PI Varg Veum fights for his reputation, his freedom and his life, when child pornography is found on his computer and he is arrested and jailed. Worse still, his memory is a blank...
Reeling from the death of his great love, Karin, Varg Veum's life has descended into a self-destructive spiral of alcohol, lust, grief and blackouts.When traces of child pornography are found on his computer, he's accused of being part of a paedophile ring and thrown into a prison cell. There, he struggles to sift through his past to work out who is responsible for planting the material... and who is seeking the ultimate revenge.
Wolves In The Dark by Gunnar Staalesen was published by Orenda Books on June 15th.
I'm delighted to welcome the author, Gunnar Staalesen to Random Things today as part of the Blog Tour. He's talking about; My Life in Books:
My Life In Books ~ Gunnar Staalesen
I have loved books from before I was able to read them myself.
In the
first years of my life, television was a dream of the future, or something we
saw in a Disney cartoon. In Norway we had the radio and only one channel that anyone
listened to: NRK (The Norwegian Broadcasting Company). Early in the morning
there was a programme they called The
Children’s Hour (although it didn’t last more than twenty minutes).
As part
of this programme, grown-up writers read their stories; stories that were later
published as books. Many of these were original Norwegian books, but one of my
very first favorites was the first Norwegian translation of A. A. Milne’s Winnie the Pooh (‘Ole Brumm’ as he was
called in our language). It remains a book I still love, and I even think that
the laconic comments of the donkey are one of the inspirations for how my
private eye hero, Varg Veum, speaks.
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I have always preferred writers who tell a good story and have important
things to say about human existence. So it’s not a big surprise that I enjoyed Hemingway, who had a great influence on many of those who followed him. I also read
Faulkner, admiring his experimental way of telling some very important stories
about life in the twentieth century.
When I was writing my very first books, I was inspired by the Beat
Generation, and the American writer, Jack Kerouac. But then I turned to crime
fiction.
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As a grown-up
reader I turned to Dashiell Hammett, Raymond Chandler and Ross Macdonald, who turned
the American private eye novel into perfect literature. As a Scandinavian it
was impossible in those days not to be impressed and influenced by the first
books by the Swedish couple Sjöwall & Wahlöö, who, with their series about
Martin Beck and his colleagues, changed modern crime fiction forever. The
tradition these Swedes started can be seen in so much contemporary crime
literature from their Nordic successors, such as Henning Mankell, StiegLarsson, Karin Fossum, Jo Nesbø and many others, as well as another favorite of
mine, Ian Rankin and the marvellous series of books about Edinburgh and the
Scottish relative of Martin Beck, John Rebus.
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I am only sorry that life is too short: there are so many books I would
like to read, and so many that I would like to read again, but there are not enough
years, days or hours to fulfill my lust for reading, which started when I was
just a kid and which will endure the rest of my life.
Gunnar Staalesen ~ June 2017
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