Review of The Man Who Played with Fire: Stieg Larsson's Lost Files and the Hunt for an Assassin by Jan Stocklassa
The Man Who Played with Fire is a true-crime mystery for anyone beguiled by the web of politics, history, and international intrigue.
When I started reading THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO," I nearly relegated it to the 'did not finish' pile — am I glad I didn't! I went on to read Larsson's next two books he wrote about Lizbeth Salander. I actually read them after his death in 2004. It was devastating to learn that there would be no more. I did ultimately read the next Salander trilogy by David Lagercrantz and found them equal to the efforts of Steig Larsson. When I came across Jan Stocklassa's book, I felt compelled to read it.
Swedish prime minister, Olof Palme, was murdered on February 28, 1986. He was shot point blank on a street in Stockholm. More than thirty years later, this crime remains unsolved. In some ways, the various investigations sound like police procedurals you might watch on television. A theory of the crime is introduced, and the blinders are donned. There cannot be any scenario other than the one the lead investigator endorses. The investigation into Palme's assassination was carried out this way by several heads of the inquiry. One of them even arrested and convicted 'his man.' The conviction was thrown out on appeal because there was literally no evidence.
Jan Stocklassa, quite literally, stumbled upon the massive collection of notes that Stieg Larsson made during his own research into Palme's death. Steig, a reporter and researcher, was amassing information on right wing extremists in Sweden. He made extensive charts showing connections between people and organizations. He was relentless in this quest.
The idea of right-wing extremist organizations in Sweden does not comport with my idea of the country, but my view is of blonde, blue-eyed, happy people enjoying a sauna with snow fields in the background — ah, propaganda at its best.
THE MAN WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE is endlessly fascinating and filled with international intrigue like any good assassination of the head of state story should be. Stocklassa himself describes the book as a "work of creative nonfiction." There is an Afterward that explains the embellishment of facts and documents to make a more readable story.
The first part of the book is about Steig Larsson and discovering his vast archive connected both to extremism and the assassination. Without coming out and saying so, Stocklassa is showing that Larsson used himself as the model for journalist Mikael Blomkvist. This alone makes the book worth reading by anyone who was captivated by the Millenium series. I would be remiss not to mention that you might need a box of tissues to get through the short chapter depicting the death of Stieg Larsson. It is dramatic and touching.
Jan Stocklassa has given us a look behind the curtain into the world of international political crime and that could be a very dry read indeed. It consumed one man and led his successor in the quest to spend eight years trying to name the assassin. Unlike movies and television, THE MAN WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE isn't able to name the perpetrator. Still, it is a damn good read.