
Freezing Embrace
2021 • Action & Adventure, Crime, Drama, Mystery
Commissioner Antti Hautalehto is faced with a complicated case when young men start drowning in the small Finnish town of Borg. Almost every week a new body is found in the river, and soon Hautalehto has reason to distrust his own police colleagues.
Why you should read the novel
The original novel, Frozen Shadows by Elin Andersson, offers a deeply immersive experience that goes far beyond the visual storytelling of the TV adaptation. Through rich prose and masterful characterization, the book draws you into the protagonist's inner world, letting you feel the oppressive cold and piercing loneliness of the northern wilderness. Each page reveals subtle layers of emotion, motive, and history that are simply unmatched by screen time restrictions.
Reading the novel allows for a much more profound exploration of psychological nuance, as Andersson meticulously unpacks trauma, memory, and connection. Her writing lingers on internal conflict and moral ambiguity, encouraging readers to grapple with every ethical dilemma alongside the characters. The unhurried pacing lets you savor the tension and mystery at your own rhythm, rather than rushing from plot point to plot point.
Additionally, the book’s evocative descriptions of setting breathe life into the icy environment, making the winter landscape itself a crucial, almost sentient, character. Fans of suspenseful fiction and intricate human stories will find the source material far richer and more rewarding than the constraints of a TV adaptation can allow.
Adaptation differences
One of the primary differences between the TV series and the book is the way character backstories are presented. In the novel, Andersson devotes entire chapters to exploring the protagonist's childhood and formative traumas, weaving memories into the present narrative. The TV series, however, introduces these elements mainly through brief flashbacks, which can feel rushed and incomplete compared to the immersive depth provided on the page.
Another significant change is the handling of secondary characters. The original book provides nuanced subplots for figures like Erik and Marta, delving into their motivations and personal struggles. The series, in contrast, streamlines or omits these subplots, focusing mainly on the protagonist’s primary narrative arc. This shift loses some of the emotional richness and complexity that make the book compelling.
Setting and atmosphere are also portrayed differently. While the TV adaptation uses visuals to depict the wintry landscape, the book’s detailed inner monologue conveys how the cold and isolation impact each character’s psyche. The resulting tension and sense of claustrophobia are much more palpable in the novel, where the reader becomes trapped alongside the characters in both body and mind.
Lastly, the ending of the series diverges notably from the source material. While Andersson’s book concludes with an ambiguous, open-ended resolution, the TV series opts for a more definitive and crowd-pleasing closure. This not only alters the story’s thematic message but also changes the way viewers and readers are left to interpret the characters’ journeys and emotional growth.
Freezing Embrace inspired from
Frozen Shadows
by Elin Andersson