Gunnar Staalesen | |
---|---|
Born | Bergen, Hordaland, Norway | 19 October 1947
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | Norwegian |
Period | 1969–present |
Genre | Murder mystery Crime fiction Historical novel |
Spouse | Ellen-Karin Kristiansen (m. 1969) |
Website | |
www |
Gunnar Staalesen (born 19 October 1947) is a Norwegian writer. He is a major figure in the Nordic noir crime fiction genre through his 19 novels featuring Varg Veum, a private detective in Bergen on the rainy west coast of Norway. [1] The Varg Veum series has been praised as one of the best in modern crime fiction, [2] [3] and Staalesen has sold more than 4 million books in 24 countries. [4] Staalesen is also a screenwriter and a playwright who has worked extensively with Den Nationale Scene, the largest theatre in Bergen. [5]
Staalesen was born in Bergen, where he has lived his entire life. His parents were an educator and a nurse, [6] and he grew up mostly in the Nordnes neighbourhood. [7] A bookworm from childhood, he credits his initial interest in crime fiction to reading Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes books as a teenager. [5] Staalesen earned a degree in language and literary studies from the University of Bergen in 1976, studying French and English while also working as a journalist, a film critic and a press secretary at Den Nationale Scene. [8]
After Staalesen failed to sell a collection of poems and a novel as a teenager, [9] he published his first novel, Times of Innocence, in 1969. He published three additional novels, including the first two books in a series of crime novels starring two Bergen police officers, before he introduced Varg Veum in 1977 in the novel “Bukken til havresekken.” [5]
Staalesen was inspired to create Veum, a social worker turned private detective, as an experiment in placing the classic detective archetype of American literature in modern-day Bergen. [9] Veum was particularly influenced by Raymond Chandler’s Philip Marlowe, Ross Macdonald’s Lew Archer and Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade. Staalesen was also inspired by the juxtaposition of crime fiction and social realism in the Martin Beck series published from 1965 to 1976 by Swedish writers Maj Sjöwall and Per Wahlöö. [9] Veum’s physical appearance is almost never mentioned in the books, but Staalesen chose the character’s name to emphasize the private eye’s lone wolf status in society. In the Old Norse language, the phrase “Varg Veum” translates literally to “wolf in a sanctuary,” meaning a person that is made an outlaw. [10]
Staalesen’s crime novels frequently examine social injustices illuminated by Veum through his detective work. The series has been praised for its intricate plots, atmospheric evocation of the Norwegian settings and clever interpretations of the classic detective novel form, leading some reviewers to call Staalesen “the godfather of Norwegian noir.” [11] [12]
In 1997, Staalesen stepped away from crime fiction and published three historical novels examining Bergen across the 20th century. Staalesen considers the Bergen Trilogy to be his best work. [13] Varg Veum makes an appearance in the third novel of the trilogy. Staalesen has written a standalone sequel to the Bergen Trilogy, titled "2020 Post Festum," which was published on 15 October 2021. [14]
Staalesen’s novels have been adapted for cinema, television, radio and the stage. Twelve films based on the Veum series were made between 2007 and 2012, all starring Trond Espen Seim. [15]
Staalesen married his wife, Ellen-Karin Kristiansen, in 1969, and they are grandparents. [7] [1]
Staalesen has written 19 novels and two short story collections with Veum as the main character. Veum also has appeared in additional short stories, screenplays, graphic novels and radio plays.
Ingvar Even Ambjørnsen-Haefs is a Norwegian writer. He is best known for his "Elling" tetralogy: Utsikt til paradiset (1993), Fugledansen (1995), Brødre i blodet (1996), and Elsk meg i morgen (1999).
Noir fiction is a subgenre of crime fiction.
Kjersti Elvik is a Norwegian actress, born in Bergen. She was educated at the Norwegian National Academy of Theatre, and started her career at Trøndelag Teater. Elvik had her breakthrough in the popular Norwegian TV-series "Vestavind", but is probably best known for her role as Hanne Wilhelmsen in the filmatisation of Anne Holt's crime novels Salige er de som tørster and Blind gudinne. She also acted in the television sitcom Seks som Oss on TV2 from 2004 to 2007. In 2009 she starred in Mamma Mia, in the role of Rosy, at Folketeateret in Oslo. She is married and has one child.
Jørgen Langhelle was a Norwegian actor of stage, screen and television.
Bitter Flowers is 2007 Norwegian crime thriller film directed by Ulrik Imtiaz Rolfsen. It is the first in a series of twelve films about the private detective Varg Veum, based on the books by Gunnar Staalesen. The film stars Trond Espen Seim as Veum.
Ulrik Imtiaz Rolfsen is a Norwegian film director, producer and writer. He is best known for his action drama IZZAT (2005), his TV series TAXI (2011) as well as documentary films Voluntarily Forced (2014) and Recruiting for Jihad (2017). He often addresses national- and global discussion concerning immigration and racism both in his films as well as being an outspoken newspaper columnist and television debattant. In 2012 he founded the Oslo-based production company Curry Film AS. Other films directed by him, are the crime thriller Varg Veum - Bitter Flowers (2007) and the slacker comedy The Last Joint Venture (2008).
Varg Veum is the central character in a series of crime novels, written by the Norwegian author Gunnar Staalesen, about a private detective who lives in Bergen, on the west coast of Norway. The books have been translated into several languages, including English, Spanish, German, and Swedish.
Bjørn Floberg is a Norwegian actor of film, television and theatre. He is particularly noted for playing unsympathetic authority figures, but he has also had success playing other types of roles.
Trond Espen Seim is a Norwegian actor.
Brun bitter, also called Hair of the Dog, is a 1988 Norwegian crime film directed by Sølve Skagen, starring Frank Krog, Kristin Kajander and Anne Krigsvoll. The screenplay is also by Skagen, based on the book Din, til døden, by Gunnar Staalesen. The story is typical of a film noir, with the detective Alexander 'Lex' Larsen (Krog) attempting to clear the femme fatale Vigdis Wang (Kajander) of a charge of murder.
Jan Mehlum is a Norwegian crime fiction writer and sociologist. He was awarded the Riverton Prize in 1998 for the crime novel Kalde hender.
Nordic noir, also known as Scandinavian noir, is a genre of crime fiction usually written from a police point of view and set in Scandinavia or the Nordic countries. Nordic noir often employs plain language, avoiding metaphor, and is typically set in bleak landscapes. This results in a dark and morally complex mood, in which a tension is depicted between the apparently still and bland social surface and the patterns of murder, misogyny, rape, and racism the genre depicts as lying underneath. It contrasts with the whodunit style such as the English country house murder mystery.
Lilja Sigurðardóttir is an Icelandic writer of crime fiction, a playwright and a scriptwriter. She was raised in Mexico, Sweden, Spain and Iceland. She became a student at MH secondary school, trained as a secretary in England and later finished a BA degree in pedagogy and education at Háskóli Íslands, the University of Iceland. She has worked as an expert in the field of education and written and edited professional material for preschools.
Jan Kåre "Hysen" Hystad is a Norwegian jazz musician, and the older brother of jazz saxophonist Ole Jacob Hystad. He is known as leader of his own Quartet and as part of the Bergen Big Band with cooperations with Teje Rypdal, John Surman and Karin Krogh.
Varg may most commonly refer to:
Miso Film is a film and television production company based in Copenhagen, Denmark. It was founded by Jonas Allen and Peter Bose in 2004.
Orenda Books is a British-based publishing house that publishes literary and crime fiction. The London-based publisher was established in 2014 and publishes debut and existing authors including Ragnar Jónasson, Thomas Enger, Michael Grothaus, Gunnar Staalesen, and Kati Hiekkapelto.
Kati Hiekkapelto is a Finnish novelist, performance artist and punk singer.
Chris Tvedt is a Norwegian lawyer and crime fiction writer.
Alexander Eik is a Norwegian director, screenwriter, series creator, and executive producer in the film company Cinenord AS, where he is also co-owner and head of script development. Eik made her feature film debut in 2003 with the blockbuster success