When I started this blog in 2012 I was
aware of the growing interest in crime fiction from Scandinavia but did not
think it would blossom as it has to now being a significant part of any crime
fiction section in a bookshop and of my home library.
As I pen this blog, we have marked the
twelve-month anniversary of the passing of Swedish crime writer, Henning
Mankell. His character, Kurt Wallander,
is widely recognized as one of the most memorable of the genre and is known to
a broad audience through the two television series, one featuring Kenneth
Brannagh.
My first Wallander was Faceless Killers
when it was translated into English in 1997. I had to import a copy as no
Australian publisher had the rights to the work. The setting is an isolated
farmhouse where the farmer has been tortured to death and his wife left with a
noose around her neck. She later dies but not before she utters the word
“foreign”. Wallander and his team set about investigating the crime and come
face-to-face with the ramifications of the state’s attitude to immigration and
national identity. As with all Mankell’s work, there is the opportunity to delve
into Sweden’s political and social character and to ponder questions that have
the power to divide nations.
As is often the case with crime writers
from this part of the world, was politically active and imbued his
work with a sense of social commentary. This is part of the attraction
for me of Nordic Noir – the deeper, more complex rendering of the society in which
the action takes place and against which the characters are set.
Another feature of Mankell’s series of
crime novels was the introduction of Linda Wallander, Kurt’s daughter, as a
policewoman. I found this sideways tilt from father to daughter as main protagonist
to be executed extremely well; the character of Linda was as expertly drawn as
that of Wallander himself.
I had the good fortune to meet Henning
Mankell on one of his visits to Melbourne and it remains a highlight of my
bookselling career.
I convene an annual Crime & Justice festival in Melbourne and am using this most recent blog as a lead-in to the November event this year and a way of regularly blogging on my favourite form of reading.
I convene an annual Crime & Justice festival in Melbourne and am using this most recent blog as a lead-in to the November event this year and a way of regularly blogging on my favourite form of reading.
For more information about the crowdfunding campaign we have going for the tenth anniversary Crime & Justice festival, please visit: http://pozible.com/project/crime-justice-festival
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