding moment, a Nordic thriller was born. My debut novel, The Ring Road, a blend of crime and dark fantasy, is now out. The Ring Road takes place after a glacial volcano awakens with a series of eruptions, stranding ex-cop Hobson at 66° North where human behavior is as unpredictable as the weather. Hobson’s quickly ensnared in a bizarre murder investigation involving Gummi, a road-weary homicide detective; Jon Kari, an amoral entrepreneur; Snorri, a brutal pimp; and Úlfar, a homicidal sheep farmer. As Hobson falls in with a group of enigmatic tourists trying to survive the volcanic aftermath, the chase for a killer pushes them all to the edge of the inhabitable world.

The Ring Road blends the inventive plotting of Jo Nesbo, the dark fantasies of Stieg Larsson and the hardboiled anti-heroes of Elmore Leonard in a dark-hearted crime drama set in the fire and ice of the world’s most enigmatic island,” Adam Chromy, publisher at The Rogue Reader, says.

While I was writing The Ring Road, Eyjafjallajökull erupted, releasing a volcanic cloud into the atmosphere that caused European nations to ground air traffic, stranding millions of travelers across the globe and costing airlines €150 million (USD 196 million) a day for six days, according to London’s The Telegraph.

Like the song ‘Hotel California’ by the Eagles, you can visit Iceland but you can never truly leave. Not only does the sublime, surreal Icelandic landscape stick in your subconscious, but the tiny, wind-swept island located in the middle of the North Atlantic can strand a traveler in Asia who is trying to fly to Europe.

Iceland’s reach is endless.

I began revising The Ring Road. What if an American tourist named Hobson, traveling through Iceland on his way to Europe, became stuck in the country due to a massive volcanic eruption? Suppose Hobson, an ex-cop trying to weed away the memories of his failed marriage, became tangled up in a murder investigation while he and a group of tourists tried to flee the carnage the volcano inflicted upon the countryside? And what if a series of traumatic events, brought on by both natural causes and personal transgressions, introduced Hobson to the best and vilest sides of humanity?

The Scando crime thriller unfolds while the novels’ characters struggle along Iceland’s Ring Road, which circumnavigates the country over an ever-changing, unforgiving, dangerous netherworld.

Could an eruption really wreak havoc on an entire nation? Yes. In 1783, Laki erupted continuously for eight months, generating so much ash, hydrogen fluoride and sulphur dioxide that it killed one in five Icelanders and half of the country’s livestock.
It was a nuclear winter. The Laki eruption actually changed the Earth’s climate.

In The Ring Road, the heroes and anti-heroes navigate this cruel climate as they try to survive the worst nature, and human beings, have to offer.

 

This piece originally appeared in Daily Life, a feature of the Iceland Review.


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“I always wondered what secrets the locals must be afraid of revealing…”

December 24, 2012 by

Edward Weinman on the inspiration for his chilling story from 66 degrees North, “Almost a Christmas Miracle.” It’s set in Iceland, where Weinman spent more than a decade writing for magazines and film. Read it heredownload it for any device, or gift it to a friend–it’s the holidays, after all.

The idea for this piece came from a story I heard when I first moved to Iceland to work as a magazine journalist for Iceland Review and Atlantica. I drove to a small town in the East Fjords to write a piece about a country doctor who had to travel great distances in a four-wheel drive jeep to treat her patients because she was the only doctor around for miles. Trying to interview locals for the story, I meet up against great resistance. Upon returning to Reykjavik, a friend’s father told me that when he moved from Denmark to Iceland as a little boy the locals treated him like a pariah because he was seen as an outsider. My friend’s father remembered how when he and his mother would walk through town, the locals would stare at them through the windows of their homes. And when he and his mother would wave, the locals would shut their curtains. Witnessing locals wary of outsiders fascinated me. I always wondered why these locals were so reticent to talk to a stranger. I wondered what secrets they must be afraid of revealing. I find this behavior similar to what happens in this country to those considered outsiders, those the locals label as “other.” – EW

EDWARD WEINMAN spent nearly one fourth of his life as an expat on Iceland, enduring many long, dark, cold, windy, gray winters. But he made it out alive, without kids, and having suffered only one nervous breakdown. His debut thriller, The Ring Road, is born out of his life in Reykjavik where he worked as a travel writer. His journalism has been picked up byThe Associated Press and The Sunday Times of London, among others. Edward co-wrote the film A Little Trip to Heaven, a psychological thriller starring Forest Whitaker, Jeremy Renner and Julia Stiles, which screened at the 2006 Sundance Film Festival. Edward earned his MFA in writing, literature and publishing from Emerson College in Boston.