The third and final volume of The Sixty KIlo Saga is out in Iceland, titled Sixty Kilos of Sundays. It carries on and completes the saga of Gestur and the herring adventure in Segulfjörður (Siglufjörður), Iceland’s northernmost and most isolated town. It takes us through events from 1918 to 1932, winding through the class struggles of the twenties, with the arrival of Communism and the founding of the first Workers’ Unions, plus the strengthening of Capitalism in the wake of the Great Depression. This is also the saga of Gestur’s marriage with Anna and his ongoing fascination for the risk-taking herring kings. The book takes its title from one of the big arguments of the age, “how long the Sundays should be”, whether workers should be better paid for Sundays than weekdays, and when the Sunday salary should take effect. The volume starts however with Gestur going to America in search of his father, who disappeared early in the first volume, Sixty Kilos of Sunshine. Gestur takes the reader with him to New York, then on to North Dakota and finally visits the real capital of Iceland back in those days, in Winnipeg’s West End, finishing the quest for his father up in the West-Icelandic town of Gimli on Lake Winnipeg.