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| Frankfurt Book Fair There are also quite a few visitors. Over 50 000 visitors that are working within the book trade wen.. (071014) |
| Frankfurt (day 3) Germany's biggest and most popular news show is called 'Heute Journal' and is viewed by over 20 mill.. (071015) |
| Frankfurt (day 2) In the morning, Arne Dahl was interviewed for the web portal Kulturnews. At twelve it was time to go.. (071015) |
| Rosenrot When sorting through heaps of files on the computer, we found a postcard from Berlin. In the beginni.. (071111) |
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The Swedish crime writer Arne Dahl remained a pseudonym for five years. That is five books - and half of his lifetime. His plan was to write a series of ten successive but independent crime novels about an elite force within the Swedish police, called the Intercrime. And at the same time capture the swift social changes in Europe during the years around the turn of the millennium. After five books, a face appeared from the shadows. It was in the mid-nineties that the writer Jan Arnald mixed the letters of his surname and became Arne Dahl.
The Intercrime series of ten books is now complete. They are unusual crime novels, hardcore thrillers with a literary touch and a mastery of style, with a good sense of humour, an unprecedented depth of character and an urge to plunge deep into the social problems of contemporary Europe. Books very hard to put down.
Books in the Intercrime-series has been translated into German, Italian, Dutch, Norwegian, Danish, Icelandic, Finnish, and Slovenian. Spanish and French books are on their way. The books are right now being translated for the English-speaking market and will be published during 2008.

The photos on the main page shows the Swedish book covers.