• The Girl in the Spider's Web

  • A Lisbeth Salander Novel
  • By: David Lagercrantz
  • Narrated by: Simon Vance
  • Length: 13 hrs and 23 mins
  • 4.4 out of 5 stars (23,410 ratings)

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The Girl in the Spider's Web  By  cover art

The Girl in the Spider's Web

By: David Lagercrantz
Narrated by: Simon Vance
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Publisher's summary

#1 NATIONAL BESTSELLER • Lisbeth Salander and Mikael Blomkvist return to the Girl in the Dragon Tattoo series in this ripped-from-the-headlines, high-octane follow-up to Stieg Larsson's The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest. • Also known as the Millennium series

“Rest easy, Lisbeth Salander fans—our punk hacker heroine is in good hands.… A twisty, bloody thrill ride.… An instant page-turner.” —
USA Today

The next installment in the Millennium series: a genius hacker who has always been an outsider; a journalist with a penchant for danger. She is Lisbeth Salander, the girl with the dragon tattoo. He is Mikael Blomkvist, crusading editor of Millennium. One night, Blomkvist receives a call from a source who claims to have been given information vital to the United States by a young female hacker. Blomkvist, always on the lookout for a story, reaches out to Salander for help. She, as usual, has plans of her own. Together they are drawn into a ruthless underworld of spies, cybercriminals, and government operatives—some willing to kill to protect their secrets.

Look for the latest book in the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo series,
The Girl in the Eagle's Talons, coming soon!

©2015 Random House Audio (P)2015 David Lagercrantz

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What listeners say about The Girl in the Spider's Web

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Good But Will Never Be the Same

The Girl in the Spider’s Web, the continuation of the deceased Stieg Larsson’s the Millennium Series, better known as the The Girl . . . With the Dragon Tattoo, Who Played With Fire, and Kicked the Hornet’s Nest, is very good but not yet to the level of its predecessors. Stiag Larson created and wrote the first three installations of the Millennium Series publication, but passed before his writing drew popular and scholarly cliam. So, the present title is authorized by Larsson’s heirs’, as a continuation of his novels, as allegedly plotted out by Larsson before his untimely death. They are written now by David Lagercrantz, himself a well published and successful Swedish mystery novelist. The book, the fourth in the Millennium Series is a wonderful murder/espionage/crime syndicate enigmatic story. Furthermore, the tale is told so well it is very difficult not to read in one sitting. A good work and recommended. Yet, . . .

. . when compared to Stieg Larsson’s prior works, the present installation, Spider’s Web is without the geometric depth found in the earlier plots. The peculiarities of the interlacing histories of the individual characters are not presented with the same, “oh my gosh, can you believe that twist in the plot”? A twist that always intrigued the reader in the earlier works because although improbable they were nevertheless believable given how well the story was put together and told. That characteristic in not present in Spider’s Web.
The story does give us back our old friends, Lisbeth Salander, Mikael Blomkvist, Erika Berger and a cameo by Plague. Wonderful to visit with them again. Did not want to let them go and maybe now we can have them as friends for ten more novels? Yet, like this summer’s revisit with Atticus (Go Set a Watchman, Harper Lee), one can never redo those unique pasts. The present versions of Lisbeth and Mikael are not the full bodied characters Larsson made, yet, they are still deployable, employable and interesting. Just not larger than life any longer. Though, I do not feel Lisbeth and Mikael’s special relationship was demonstrated whatsoever in this novel.

The story is about super hacking, and of course, this is all engineered by Lisbeth to bring about the better good. The story also ties back into her past, specifically her evil father’s criminal empire, which she was able to put an end to in the trilogy. Yet, effluents of his past remain and seek Lisbeth’s demise. The hacking that initiates the story and Lisbeth’s family past dovetail to produce a potentially terrific story. All this is spiced up by the introduction of a savant syndrome child whose prodigious capacities blend uniquely with Lisbeth’s genius. The story is good, the telling is good and the unfolding is good, but less than it could have been. At some points just too many people are introduced and it makes it difficult to follow who is who from what organization and why are they added to the plot.

Nevertheless, not a Stieg Larson but definitely a Swedish mystery lover’s read. This is definitely the only time I have found Simon Vance’s presentation less than great.

We are told by the media that Larsson’s lifelong significant other lady friend, someone who was with him as he created his characters and plots, was not given opportunity to participate in prolongation of the series. She was not a legal inheritor and not permitted to guide the follow along series because Larsson’s brother and father, his inheritors, did not want to share the bounty. Someone should have pointed out to them; long time loving mates share an élan and perception of the original Lisbeth tales that perhaps no one, not even an editor may share. This may have been quite stupid. If Larsson’s life mate was there when he created our loving characters the story may have had an insight which we do not and now will never have.

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174 people found this helpful

  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

So thankful we still have Lizbeth!

STORY (thriller) - Yes, the loss of Stieg Larsson is huge, but I so appreciate David Lagercrantz for this effort. Lizbeth is an awesome character and, thanks to him, she's going to be around a little longer!

Personally, I didn't like this book as much as the first three, but that stems from my own personal taste and, perhaps, stupidity rather than from Lagercrantz's writing. For one, I would have liked a few less characters to keep straight. I'm embarrassed to admit it, but I got confused with who was who several times. Second, although Lizbeth definitely plays a major role in the story, I would have preferred more of her. (Yes, I'm a fan). And, third, while I normally do not enjoy violence, I've come to expect it in this series and actually would have liked more of it in this book.

On the positive side, the plot is thrilling and complex, and it was wonderful to spend time with Lizbeth and Mikael again. Thankfully, their characters have not changed one bit! The addition of an autistic boy character was very interesting, and I loved the deeper insight into Lizbeth's childhood and the dark relationship she has with her sister. The book doesn't end with a bang, but everything is explained and it's a nice ending.

PERFORMANCE - Simon Vance delivers his usual awesome performance and lends continuity to the series.

OVERALL - As always, there is some violence and cursing, but no sex scenes this time. Recommended for anyone who loves The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. I hope the criticism Lagercrantz is receiving for this sequel doesn't dissuade him from continuing our beloved series...

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    2 out of 5 stars
  • Story
    2 out of 5 stars

Woefully disappointed

How could the performance have been better?

I love Simon Vance's narration, but I think there is something wrong with the translation. "William Borg", Blomkvist's long-standing enemy in the press has a different last name, as does Erica Berger - I can't even figure out what it is now. It just doesn't make sense.

Any additional comments?

I have listened to the original three Millennium books at least 4 times. I love them. I enjoy them every time I listen. But this book "reads" more like fan fiction. As though Lagercrantz was attempting to emulate Larsson, but missed the mark. Not to mention, there are terrible holes in continuation. There is no mention of Monica Figeurola AT ALL (Blomkvist's major love interest in "Hornet's Nest.") and Salander is back to having a bunch of piercings, which doesn't fit with how she looked in "Hornet's Nest" either (she had taken several of her piercings out and had a few tattoos removed and was generally working on appearing more "grown up").

I am a die-hard fan of the series, and will finish it on principle, but I am woefully disappointed about the whole thing.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Oh what a tangled web


Salander and Blomkvist are back; Stieg Larsson isn't; having died unexpectedly in 2004 without witnessing the global success of his Millennium Trilogy, or the consequences of not legalizing his relationship with his partner of 30 yrs. Eva Gabrielsson. 2015 seems to be the year the publishing world is giving readers novels tangled in a web of controversy dealing with publishers, lawyers, authors and wills. The ongoing battle over the estate of Stieg Larsson presents us with a Gordian knot. Is it possible to set aside the misfortunes of Larsson's life-management failures while thinking about this new novel, and the dark sprite born in his head and reanimated in that of another's? Probably knot completely.

The decision to disregard the text for a fourth installment, found in Larsson's computer after his death, and start fresh with a new author and his own imaginings of Larsson's mega-successful duo of Lisbeth Salander and Mikael Blomkvist invites a certain amount of scrutiny. Lagercrantz took on a job most of us would not want. I have to wonder at the level of authorial commitment and confidence it must have taken to step into this 80 million dollar (books alone) franchise. Surprisingly, he stepped in and continued on seamlessly, sometimes writing so much like Larsson it was uncanny, as if Larsson's ghost was nestled behind him guiding his hands on the keyboard whistling Unchained Melody. But where Larsson was raw and edgy, Lagercrantz is smooth and polished. He dances with these characters like a perfect postured ballroom dancer with flawless execution, while Larsson stepped on toes and slapped his girl around doing a passionate French tango. He definitely is leading this dance to his own music.

Salander is still a head banging ball of spitfire, but at times seems disappointingly more mature. She didn't dump the BMW like you would have expected and roll the bike out of storage, and I think Lagercrantz's Salander is a closeted Burberry fashionista, maybe a little Chanel, and definitely some Alexander McQueen. Her characterization is too flimsy to support the bad-ass we came to love. I wasn't convinced she could back down the bad guys with a picture on her phone and a few threats.

And Blomkvist is buried in a re-hashed starting point: once again fighting for respectability amongst his colleagues, still riding on the coattails of his last big story for the newspaper. He's a washed up has-been to his younger working mates, a man that can't text, doesn't do facebook, can't get his sexy on, and has traded in his coffee habit for guzzling shots of whiskey. Yet, we are expected (true to Larsson's characterization of Blomkvist) to believe he is a chick magnet, though completely with out evidentiary charm. Eh--I'm okay with that as long as I picture Daniel Craig in the role.

The characters drive this text. Larsson hard-wired a strong psychological profile into the main cast, and under his pen they methodically kept to those profiles. Overall Lagercrantz does an impressive job of assimilating the characters. His writing is most of the time well crafted and well paced. He is most vulnerable to criticism when he overly clarifies by using several characters to repeat the same facts instead of trusting the reader to just get it. Also his almost encyclopedic detailing of algorithms, quantum theory, and other high intelligency interferes with my undisciplined craving for easily digested, meaty, sexy, Swedish smut, devoid of literary significance. It's at times bumpy with pot holes that make the plot seem disjointed in places. And it begins with a significant murder...never mind.

The appearance of Camilla, Salander's drop-dead-gorgeous sister is promising, but I have my concerns about the Marvel-ization of our Girl. I always felt under the surface, Larsson hinted at a comic book hero influence, and I liked it there. I'm not sure I'm ready for a full blown WASP girl and the Spider Society (finally a connection to the USA title). I'd rather leave that to Marvel Comics and keep Salander in the world she already inhabits, whether it's in Larsson's hands or Lagercrantz's.

He hints at the end of the book that She will be back, as will Camilla, and Daniel Craig. Next time, I hope Lagercrantz is bringing sexy back. In fairness I have to admit I couldn't help but read his words in the shadow of Larsson. Larsson was by no means a master of literary style, but he was a helluva storyteller. Listening to the audio production, I thought at times it was Larsson -- then other times wished it was. I think Lagercrantz did a good enough job that he deserves my continued following on his next volume. It was a tough act to follow. If following Larsson's dream, he signed on to take the girl and her tats to 10 volumes. You know how this will go...die hard Stieg fans will hate it; most of us will think it's pretty darn good, and then, blessed are those peacemakers that will philosophize about the beauty of a message the rest of us have missed in the text regarding world peace and love...(GSAW was OK, but deep? : } ) .
*I'm wondering what he will come up with to replace that catchall shelf, the Millennium Trilogy.

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Super Fast Ending

I was worried when I heard that there was a fourth book coming. I thought that the first 3 books were really great and I was excited to get to know what happened to the characters, but I was worried that it might not be done the right way. And I was right.

The book started good in my o[inion, introducing new characters and preparing the readers for whats coming and the state of the original characters. And then it was followed by a good hunt and search and so far. But all the sudden the book ended, all happened too fast, an action here followed by an action there and then done. I really hated that. This book had an interesting story with good characters, but it felt like a summary of the story was given, not the whole story itself. Some characters were not even talked about once this book as well.

Narrator was good as always, but Simon was a bit off with the names of the characters, not all, but some; and I wondered few times who was he talking about, the names were not pronounced correctly.


Overall, good start, really interesting story, but a very fast ending. Extremely fast ending... Maybe the book would have been better if it wasn't as short as it was ( comparing to the other 3 books). It could have been easily 5 hours longer.

I was looking at my phone shocked that there was 20 minutes left for the book to finish.. so disappointing.

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    3 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Huge Disappointment

Yes it truly was a huge disappointment. As a highly enthusiastic fan of the Stieg Larsson novels I awaited this one with great eagerness. What I got was a rambling disorganized plot and with ancillary characters being added every chapter and not even close to enough of Elisabeth Sallander. Perhaps others might be able to appreciate this novel but for me this one is a total no go.

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    2 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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WTF Why the Failure

This is my opinion and maybe my disappointment was related to the previous books in this series are so good, which created large shoes to fill. The new author not only did not fill the shoes he came up a few sizes short. He is given great characters and great series and someone allowed him to tame the dragon. Lisbeth character was the biggest disappointment he turned her into a GIRL. The only similarities in this book for the series is it has same names of characters ( but with no character) and same narrator (Simon Vance can read a phone book and I would listen). If this book was published on its own it would have never made it. I really wished I would have passed on this novel. I just finished 14, The Fold, The Martian, The Killer Next Door, all excellent stories, by comparison this story is medeocore at best

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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars

Not Steig Larsson

It was nice to pick up the series again. It wasn't bad, but you can see the difference in the author. Too bad Stieg's father and brother didn't let Stieg's life partner do it with what Stieg already had done on this book. I think she said he was almost done with it, and outlined 10 books. She did work with him on the books, I just have a gut feeling it would have been so different if she did it.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

No disappointment here!

Any additional comments?

I am pleasantly surprised at the embodiment of the late author's style. At one--third through the book, I am engrossed and characters ring true! I hope there are more to come!

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    1 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars

Stop! Don't walk, run away from this book.

What would have made The Girl in the Spider's Web better?

A totally different writer could have taken the key characters and put together a Larrson-worthy book. This is SO not it. Why? There are a tremendous number of monologues in this book where either the narrator or 1 character tell you what happened in the past OR describe something they could not possibly know. These monologues are very long and tedious and take the place of action and plot.

What do you think your next listen will be?

Nothing by Lagercrantz

What about Simon Vance’s performance did you like?

He's good. Sad he had to do this work.

You didn’t love this book... but did it have any redeeming qualities?

Simon Vance only.

Any additional comments?

I've thrown myself on the alter of bad book sequels so others don't have to. Please get another book and not this one. Try Robert Galbraith. Excellent.

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