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Henning Mankell
Henning Mankell in New York City in April 2011
Henning Mankell in New York City in April 2011
Born Henning Georg Mankell
(1948-02-03)3 February 1948
Stockholm, Sweden
Died 5 October 2015(2015-10-05) (aged 67)
Gothenburg, Sweden
Occupation Novelist, playwright, publisher
Period 1991–2009 (Kurt Wallander series)
Genre Crime fiction
Thriller
Notable works The Kurt Wallander novels
Spouse
Eva Bergman
(m. 1998)
Children 4
Relatives Ingmar Bergman (father-in-law)

Henning Georg Mankell (Swedish pronunciation: [ˈhɛ̂nːɪŋ ˈmǎŋːkɛl]; 3 February 1948 – 5 October 2015) was a Swedish crime writer, children's author, and dramatist, best known for a series of mystery novels starring his most noted creation, Inspector Kurt Wallander. He also wrote a number of plays and screenplays for television.

He was a left-wing social critic and activist. In his books and plays he constantly highlighted social inequality issues and injustices in Sweden and abroad. In 2010, Mankell was on board one of the ships in the Gaza Freedom Flotilla that was boarded by Israeli commandos. He was below deck on the MV Mavi Marmara when nine civilians were killed in international waters.

Mankell shared his time between Sweden and countries in Africa, mostly Mozambique where he started a theatre. He made considerable donations to charity organizations, mostly connected to Africa.

Life and career

Mankell's grandfather, also named Henning Mankell, lived from 1868 to 1930 and was a composer. Mankell was born in Stockholm, Sweden in 1948. His father Ivar was a lawyer who divorced his mother when Mankell was one year old. He and an older sister lived with his father for most of their childhood. The family first lived in Sveg, Härjedalen in northern Sweden, where Mankell's father was a district judge. In the biography on Mankell's website, he describes this time when they lived in a flat above the court as one of the happiest in his life. In Sveg, a museum was built in his honour during his lifetime.

Later, when Mankell was thirteen, the family moved to Borås, Västergötland on the Swedish west coast near Gothenburg. After three years he dropped out of school and went to Paris when he was 16. Shortly afterwards he joined the merchant marine, working on a cargo ship and he "loved the ship's decent hard-working community". In 1966, he returned to Paris to become a writer. He took part in the student uprising of 1968. He later returned to work as a stagehand in Stockholm. At the age of 20, he had already started as author at Riksteatern in Stockholm. In the following years he collaborated with several theatres in Sweden. His first play, The Amusement Park dealt with Swedish colonialism in South America. In 1973, he published The Stone Blaster, a novel about the Swedish labour movement. He used the proceeds from the novel to travel to Guinea-Bissau. Africa would later become a second home to him, and he spent a big part of his life there. When his success as a writer made it possible, he founded and ran a theatre in Mozambique.

From 1991 to 2013, Mankell wrote the books which made him famous worldwide, the Kurt Wallender mystery novels. Wallender was a fictional detective living in Ystad in southern Sweden, who supervised a squad of detectives in solving murders, some of which were bizarre. The team often worked late into the nights in a heightened atmosphere of tension and crisis. Wallender's thoughts and worries about his daughter, his health, his lack of friends and a social life, his worries about Swedish society, shared his mental life with his many concerns and worries about the case he was working. There were ten books in the series. They were translated into many languages and sold millions of copies worldwide. The series gave Mankell the freedom and wherewithal to pursue other projects which interested him.

After living in Zambia and other African countries, Mankell was invited from 1986 onward to become the artistic director of Teatro Avenida in Maputo, Mozambique. He subsequently spent extended periods in Maputo working with the theatre and as a writer. He built his own publishing house, Leopard Förlag, in order to support young talented writers from Africa and Sweden. His novel Chronicler of the Winds, published in Sweden as Comédie infantil in 1995, reflects African problems and is based on African storytelling. On 12 June 2008, he was awarded an honorary Doctorate from the University of St Andrews in Scotland "in recognition of his major contribution to literature and to the practical exercise of conscience".

Around 2008, Mankell developed two original stories for the German police series Tatort. Actor Axel Milberg, who portrays Inspector Klaus Borowski, had asked Mankell to contribute to the show when they were promoting The Man from Beijing audiobook, a project that Milberg had worked on. The episodes were scheduled to broadcast in Germany in 2010. In 2010, Mankell was set to work on a screenplay for Sveriges Television about his father-in-law, movie and theatre director Ingmar Bergman, on a series produced in four one-hour episodes. Mankell pitched the project to Sveriges Television and production was planned for 2011. At the time of his death, Mankell had written over 40 novels that had sold more than 40 million copies worldwide.

Personal life

Mankell was married four times and had four sons, Thomas, Marius, Morten and Jon, by different relationships. In 1998 he married Eva Bergman, daughter of film director Ingmar Bergman.

Death

In January 2014, Mankell announced that he had been diagnosed with lung cancer and throat cancer. In May 2014, he reported that treatments had worked well and he was getting better.

He wrote a series of articles inspired by his wife Eva, describing his situation, how it felt to be diagnosed, how it felt to be supported, how it felt to wait, and after his first chemotherapy at Sahlgrenska University Hospital about the importance of cancer research. Three weeks before his death he wrote about what happens to people's identity when they are stricken by a serious illness. His last post was published posthumously 6 October.

On 5 October 2015, Mankell died at the age of 67, almost two years after having been diagnosed.

Gaza flotilla

Henning Mankell01
Mankell in 2009

In 2010, Henning Mankell was on board the MS Sofia, one of the boats which took part in the flotilla which tried to break the Israeli embargo of the Gaza strip. Following the Israel Defense Forces' boarding of the flotilla on the morning of 31 May 2010, Mankell was deported to Sweden. He subsequently called for global sanctions against Israel. In 2010 it was reported that he was considering halting Hebrew translations of his books. In June 2011, Mankell stated in an article in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz that he had never considered preventing his books from being translated into Hebrew, and that unidentified persons had stolen his identity to make this false claim.

Mankell was supposed to be one of twenty Swedish participants in "Freedom Flotilla II" which never took place. It was originally scheduled to sail to Gaza in June 2011.

Charity and legacy

In 2007, Henning Mankell donated 15 million Swedish crowns (about 1.5 million euros) to SOS Children's Villages for a children's village in Chimoio in western Mozambique. Mankell donated vast amounts of money to charitable organizations such as SOS Children's Villages and Hand in Hand, a collection of independent organizations.

In the 1980s, Mankell visited United Nations refugee camps in Mozambique and later accompanied UN High Commissioner Sadako Ogata to refugee camps in South Africa. In 2013, he visited Congolese refugees in Uganda. He wrote on the plight of refugees and after his death his website asked for donations in his name to the UN Commission on Refugees.

The theme for short stories submitted to the inaugural Festival Fim do Caminho Literary Prize, "Crime in Mozambique", was chosen in homage to Mankell.

Works

Wallander series

Kurt Wallander is a fictional police inspector living and working in Ystad, Sweden. In the novels, he solves shocking murders with his colleagues. The novels have an underlying question: "What went wrong with Swedish society?"

The series has won many awards, including the German Crime Prize and the British 2001 CWA Gold Dagger for Sidetracked (1995).

The ninth book, The Pyramid (1999), is a prequel about Wallander's past, covering the time until just before the start of Faceless Killers (1991). It includes a collection of five novellas:

  • Wallander's First Case
  • The Man with the Mask
  • The Man on the Beach
  • The Death of the Photographer
  • The Pyramid

Ten years after The Pyramid, Mankell published another Wallander novel, The Troubled Man (2009), which he said would definitely be the last in the series.

Linda is the daughter of Kurt Wallander, who follows in his footsteps as a police officer. Mankell began an intended trilogy of novels with her as the protagonist. However, following the death of Johanna Sällström, the actress playing the character at the time in the Swedish TV series, Mankell was so distraught that he decided to abandon the series after only the first novel.

Film and television

Original screenplays for television and TV

  • Etterfølgeren (The Successor) (1997 film)
  • Labyrinten (2000), TV mini-series
  • Talismanen [sv] (2003), TV mini-series (co-written with Jan Guillou)
  • Unnamed Ingmar Bergman docudrama (2012), TV mini-series

Film and television adaptations of novels

  • Wallander (1997–2007) Sveriges Television. Swedish language.
  • Wallander (2005, 2009, 2013) Yellow Bird for TV4 (Sweden). Swedish language.
  • Wallander (2008, 2010, 2012, 2016) Yellow Bird for BBC (UK). English language.

Plays

  • Älskade syster (1983) (Beloved Sister)
  • Antiloperna (The Antelopes)
  • Apelsinträdet (1983) (The Orange Tree)
  • Att Storma Himlen (To Storm Heaven)
  • Berättelser På Tidens Strand (Tales On The Beach of Time)
  • Bergsprängaren (1973) (The Rock Blaster)
  • Butterfly Blues
  • Daisy Sisters (1982)
  • Darwins kapten (2010) (Darwin's Captain)
  • Den Samvetslöse Mördaren Hasse Karlsson... (The Ruthless Killer Hasse Karlsson...)
  • Dödsbrickan (1980) (The Death Counter)
  • Eldens gåta (2001) (Fire Riddle)
  • En Gammal Man Som Dansar (Old Man Dancing)
  • En Höstkväll Innan Tystnaden (An Evening in Autumn Before Silence)
  • En seglares död (1981) (Death of a Sailor)
  • Fångvårdskolonin som försvann (1979) (The Penal Colony Which Disappeared)
  • Gatlopp (Running the Gauntlet)
  • Grävskopan (The Excavator)
  • Hårbandet (The Ribbon)
  • I sand och i lera (1999) (In Sand and Mud)
  • In Duisternis (2010) (Time of Darkness)
  • Innan Gryningen (Before Dawn)
  • Italienska skor (2006) (Italian Shoes)
  • Jag dör, men minnet lever (2003) (I Die, but the Memory Lives)
  • Kakelugnen På Myren (The Cocklestove on the Myre)
  • Katten som älskade regn (1992) (The Cat that Loved Rain)
  • Labyrinten (2000) (The Labyrinth)
  • Lampedusa
  • Mannen Som Byggde Kojor (The Man Who Built huts)
  • Mörkertid (Dark Times)
  • Möte Om Eftermiddagen (Afternoon Rendezvous)
  • Och Sanden Ropar... (Sand Calling...)
  • Påläggskalven (Groomed for Greatness)
  • Pojken som sov med snö i sin säng (1996) (The Boy Who Slept with Snow in His Bed)
  • Politik (2010) (Politics)
  • Resan till värdens ände (1998) (Journey to The End of the World)
  • Sagan om Isidor (1984) (Isidor's Saga)
  • Sandmålaren (1974) (Sand painter)
  • Svarte Petter (The Short Straw)
  • Tea-Bag (2001)
  • Tokfursten (The Silly Prince)
  • Tyckte Jag Hörde Hundar (Thought I Heard Dogs)
  • Valpen (The Welp)
  • Vettvillingen (1977) (The Maniac)

Awards and honours

  • 1991 – Swedish Crime Writers' Academy, Best Swedish Crime Novel Award for Faceless Killers
  • 1991 – Nils Holgersson Plaque for A Bridge to the Stars
  • 1992 – Glass Key award For Best Nordic Crime Novel: Faceless Killers
  • 1993 – Deutscher Jugendliteraturpreis for A Bridge to the Stars
  • 1995 – Swedish Crime Writers' Academy, Best Swedish Crime Novel Award for Sidetracked
  • 1996 – Astrid Lindgren Prize
  • 2001 – Crime Writers' Association Gold Dagger for Best Crime Novel of the Year: Sidetracked
  • 2001 – Corine Literature Prize for One Step behind
  • 2004 – Toleranzpreis der Evangelischen Akademie Tutzing
  • 2005 – Gumshoe Award for Best European Crime Novel: The Return of the Dancing Master
  • 2008 – Corine Literature Prize for the German Audiobook The Man from Beijing

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Henning Mankell para niños

  • Category:Works by Henning Mankell
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