« Between the covers | Main | 'Molvania: A Land Untouched by Modern Dentistry (Jetlag Travel Guide S.)' by Santo Cilauro, Tom Gleisner and Rob Sitch »

Tuesday, May 17, 2005

'The Laughing Policeman' by Maj Sjöwall and Peter Wahlöö

Laughing_policeman_14stars_22Fiction - paperback; Orion Mass Market Paperback; 224 pages; 2002 (originally published in 1968). (Translated from the Swedish by Alan Blair.)

Described by many as a "classic of the police procedural", The Laughing Policeman, by husband-and-wife Scandinavian team Maj Sjöwall and Peter Wahlöö, is a wonderfully realised piece of detective fiction.

While written in the late 1960s, the storyline is far from dated. It's a well crafted and exquisitely plotted piece of fiction that had me hooked from the first page.

The setting is Stockholm, Sweden. It's a cold, wet November evening and two policemen have just stumbled upon a double-decker bus that has driven off the road. On board are eight people, including an off-duty police officer, who have been gunned down by an unknown assailant. Who was the murderer and what was his motive? Why was the policeman onboard? And did he know the young nurse sitting next to him?

The crime -- Sweden's first ever mass murder -- tests the resolve of all the detectives working on it, including Inspector Martin Beck whom appears in three other novels by Sjöwall and Wahlöö.

I initially found the writing in The Laughing Policeman a little disjointed -- probably the fault of the translator and not the authors -- but once I got used to the style I absolutely loved this book. The humour and the banter between the police working on the case really brought the story alive. And despite the grim subject matter,  I found myself chuckling throughout because of the one-liners. 

This is definitely a classic piece of crime fiction that holds up against the best of its genre today, and I would highly recommend it to anyone after a powerful and intelligent read.

Comments

Feed You can follow this conversation by subscribing to the comment feed for this post.

Yes, Sjöwall Wahlöö. They're classics here in Sweden. They've made a whole bunch of films and it has been at least three different men in the role as Martin Beck. They are, even if not as good as the books, well worth to see.

Ella, do you know the names of the other books written by this pair? Would love to read more from them . . .

Post a comment

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Number of reviews online

Editorial policy

Contact details


  • Reading Matters is edited by kimbofo, an expat Australian who resides in London, UK. She is a trained journalist who works in magazine publishing and has a slight book addiction which is beyond cure.
    You can find out more here.

    kimbofo also posts at London Cycling Diary and kimbofo.

    She also publishes photographs on smugmug.

    Click to email kimbofo

Categories


Books read in 2008

An Irish Writers' Year




  • During 2008 I plan to read one piece of work by each of the following Irish literary greats:
    * Brendan Behan
    * Flann O'Brien
    * George Bernard Shaw
    * James Joyce
    * John Millington Synge
    * Johnathan Swift
    * Oliver Goldsmith
    * Oscar Wilde
    * Patrick Kavanagh
    * Samuel Beckett
    * Sean O'Casey
    * William Butler Yeats.

Support this blog


Site admin


Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 04/2004

Copyright Notice


  • Creative Commons License
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License. You must not copy and distribute any of the reviews on this site without giving Reading Matters credit. Please note that original photographs on this site are also copyright protected.