Table of Contents
Summary
The Boy in the Suitcase is the first of the Nina Borg arrangement composed by Danish creators Lene Kaaberbol and Agnete Friis. The book introduces the nominal character of the arrangement, Nina Borg, and versions of her involvement in a puzzling infant boy caught in a suitcase. The plot of The Boy in the Suitcase is rather sinister. Nina Borg is a Red Cross medical caretaker and mother of two who is extremely philanthropic.
Her companion Karin strangely gives her a key to public storage in a Copenhagen train station, inside of which she finds a suitcase. The suitcase contains something shocking: a three-year-old boy, medicated, however alive. Nina should choose how to manage this obscure kid, while powers are trying to chase the two of them down. The Boy in the Suitcase delighted in unassuming achievement. Pundits and perusers adulated its high-speed account and engaging storyline. The book was prevailing by three other books: Invisible Murder (2012), Death of a Nightingale (2013), and The Considerate Killer (2016).
Sigita Introduction
Sigita is a single mother as of late moved to Denmark from Lithuania. Undocumented and struggling with destitution, she can’t accommodate her 3-year-old child successfully. Her child is before long abducted. She spends the remainder of the book trying to find him again. This is muddled since she doesn’t communicate in the local language. Nina is a fruitful, loving spouse and mother. She works for the Red Cross. Nina’s the kind of individual who appreciates being up to speed in being required and finds her worth in doing great deeds. At the point when an old companion of hers strangely sends her a key to a train station storage in Copenhagen, she gets concerned.
In the storage, she finds a suitcase containing a tranquilized and stripped young man (Sigita’s child). Clearly, Nina doesn’t have the foggiest idea of what to do. She takes him home and tidies him up, looking after his wellbeing like any great mother would do.
Role of Denmark Police
Nina’s hesitant to hand the boy over to the whizzes since he has no desk work and doesn’t speak Danish. He might be an illicit settler. They may simply turn him out on the road where he’s at risk to be captured again. Likewise, the Denmark police are quite bad, so she doesn’t believe that they wouldn’t simply sell him on the black market to be finished with the issue. Sure that she will sort out what’s best for him, Nina sets out on an excursion across Denmark trying to find what his identity is. Close to this time Karin, the companion who gave her the storage key is discovered killed in her own home. Nina perceives the impending peril for herself and the boy. Whoever executed Karin should not be a long way behind them.
Alone and scared, Nina becomes mindful that an abnormal man is following her. Turns out this man named Jucas and his better half were recruited to convey the boy to some well-off Dane in return for an attractive total. The two were trying to get hitched however required the cash to get it going. At the point when Jucas runs into Nina and the child, he’s befuddled and irate. He pursues her all over Denmark, becoming increasingly rough. Karin works for a Danish businessman named Jan Marquat who isn’t known for his high good character. At the point when his flight is postponed one day, he requests that Karin cover for him.
She should pull out a lot of cash from the bank and get a suitcase from the neighborhood train station. Recognizing how questionable that solicitation is, Karin chooses to run. She realizes her supervisor should be stirred up in some truly perilous business.
Supposition
In the end, it is uncovered that Jan was the intended beneficiary of the boy. His own child got wiped out and kicked the bucket shockingly. Troubled over the deficiency of her child, Jan’s significant other begins to lose her mind. With an end goal to conciliate her Jan bought Sigita’s child from a kid dealer in a request to some way or another supplant the boy, he had lost. Every one of the main players winds up facing off in Jan’s home where reality finally comes out. Sigita leaves with her dearest child finally. Nina gets back to her family and her compassionate work. What’s more, Jucas and Barbara are sent on their way.
Invisible Murder
In the remnants of an unwanted Soviet military clinic in northern Hungary, two ruined Roma young men are searching for old supplies or weapons they could sell on the bootleg market when they discover more than they at any point expected. The subsequent chain of occasions takes steps to blow the existences of a startling number of individuals into pieces and pieces. In this hotly expected development to 20’s widely praised The Boy in the Suitcase, Danish Red Cross medical caretaker Nina Borg doesn’t understand she is risking life and family when she attempts to treat a gathering of wiped out Hungarian vagabonds who are living unlawfully in a Copenhagen carport. Nina has accidentally hurled herself entirely into a destructive home of the corrupt and the urgent, and what is in question is considerably more frightening than anybody had figured it out.
Death of a Nightingale
And it’s humming away in her latest adventure, Death of a Nightingale, an elaborately plotted page-turner that dances from today’s liberal-disapproved of Denmark and mobbed-up Ukraine to the starvation-racked Soviet Union of the Stalinist ’30s. In its middle is Natasha Doroshenko. She’s a Ukrainian emigre who Nina initially met a couple of years earlier while, escaping a sexually abusive Danish fiance, Natasha took shelter at the Red Cross emergency community where Nina works. From that point forward, Natasha has been detained for attempting to kill her fiance, however as this novel starts, she escapes from authority. At the point when her fiance is discovered killed a couple of hours later. The cops believe she’s returned and completed the work.
The Considerate Killer
Medical attendant Nina Borg has a propensity for getting herself in difficulty. Generally, on the grounds that she can’t stand unfairness, yet this time inconvenience discovered her. A half-year prior, her ex took her along to the Philippines in a fearless endeavor to save their marriage. Her carelessness and egotistical conduct in her endeavors to save the world has negatively affected their day-to-day life. Nina has pretty much begun a relationship with the police and knowledge.
An official of the impossible name of Søren Kirkegaard, who is on transitory leave from his work. While in the Philippines, a fiasco happened, and Nina hurried to the salvage, her abilities being tremendously valued. In any case, a perishing man disclosed to her something, which she didn’t exactly get a handle on. However, all things considered put her life in harm’s way, and in this manner starts a plunge into heck. Hauling along Søren in the entire wreck.