Kjell Eriksson

Karl Stig Kjell Eriksson (born 1953 in Uppsala) is a Swedish writer, author of the detective chief inspector Ann Lindell crime novels. Den upplysta stigen (“Shining path”), the first of the Lindell series, was named Best First Novel of 1999 by the Swedish Crime Academy. Prinsessan av Burundi (The Princess of Burundi), fourth in the series, was awarded the Swedish Crime Writers' Academy Best Swedish Crime Novel Award in 2002. Öppen grav (Open Grave), published in 2009, was the tenth and final novel in the series. Currently only six Lindell novels are available in English, though St. Martin's Press has the rights to the whole series.[1][2][3]

Kjell Eriksson
Born1953 (age 6667)
Uppsala
OccupationNovelist
NationalitySwedish
GenreCrime fiction

Bibliography

  • Knäppgöken (1993)
  • Frihetsgrisen (1995)
  • Efter statarna-en ny tid (1995)

Ann Lindell series

  • Den upplysta stigen (“Shining path”) (1999)
  • Jorden må rämna (2000)
  • Stenkistan ("The Stone Coffin") (2001)
  • Prinsessan av Burundi (2002) translated by Ebba Segerberg as The Princess of Burundi (2007)
  • Nattskärran (2003)
  • Nattens grymma stjärnor (2004) translated by Ebba Segerberg as The Cruel Stars of the Night (2008)
  • Mannen från bergen (2004) translated by Ebba Segerberg as The Demon of Dakar (2009)
  • Den hand som skälver (2007) translated by Ebba Segerberg as The Hand that Trembles (2011)
  • Svarta lögner, rött blod (2008) translated by Paul Norlen as Black Lies, Red Blood (2014)
  • Öppen grav (2009) translated by Paul Norlen as Open Grave (2015)
gollark: Perhaps I should try removing random packages.
gollark: I tried r/archlinux for *my* weird bug and got no useful responses.
gollark: ’¥E¡
gollark: PotatOS attempts to do sandboxing, and even though I am able to break backward compatibility with CC in a few places there are stil holes everywhere.
gollark: viluon: take it from me, proper sandboxing in CC is *extremely hard*.

References

  1. "The Princess of Burundi by Kjell Eriksson". Consulate General of Sweden: New York. Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 29 March 2010.
  2. "Svenska Deckarakademin" (Swedish). 1 May 2010. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
  3. "Kjell Ericsson" Archived 2013-11-03 at the Wayback Machine. Leonhardt & Høier Literary Agency. Retrieved 17 August 2015.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.