Cancer claims Wallander crime writer Henning Mankell, aged 67

Best-selling Swedish crime writer Henning Mankell, whose detective character Kurt Wallander became a worldwide phenomenon, has died at 67 after a battle with cancer, his publisher said Monday. Mankell, who first revealed he had cancer in January last year, “died in his sleep early this morning” in Sweden’s second city of Gothenburg, his publisher Leopard said on its website. Mankell’s collection of dark novels about the Swedish police inspector Wallander brought the author international fame after it was made into a television series by the BBC starring Oscar-nominated actor and director Kenneth Branagh.

Henning Mankell was one of the great Swedish authors of our time, loved by readers in Sweden and all over the world.

Mankell’s publisher, Leopard

Mankell, who shared his time between Sweden and Mozambique, published more than 40 novels, plays and children’s books, selling around 40 million copies around the world. The Wallander series itself won numerous awards and contributed to the massive global interest in Scandinavian crime and thriller novels dubbed Nordic noir. Mankell first revealed he had cancer in January 2014, saying it was discovered when he underwent treatment for a slipped disc. "A few days later… I had it in black and white: it was serious. I had one tumour in the back of my neck and one in my left lung. The cancer could also have spread to other parts of my body,“ he wrote at the time.