Anna Jansson

Anna Maria Angelika Jansson (born 13 February 1958) is a Swedish crime writer and nurse from Visby, Gotland. She started her career as a surgeon nurse, but soon went over to the lung clinic due to her frequent fainting from seeing blood.[1]

Anna Jansson
Anna Jansson
Born (1958-02-13) 13 February 1958
Visby, Gotland
OccupationNurse, author
NationalitySwedish
GenreCrime fiction, children's books

Jansson began writing novels in 1997 after her family bought a computer.[2] At this time she had worked as a nurse for twenty years, and although she still enjoyed her occupation, she felt it was time to try something new.[1] Jansson commented: "In school I hated writing essays, but then we got a computer at home, and suddenly I discovered that I actually felt happy as I was writing."[1] A contributing factor to Jansson's decision to pursue her career as an author was her patients; she often met patients that were about to die and she was told that they regretted the fact that they had not spent much time in life doing what they really wanted.[1]

The inspiration for Jansson's novels, which deal with crimes, came from the patients she met in her job as a nurse.[1] Jansson's first crime novel to be published was Stum sitter guden in 2000. She had written two novels prior to this one, but failed to find a publisher for them.[2] Jansson did not give up on her career as a nurse, and continued to work part-time at the Örebro Hospital while writing in her free time.[1] Since 2000, she has published at least one novel each year. Her latest ones have sold over 100,000 copies each.[1] In addition to this, Jansson has written a number of children's books.[1]

Jansson's crime novels take place in Gotland and the main character in all of them is criminal inspector Maria Wern.[3][4] Her 2006 novel Främmande fågel was nominated for a Glass Key award in 2007,[4] and was adapted into a television show by TV4 in 2008.[5]

Despite her now successful career as a writer, Jansson still works part-time as a nurse at Örebro Hospital's lung clinic.[1][6] She has three children and lives in Vintrosa outside of Örebro.[1]

Bibliography

Anna Jansson at the 2008 Gothenburg Book Fair

Translated Crime novels

  • 2013 – Strange Bird
  • 2014 – Killer's Island

Crime novels

  • 2000 – Stum sitter guden
  • 2001 – Alla de stillsamma döda
  • 2002 – Må döden sova
  • 2003 – Silverkronan
  • 2003 – Dömd för mord
  • 2004 – Drömmar ur snö
  • 2005 – Svart fjäril
  • 2006 – Främmande fågel
  • 2007 – I stormen ska du dö
  • 2007 – Pojke försvunnen
  • 2008 – Inte ens det förflutna
  • 2008 – Hantverkarsvett är dyrare än saffran
  • 2009 – Först när givaren är död
  • 2010 – Drömmen förde dej vilse
  • 2011 – Alkemins eviga eld
  • 2012 – När Skönheten kom till Bro
  • 2013 – Dans på glödande kol
  • 2014 – Skymningens barfotabarn
  • 2014 – Ödesgudinnan på Salong d'Amour
  • 2015 – Alla kan se dig
  • 2016 – Rädslans fångar
  • 2017 - Det du inte vet
  • 2018 - Kvinnan på bänken

Children's books

  • Ditt och mitt, 2007
  • Ingen att vara med, 2007
  • Modigt Mia, 2007
  • Monster finns, 2007
  • Kojan, 2007
  • Mia frågar chans, 2007
  • Det brinner, 2007
  • En varulv, 2007

References

  1. Lagerblad, Anna (2007-07-08). "Karriärbyte mitt i livet". E24 Näringsliv (in Swedish). Stockholm. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  2. "Världsbokdagen firas med besök av deckarförfattaren Anna Jansson". Hällekis-Kuriren (in Swedish). Hällekis. 2009-04-09. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  3. "Mord i gotländsk sommarnatt". Dala-Demokraten (in Swedish). Falun. 2004-05-14. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  4. "Anna Jansson årets kandidat till Glasnyckeln" (in Swedish). Visby: Gotland.net. 2007-03-27. Archived from the original on 2011-07-23. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  5. Redvall, Eva (2007-07-13). "Anna Janssons deckare blir tv-serie". Sydsvenskan (in Swedish). Malmö. Archived from the original on 2009-12-24. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
  6. "Lunchvanor och Anna Jansson" (in Swedish). Stockholm: Sveriges Radio. 2009-05-24. Retrieved 2009-12-21.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.