Roslund/Hellström

Roslund & Hellström is a Swedish crime writing duo composed of journalist Anders Roslund (born 1961) and Börge Hellström (19572017), a famous debater on the Swedish correctional system. Since 2004 full time writers. Until then, Roslund for fifteen years worked as a news reporter, head of Culture News and head of news for Rapport News, Aktuellt and Kulturnyheterna. Hellström is an ex-con[1] and one of the founders of Kriminellas Revansch i Samhället (KRIS), an organisation fighting to prevent crime.[2]

The duo made their debut with the crime novel Odjuret (English translation: The Beast) in 2004. A recurring theme in their novels is the question of who is the real victim and who the criminal when a crime has been committed.

Their works have been translated into Japanese, Chinese, Korean, Indonesian, Russian, English, German, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, Polish, Lithuanian, Estonian, Romanian, Bulgarian, Slovenian, Croatian, Hungarian, Slovak, Czech, Icelandic, Finnish, Danish, Norwegian, Hebrew, Turkish, Greek, Macedonian and Catalan.

Bibliography

  • Odjuret (2004, published in English as The Beast)
  • Box 21 (2005, published in English in England as The Vault and in the United States as Box 21[3])
  • Edward Finnigans upprättelse (2006, published in English in 2011 as Cell 8)
  • Flickan under gatan (2007)
  • Tre sekunder (2009, published in English in 2010 as Three Seconds)
  • Två soldater (2012, published in English in 2013 as Two Soldiers)
  • Tre Minuter (2016, will be published in English in 2017 as Three Minutes)

Prizes, awards and recognition

  • Awarded Glasnyckeln (The Glass Key Award) in 2005 for Odjuret
  • Nominated for Best Swedish Crime Novel in 2005 by Svenska Deckarakademin for Box 21
  • Awarded Stockholm City Newspaper's Book of the Year in 2005 for Box 21
  • Awarded Guldpocket (Gold Pocket) for The Year's Most Sold Swedish Crime Novel (more than 50 000 copies sold) in 2005 for Odjuret
  • Nominated for Best Swedish Crime Novel in 2006 by Svenska Deckarakademin for Edward Finnigans upprättelse
  • Awarded Platinapocket (The Platinum Pocket) for The Year's Most Sold Swedish Crime Novel (more than 100,000 copies sold) in 2006 for Box 21
  • Awarded Best Romanian Crime Novel by Romanian Crime Writers Club - Box 21
  • Nominated for Bookseller's Prize - Box 21
  • Awarded Platinapocket (The Platinum Pocket) for The Year's Most Sold Swedish Crime Novel (more than 100,000 copies sold) in 2007 for "Edward Finnigans Upprättelse"
  • Nominated for Bookseller's Prize - "Edward Finnigans Upprättelse"
  • Nominated for Best Swedish Crime Novel in 2007 by Svenska Deckarakademin for Flickan under gatan
  • Awarded Platinapocket (The Platinum Pocket) for The Year's Most Sold Swedish Crime Novel (more than 100,000 copies sold) in 2008 for "Flickan Under Gatan"
  • Awarded Best Swedish Crime Novel 2010 - "Tre Sekunder"
  • Recognized on the New York Times list of Notable Crime Fiction for 2009
  • Awarded The Great Reader's Prize 2010 - "Tre Sekunder"
  • Nominated for Glasnyckeln (The Glass Key Award) in 2010 for 'Tre Sekunder
  • Awarded Platinapocket (The Platinum Pocket) for The Year's Most Sold Swedish Crime Novel (more than 100,000 copies sold) in 2010 for "Tre Sekunder"
  • Awarded The CWA International Dagger 2011 for The Best translated crime, thriller, suspense or spy fiction novel, for UK publication. - "Three Seconds"
  • Nominated for The Barry Award for Best Britisth Crime Novel 2011 - "Three Seconds"
  • Nominated for Best Swedish Crime Novel 2013 - "Två Soldater"
  • Nominated for The CWA International Dagger 2013 for The Best translated crime, thriller, suspense or spy fiction novel, for UK publication. - "Two Soldiers"
  • Nominated for Best Swedish Crime Novel 2013 - "Tre Minuter"

See also

References

  1. Maslin, Janet (5 January 2011). "Stoking the Fire Larsson Ignited". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 January 2010.
  2. "Ett lyckat samarbete" (Swedish). Piratförlaget AB. Retrieved 6 June 2010.
  3. Roslund; Hellström (2009). Box 21. New York City: Sarah Crichton Books. ISBN 978-0-374-28295-0.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.