Sidetracked (novel) explained

Sidetracked
Title Orig:Villospår
Translator:Steven T. Murray
Author:Henning Mankell
Country:Sweden
Language:Swedish
Series:Kurt Wallander #5
Genre:Crime, Mystery novel
Publisher:Ordfront
Pub Date:1995
English Pub Date:1999
Media Type:Print (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages:420 pp (Eng. hardback trans.)
Isbn:1-86046-785-7
Isbn Note:(Eng. trans.)
Oclc:44398108
Preceded By:The Man Who Smiled
Followed By:The Fifth Woman

Sidetracked (first published as Villospår in 1995) is a crime novel by Swedish author Henning Mankell, the fifth in his Kurt Wallander series.[1] Translated into English, it won the UK Crime Writers' Association annual Gold Dagger award for "best crime novel" in 2001.

Synopsis

In the sweltering Swedish summer of 1994, a sadistic serial killer begins preying on elderly, successful men, violently slaughtering them with an axe before collecting their scalps as trophies. Meanwhile, Wallander witnesses a young woman from the Dominican Republic set herself on fire, and must also cope with his increasingly despondent father, who's determined to make one final trip to Italy. As he investigates the two cases, the Ystad detective uncovers a sinister link to prostitution rackets and the white slavery trade.

Adaptations

In 2001, Sidetracked was adapted by Swedish public broadcaster Sveriges Television into a two and a half hour television movie, starring Rolf Lassgård as Wallander. In 2008, British broadcaster BBC One broadcast a 90-minute adaptation for its Wallander television series starring Kenneth Branagh.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Homer B. Pettey. R. Barton Palmer. Andrew Nestingen . International noir. 2014. Edinburgh University Press. Edinburgh. 978-0-7486-9111-1. 181. https://doi.org/10.1515/9780748691111-011. 10.1515/9780748691111-011. Nordic Noir and Neo-noir: The Human Criminal. 246932240 .