Karin Alfredsson
Karin Alfredsson (born 1953) is a Swedish writer and journalist.
Karin Alfredsson | |
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Born | 1953 |
Nationality | Sweden |
Genre | novel, essay |
She wrote articles for the magazine OmVärlden. Alfredsson worked as an editor for several programs for the Swedish public broadcaster SVT. She was also a visiting journalism professor at Umeå University. She contributed to the anthology The Tattooed Girl: The Enigma of Stieg Larsson and the Secrets Behind the Most Compelling Thrillers of Our Time.[1] Her books, including crime fiction, mainly deal with women's issues. She currently lives in Stockholm.[2]
Alfredsson has been credited with being the main driving force during the 1980s in persuading the Swedish government to treat domestic violence more severely.[2] She was the founder and head of "Cause of Death: Woman", a non-governmental project to stop violence against women which was active in ten countries.[3]
Selected works[2]
- Den man älskar agar man?, on violence against women (1979) ("The person that you love you hurt?")[1]
- 80 grader från Varmvattnet, crime novel (2006), received the Swedish Crime Writers' Academy debutante award, translated into English as Beauty, Blessing and Hope
- Kvinnorna på 10:e våningen, crime novel (2008), translated into English as The Woman on the 10th floor
- Klockan 21:37, crime novel (2009), translated into English as 9:37 pm
- Den sjätte gudinnan, crime novel (2010), translated into English as The Sixth Goddess
- Pojken i hiss 54, crime novel (2011), translated into English as The Boy in Elevator 54
References
- Burstein, Dan; de Keijzer, Arne; Holmberg, John-Henri (2011). The Tattooed Girl: The Enigma of Stieg Larsson and the Secrets Behind the Most Compelling Thrillers of Our Time. pp. 133, 353. ISBN 978-1429983679.
- Brunsdale, Mitzi M (2016). Encyclopedia of Nordic Crime Fiction: Works and Authors of Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden Since 1967. pp. 401–02. ISBN 978-1476622774.
- "Karin Alfredsson travels the world to help stop violence against women". Christian Science Monitor. September 19, 2011.