Book description
Almost 20 years since he first appeared in Henning Mankel's novel
Faceless Killers, the sad Swedish detective Kurt Wallander has become
a worldwide success story. Mankel's compelling books about the
idealistic police inspector -- who is even more miserable that Morse
-- have sold more than 30 million copies in 43 different languages and
inspired more than 25 film adaptations. In Europe, readers took
instantly to the troubled, lonely cop with his horrendous health
problems and catastrophic home life. The nine Wallander novels became
runaway bestsellers all over Europe, but in Britain and the United
States success was slower to take off. But now, since Kenneth Branagh
has taken on the central role in the acclaimed and award-winning BBC
series, British and American fans have really taken Wallander to their
hearts. The popularity of the character has turned the small Swedish
town of Ystad into one of the country's top tourist attractions and
many British and American visitors are joining the queue to visit
murder scenes and immerse themselves in the bleak landscape made
famous on screen. Yet Wallander is much more than just another TV
crime series. Henning Mankel invented the caring policeman as a
vehicle to write about the disturbing increase in violence and racism
that was undermining the comfortable social democracy of Sweden. Those
problems are as international as Wallander's appeal.
Stafford Hildred is one of Britain's best-known television critics
and showbusiness writers, with a long career in the media. He has
previously written and co-written an array of bestselling biographies
whose subjects include John Thaw, David Beckham, Roy Keane, Rod Stewart
and Jamie Oliver.