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Stieg Larsson’s partner blasts trilogy sequel

The partner of Sweden's best-known contempory author Stieg Larsson has criticised the decision to publish a fourth installment of his Girl with the Dragon Tattoo trilogy, written by another author.

Stieg Larsson's partner blasts trilogy sequel
Eva Gabrielsson, Stieg Larsson's former partner. Photo: TT
Eva Gabrielsson has said that continuing the wildly successful Millennium trilogy written by her late partner Stieg Larsson is a mistake and should not be happening.
 
The highly-anticipated fourth instalment, written by David Lagercrantz, a journalist and author best known as footballer Zlatan Ibrahimovic's official biographer, is due out on August 27th in 35 countries, as The Local reported earlier this year.
 
But Gabrielsson won't be buying it.
 
"They say heroes are supposed to live forever. That's a load of crap, this is about money," Gabrielsson she told the AFP news agency in Stockholm this week. 
 
"It's about a publishing house that needs money, (and) a writer who doesn't have anything to write so he copies someone else," she said.
 
The 61-year-old lived with Stieg Larsson for 32 years until his sudden death in 2004 from a heart attack at age 50 — before the publication and phenomenal success of the dark crime trilogy that took the world by storm.
 
The first three books have sold more than 75 million copies in more than 30 languages, according to publisher Norstedts.
 
The title of the 500-page new novel is, literally translated, "That Which Does Not Kill Us".
 
Just after Larsson's death, Gabrielsson said in interviews that she had the draft of a fourth book he had begun several months before his death.
 
Few details about that draft ever leaked out, and Gabrielsson remained unwilling to be drawn on it when speaking to AFP.
 
"I don't want to talk about the fourth manuscript. I don't have it anymore and Lagergrantz started over from zero."
 
Lagercrantz has nothing in common with Larsson, a journalist and leftist activist who was passionate about combatting extremism, she said.
 
He "comes from a completely different background. Everything has always been easy for him. He's never been an activist. Everything is wrong," she argued.
 
Picking Lagercrantz as the author was "a totally idiotic choice", she said.
 
Even the title is all wrong, in her eyes: "It's a little tame, a little weak, very literary. The other titles were much more straightforward…let him dig his own grave."
 
The idea to continue the Millennium trilogy is based on a misconception about Larsson's plans for his protagonists Lisbeth Salander, a feisty rebel hacker-turned-detective, and Mikael Blomkvist, an investigative reporter, according to Gabrielsson.
 
"Everyone thinks there was some grand scheme but no, he had no plan for the first three books and when he started writing the fourth one, it was spontaneous. He still didn't have a plan," she explained.
 
If it were up to her, none of this would have happened.
 
"I wouldn't have continued Stieg's work. It was his language, his unique narrative," she said.
 

Noomi Rapace who played Lisbeth Salander in the film adaptation of the books. Photo: TT
 
Gabrielsson fought a bitter battle with Larsson's family to manage her late partner's work, but lost.
 
The couple were not married, and — unable to predict his sudden death nor the wild success of his trilogy — he left no will.
 
As a result his family inherited his entire estate, not her.
 
Gabrielsson wanted to manage his authorship to avoid its commercialisation, but she says she never reached an agreement with Larsson's brother and father and they now manage his estate.
 
"It's in European intellectual property laws that you have to manage an author's work in such a way that its origin is respected and protected. Those who manage it are responsible for that," she said.
 
But "Stieg's family, they're too weak, they don't protect his work and now there's nothing left to protect."
 
"The worst thing is how saddened Stieg would have been. He never let anyone work on his literary texts. He would have been furious. Who knows, maybe he'll send a lightning bolt at the book launch," she muses.
 
"I don't think this book will do very well. But I don't care," she said.

FOOTBALL

Sweden legend Larsson’s son joins Olympics football squad

Sweden legend Henrik Larsson's son Jordan has been named in the country's final 18-man squad that will play at the Rio Olympics in August.

Sweden legend Larsson's son joins Olympics football squad
Henrik Larsson (left) and son Jordan (right). Photo: Björn Lindgren/TT & Pontus Lundahl/TT

Dad Henrik, 44, represented Sweden 106 times between 1993 and 2009, winning Bronze with his nation at the 1994 World Cup.

At club level he also played in the Uefa Cup final with Celtic, and won the Uefa Champions League and La Liga with FC Barcelona.

Now Jordan, 19, will have a chance to start building a legacy of his own in what will be the biggest stage he has played on to date.

The men’s football squads for the Olympics are made up of players under the age of 23, as well as three selected players over the age limit.

The Helsingborg forward has previously represented his nation at U17, U19 and U21 level.

Larsson is one of the higher profile names in a squad comprised mostly of promising young players. There will be no final swan song for veterans like Kim Källström, 33, or Zlatan Ibrahimovic, 34.

The latter had been rumoured as a participant at the Olympics when he was included in the initial 35-man shortlist in June.

Here is the full Sweden men’s Olympic football squad

Goalkeepers:

Tim Erlandsson (Nottingham Forest)
Andreas Linde (Molde)

Defenders:

Pa Konate (Malmö FF)
Adam Lundqvist (Elfsborg)
Alexander Milosevic (Besiktas)
Joakim Nilsson (Elfsborg)
Noah Sonko Sundberg (Gif Sundsvall)
Sebastian Starke Hedlund (Kalmar FF)

Midfielders:

Jacub Une Larsson (Djurgården)
Astrit Ajdarevic (Örebro SK)
Alexander Fransson (Basel)
Abdulrahman Khalili (Mersin)
Robin Quaison (Palermo)
Ken Sema (Östersunds FK)
Simon Tibbling (Groningen)

Forwards:

Mikael Ishak (Randers)
Jordan Larsson (Helsingborg)
Muamer Tankovic (AZ Alkmaar)

Reserves:

Jesper Johansson (Gais)
Alexander Leksell (IFK Gothenburg)
Ali Suljic (Chelsea)
Adnan Maric (Swansea)