- Schwedenkrimi
- German portmanteau term for Swedish crime novels.
Discussing the posthumous success of Swedish crime writer Stieg Larsson in a recent A.P. article, Malin Rising noted:
Larsson is the latest of many Swedish crime writers to win international acclaim, from the team of Maj Sjowall and Per Wahloo in the 1960s to the more recent Henning Mankell, creator of the gloomy detective Kurt Wallander in such books as “Faceless Killers,” “Sidetracked,” “Firewall” and “Before the Frost.”The Scandinavian crime writing tradition also includes Denmark’s Peter Hoeg, whose “Smilla’s Sense of Snow” became an international best seller in the 1990s and a movie starring Julia Ormond, Vanessa Redgrave and Gabriel Byrne.Set in a scenic Nordic landscape of serene lakes and lonely red cabins, Larsson’s trilogy follows computer hacker Lisbeth Salander and journalist Mikael Blomqvist as they get entangled in a series of murder mysteries. Like Mankell, Larsson weaves in social commentary, with democracy and women’s rights as prominent themes. …Swedish crime literature has become a phenomenon in Europe, so much so that the Germans have invented a new word for it: “Schwedenkrimi.”
Dictionary of unconsidered lexicographical trifles. 2014.