Thursday, January 29, 2009

THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE IS OUT NOW!

I popped into Crosswords to see what the 80% clearance sale had to offer. Not much. In fact I think most people like me were lured in by the sale only to pick up stuff that wasn't on sale!
But imagine my absolute delight when I saw THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE - the second in Stieg Larsson's Millennium trilogy displayed innocuously as a new arrival! And they had just unpacked them I believe. If you are wondering why this is such a big deal, scroll down read my take on the first book - The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, that appeared first on the CNBC TV18 show, MUST DO. Next week I will tell you if the second volume was worth the wait.

The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo – Steig Larsson
(FROM MUST DO ON CNBC TV18, SEPTEMBER 7TH, 2008 )
I’m recommending a pacy crime thriller today. The book is called “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo” by Swedish journalist Steig Larsson. First a bit about the author who died in 2004. Larsson was a journalist who spent a lifetime researching and fighting right wing extremism & racism in Sweden. He was the editor in chief of Expo, the magazine of the Expo foundation that was started by teachers, journalists, and artists to counter the growth of Nazism and white power culture among the young people in Sweden. Now Larsson died before his set of three novels were published so he didn’t get to see the worldwide responses his books are getting. Now “The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo” is the first of what is called the ‘Millennium Trilogy’. The English translation was published this year. It’s about Mikael Blomkvist – (I had a hard time saying the name on TV and hope I got it right) – who’s a financial journalist. He’s the publisher and editor of a magazine called Millennium that has a simple mission. Let me give you a sense of that mission…From Page 60,

"His contempt for his fellow financial journalists was based on something that in his opinion was as plain as morality. The equation was simple.
A bank director who blows millions on foolhardy speculations should not keep his
job. A managing director who plays shell company games should do time. A slumlord who forces young people to pay through the nose and under the table for a one-room appartment and shared toilet should be hung out to dry.
The job of the financial journalist was to examine the sharks who created interest crises and speculated away the savings of small investors, to scrutinize company boards with the same merciless zeal with which political reporters pursue the tiniest steps of out of line of ministers and members of parliament. He could not for the life of him understand why so many influential financial reporters treated mediocre financial whelps like rock stars."


But that’s not the story. The story starts when Blomkvist’s piece on a powerful Swedish financier is found libelous. Fined and sentenced to a few months in prison, his trust capital is seriously eroded and the survival of his magazine is at stake. The only option he has is to lie low and figure out how to redeem himself. Enter an old respected industrialist – the head of one of Sweden’s pioneering industrial houses – and a chance to solve a 40-year-old family mystery. A disappearance that maybe a murder.

The rest of the book follows months of painstaking research that helps Blomkvist solve the mystery, uncover horrific crime in the process, rescue ‘Millennium’ and most importantly for him, expose the corrupt financier he had failed to do earlier. The book is fast even when Blomkvist is all alone plodding through decades of records and notes on the mystery in a small industrial snow bound town ion the north of Sweden. The milieu and location is a refreshing change from the British and American settings we’re used to. Some of the images that get conjured up while reading are like those you would have seen in films like Run Lola Run or even the Bourne identity.

While it’s a crime thriller, it also ends up putting to test the journalist’s own ethics, and standards on journalism. Blomkvist is an attractive hero. As you’ll discover while you read the book – women like him. But the character for whom you must read this book is Lizbeth Salander. A 24 year old who the Swedish state has declared legally incompetent, and whose legal affairs are entrusted to a State appointed guardian. Now Salander lives on the fringes of society perpetually worried that she maybe institutionalized. She’s also a freelance private investigator, an amoral genius computer hacker and a loner who deals head on with all the punches life throws her and it throws her many. She’s the real hero of the book, rescuing Blomkvist from the villain, finding him the proof he needs to redeem his reputation and the character who gets to grow the most as the story unfolds. She’s the Girl With The Dragon Tattoo.

Now the next book in the trilogy is the Girl Who Played With Fire, its going to be out in English in January next year. The trilogy is also being filmed, the first film is going to release next year as well. I can’t wait to get my hands on the next two books. Pity, I can’t read Swedish.

5 comments:

Reg / Steve said...

Hello Anuradha, Thanks for the very nice, perceptive review of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. I think you'll like the second book even better.

What sort of program do you have on TV? I wish we could see these things over here in New Mexico.

My condolences for your misfortune in Mumbai, and my congratulations on the success of Slumdog Millionaire, which we're all anxious to see.

Best wishes,
Reg Keeland
Albuquerque, NM, USA

Reg / Steve said...

P.S. My blog is at http://reg-stieglarssonsenglishtranslator.blogspot.com/

Anuradha SenGupta said...

Hi Reg,

The power of technology! I pick up a book you have translated, in Mumbai, post a blog on the worldwide web and you get to know of it and can reply! I guess you have some way of tracking every new mention of the book?
I do several weekly shows on CNBC TV18(India)including STORYBOARD a show on advertising & marketing that can also be seen in the US on CNBC US. I also do an interview series called Beautiful People and Slumdog Millionaire's Danny Boyle was my guest last week. I think there are some clips on youtube if you search for danny boyle+cnbc tv18.
I am looking forward to the weekend so that I can start the book and read it uninterrupted. Thanks for getting in touch.
All the best, Anuradha

Reg / Steve said...

Great to hear from you, and I will definitely search for your show on YouTube. The trick to following all the comments on the Web about a book is to set a Google Alert. I track "Stieg Larsson" and they send me a daily email with links to all the reviews and blogs. (It probably doesn't catch the misspelled ones that say "Steig".) Is this fun or what?

Unknown said...

Hi Anuradha, this is Stephanie. I work for Knopf, the publisher of Stieg Larsson's books in the U.S. Thanks for your great note on The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. For the launch of the second book in the series we're trying something different. Run your own Stieg Larsson contest on your blog--for which we will provide the prizes (a free copy of The Girl Who Played with Fire, cool temporary dragon tattoos). And the first thirty blogger entrants will get first dibs on the translated manuscript of book three. I'm including a link to the contest if you are interested.
Thanks again!
http://knopfdoubleday.com/blogger-contest-stieg-larsson
Book site is stieglarsson.net