
If you haven't read the books, I highly recommend you give it a try. It will be quite a unique experience. For those who already did, here are some articles I enjoyed as additional reading after finishing the trilogy. For those who haven't, you can of course read them as a review to gauge your interest in the series, but there will be a lot of spoilers, so don't say I didn't warn you.
QUOTE(The man behind the Millennium trilogy @ http://isreview.org/issue/77/man-behind-millennium-trilogy )
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IT MAY come as a surprise to learn that, since 2008, tens of millions of people worldwide have read the books of a Marxist and a committed antifascist. The books are not political titles, but a crime fiction trilogy written by Stieg Larsson. The Millennium trilogy, written before the author’s life was cut short at the age of 50 by a heart attack, includes The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire, and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Next. These books have sold over 21 million copies in forty-one countries, posthumously making Larsson the world’s second-best-selling author in 2008. With so many readers, it seems appropriate to discuss the connection between Larsson’s political legacy and his fiction. Our side should celebrate Larsson not only as a good storyteller, but also as a Marxist and a journalist for the left. His characters and the plots shine a spotlight on the ills and realities of a rigged society.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo starts out slow and convoluted, like a chore the reader must get through, but, once hooked, there is no going back. A summary cannot do justice to the precision, detail and well-thought-out nature of the novels. But rather than giving a comprehensive overview of the plots, this review aims to outline some of the major themes in a way that introduces the Marxist perspective behind these stories, a feature that is either glossed over or absent in many literary reviews and biographical pieces about the author.
The Millenium trilogy centers around two protagonists, Mikael Blomkvist and Lisbeth Salander, who, in each book respectively, work together to solve a thirty-year-old murder mystery, to uncover a sex-trafficking ring that is aided by the government, and to defend themselves against state repression. Blomkvist, a journalist for a magazine called Millennium, is known for his exposés of powerful people in Sweden. Lisbeth Salander, simultaneously a victim and hero of the stories, is, for many readers, the most engrossing aspect of the books. Information about her life and her difficult past are slowly uncovered over the course of the books. She is an enigmatic and powerful figure from the beginning. She hacks computers like a pro and has a gift for digging up dirt on anyone. But soon into the first book she becomes much more integral to the plot than just a computer hacker.
When he was still alive, Stieg Larsson was primarily known as an expert on Sweden’s far right. Since the 1970s, his life work was devoted to building antiracist struggles and fighting fascism in his home country. His interest in the issue was sparked during his childhood by his grandfather, who helped raise him—and who was imprisoned for being a communist and an antifascist during the Second World War.1
Larsson was an activist and a writer from a young age. He began merging his politics and his writing during the anti-Vietnam War movement. According to his father: “Stieg was young and leaning towards the left. In Sweden at the time, in every town, on every Saturday, young people would be marching, shouting, ‘Out of Vietnam!’ Stieg was one of those young people and he started writing about the Vietnam War.”
Through activism he found the Communist Workers’ League (today called the Socialist Party), a Trotskyist organization in Sweden that belonged to the 4th International. He was an active member for many years. The young activist’s views were further impressed by his experience in Africa, where he brought money and training he had learned in the military to help in the bloody civil war in Eritrea. Larsson’s life was, from this time on, cemented forever with a need to stand up against fascism, religious intolerance, and racism.
When the far right wing in Sweden began making inroads in the early 1980s, Larsson helped launch Stoppa Rasismen (Stop Racism) an organization inspired by the British Anti-Nazi League that organized counter-protests of Nazi groups. Through this work, Larsson began writing for the British anti-fascist magazine Searchlight, reporting on developments in Sweden. A whole decade before the writer began writing fiction, he published his first book called Right Wing Extremists in 1991, the same year that conservative parties made big headway electorally for the first time since 1928. In response, a neo-Nazi newspaper wrote an article that included his full name as well as a photo of the author, and asked readers: “Should he be allowed to continue his work, or should something be done?”2
In 1995, four years after the target was painted on Larsson’s back for any right-wing zealot to see, eight leftists, many of who were colleagues and acquaintances of Larsson’s, were murdered by the right. This was the final impetus for Larsson to found Expo, a Swedish version of Searchlight devoted to exposing neo-Nazis. From that point on, all of Larsson’s political energy went towards using journalism as a tool to fight fascism in Sweden. His passion for opposing the right through journalism led him away from being active in the Communist Worker’s League, though he never abandoned his principles of being against all forms of oppression and for workers’ power.
Today there is a legal battle over Larsson’s legacy. He and his partner Eva Gabrielsson (who is also a revolutionary and an activist), despite sharing their lives, were never married because Swedish law dictates married couples must make their home address public. For obvious reasons, this was not an option for the two.
So Larsson’s estate, including the millions made from the rights to the Millennium series were granted to his father and his brother, who, it seems, he had very little connection to. In an interview with the author’s father, Erland Larsson, he asserts that “Stieg was never a communist,” a statement that is hard to believe, considering that a copy of a will written by his son but never officially witnessed would have left everything to his branch of the Communist Workers’ League.
The battle between his blood relatives and his partner for the rights to the books continues. Gabrielsson currently possesses three-quarters of the fourth book in the series, which she has said she will not release unless she is given full creative control. She has launched a campaign that has generated a lot of public support for the case for her late partner’s estate that will culminate in the release of a memoir called The Year After Stieg.
Larsson’s hatred of the far right comes through strongly in his fiction. His books challenge the view of Sweden as a “socialist paradise” and provide insight into the political reality of the country. While there are many left-wing parties in Sweden, there is also a long history of Nazi sympathies and extreme racism and sexism that come a long with it. The theme of fascists and Nazi sympathizers both in and out of government is sprinkled throughout the books.
The major theme in the books is sexual violence, the thread that runs most centrally throughout the trilogy. The original title of the first book—Men Who Hate Women—seems more appropriate than The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, the name by which the U.S. audience knows it. Larsson continually draws attention to just how commonplace rape and sexual assault are and how it is both a problem of individual men who hate women and of the whole social system that thrives off of the oppression. From the moment that Lisbeth Salander enters the plot, so too does this major theme.
Stemming from a vaguely-drawn troubled childhood, she is considered an incompetent adult and has had a guardian her entire adult life. When her longtime guardian, friend and supporter has a stroke, she is put in the custody of one Nils Bjurman. Her new guardian is not like the old. Bjurman berates Salander with inappropriate questions about her sex life and hygiene. The abuse from Salander’s new guardian escalates to a horrific rape scene for which she will seek revenge. As the narration explains: “By the time she was eighteen, Salander did not know a single girl who at some point had not been forced to perform some sort of sexual act against her will…. In her world, this was the natural order of things. As a girl she was legal prey.”
The violence that Lisbeth and other characters experience occurs in situations where turning to police or other authorities is not an option, particularly because those committing the abuse are most often intertwined with the state or are authority figures themselves (like Salander’s so-called guardian). The world is stacked against women, and the only opportunity Salander and other female characters have is to fight like hell against their attackers.
Critics of the novels have said that the sexual violence is gratuitous. As one reviewer wrote: “I finished Larsson’s novel with the uncomfortable sense it used a good mystery as an excuse to dwell on sadism and perversity—an aspect only exacerbated on screen.”3
However, when the context of the dangerous reality that women face in Sweden is taken into account, the violence takes on a much more powerful message than simple “perversion.” Sweden is a country broadly thought to be progressive on women’s issues, where women have long paid maternity leaves, socialized childcare and even a Feminist party (“Feminist Initiative” is the name of the party in English) that gets a sizable percentage of the vote. And yet statistics of sexual assault remain incredibly high, even after feminists fought and won stricter judicial penalties for prosecuted offenders.
In a subtle way, Larsson points out just how ingrained the oppression of women is to the fabric of society and that justice cannot come from relying on the institutions of the system but only from oppressed people fighting back, as Salander does. Beyond this, Larsson’s plots also challenge traditional gender roles. It is Salander and not the male protagonist Mikael Blomkvist who ultimately saves the day in the books. And while Blomkvist helps Salander in important ways, he is helpless when it comes to defending himself or others physically.
An active middle-aged man who takes on social villains through his journalism, Mikael Blomkvist is a rather clear literary reflection of his creator. Larsson spent many years of his life exposing fascism in his home country just as Blomkvist does through the Millennium trilogy. Both were committed to publishing truths that the mainstream media and the government actively try to hide. Blomkvist is not a political activist, but through a sober look at facts finds himself on the side of the oppressed and against individual capitalists and government corruption that collaborates with criminals at the expense of people’s lives.
The details of Stieg Larsson’s life go hand in hand with his novels. Many mainstream articles about the mystery series mention his political life as a side note, but make only superficial connections between the content of the stories and his outlook on the world. Larsson’s friends say that the writer would be up all day working on Expo and would then stay up all night writing these novels. The books are not so much an escape as a reflection, in a different context and with a different outcome, of the reality that Larsson lived as a man taking on powerful and villainous characters in society—much in the same way as his protagonists do in his novels.
The backdrop of Larsson’s novels is a Sweden where the state and the criminal elements of society are combined, where government-run institutions carry out the dirty work of government criminals, where women face endless gradations of sexism and where the mainstream media are run by corporate bigwigs. But it is also a world where those who push back against the powers that be can expose these ills and win retribution—a view that comes out through the series in an understated yet powerful way. Like his journalism, Larsson’s novels put forth the basic viewpoint that the world we live in is rotten from the inside out but that, when we fight back, we can effect change.
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo starts out slow and convoluted, like a chore the reader must get through, but, once hooked, there is no going back. A summary cannot do justice to the precision, detail and well-thought-out nature of the novels. But rather than giving a comprehensive overview of the plots, this review aims to outline some of the major themes in a way that introduces the Marxist perspective behind these stories, a feature that is either glossed over or absent in many literary reviews and biographical pieces about the author.
The Millenium trilogy centers around two protagonists, Mikael Blomkvist and Lisbeth Salander, who, in each book respectively, work together to solve a thirty-year-old murder mystery, to uncover a sex-trafficking ring that is aided by the government, and to defend themselves against state repression. Blomkvist, a journalist for a magazine called Millennium, is known for his exposés of powerful people in Sweden. Lisbeth Salander, simultaneously a victim and hero of the stories, is, for many readers, the most engrossing aspect of the books. Information about her life and her difficult past are slowly uncovered over the course of the books. She is an enigmatic and powerful figure from the beginning. She hacks computers like a pro and has a gift for digging up dirt on anyone. But soon into the first book she becomes much more integral to the plot than just a computer hacker.
When he was still alive, Stieg Larsson was primarily known as an expert on Sweden’s far right. Since the 1970s, his life work was devoted to building antiracist struggles and fighting fascism in his home country. His interest in the issue was sparked during his childhood by his grandfather, who helped raise him—and who was imprisoned for being a communist and an antifascist during the Second World War.1
Larsson was an activist and a writer from a young age. He began merging his politics and his writing during the anti-Vietnam War movement. According to his father: “Stieg was young and leaning towards the left. In Sweden at the time, in every town, on every Saturday, young people would be marching, shouting, ‘Out of Vietnam!’ Stieg was one of those young people and he started writing about the Vietnam War.”
Through activism he found the Communist Workers’ League (today called the Socialist Party), a Trotskyist organization in Sweden that belonged to the 4th International. He was an active member for many years. The young activist’s views were further impressed by his experience in Africa, where he brought money and training he had learned in the military to help in the bloody civil war in Eritrea. Larsson’s life was, from this time on, cemented forever with a need to stand up against fascism, religious intolerance, and racism.
When the far right wing in Sweden began making inroads in the early 1980s, Larsson helped launch Stoppa Rasismen (Stop Racism) an organization inspired by the British Anti-Nazi League that organized counter-protests of Nazi groups. Through this work, Larsson began writing for the British anti-fascist magazine Searchlight, reporting on developments in Sweden. A whole decade before the writer began writing fiction, he published his first book called Right Wing Extremists in 1991, the same year that conservative parties made big headway electorally for the first time since 1928. In response, a neo-Nazi newspaper wrote an article that included his full name as well as a photo of the author, and asked readers: “Should he be allowed to continue his work, or should something be done?”2
In 1995, four years after the target was painted on Larsson’s back for any right-wing zealot to see, eight leftists, many of who were colleagues and acquaintances of Larsson’s, were murdered by the right. This was the final impetus for Larsson to found Expo, a Swedish version of Searchlight devoted to exposing neo-Nazis. From that point on, all of Larsson’s political energy went towards using journalism as a tool to fight fascism in Sweden. His passion for opposing the right through journalism led him away from being active in the Communist Worker’s League, though he never abandoned his principles of being against all forms of oppression and for workers’ power.
Today there is a legal battle over Larsson’s legacy. He and his partner Eva Gabrielsson (who is also a revolutionary and an activist), despite sharing their lives, were never married because Swedish law dictates married couples must make their home address public. For obvious reasons, this was not an option for the two.
So Larsson’s estate, including the millions made from the rights to the Millennium series were granted to his father and his brother, who, it seems, he had very little connection to. In an interview with the author’s father, Erland Larsson, he asserts that “Stieg was never a communist,” a statement that is hard to believe, considering that a copy of a will written by his son but never officially witnessed would have left everything to his branch of the Communist Workers’ League.
The battle between his blood relatives and his partner for the rights to the books continues. Gabrielsson currently possesses three-quarters of the fourth book in the series, which she has said she will not release unless she is given full creative control. She has launched a campaign that has generated a lot of public support for the case for her late partner’s estate that will culminate in the release of a memoir called The Year After Stieg.
Larsson’s hatred of the far right comes through strongly in his fiction. His books challenge the view of Sweden as a “socialist paradise” and provide insight into the political reality of the country. While there are many left-wing parties in Sweden, there is also a long history of Nazi sympathies and extreme racism and sexism that come a long with it. The theme of fascists and Nazi sympathizers both in and out of government is sprinkled throughout the books.
The major theme in the books is sexual violence, the thread that runs most centrally throughout the trilogy. The original title of the first book—Men Who Hate Women—seems more appropriate than The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, the name by which the U.S. audience knows it. Larsson continually draws attention to just how commonplace rape and sexual assault are and how it is both a problem of individual men who hate women and of the whole social system that thrives off of the oppression. From the moment that Lisbeth Salander enters the plot, so too does this major theme.
Stemming from a vaguely-drawn troubled childhood, she is considered an incompetent adult and has had a guardian her entire adult life. When her longtime guardian, friend and supporter has a stroke, she is put in the custody of one Nils Bjurman. Her new guardian is not like the old. Bjurman berates Salander with inappropriate questions about her sex life and hygiene. The abuse from Salander’s new guardian escalates to a horrific rape scene for which she will seek revenge. As the narration explains: “By the time she was eighteen, Salander did not know a single girl who at some point had not been forced to perform some sort of sexual act against her will…. In her world, this was the natural order of things. As a girl she was legal prey.”
The violence that Lisbeth and other characters experience occurs in situations where turning to police or other authorities is not an option, particularly because those committing the abuse are most often intertwined with the state or are authority figures themselves (like Salander’s so-called guardian). The world is stacked against women, and the only opportunity Salander and other female characters have is to fight like hell against their attackers.
Critics of the novels have said that the sexual violence is gratuitous. As one reviewer wrote: “I finished Larsson’s novel with the uncomfortable sense it used a good mystery as an excuse to dwell on sadism and perversity—an aspect only exacerbated on screen.”3
However, when the context of the dangerous reality that women face in Sweden is taken into account, the violence takes on a much more powerful message than simple “perversion.” Sweden is a country broadly thought to be progressive on women’s issues, where women have long paid maternity leaves, socialized childcare and even a Feminist party (“Feminist Initiative” is the name of the party in English) that gets a sizable percentage of the vote. And yet statistics of sexual assault remain incredibly high, even after feminists fought and won stricter judicial penalties for prosecuted offenders.
In a subtle way, Larsson points out just how ingrained the oppression of women is to the fabric of society and that justice cannot come from relying on the institutions of the system but only from oppressed people fighting back, as Salander does. Beyond this, Larsson’s plots also challenge traditional gender roles. It is Salander and not the male protagonist Mikael Blomkvist who ultimately saves the day in the books. And while Blomkvist helps Salander in important ways, he is helpless when it comes to defending himself or others physically.
An active middle-aged man who takes on social villains through his journalism, Mikael Blomkvist is a rather clear literary reflection of his creator. Larsson spent many years of his life exposing fascism in his home country just as Blomkvist does through the Millennium trilogy. Both were committed to publishing truths that the mainstream media and the government actively try to hide. Blomkvist is not a political activist, but through a sober look at facts finds himself on the side of the oppressed and against individual capitalists and government corruption that collaborates with criminals at the expense of people’s lives.
The details of Stieg Larsson’s life go hand in hand with his novels. Many mainstream articles about the mystery series mention his political life as a side note, but make only superficial connections between the content of the stories and his outlook on the world. Larsson’s friends say that the writer would be up all day working on Expo and would then stay up all night writing these novels. The books are not so much an escape as a reflection, in a different context and with a different outcome, of the reality that Larsson lived as a man taking on powerful and villainous characters in society—much in the same way as his protagonists do in his novels.
The backdrop of Larsson’s novels is a Sweden where the state and the criminal elements of society are combined, where government-run institutions carry out the dirty work of government criminals, where women face endless gradations of sexism and where the mainstream media are run by corporate bigwigs. But it is also a world where those who push back against the powers that be can expose these ills and win retribution—a view that comes out through the series in an understated yet powerful way. Like his journalism, Larsson’s novels put forth the basic viewpoint that the world we live in is rotten from the inside out but that, when we fight back, we can effect change.
QUOTE(How a brutal rape and a lifelong burden of guilt fuelled Girl with the Dragon Tattoo writer Stieg Larsson @ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12...rutal-rape.html)
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» Click to show Spoiler - click again to hide... «
The chapel in southern Stockholm was packed on that icy December day in 2004. We filed past the coffin to pay our respects, whispering final messages to Stieg Larsson.
The Stieg we were mourning was a tireless hero in the fight against neo-Nazism, but the man the world now remembers is someone quite different - the author of one of the biggest, least expected publishing successes of modern times.
His crime novels - The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played With Fire and The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest - were published after his death, have sold 30million copies and have made Stieg Larsson a global celebrity.
People beg me to sign his books, simply because I was his friend. A critically-acclaimed Swedish film version of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo has already been released and now Hollywood is planning its own take, with Carey Mulligan and Daniel Craig rumoured as stars.
Despite the acclaim, however, Stieg remains a man of secrets. Before his death few people knew he was writing his novels, and he was intensely private, rarely talking about the first 20 years of his life. On one occasion though, he told me a chilling story about something in his past that drove his passion and creativity.
I did not know the whole story but I was given the bare but brutal details. As a fellow journalist and former colleague of Stieg's, I wanted to know more. In short, who was Stieg, and what fuelled his writing? I found out - and uncovered the dark secret behind The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.
A year after Stieg's death from a heart attack, the journalist in me was still asking questions. No human being is capable of working as hard as he did. Did he do it to achieve ambitious goals or was it a form of escapism?
Stieg had so many secrets - the most extreme was the trilogy that he wrote at night. That was unusual enough, but stranger still was the fact that he waited to complete three thumping great novels before submitting them to a publisher.
Stieg was born in 1954, the son of a decorator and a shop worker. The family moved often when he was young. Stieg had also worked as a dishwasher before completing his two years of national service with an infantry regiment.
As I traced Stieg's past, I felt a kinship with him. I, too, was forced to move frequently because of my father's political activities in the Kurdish part of South-East Turkey. In 1980, when I was a teenager, I moved to Stockholm.
Like many of his generation, Stieg had grown up with a political vision - in his case, Trotskyism. He became interested in politics as a teenager, attending a Vietnam War protest in 1972. It was there that he met Eva Gabrielsson, who would go on to become his partner.
The stereotypical crime novel begins with a phone call, usually in the early hours. That is how the story of Stieg and me also began in February 1992, even if it was not in the middle of the night. As I picked up the handset, the voice at the other end skipped the usual polite preliminaries: 'I hope I'm not disturbing you at an inconvenient moment. I have something important to discuss.'
I was on a strike committee in Stockholm, set up in reaction to a series of racist shootings by a gunman dubbed the Laser Man. Stieg wanted me to extend the action we had organised against the attacks to include all Swedish people, not just immigrants.
He said: 'Why is it only immigrants who are allowed to take part in the strike? How do you envisage including my solidarity with Swedish immigrants?'
We met face-to-face for the first time nine months later. After arriving an hour late for lunch, Stieg discussed Black And White, the anti-racist magazine I edited. He had helped found a magazine called Expo, which had similar aims, while at the same time working for a news agency.
Needless to say, magazines which scrutinise racists and neo-Nazis attract enemies. Expo staff received many death threats. In the worst incident, in 1999, a former member of its staff, his partner and their eight-year-old baby survived a car bomb attack.
The same year, shots were fired into my flat, a stone's throw from Stieg's house.
Stieg would often exaggerate threats aimed at people close to him, but trivialise those directed at him, taking few precautions to protect himself despite being shadowed by neo-Nazis.
He had no narcissistic or exhibitionist tendencies - he always wanted to be in the background, happy to take on work and share praise with others. He made sure he didn't appear in photographs.
Nonetheless, there was something electric about Stieg. If you managed to interpret the signals he sent out correctly, your whole environment was lit up. But if you misunderstood his intentions, he could burn everything that got in his way, including himself.
He was both a dream and a nightmare to work with.
People used to joke that he worked from 9 to 5 - that is, 9am until 5am the next morning. He was pushing himself to the limit, his bloodshot eyes betraying his exhaustion. He sometimes compared his sleeping habits to Winston Churchill's.
Whereas the wartime leader had champagne and cigars to sustain him, Stieg drank up to 20 cups of coffee a day and smoked two to three packets of cigarettes.
The only part of his body Stieg kept in trim was his brain - the rest of him had to survive as best it could.
He was fantastic with language, but far less so when it came to figures. As a result, Expo was always teetering towards bankruptcy, but he would not let it die.
In 1998, we agreed to merge our magazines. 'Behind closed doors I will be the editor, but I don't want my name linked publicly with the job,' he said.
'As usual, in other words,' I said. For the last ten years of Stieg's life, we met almost every day and regarded each other as close friends. Because he was 11 years older than me, Stieg called me his kid brother and I called him my big brother. It was a joke, but also a true reflection of our mutual trust.
He had mentioned to me in 1997 that he was writing a novel and I think this was the time he wrote the opening chapter of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. However, it became clear that Stieg was devoting more and more time to his writing when Eva phoned me at 2.15am one day in November 1999 to say tearfully that Stieg hadn't come home. He had fallen asleep on the office sofa.
The Stieg we were mourning was a tireless hero in the fight against neo-Nazism, but the man the world now remembers is someone quite different - the author of one of the biggest, least expected publishing successes of modern times.
His crime novels - The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played With Fire and The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet's Nest - were published after his death, have sold 30million copies and have made Stieg Larsson a global celebrity.
People beg me to sign his books, simply because I was his friend. A critically-acclaimed Swedish film version of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo has already been released and now Hollywood is planning its own take, with Carey Mulligan and Daniel Craig rumoured as stars.
Despite the acclaim, however, Stieg remains a man of secrets. Before his death few people knew he was writing his novels, and he was intensely private, rarely talking about the first 20 years of his life. On one occasion though, he told me a chilling story about something in his past that drove his passion and creativity.
I did not know the whole story but I was given the bare but brutal details. As a fellow journalist and former colleague of Stieg's, I wanted to know more. In short, who was Stieg, and what fuelled his writing? I found out - and uncovered the dark secret behind The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.
A year after Stieg's death from a heart attack, the journalist in me was still asking questions. No human being is capable of working as hard as he did. Did he do it to achieve ambitious goals or was it a form of escapism?
Stieg had so many secrets - the most extreme was the trilogy that he wrote at night. That was unusual enough, but stranger still was the fact that he waited to complete three thumping great novels before submitting them to a publisher.
Stieg was born in 1954, the son of a decorator and a shop worker. The family moved often when he was young. Stieg had also worked as a dishwasher before completing his two years of national service with an infantry regiment.
As I traced Stieg's past, I felt a kinship with him. I, too, was forced to move frequently because of my father's political activities in the Kurdish part of South-East Turkey. In 1980, when I was a teenager, I moved to Stockholm.
Like many of his generation, Stieg had grown up with a political vision - in his case, Trotskyism. He became interested in politics as a teenager, attending a Vietnam War protest in 1972. It was there that he met Eva Gabrielsson, who would go on to become his partner.
The stereotypical crime novel begins with a phone call, usually in the early hours. That is how the story of Stieg and me also began in February 1992, even if it was not in the middle of the night. As I picked up the handset, the voice at the other end skipped the usual polite preliminaries: 'I hope I'm not disturbing you at an inconvenient moment. I have something important to discuss.'
I was on a strike committee in Stockholm, set up in reaction to a series of racist shootings by a gunman dubbed the Laser Man. Stieg wanted me to extend the action we had organised against the attacks to include all Swedish people, not just immigrants.
He said: 'Why is it only immigrants who are allowed to take part in the strike? How do you envisage including my solidarity with Swedish immigrants?'
We met face-to-face for the first time nine months later. After arriving an hour late for lunch, Stieg discussed Black And White, the anti-racist magazine I edited. He had helped found a magazine called Expo, which had similar aims, while at the same time working for a news agency.
Needless to say, magazines which scrutinise racists and neo-Nazis attract enemies. Expo staff received many death threats. In the worst incident, in 1999, a former member of its staff, his partner and their eight-year-old baby survived a car bomb attack.
The same year, shots were fired into my flat, a stone's throw from Stieg's house.
Stieg would often exaggerate threats aimed at people close to him, but trivialise those directed at him, taking few precautions to protect himself despite being shadowed by neo-Nazis.
He had no narcissistic or exhibitionist tendencies - he always wanted to be in the background, happy to take on work and share praise with others. He made sure he didn't appear in photographs.
Nonetheless, there was something electric about Stieg. If you managed to interpret the signals he sent out correctly, your whole environment was lit up. But if you misunderstood his intentions, he could burn everything that got in his way, including himself.
He was both a dream and a nightmare to work with.
People used to joke that he worked from 9 to 5 - that is, 9am until 5am the next morning. He was pushing himself to the limit, his bloodshot eyes betraying his exhaustion. He sometimes compared his sleeping habits to Winston Churchill's.
Whereas the wartime leader had champagne and cigars to sustain him, Stieg drank up to 20 cups of coffee a day and smoked two to three packets of cigarettes.
The only part of his body Stieg kept in trim was his brain - the rest of him had to survive as best it could.
He was fantastic with language, but far less so when it came to figures. As a result, Expo was always teetering towards bankruptcy, but he would not let it die.
In 1998, we agreed to merge our magazines. 'Behind closed doors I will be the editor, but I don't want my name linked publicly with the job,' he said.
'As usual, in other words,' I said. For the last ten years of Stieg's life, we met almost every day and regarded each other as close friends. Because he was 11 years older than me, Stieg called me his kid brother and I called him my big brother. It was a joke, but also a true reflection of our mutual trust.
He had mentioned to me in 1997 that he was writing a novel and I think this was the time he wrote the opening chapter of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. However, it became clear that Stieg was devoting more and more time to his writing when Eva phoned me at 2.15am one day in November 1999 to say tearfully that Stieg hadn't come home. He had fallen asleep on the office sofa.
While he was shaping his novels, two events affected Stieg emotionally. In November 2001, model Melissa Nordell was murdered by her Swedish boyfriend because he refused to respect her wish to break off their relationship. Every time Melissa's name or fate was mentioned, Stieg's eyes would fill with tears. He could not accept someone could be denied their freedom simply because of their gender.
Two months later, Fadime Sahindal, a Swedish-Kurdish woman, was murdered by her father. She was killed because she wanted to lead her own life, to go her own way.
'Every day, all over the world, women are mutilated, murdered, ill-treated or circumcised by men rich and poor,' Stieg told me soon after the killings.
'It might happen in South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Norway, Mexico, Tibet or Iran. But the fact is that there's no such thing as soft or hard oppression of women: men want to own women, they want to control women, they are afraid of women. Men hate women. The oppression of women has nothing to do with religion or ethnicity.'
This is why Stieg refused to change the title of his first novel. In Sweden it was called Men Who Hate Women, although it was often changed in translated versions to The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.
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Although he had written several books about racism, Stieg wanted to become a bestselling author - not to make himself rich, but to earn enough money to continue to publish Expo.
Stieg had premonitions that his trilogy would be a success, and he thought he could change the world with sound financial backing. He also said he found it relaxing to write novels.
In the middle of the night, while everyone else was in bed, he would be writing in his office. There, in the small hours, Stieg Larsson the crime novelist was created.
In the summer of 2003, he started talking more about his work on the novels, but he never mentioned the fact that he had already sent the manuscripts to a publishing house, which turned them down.
Fortunately, Robert Aschberg, Expo's publisher, had read them and recommended them to Norstedts, Sweden's oldest publishing house. Its editors, having read the first two novels at one sitting, signed him up immediately.
Many readers of Stieg's books wonder how much of himself is in the character of Mikael Blomkvist, the main male protagonist. There are similarities, of course: they are both journalists and work on magazines critical of contemporary society, but that's where it ends.
In fact, Stieg had more in common with the heroine, Lisbeth Salander, not least in their shared lack of confidence in so-called authorities. They both had a reluctance to talk about the past, preferring not to discuss their childhoods, and they had similarly bad eating habits. It is hardly surprising that Stieg made Lisbeth a chain-smoker and a drinker of awful coffee.
What makes his books unique is the way he portrays the violent exploitation of women. These stories were told by somebody who knew what he was talking about.
A few of the Expo staff are clearly recognisable in the books. An important person in the history of Expo was Jenny, who most probably inspired Lisbeth Salander's appearance, clothes and tattoos. Mikael Blomkvist's endless philandering is reminiscent of somebody, who also happened to be called Michael, who worked on the magazine in the early days.
During the time Stieg was collecting material, an average of 36 women a year were killed in Sweden by men who knew them well. More or less everything he wrote depicts women who are attacked, women who are raped, women who are illtreated and murdered because they challenge patriarchy. Stieg wanted to do something about this senseless violence.
Stieg had premonitions that his trilogy would be a success, and he thought he could change the world with sound financial backing. He also said he found it relaxing to write novels.
In the middle of the night, while everyone else was in bed, he would be writing in his office. There, in the small hours, Stieg Larsson the crime novelist was created.
In the summer of 2003, he started talking more about his work on the novels, but he never mentioned the fact that he had already sent the manuscripts to a publishing house, which turned them down.
Fortunately, Robert Aschberg, Expo's publisher, had read them and recommended them to Norstedts, Sweden's oldest publishing house. Its editors, having read the first two novels at one sitting, signed him up immediately.
Many readers of Stieg's books wonder how much of himself is in the character of Mikael Blomkvist, the main male protagonist. There are similarities, of course: they are both journalists and work on magazines critical of contemporary society, but that's where it ends.
In fact, Stieg had more in common with the heroine, Lisbeth Salander, not least in their shared lack of confidence in so-called authorities. They both had a reluctance to talk about the past, preferring not to discuss their childhoods, and they had similarly bad eating habits. It is hardly surprising that Stieg made Lisbeth a chain-smoker and a drinker of awful coffee.
What makes his books unique is the way he portrays the violent exploitation of women. These stories were told by somebody who knew what he was talking about.
A few of the Expo staff are clearly recognisable in the books. An important person in the history of Expo was Jenny, who most probably inspired Lisbeth Salander's appearance, clothes and tattoos. Mikael Blomkvist's endless philandering is reminiscent of somebody, who also happened to be called Michael, who worked on the magazine in the early days.
During the time Stieg was collecting material, an average of 36 women a year were killed in Sweden by men who knew them well. More or less everything he wrote depicts women who are attacked, women who are raped, women who are illtreated and murdered because they challenge patriarchy. Stieg wanted to do something about this senseless violence.
However, one of the most pressing reasons why Stieg wrote his novels happened in the late summer of 1969.
The location was a camping site in Umea, northern Sweden, where he was brought up. I have always avoided writing about what happened that day, but it is unavoidable in this context. It affected Stieg so deeply that it became a sombre leitmotif running through his books.
On that day, 15-year-old Stieg watched three friends rape a girl, also called Lisbeth, who was the same age as him and someone he knew. Her screams were heartrending, but he didn't intervene. His loyalty to his friends was too strong. He was too young, too insecure. It was inevitable that he would realise afterwards that he could have acted and possibly prevented the rape.
Haunted by feelings of guilt, he contacted the girl a few days later. When he begged her to forgive him for his cowardice and passivity, she told him bitterly that she could not accept his explanations. 'I shall never forgive you,' she said, gritting her teeth.
That was one of the worst memories Stieg told me about. It was obvious, looking at him, that the girl's voice still echoed in his ears, even after he had written three novels about vulnerable, violated and raped women.
It was probably not his intention to be forgiven after writing the books, but when you read them it is possible to detect the driving force behind them.
As a result, the women in his novels have minds of their own and go their own ways. They fight. They resist. Just as he wished all women would do in the real world.
For three years, I have been trying to trace the identity of this girl and the boys who raped her but I have been unable to find any of them. I have contacted old friends of Stieg's and searched through public records but the trail has run cold. It seems as if one of the most disturbing but tantalising incidents of Stieg's life will for ever remain a mystery.
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There were two other events that shocked Stieg deeply, as well as inspiring his writing. In the mid-Eighties, Stieg got to know a European anti-racist with an invaluable knowledge of Rightwing extremism in Europe. A few years later, Stieg heard that this man had beaten his partner repeatedly. Stieg dropped the man. 'Up north, where I come from,' he used to say, 'you never forgive anybody for anything.'
Another man, among the best researchers and computer experts in Sweden, had been working at Expo for some time. It soon transpired that the young man had been reported to police for assault. Stieg felt let down.
I am quite certain that this researcher is linked with Lisbeth Salander's abilities. The researcher was forced to leave Expo in 1997 - the year when Stieg wrote his first chapter about Lisbeth Salander. Stieg dealt with his sorrow and disappointment by creating a character similar to the researcher.
One summer's day in 2009 I bumped into that researcher. I shall never forget the first thing he said: 'Stieg got his revenge in his own way. I am Lisbeth Salander as far as her computer expertise is concerned. And we are both thin and don't weigh enough! But I will always love Stieg. It's an honour to be a model for Salander.'
There is a rumour suggesting that Stieg also wrote crime stories in the mid-Nineties but destroyed them. Is it true? Yes and no.
The fact is that he did indeed write crime stories in that period but it was more a case of him writing to relax and have fun. You could call those early stories practice-crime novels. He told me they were utterly worthless.
How many books would Stieg have written if he had lived longer? I once heard him say quite specifically in a smoke-filled room at the Expo offices: 'I have ten books in my head.'
By 2003, I had decided to close down Black And White, although Expo restarted as an independent magazine. My health had deteriorated steadily during the previous year - it sometimes felt as if I had spent more time in hospital than in my office.
'We are not 20-year-olds any more,' I told Stieg. 'Both you and I must start thinking about our health.' He nodded, but sadly that was a subject in which he had no interest at all. A year later he died, aged 50, from a heart attack.
Another man, among the best researchers and computer experts in Sweden, had been working at Expo for some time. It soon transpired that the young man had been reported to police for assault. Stieg felt let down.
I am quite certain that this researcher is linked with Lisbeth Salander's abilities. The researcher was forced to leave Expo in 1997 - the year when Stieg wrote his first chapter about Lisbeth Salander. Stieg dealt with his sorrow and disappointment by creating a character similar to the researcher.
One summer's day in 2009 I bumped into that researcher. I shall never forget the first thing he said: 'Stieg got his revenge in his own way. I am Lisbeth Salander as far as her computer expertise is concerned. And we are both thin and don't weigh enough! But I will always love Stieg. It's an honour to be a model for Salander.'
There is a rumour suggesting that Stieg also wrote crime stories in the mid-Nineties but destroyed them. Is it true? Yes and no.
The fact is that he did indeed write crime stories in that period but it was more a case of him writing to relax and have fun. You could call those early stories practice-crime novels. He told me they were utterly worthless.
How many books would Stieg have written if he had lived longer? I once heard him say quite specifically in a smoke-filled room at the Expo offices: 'I have ten books in my head.'
By 2003, I had decided to close down Black And White, although Expo restarted as an independent magazine. My health had deteriorated steadily during the previous year - it sometimes felt as if I had spent more time in hospital than in my office.
'We are not 20-year-olds any more,' I told Stieg. 'Both you and I must start thinking about our health.' He nodded, but sadly that was a subject in which he had no interest at all. A year later he died, aged 50, from a heart attack.
After Stieg's death, his partner Eva gave me as a keepsake - the black and white tie he had worn on the last day of his life. He should be close by, I thought, but he felt so dreadfully far away.
Six years on, Stieg's global success has changed my life. I am often invited to lecture about him throughout Europe. It feels almost as if, in a most bizarre fashion, I have become an ambassador for Stieg. But I do it willingly and am happy to have him in my orbit in this way.
It's not how I would have wanted things to turn out: I would have preferred to continue sitting in our basement offices with my friend, and to carry on producing a magazine on a less than adequate budget.
However, I can't turn back the clock: Stieg has left my life as a living person. Every time I meet somebody who has become a little happier after having read one of his novels, though, I also become a little happier. In that way he is always present. And it is a presence nobody can take away from me.
QUOTE(Why do people love Stieg Larsson’s novels? @ http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/atla...tlarge_acocella )
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Having got American readers to buy more than fourteen million copies, collectively, of Stieg Larsson’s Millennium trilogy books—“The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (2008, American edition), “The Girl Who Played with Fire” (2009), and “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest” (2010)—the management at Knopf has decided that it would like them to buy some more. So the company has issued a boxed set: the three crime novels, plus a new book, “On Stieg Larsson,” containing background materials on the late Swedish writer. If you have been in a coma, say, for the past two years, and have not read the Millennium trilogy, about a crusading journalist, Mikael Blomkvist, and a computer hacker, Lisbeth Salander, battling right-wing forces in Sweden, the set, at ninety-nine dollars, is not a bad bargain. But if you decided to pass on the novels your resolve should not be shaken by this offer. As for “On Stieg Larsson,” don’t worry. It is a small thing—eighty-five pages—and nothing in it solves the central mystery of the Millennium trilogy: why it is so popular.
Larsson, who was born in a village in the north of Sweden in 1954, was an ardent leftist all his life. In the nineteen-eighties, because of immigration, Sweden, like other European countries, saw a sharp increase in racism. Suddenly, there were neo-Nazis and Aryan leagues, and the people involved were no longer crazed souls operating mimeograph machines in basements but smooth characters, in suits, running for public office. In 1995, Larsson and some friends in Stockholm founded a quarterly magazine, Expo, with the declared mission of safeguarding “democracy and freedom of speech by . . . documenting extremist and racist groups in society.” Expo was undisguisedly the model for Millennium, the journal that is Blomkvist’s home base in the trilogy.
Larsson’s anti-authoritarian writings won him and Expo many enemies. The printers and distributors of the magazine had their windows smashed. Larsson received death threats. He took precautions. He allowed no photographs. In restaurants, he and his companion, Eva Gabrielsson, sat so that he could watch one exit, she the other.
Despite all this, Larsson is said to have been a happy man, who lived the life he wanted. He smoked three packs a day, subsisted on hamburgers, and often worked around the clock. He consumed popular novels, especially crime fiction, by the cartload. And then, in 2001, in a move that no one has been able to explain satisfactorily—and about which, for a long time, he told almost no one—he began writing crime fiction. Later, he said that he did it for fun. Or he said that it was for money—that the books were going to be his “retirement fund.” He wrote fast, easily, and late at night. By 2003, he had the trilogy’s first volume, which, in English, is called “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.” This is a rather conventional detective novel, except that the villains are Nazis and neo-Nazis, and the crimes are unusually grisly: incestuous rape (homo and hetero), plus murders of the most appalling sort. One victim is gagged with a sanitary napkin and stoned to death. Another is tied up and placed with her face in a bed of dying embers.
Larsson submitted the manuscript to Piratförlag, a publishing house with a strong line of crime novels. The editors there never opened the package. (They did not read manuscripts from first-time authors.) Today, one almost pities them. The publisher that accepted the Millennium trilogy—Norstedts Förlag, the second firm Larsson contacted—has sold three and a half million copies of the books.
The editing went slowly, because Larsson was always overscheduled. “On Stieg Larsson” contains a series of e-mail exchanges between him and his Norstedts editor, Eva Gedin. In them we find Gedin asking Larsson politely, but with increasing emphasis, to make room in his schedule to meet with her and hear her editorial suggestions. He responds blithely that he will do so, eventually. One afternoon, seven months after the contract was signed, he went to work at Expo, found that the elevator was broken, climbed seven flights of stairs, had a heart attack, and died. He was fifty.
In part because Larsson was not alive when the books were published, the Millennium trilogy has been surrounded by a number of controversies, the juiciest being the question of who should be receiving the fortune the books have earned. The most deserving beneficiary, as many people saw it, was Eva Gabrielsson, who was not only Larsson’s companion for three decades but who also, at various times, supported him, not to speak of putting up with the fact that he normally came home around midnight. The two of them never married, however. Larsson—and, later, Gabrielsson—said that this was a way of protecting her; she would not run his risks. Years earlier, Larsson had written a will leaving his entire estate to the Communist Workers’ Party of his home town, but the will was not witnessed and therefore was not valid. When Swedes die intestate, everything is awarded to their kin—a strange law in a country where unregistered unions are almost the rule. In any case, Larsson’s money has gone to the two surviving members of his immediate family, his father and his brother.
These two men were not unaware of the awkwardness of their position. They gave Gabrielsson Larsson’s half of the apartment that she shared with him. They also proposed to pay her $2.7 million, by way of a settlement. She refused this offer, at which point the dealings between the two parties grew nasty. Gabrielsson told the press that Larsson had been alienated from his father and brother. They, in turn, suggested that Gabrielsson was psychologically disturbed. The story became even more exciting when the news got out that Gabrielsson had Larsson’s laptop, which, according to several sources (including her), contained more than half of a fourth novel, plus notes for the remainder—in other words, enough material so that someone else could finish it and it could still be called a Stieg Larsson novel. (Some of Larsson’s associates say that he had plans for ten novels, and had started the fifth as well as the fourth.) Does Gabrielsson really have the laptop? At one point, she told the press that she had given it to Expo. Elsewhere, she has said, “No comment.” Reportedly, we will find out the answer when Gabrielsson’s memoir is published, next year. Meanwhile, a lot of people think that she has been terribly wronged. If you call up www.supporteva.com, you can make a contribution to her upkeep.
Another question that has been raised about the trilogy is: Who wrote it? A co-worker of Larsson’s at Expo, Kurdo Baksi, suggested in a recent memoir, “Stieg Larsson: Our Days in Stockholm,” that Larsson did not have a talent for writing. Another colleague has come right out and said that someone else must have authored or at least heavily edited the books. The person most often pointed to is Gabrielsson, who is reputed to have good literary skills. (She is an architect and writer.) Asked about her contribution to the trilogy, Gabrielsson has been as elusive as she was about the laptop. In an interview with Swedish National Television, she denied having given any direct assistance. Then, repeatedly, she spoke of the books’ author as “we.”
If Gabrielsson didn’t edit the trilogy, did anyone else—for example, its editors? The e-mails printed in “On Stieg Larsson” suggest that Eva Gedin, of Norstedts, was not often successful in getting Larsson to meet with her. Furthermore, they had only seven months together. When I asked Gedin whether, as a result, the books received little editing, she firmly denied this. With the second and third books, she said, she suggested some revisions, and Larsson indicated his approval. As for the first, “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” she told me that it was thoroughly edited, and that big changes were made, before he died. She recalled, for example, that the manuscript had opened with an extensive description of a flower, which, as she put it, was “a little bit boring.” She got Larsson to let her take that out. Still, Norstedts may have been reluctant to make extensive changes that the author had not survived to oversee.
As for the English edition, it was apparently not subject to any such scruples. The translation was done at top speed (because Norstedts needed to show it to a film company), and then it was heavily revised by its editor, Christopher MacLehose, of Quercus Press, in London. Gabrielsson registered bitter complaints about the changes. So did the translator, Steven Murray. He actually took his name off the novels; he is credited under a pseudonym, Reg Keeland. MacLehose stands by his work. “I did edit the translation, yes,” he wrote to me, “but it isn’t a particularly interesting fact or story and it has earned me enough abuse already from the translator and from the author’s former partner. Perhaps [it is] sufficient to say that seven or eight houses in England turned it down in its original form”—Murray’s English translation—“and seven or eight in America. In its edited form, as many Americans bid for it.”
However much the book was revised, it should have been revised more. The opening may have been reworked, as Gedin says, but it still features an episode—somebody telling somebody else at length (twelve pages!) about a series of financial crimes peripheral to the main plot—that, by wide consensus, is staggeringly boring. (And, pace Gedin, it is preceded by a substantial description of a flower.) Elsewhere, there are blatant violations of logic and consistency. Loose ends dangle. There are vast dumps of unnecessary detail. When Lisbeth goes to IKEA, we get a list of every single thing she buys. (“Two Karlanda sofas with sand-colored upholstery, five Poäng armchairs, two round side tables of clear-lacquered birch, a Svansbo coffee table, and several Lack occasional tables,” and that’s just for the living room.) The jokes aren’t funny. The dialogue could not be worse. The phrasing and the vocabulary are consistently banal. (Here is Lisbeth, about to be raped: “Shit, she thought when he ripped off her T-shirt. She realized with terrifying clarity that she was out of her depth.”) I am basing these judgments on the English edition, but, if this text was the product of extensive editing, what must the unedited version have looked like? Maybe somebody will franchise this popular series—hire other writers to produce further volumes. This is not a bad idea. We’re not looking at Tolstoy here. The loss of Larsson’s style would not be a sacrifice.
The most crippling weakness of the trilogy, however, is its hero. Mikael Blomkvist is so anti-masculinist that, in a narrative where people are brandishing chainsaws, he can take no forceful action. That goes for his sex life, too, which features heavily in the plot. Mikael is irresistible to women, we are told, yet he never makes the first move. Not that Larsson’s women have a problem with this. “Are you going to come quietly or do I have to handcuff you?” one says. Lisbeth is more direct. She just walks into his bedroom in the middle of the night and plops down on him. He apparently gives all his bedmates a good time, but one wonders whether he has a good time. A girlfriend says to him that he seems to get a fair amount of action. “Yes, unfortunately,” he answers. Again and again, he tries to maneuver his relations with Lisbeth out of sex and into friendship. “Lisbeth, can you define the word friendship for me?” he asks. She is not sure how to answer. He tells her, avuncularly (he’s almost twenty years older than she), that friendship is built on respect and trust. Ugh!
In 2009, three Swedish movies were made of the novels, with Niels Arden Oplev directing “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (the best one) and Daniel Alfredson the final two. These films were huge hits, and they certainly bumped up the sales of the books. Like many mediocre novels, the trilogy is far better on the screen than on the page. The screenwriters, trying to bring their stories down to two hours, got rid of a lot of the clutter and scrubbed off the sugar coating that Larsson put on the relationship between Mikael and Lisbeth. Finally, the movies give us lovely things to see—fog-bound islands, dewy leaves. Sony is now producing an American movie trilogy, with Daniel Craig as Mikael. After a loud fuss in the press, the role of Lisbeth was given to Rooney Mara, who had a small part in “The Social Network.” (She was the girlfriend who dumped Mark Zuckerberg in the opening scene.) She will have big boots to fill. Nothing in the three Swedish films is better than Noomi Rapace, the actress who plays Lisbeth. In most of the first movie, to show us how surly and unapproachable Lisbeth is, Rapace wears her punk hairdo so that it covers her left eye. In the third movie, we get to see both her eyes, but, because she is in the hospital, recovering from dire wounds, and then on trial (she’s been framed by the villains), she barely speaks. Yet whether she has one eye or two eyes, she communicates something like a five-act tragedy.
It is clear what people like in these movies, but what accounts for the success of the novels, despite their almost comical faults? Larsson may have had a weakness for extraneous detail, but at the same time, paradoxically, he is a very good storyteller. (Mario Vargas Llosa, in an article on the trilogy, compared Larsson to Dumas père.) As for cheap thrills, there’s dirt aplenty and considerable mayhem.
Early in the trilogy, we find out that when Lisbeth was a child her mother was regularly beaten senseless by her mate, Alexander Zalachenko, a Russian spy who had defected to Sweden, where a secret branch of the security police put him on the payroll, thinking that he could tell them useful secrets. Lisbeth told the police about Zalachenko’s assaults on her mother, only to be put away for two years in a state psychiatric hospital. This is the main source of what, in the novel’s present, is Lisbeth’s utter distrust of any government institution, down to the local police. At the end of “The Girl Who Played with Fire,” she has a showdown with Zalachenko. This is a brilliantly orchestrated scene, if you can stand it. Zalachenko shoots Lisbeth in the head. (She runs her fingers over her skull. She finds the hole, feels her wet brain.) Zalachenko and his sidekick, Ronald Niedermann, bury her hastily, failing to notice—they’re in a dark wood—that she is still alive. Once they’re gone, she digs herself out, returns to Zalachenko’s hideout, and sinks an axe in his face.
Near the end of the last book, Niedermann holes up in a brickworks that Zalachenko once owned. When he arrives, he finds two Russian girls, a brunette and a blonde, who have been deposited there by sex traffickers. They are afraid to go outside, and are starving. Niedermann brings them some soup. Then he grabs the brunette and breaks her neck with a single twist. The other watches, and puts up no resistance when it is her turn. You don’t forget such episodes—the truly innocent at the mercy of the truly evil—and they lead directly into the absolutist morals of Larsson’s books, which may also be a powerful selling point. Lisbeth believes that people are responsible for what they do, no matter what was done to them, and plenty was done to her. The trilogy is, to some extent, a revenge story—a popular genre. (Think of “Death Wish” or “True Grit.”) Lisbeth not only cleaves Zalachenko’s skull; she beats up two large bikers simultaneously and, with a Taser, delivers fifty thousand volts to Niedermann’s crotch. The woman warrior has become a beloved feature of the movies, from Nikita to Angelina Jolie’s Lara Croft, and beyond. It is also, reportedly, a sexual fantasy popular with men—something else that may have helped to sell the books.
According to certain researchers, another sexual fantasy common among men is rape. Larsson’s campaign against the abuse of power eventually became focussed on one victimized group: women. A friend of Larsson’s tells the story that, at the age of fifteen, Larsson watched as several boys he knew gang-raped a girl. Later, ashamed, he telephoned the girl and asked her to forgive him. She refused. He is said never to have forgotten this episode. In these three violent novels, no species of assault is more highly featured than the rape of women by men. Furthermore, you can’t go twelve pages without being almost screamed at on the subject of feminism. Larsson’s original title for his trilogy was “Men Who Hate Women.” (This remained the title of the first book in the Swedish edition. Gedin says that he absolutely insisted.) All the sections of the first book are prefaced with statistics on crimes against women. The epigraphs in the third book all have to do with female warriors—the Amazons, and so on.
Yet some critics have accused Larsson of having his feminism and eating it, too. They say that, under cover of condemning violence against women, he has supplied, for the reader’s enjoyment, quite a few riveting scenes of violence against women. There are indeed many such scenes, the most vile being the sex murders in the first book. It should be noted, however, that we never see those crimes. They are in the past—they are told to Mikael and Lisbeth, and hence to us. Other crimes against women get curiously brief coverage. Niedermann’s murder of the two Russian girls takes only four lines.
In terms of the plot, the most important crime in the novel’s present time is the rape of Lisbeth by her state-appointed guardian, Nils Bjurman, but, while we’re told that her clothes are torn off and that something is then rammed up her anus, we don’t hear much more. The episode occupies only one page. By contrast, when Lisbeth returns to Bjurman’s apartment to rape him, in the same way, this is given more than six pages, and the assault acquires significant embellishment. On Bjurman’s torso, from his nipples to just above his crotch, Lisbeth tattoos, in big letters, “i am a sadistic pig, a pervert, and a rapist.” Some of the people who accuse Larsson of double-dealing may be thinking more of the film “Dragon Tattoo,” where the two scenes are more equal in length, and where everything is more horrible just by virtue of being there, on the screen, for us to look at.
Another consideration that would seem to deflect charges of misogyny is simply the character of Lisbeth. She is a complicated person, alienating and poignant at the same time. Many critics have stressed her apparent coldness. In the scene of her revenge against Bjurman, her face never betrays hatred or fear. When the rape is over, she sits in a chair, smokes a cigarette, and stubs it out on his rug. (He is tied up.) Accordingly, some writers have called her a sociopath. Larsson, too, said that once, but elsewhere he described her as a grownup version of Pippi Longstocking, the badly behaved and happy nine-year-old heroine of a series of books, by Astrid Lindgren, beloved of Swedish children. Pippi, Lindgren wrote unsentimentally, “had no mother and no father, and that was of course very nice because there was no one to tell her to go to bed.” Lisbeth wears leather and studs. She has a ring implanted in her left labium. She doesn’t particularly like to be around people. But she is not a sociopath. The primary diagnostic feature of sociopathy is callousness—lack of feeling—toward others. Lisbeth falls in love with Mikael. She brings gifts—cake and perfume—to her mother, who is in a home for the mentally impaired. (Zalachenko’s beatings finally caused brain damage.) She operates outside society but not outside morality. She is an outlaw, or a sprite—a punk fairy.
A final drawing card of the trilogy may be its up-to-dateness, particularly of the technological variety. Other mystery writers—Patricia Cornwell, Henning Mankell—have introduced computers into their arsenal, but no one I know of uses computers as extensively as Larsson to build plot and character. Lisbeth and Mikael find each other online, solve crimes online, acquire their glamour online. (Lisbeth has an “Apple PowerBook G4/1.0 GHz . . . with a PowerPC 7451 processor with an AltiVec Velocity Engine, 960 MB RAM and a 60 GB hard drive.”) Lisbeth’s only friends are fellow-hackers. Her colleague Trinity has infiltrated the computers of the BBC and Scotland Yard: “He even managed—for a short time—to take command of a nuclear submarine on patrol in the North Sea.” One of the sweetest moments in the whole trilogy comes via an electronic device. Mikael has been separated from Lisbeth for almost the entire length of “The Girl Who Played with Fire.” Finally, he breaks into her apartment, looking for evidence that might help her (the police are after her). His entry activates the apartment’s security system. Lisbeth, driving up a country road, is alerted by her cell phone. The system is wired so that after thirty seconds a paint bomb explodes on any intruder. There are six seconds left. Mikael, guessing the machine’s code, turns the system off. Lisbeth taps into her security camera and sees who is standing in her foyer. She smiles—a rare event. She knows now that Mikael is still on her side.
Related to the trilogy’s cutting-edge quality is a revised view of Sweden. After the establishment of the Social Democratic government, in 1932, Sweden seemed, to many people—the Swedes, in particular—a kind of socialist utopia: maternity leaves, free love. (Ingmar Bergman’s movies might appear to contradict such a view, but they are really about humankind, not about his homeland.) The writer John-Henri Holmberg, in an essay on his friend Larsson, lists what he believes are the fundamental tenets of his countrymen’s vision of their society, and, in each case, Larsson’s critique of them. Swedes think that their country is uniquely egalitarian (Larsson presents considerable differences between rich and poor), that Sweden is politically neutral (Larsson shows a burgeoning right), that the Swedish health-care system is the best in the world (Lisbeth is imprisoned in a state hospital), etc. Above all, the Swedes believe that their government is benign, and working for their benefit, whereas, in Holmberg’s words, Larsson shows the Swedish state as “an instrument of violence, wielded against individuals who threaten the privileges and power of those who have managed to gain control of it.” Larsson even denied Sweden’s fabled beauty. However pretty the countryside, his Stockholm has tattoo parlors, S & M clubs, McDonald’s. As Charles McGrath wrote, in the Times, Larsson’s Sweden is “a country . . . a lot like our own.”
The critique is not new. For decades, Sweden’s writers have been portraying the supposed welfare administered by the Swedish welfare state as an empty promise. (And that welfare state may soon be disabled by the recently elected conservative government.) But Holmberg claims that Larsson’s critique is more piercing, especially as it is embodied in Lisbeth. She is an anarchist. (She would surely enjoy the recent activities of WikiLeaks, whose files are stored on servers in Stockholm.) “She is . . . the nightmare of all doctrines, all consensus thinkers, all moralists and all politicians,” Holmberg writes. Larsson doesn’t fully endorse her view, or maybe he felt that it wouldn’t have been good for sales. The trilogy ends with a gesture of trust in the government. The police are called—and by Lisbeth! But only after she’s done the real work.
Larsson, who was born in a village in the north of Sweden in 1954, was an ardent leftist all his life. In the nineteen-eighties, because of immigration, Sweden, like other European countries, saw a sharp increase in racism. Suddenly, there were neo-Nazis and Aryan leagues, and the people involved were no longer crazed souls operating mimeograph machines in basements but smooth characters, in suits, running for public office. In 1995, Larsson and some friends in Stockholm founded a quarterly magazine, Expo, with the declared mission of safeguarding “democracy and freedom of speech by . . . documenting extremist and racist groups in society.” Expo was undisguisedly the model for Millennium, the journal that is Blomkvist’s home base in the trilogy.
Larsson’s anti-authoritarian writings won him and Expo many enemies. The printers and distributors of the magazine had their windows smashed. Larsson received death threats. He took precautions. He allowed no photographs. In restaurants, he and his companion, Eva Gabrielsson, sat so that he could watch one exit, she the other.
Despite all this, Larsson is said to have been a happy man, who lived the life he wanted. He smoked three packs a day, subsisted on hamburgers, and often worked around the clock. He consumed popular novels, especially crime fiction, by the cartload. And then, in 2001, in a move that no one has been able to explain satisfactorily—and about which, for a long time, he told almost no one—he began writing crime fiction. Later, he said that he did it for fun. Or he said that it was for money—that the books were going to be his “retirement fund.” He wrote fast, easily, and late at night. By 2003, he had the trilogy’s first volume, which, in English, is called “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.” This is a rather conventional detective novel, except that the villains are Nazis and neo-Nazis, and the crimes are unusually grisly: incestuous rape (homo and hetero), plus murders of the most appalling sort. One victim is gagged with a sanitary napkin and stoned to death. Another is tied up and placed with her face in a bed of dying embers.
Larsson submitted the manuscript to Piratförlag, a publishing house with a strong line of crime novels. The editors there never opened the package. (They did not read manuscripts from first-time authors.) Today, one almost pities them. The publisher that accepted the Millennium trilogy—Norstedts Förlag, the second firm Larsson contacted—has sold three and a half million copies of the books.
The editing went slowly, because Larsson was always overscheduled. “On Stieg Larsson” contains a series of e-mail exchanges between him and his Norstedts editor, Eva Gedin. In them we find Gedin asking Larsson politely, but with increasing emphasis, to make room in his schedule to meet with her and hear her editorial suggestions. He responds blithely that he will do so, eventually. One afternoon, seven months after the contract was signed, he went to work at Expo, found that the elevator was broken, climbed seven flights of stairs, had a heart attack, and died. He was fifty.
In part because Larsson was not alive when the books were published, the Millennium trilogy has been surrounded by a number of controversies, the juiciest being the question of who should be receiving the fortune the books have earned. The most deserving beneficiary, as many people saw it, was Eva Gabrielsson, who was not only Larsson’s companion for three decades but who also, at various times, supported him, not to speak of putting up with the fact that he normally came home around midnight. The two of them never married, however. Larsson—and, later, Gabrielsson—said that this was a way of protecting her; she would not run his risks. Years earlier, Larsson had written a will leaving his entire estate to the Communist Workers’ Party of his home town, but the will was not witnessed and therefore was not valid. When Swedes die intestate, everything is awarded to their kin—a strange law in a country where unregistered unions are almost the rule. In any case, Larsson’s money has gone to the two surviving members of his immediate family, his father and his brother.
These two men were not unaware of the awkwardness of their position. They gave Gabrielsson Larsson’s half of the apartment that she shared with him. They also proposed to pay her $2.7 million, by way of a settlement. She refused this offer, at which point the dealings between the two parties grew nasty. Gabrielsson told the press that Larsson had been alienated from his father and brother. They, in turn, suggested that Gabrielsson was psychologically disturbed. The story became even more exciting when the news got out that Gabrielsson had Larsson’s laptop, which, according to several sources (including her), contained more than half of a fourth novel, plus notes for the remainder—in other words, enough material so that someone else could finish it and it could still be called a Stieg Larsson novel. (Some of Larsson’s associates say that he had plans for ten novels, and had started the fifth as well as the fourth.) Does Gabrielsson really have the laptop? At one point, she told the press that she had given it to Expo. Elsewhere, she has said, “No comment.” Reportedly, we will find out the answer when Gabrielsson’s memoir is published, next year. Meanwhile, a lot of people think that she has been terribly wronged. If you call up www.supporteva.com, you can make a contribution to her upkeep.
Another question that has been raised about the trilogy is: Who wrote it? A co-worker of Larsson’s at Expo, Kurdo Baksi, suggested in a recent memoir, “Stieg Larsson: Our Days in Stockholm,” that Larsson did not have a talent for writing. Another colleague has come right out and said that someone else must have authored or at least heavily edited the books. The person most often pointed to is Gabrielsson, who is reputed to have good literary skills. (She is an architect and writer.) Asked about her contribution to the trilogy, Gabrielsson has been as elusive as she was about the laptop. In an interview with Swedish National Television, she denied having given any direct assistance. Then, repeatedly, she spoke of the books’ author as “we.”
If Gabrielsson didn’t edit the trilogy, did anyone else—for example, its editors? The e-mails printed in “On Stieg Larsson” suggest that Eva Gedin, of Norstedts, was not often successful in getting Larsson to meet with her. Furthermore, they had only seven months together. When I asked Gedin whether, as a result, the books received little editing, she firmly denied this. With the second and third books, she said, she suggested some revisions, and Larsson indicated his approval. As for the first, “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo,” she told me that it was thoroughly edited, and that big changes were made, before he died. She recalled, for example, that the manuscript had opened with an extensive description of a flower, which, as she put it, was “a little bit boring.” She got Larsson to let her take that out. Still, Norstedts may have been reluctant to make extensive changes that the author had not survived to oversee.
As for the English edition, it was apparently not subject to any such scruples. The translation was done at top speed (because Norstedts needed to show it to a film company), and then it was heavily revised by its editor, Christopher MacLehose, of Quercus Press, in London. Gabrielsson registered bitter complaints about the changes. So did the translator, Steven Murray. He actually took his name off the novels; he is credited under a pseudonym, Reg Keeland. MacLehose stands by his work. “I did edit the translation, yes,” he wrote to me, “but it isn’t a particularly interesting fact or story and it has earned me enough abuse already from the translator and from the author’s former partner. Perhaps [it is] sufficient to say that seven or eight houses in England turned it down in its original form”—Murray’s English translation—“and seven or eight in America. In its edited form, as many Americans bid for it.”
However much the book was revised, it should have been revised more. The opening may have been reworked, as Gedin says, but it still features an episode—somebody telling somebody else at length (twelve pages!) about a series of financial crimes peripheral to the main plot—that, by wide consensus, is staggeringly boring. (And, pace Gedin, it is preceded by a substantial description of a flower.) Elsewhere, there are blatant violations of logic and consistency. Loose ends dangle. There are vast dumps of unnecessary detail. When Lisbeth goes to IKEA, we get a list of every single thing she buys. (“Two Karlanda sofas with sand-colored upholstery, five Poäng armchairs, two round side tables of clear-lacquered birch, a Svansbo coffee table, and several Lack occasional tables,” and that’s just for the living room.) The jokes aren’t funny. The dialogue could not be worse. The phrasing and the vocabulary are consistently banal. (Here is Lisbeth, about to be raped: “Shit, she thought when he ripped off her T-shirt. She realized with terrifying clarity that she was out of her depth.”) I am basing these judgments on the English edition, but, if this text was the product of extensive editing, what must the unedited version have looked like? Maybe somebody will franchise this popular series—hire other writers to produce further volumes. This is not a bad idea. We’re not looking at Tolstoy here. The loss of Larsson’s style would not be a sacrifice.
The most crippling weakness of the trilogy, however, is its hero. Mikael Blomkvist is so anti-masculinist that, in a narrative where people are brandishing chainsaws, he can take no forceful action. That goes for his sex life, too, which features heavily in the plot. Mikael is irresistible to women, we are told, yet he never makes the first move. Not that Larsson’s women have a problem with this. “Are you going to come quietly or do I have to handcuff you?” one says. Lisbeth is more direct. She just walks into his bedroom in the middle of the night and plops down on him. He apparently gives all his bedmates a good time, but one wonders whether he has a good time. A girlfriend says to him that he seems to get a fair amount of action. “Yes, unfortunately,” he answers. Again and again, he tries to maneuver his relations with Lisbeth out of sex and into friendship. “Lisbeth, can you define the word friendship for me?” he asks. She is not sure how to answer. He tells her, avuncularly (he’s almost twenty years older than she), that friendship is built on respect and trust. Ugh!
In 2009, three Swedish movies were made of the novels, with Niels Arden Oplev directing “The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo” (the best one) and Daniel Alfredson the final two. These films were huge hits, and they certainly bumped up the sales of the books. Like many mediocre novels, the trilogy is far better on the screen than on the page. The screenwriters, trying to bring their stories down to two hours, got rid of a lot of the clutter and scrubbed off the sugar coating that Larsson put on the relationship between Mikael and Lisbeth. Finally, the movies give us lovely things to see—fog-bound islands, dewy leaves. Sony is now producing an American movie trilogy, with Daniel Craig as Mikael. After a loud fuss in the press, the role of Lisbeth was given to Rooney Mara, who had a small part in “The Social Network.” (She was the girlfriend who dumped Mark Zuckerberg in the opening scene.) She will have big boots to fill. Nothing in the three Swedish films is better than Noomi Rapace, the actress who plays Lisbeth. In most of the first movie, to show us how surly and unapproachable Lisbeth is, Rapace wears her punk hairdo so that it covers her left eye. In the third movie, we get to see both her eyes, but, because she is in the hospital, recovering from dire wounds, and then on trial (she’s been framed by the villains), she barely speaks. Yet whether she has one eye or two eyes, she communicates something like a five-act tragedy.
It is clear what people like in these movies, but what accounts for the success of the novels, despite their almost comical faults? Larsson may have had a weakness for extraneous detail, but at the same time, paradoxically, he is a very good storyteller. (Mario Vargas Llosa, in an article on the trilogy, compared Larsson to Dumas père.) As for cheap thrills, there’s dirt aplenty and considerable mayhem.
Early in the trilogy, we find out that when Lisbeth was a child her mother was regularly beaten senseless by her mate, Alexander Zalachenko, a Russian spy who had defected to Sweden, where a secret branch of the security police put him on the payroll, thinking that he could tell them useful secrets. Lisbeth told the police about Zalachenko’s assaults on her mother, only to be put away for two years in a state psychiatric hospital. This is the main source of what, in the novel’s present, is Lisbeth’s utter distrust of any government institution, down to the local police. At the end of “The Girl Who Played with Fire,” she has a showdown with Zalachenko. This is a brilliantly orchestrated scene, if you can stand it. Zalachenko shoots Lisbeth in the head. (She runs her fingers over her skull. She finds the hole, feels her wet brain.) Zalachenko and his sidekick, Ronald Niedermann, bury her hastily, failing to notice—they’re in a dark wood—that she is still alive. Once they’re gone, she digs herself out, returns to Zalachenko’s hideout, and sinks an axe in his face.
Near the end of the last book, Niedermann holes up in a brickworks that Zalachenko once owned. When he arrives, he finds two Russian girls, a brunette and a blonde, who have been deposited there by sex traffickers. They are afraid to go outside, and are starving. Niedermann brings them some soup. Then he grabs the brunette and breaks her neck with a single twist. The other watches, and puts up no resistance when it is her turn. You don’t forget such episodes—the truly innocent at the mercy of the truly evil—and they lead directly into the absolutist morals of Larsson’s books, which may also be a powerful selling point. Lisbeth believes that people are responsible for what they do, no matter what was done to them, and plenty was done to her. The trilogy is, to some extent, a revenge story—a popular genre. (Think of “Death Wish” or “True Grit.”) Lisbeth not only cleaves Zalachenko’s skull; she beats up two large bikers simultaneously and, with a Taser, delivers fifty thousand volts to Niedermann’s crotch. The woman warrior has become a beloved feature of the movies, from Nikita to Angelina Jolie’s Lara Croft, and beyond. It is also, reportedly, a sexual fantasy popular with men—something else that may have helped to sell the books.
According to certain researchers, another sexual fantasy common among men is rape. Larsson’s campaign against the abuse of power eventually became focussed on one victimized group: women. A friend of Larsson’s tells the story that, at the age of fifteen, Larsson watched as several boys he knew gang-raped a girl. Later, ashamed, he telephoned the girl and asked her to forgive him. She refused. He is said never to have forgotten this episode. In these three violent novels, no species of assault is more highly featured than the rape of women by men. Furthermore, you can’t go twelve pages without being almost screamed at on the subject of feminism. Larsson’s original title for his trilogy was “Men Who Hate Women.” (This remained the title of the first book in the Swedish edition. Gedin says that he absolutely insisted.) All the sections of the first book are prefaced with statistics on crimes against women. The epigraphs in the third book all have to do with female warriors—the Amazons, and so on.
Yet some critics have accused Larsson of having his feminism and eating it, too. They say that, under cover of condemning violence against women, he has supplied, for the reader’s enjoyment, quite a few riveting scenes of violence against women. There are indeed many such scenes, the most vile being the sex murders in the first book. It should be noted, however, that we never see those crimes. They are in the past—they are told to Mikael and Lisbeth, and hence to us. Other crimes against women get curiously brief coverage. Niedermann’s murder of the two Russian girls takes only four lines.
In terms of the plot, the most important crime in the novel’s present time is the rape of Lisbeth by her state-appointed guardian, Nils Bjurman, but, while we’re told that her clothes are torn off and that something is then rammed up her anus, we don’t hear much more. The episode occupies only one page. By contrast, when Lisbeth returns to Bjurman’s apartment to rape him, in the same way, this is given more than six pages, and the assault acquires significant embellishment. On Bjurman’s torso, from his nipples to just above his crotch, Lisbeth tattoos, in big letters, “i am a sadistic pig, a pervert, and a rapist.” Some of the people who accuse Larsson of double-dealing may be thinking more of the film “Dragon Tattoo,” where the two scenes are more equal in length, and where everything is more horrible just by virtue of being there, on the screen, for us to look at.
Another consideration that would seem to deflect charges of misogyny is simply the character of Lisbeth. She is a complicated person, alienating and poignant at the same time. Many critics have stressed her apparent coldness. In the scene of her revenge against Bjurman, her face never betrays hatred or fear. When the rape is over, she sits in a chair, smokes a cigarette, and stubs it out on his rug. (He is tied up.) Accordingly, some writers have called her a sociopath. Larsson, too, said that once, but elsewhere he described her as a grownup version of Pippi Longstocking, the badly behaved and happy nine-year-old heroine of a series of books, by Astrid Lindgren, beloved of Swedish children. Pippi, Lindgren wrote unsentimentally, “had no mother and no father, and that was of course very nice because there was no one to tell her to go to bed.” Lisbeth wears leather and studs. She has a ring implanted in her left labium. She doesn’t particularly like to be around people. But she is not a sociopath. The primary diagnostic feature of sociopathy is callousness—lack of feeling—toward others. Lisbeth falls in love with Mikael. She brings gifts—cake and perfume—to her mother, who is in a home for the mentally impaired. (Zalachenko’s beatings finally caused brain damage.) She operates outside society but not outside morality. She is an outlaw, or a sprite—a punk fairy.
A final drawing card of the trilogy may be its up-to-dateness, particularly of the technological variety. Other mystery writers—Patricia Cornwell, Henning Mankell—have introduced computers into their arsenal, but no one I know of uses computers as extensively as Larsson to build plot and character. Lisbeth and Mikael find each other online, solve crimes online, acquire their glamour online. (Lisbeth has an “Apple PowerBook G4/1.0 GHz . . . with a PowerPC 7451 processor with an AltiVec Velocity Engine, 960 MB RAM and a 60 GB hard drive.”) Lisbeth’s only friends are fellow-hackers. Her colleague Trinity has infiltrated the computers of the BBC and Scotland Yard: “He even managed—for a short time—to take command of a nuclear submarine on patrol in the North Sea.” One of the sweetest moments in the whole trilogy comes via an electronic device. Mikael has been separated from Lisbeth for almost the entire length of “The Girl Who Played with Fire.” Finally, he breaks into her apartment, looking for evidence that might help her (the police are after her). His entry activates the apartment’s security system. Lisbeth, driving up a country road, is alerted by her cell phone. The system is wired so that after thirty seconds a paint bomb explodes on any intruder. There are six seconds left. Mikael, guessing the machine’s code, turns the system off. Lisbeth taps into her security camera and sees who is standing in her foyer. She smiles—a rare event. She knows now that Mikael is still on her side.
Related to the trilogy’s cutting-edge quality is a revised view of Sweden. After the establishment of the Social Democratic government, in 1932, Sweden seemed, to many people—the Swedes, in particular—a kind of socialist utopia: maternity leaves, free love. (Ingmar Bergman’s movies might appear to contradict such a view, but they are really about humankind, not about his homeland.) The writer John-Henri Holmberg, in an essay on his friend Larsson, lists what he believes are the fundamental tenets of his countrymen’s vision of their society, and, in each case, Larsson’s critique of them. Swedes think that their country is uniquely egalitarian (Larsson presents considerable differences between rich and poor), that Sweden is politically neutral (Larsson shows a burgeoning right), that the Swedish health-care system is the best in the world (Lisbeth is imprisoned in a state hospital), etc. Above all, the Swedes believe that their government is benign, and working for their benefit, whereas, in Holmberg’s words, Larsson shows the Swedish state as “an instrument of violence, wielded against individuals who threaten the privileges and power of those who have managed to gain control of it.” Larsson even denied Sweden’s fabled beauty. However pretty the countryside, his Stockholm has tattoo parlors, S & M clubs, McDonald’s. As Charles McGrath wrote, in the Times, Larsson’s Sweden is “a country . . . a lot like our own.”
The critique is not new. For decades, Sweden’s writers have been portraying the supposed welfare administered by the Swedish welfare state as an empty promise. (And that welfare state may soon be disabled by the recently elected conservative government.) But Holmberg claims that Larsson’s critique is more piercing, especially as it is embodied in Lisbeth. She is an anarchist. (She would surely enjoy the recent activities of WikiLeaks, whose files are stored on servers in Stockholm.) “She is . . . the nightmare of all doctrines, all consensus thinkers, all moralists and all politicians,” Holmberg writes. Larsson doesn’t fully endorse her view, or maybe he felt that it wouldn’t have been good for sales. The trilogy ends with a gesture of trust in the government. The police are called—and by Lisbeth! But only after she’s done the real work.
Jul 9 2014, 06:23 PM, updated 12y ago
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