Leif G. W. Persson

Leif G. W. Persson

Leif G.W. Persson at the Göteborg Book Fair in 2005
Born (1945-03-12) March 12, 1945
Stockholm, Sweden
Occupation novelist, criminologist
Nationality Swedish
Genre Crime fiction, mystery fiction
Notable works He Who Kills the Dragon,
Falling Freely, As in a Dream,
Linda - as in the Linda Murder Case
Website
www.leifgwpersson.se

Leif Gustav Willy Persson (born 12 March 1945 in Stockholm) is a Swedish criminologist and novelist. He was a professor in criminology at the Swedish National Police Board from 1992 to 2012. He is known for his crime fiction novels[1] and for his regular appearances as an expert commentator on notable crime cases in television and newspapers. Between 1999 and 2009, he participated as an expert commentator on the television show Efterlyst on TV3. Nowadays he participates in the television show Veckans Brott with Camilla Kvartoft, which is primarily about unsolved Swedish criminal cases.

In 1977, while working at the Swedish National Police Board, Persson was the whistleblower who worked with journalist Peter Bratt in the so-called Geijer Scandal when he confirmed a classified memo sent by then National Police Commissioner Carl Persson to Prime Minister Olof Palme about the alleged ties of the Minister of Justice, Lennart Geijer, to a prostitution ring in Stockholm. Following this affair he was fired from the National Police Board. The string of events almost drove Persson to suicide,[2] but he soon returned as lecturer at Stockholm University. The prostitution ring affair inspired him to write his first novel, Grisfesten. He returned as a professor at the National Police Board in 1992.

Awards

Persson won the Best Swedish Crime Novel Award (Bästa svenska kriminalroman), for three of his novels: Samhällsbärarna in 1982, En annan tid, ett annat liv in 2003, and Den döende detektiven in 2010. This award is a literary prize awarded annually by the Swedish Crime Writers' Academy.

He also received the 2011 Glass Key award for Den döende detektiven (The Dying Detective); this award is a given annually to a crime novel by an author from the Nordic countries and the 2011 Palle Rosenkrantz-prize, which is awarded by the Det danske Kriminalakademi for the best criminal literature translated into Danish.

Bibliography

Film and TV series adaptations

References

  1. "Inspector Norse: Why are Nordic detective novels so successful?". The Economist. 2010-03-11. Retrieved 2010-03-19.
  2. Daniel Ekeroth: SWEDISH SENSATIONSFILMS: A Clandestine History of Sex, Thrillers, and Kicker Cinema, (Bazillion Points, 2011) ISBN 978-0-9796163-6-5.
  3. "Books - Den sanna historien om Pinocchios näsa". SalomonssonAgency.se. Retrieved 23 January 2015.

External links

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