A&E
April 20, 2004 | Globe Staff
The Return of the Dancing Master , By Henning Mankell, The New Press, 392 pp., $24.95 Most fans of crime novels know Henning Mankell from the nine books featuring Kurt Wallander, a tired but trustworthy police investigator in Ystad, Sweden. But with Wallander approaching retirement, Mankell has looked for younger blood to deal with the increasingly blood-soaked goings-on in Sweden. The next Wallander novel will feature Linda Wallander, Kurt's daughter, who is going to follow in his footsteps.
A&E
June 7, 2007 | Ed Siegel
Depths , By Henning Mankell, Translated from Swedish by Laurie Thompson, New Press, 403 pp., $26.95 All of Henning Mankell's characters, even those on the side of the angels, have a hole in their soul deep enough to drive an existential truck through. Kurt Wallander , his standing detective, is perhaps the most depressive recurring figure in crime fiction. So when Mankell titles a book "Depths," you can bet he's not just talking about the measurements that his protagonist, a naval officer, is engaged in around the Stockholm archipelago during World...
NEWS
February 10, 2005 | Globe Staff
Before the Frost: A Linda Wallander Mystery , By Henning Mankell Translated, from Swedish, by Ebba Segerberg, New Press, 383 pp, $24.95 Henning Mankell is crime fiction's master juggler. Few of this genre's writers -- few of any genre's writers -- have been able to balance the ordinary and the grotesque with such literary dash and page-turning brio. In fact the Swedish writer himself hasn't done it as well as he does in his latest, "Before the Frost. " Here we have one new central character, Linda Wallander, dealing with two of Mankell's...
NEWS
July 4, 2006 | Ed Siegel, Globe Correspondent
Chronicler of the Winds , By Henning Mankell, Translated, from the Swedish, by Tiina Nunnally, New Press, 233 pp., $24.95 Henning Mankell is best known to the English-speaking world as a writer whose superb crime novels spring from a profound dissatisfaction with the ways of the world. It should come as no surprise, then, that Mankell is a celebrated playwright and novelist in his native Sweden as well as in Mozambique, where he is director of Teatro Avenida. It's his love of, and dissatisfaction with, Africa that shape his 1995 novel, "Chronicler of the Winds," which has just...
A&E
June 9, 2009 | Ed Siegel, Globe Correspondent
Kurt Wallander might be the most depressive standing detective in crime fiction, but he seems like Kenneth the page from "30 Rock" compared with the protagonists in Henning Mankell's non-genre fiction. Meet Frederik Welin. He lives on his own private island where he cuts a hole in the ice and jumps in every day to feel alive. And, this being Scandinavia, such a ritual by the 66-year-old makes the daily dip by the L Street Brownies look like a dive into a heated indoor pool. And did we mention his dog and cat?
A&E
October 2, 2010 | Matthew Gilbert, Globe Staff
Masterpiece Mystery! Tomorrow at 9 p.m., Channel 2 One of the best recent additions to the PBS family of detectives is Kenneth Branagh’s Kurt Wallander (pictured), a Swedish inspector adapted from the novels by Henning Mankell. Branagh’s Wallander is a weary, rundown fellow who has a reserve of righteous fury right below the surface. The three episodes in 2009 offered compelling crime mysteries and beautiful cinematography, and tomorrow night PBS introduces the first of three new installments.