Scandinavian Mysteries discussion
great Scandanavian authors and why you like them
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Elizabeth
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Mar 06, 2011 10:24AM

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Has anyone been folowing Wallender on B.B.C.?

Has anyone been folowing Wallender on B.B.C.?"
I love the Swedish versions of Wallander and am now hooked on The Killing- very atmospheric and compelling. I've just finished reading 3 seconds and am about to read the second Martin Beck. Having read a lot of American crime, I now find I much prefer Scandi crime!

I am feeling the same way, am totally hooked on Scandi mysteries


I have only 2 Fossums left to read . Seem to be saving them for just the right moment. Inspector Sejer is so great.
Thanks for info.
I've been having a Liza Marklund fest lately - not the horrid thing she wrote with James Patterson (which I can only assume she did for the mega bucks) but her Annika Bengtzon books - have just started my third one Red Wolf and enjoying it very much, also read Studio Sex which was almost perfect and Prime Time which was very good.





Got two Marklund books reserved Studio Sex and Red Wolf. Really excited about the "Marklund Fest"



I do hope I like his other books better. (His or Hers)?
On to Marklund and excited to read the two I got.

I do hope I like his other books better.
Elizabeth, I found Nemesis, the next book in the series, much more compelling than The Redbreast. I hope you give Nemesis a try.

I do hope I like his other books better.
Elizabeth, I found Nemesis, the next book in the series, much more compelling than The..."
Thanks for the advice. I bought Nemesis and it is waiting for me.


I don't believe there is a book based series. The TV show is an original. The US version is very compelling, I'm finding. Very Scandanavian influenced with the moody distance of the main detective. I'm almost tempted to order the original Danish season 1 to get more of it.

I do hope I like his other books better.
Elizabeth, I found Nemesis, the next book in the series, much more compelling than The..."
As the series continues, the books get tighter and tighter within time. There are still instances where Nesbo uses various time devices to expand the plot, but not as significantly as he did in RedBreast.


I have read all of Indriadason's books and really enjoyed them . At this point I do not know of anymore that have been translated into English.
Also agree about Yrsa. Planning a trip to Iceland one day soon.
Tomorrow get to start on Marklund's Studio Sex.


Thanks for letting me join your group.
I’m a third generation Norwegian-American who’s written a memoir (narrative nonfiction – names were changed) that could also be called a thriller. If you’ve wondered what your misfit relatives got up to in America, here’s a small sample:
“If Dad finds out about this, he’ll go crazy. If he goes crazy, he’ll end up in the nuthouse and we’ll all starve to death.” That was how my mother forced my cooperation. “I’ll get you sent to the nuthouse” was a greater threat than “I’ll kill you.” The book is called Threadbare (www.vermillionroadpress.com).
Nice reviews would be appreciated (smile).
I’m reading the Stieg Larsson books (Sweden rather than Norway), and seeing parallels to the mythological homeland my relatives created when they felt overwhelmed in America. That has surprised me a bit.
I have a neighbor who loves books about Northern Europe, and we’ve swapped several, including the book that The 13th Warrior movie was based upon.
Thanks again for this site and letting me join.
Darlene Underdahl

Love the Vermillion Road Press page. Made me laugh when the sign went crooked. Will look for your book.


Comments on her books?

Need to finish Studio Sex so I can get to Red Wolf.
No comments on Karin Alvtegen??





o The Fire Engine that Disappeared and The Locked Room by Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo;
O The Ice Princess by Camilla Läckberg (not one of my favorites);
o The Man from Beijing, The Pyramid: And Four Other Kurt Wallander Mysteries, Before the Frost, and The Troubled Man by Henning Mankell; and my favorites
o Nemesis by Jo Nesbø ( with The Redbreast, The Devil's Star, and Snømannen in my library queue); and
o the Millennium Trilogy by Stieg Larsson.
I'm very excited because my library just acquired several books by Ake Edwardson, Quentin Bates, Håkan Nesser, and Karin Fossum :-)

Thanks for the list; I'll keep it. I'm working my way through the Stieg Larsson trilogy. Salander is almost as sassy as I was (smile).
www.vermillionroadpress.com

Thanks for the list; I'll keep it. I'm working my way through the Stieg Larsson trilogy. Salander is almost as sassy as I was (smile).
www.vermillionroadpress.com"
Salander is my hero :-))

I agree. They are my favorite, too. Every couple of years I sit down and reread all ten.
just finished a 5-star Scandinavian read The Vault which was called Box 21 in the US by Anders Roslund and Borge Hellstrom. It's very sad and some of the characters made me so angry I could scream but it is very well written - totally compelling book.
I'm going for something a bit ligher now - Camilla Lackberg's second book The Preacher- only just started and so far enjoyable.


I have read some Mari Jungstedt but she was a little boring I think.
Has anyone in here read any T.P.Boje? I was recommended her book "One,Two...He is coming for you" by a dear friend of mine and I thought it was a great mystery story. She is a Danish author.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Summer Book (other topics)The Summer Book (other topics)
Purge (other topics)
The Preacher (other topics)
The Vault (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Jo Nesbø (other topics)Håkan Nesser (other topics)
Quentin Bates (other topics)
Åke Edwardson (other topics)
Henning Mankell (other topics)
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