The Isdal Woman: The Nameless Stranger Who Burned in the Valley of Ice
Behind the city of Bergen on the western coast of Norway there is a valley the local people have long called Isdalen, the Valley of Ice. It is a somber, steep-sided place of dark water and colder stone, and it carries an old and unlovely reputation. In centuries past it was said to be a valley where the desperate came to die, where suicides threw themselves from the crags and where more than one traveler had simply vanished into the mists that gather between its walls. The old Bergensers gave it another name in their whispers: Death Valley. It is the kind of place that seems to have been waiting a very long time for exactly the sort of thing that happened there on the twenty-ninth of November, 1970. On that cold Sunday a university professor was hiking in Isdalen with his two young daughters when they came upon something dreadful among the scree and scrub. A woman's body lay sprawled in a hollow between the rocks, badly burned across the whole front of her torso, her arms drawn u...