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Death
In A Cold Climate
A Guide to Scandinavian
Crime Fiction

by Barry Forshaw

Published Jan 2012
Available
from Amazon

Crime Time is edited
by Barry Forshaw


More Crime News

Modern Day Cold War Thriller To Harvill Secker
Announcement at booktrade.info

A Night Of Crime In Belgravia
order from amazon.co.uk

Century Buys Chatterton Crime Debut
order from amazon.co.uk

WEB NEWS, FEATURES & REVIEWS

feature: Ten Great Crime Novels That You Should Have Read
www.sabotagetimes.com

There's a kind of novel that can only be a crime novel. They are short. They are sharp – ostentatiously so - they are cool and the people are cold.

news: Modern Day Cold War Thriller To Harvill Secker
www.booktrade.info

Alison Hennessey, Senior Crime Editor at Harvill Secker, has acquired World English Language rights to thriller Plan D by Simon Urban

feature: The Year of Translated TV Dramas
eurocrime.blogspot.com

The announcements have been coming thick and fast over the last few days regarding new to the UK dramas from mainland Europe

review: Vanished By Liza Marklund
www.amazon.co.uk

This is a strange mix

feature: The Blaggers Guide To George Pelecanos
www.independent.co.uk

The man Obama likes to take on holiday

feature: Altar Of Bones: A Literary Sensation But Who Dunnit?
www.amazon.co.uk

The publication of a crime thriller whose plot rests on a global conspiracy is fast inspiring its own, real-life literary conspiracy

Forshaw First Out Of The Gate With Stieg Larsson Bio

A host of books on the late Steig Larsson are being written - or have been written — but Barry Forshaw's The Man Who Left Too Soon: The Biography of Stieg Larsson — will be first out of the gate in the UK, published in April by John Blake.

Forshaw (who has written on Larsson for The Times, The Independent and The Express) has spoken to Larsson's confidants, family, various publishers, editors, translators, film people and many authors (Scandinavian and otherwise) — and has tried to ensure all the recent developments are included. The main emphasis, though, is on the books (with much analysis, plus an overview of Nordic crime fiction) and the whole Larsson phenomenon. And, he says, it's certainly no hagiography...

Barry Forshaw's review of The Girl with The Dragon Tattoo in The Independent:

http://artsandentertainment.independentminds.livejournal.com/1123193.html

Related Links
Independent >>

Posted at 9:29PM Monday 01 Mar 2010

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