The troubled genius hacker and crusading journalist thrilled the world in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with Fire, and The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet's Nest, which have sold more than 80 million copies worldwide. David Lagercrantz is a Swedish journalist and best-selling author of. Jun 18, 2010 In THE GIRL WHO PLAYED WITH FIRE -- the second installment in the 'Millennium' trilogy following THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO -- Mikael Blomkvist is about to.
The Girl Who Played with Fire
Directed by
Daniel Alfredson
Produced by
Soren Staermose Jon Mankell
Screenplay by
Ulf Rydberg
Based on
The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson
Starring
Michael Nyqvist Noomi Rapace
Music by
Jacob Groth
Cinematography
Peter Mokrosinski
Edited by
Mattias Morheden
Production company
Distributed by
Zodiak Entertainment
Release date
Running time
129 minutes
Country
Sweden
Language
Swedish
Box office
$67,126,795[1]
The Girl Who Played with Fire (Swedish: Flickan som lekte med elden) is a 2009 Swedish thriller film directed by Daniel Alfredson, and the sequel to The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. It is based on the best-selling novel of the same name by the late Swedish author and journalist Stieg Larsson, the second in his Millennium series.
The film follows Lisbeth Salander as she returns to Sweden after spending a year abroad. She falls under suspicion of having murdered a journalist and his girlfriend as well as her own social services guardian, Nils Bjurman. Mikael Blomkvist has to do what he can to find her before the authorities do.
4Reception
Plot[edit]
Lisbeth Salander purchases an apartment in Stockholm. On returning to Sweden after nearly a year living abroad, Salander reconnects with her best friend and former partner Miriam Wu and offers her free use of her old apartment in return for forwarding her mail. Later, Salander confronts Nils Bjurman after hacking into his mail and discovering that he has an appointment booked with a tattoo removal specialist. Threatening him with his own gun, she warns him not to remove the tattoo that she etched on his abdomen.
Millennium magazine welcomes Dag Svensson, a new journalist who is writing an exposé on prostitution and human trafficking in Sweden. Dag's girlfriend, Mia Bergman, is writing her doctoral thesis on sex trafficking. Dag is nearly finished with the story and is confronting those who will be exposed by the article. Dag and his girlfriend are about to leave on a holiday and ask Mikael Blomkvist to come to his apartment and collect some photographs. At the same time Dag also asks Blomkvist to inquire about someone called 'Zala,' who may have a connection to his present research. Blomkvist arrives at their apartment and finds the two lying dead. The murder weapon is tracked to Bjurman who is also deceased. Salander is the prime suspect, as her fingerprints happen to be on the gun. Salander tells Blomkvist that she did not kill anyone and that he needs to find the mysterious 'Zala.'
Blomkvist is contacted by Salander's boxing trainer and friend, Paolo Roberto. While he is unaware of Salander's whereabouts, Paolo does know Miriam, who also trained with them, and promises to pay her a visit. Near her apartment, Paolo witnesses Miriam being kidnapped by strongman Ronald Niedermann. Paolo follows his car to a deserted barn, where he hears him beat Miriam for information about Salander. Paolo comes in to rescue her but Niedermann beats him too. He then sets the barn aflame, but the two manage to escape.
News breaks of the attack, and Paolo gives his account to the police. After Blomkvist leaves information that he has discovered about the case on his computer for Salander to hack into and read, she leaves a message to him saying, 'Thank you for being my friend.' He realizes that she intends to set out alone to find the man who framed her and that she may not survive. A disguised Salander visits Miriam in hospital to apologize for getting her involved. Without giving anything away, Salander confirms the police sketch of Niedermann with Miriam and then disappears. Knowing now that he is Salander's friend, Miriam calls Blomkvist to the hospital to give him keys that Lisbeth dropped during her visit. Noticing that one of them is for a post office box, Blomkvist is able to access and read Salander's mail and locate her apartment. Meanwhile, Salander continues her efforts to find Niedermann by patiently staking out his post office box. She eventually sees someone retrieve his mail and follows him to a small house near Gosseberga. Reading the material in Lisbeth's apartment, Blomkvist finds the video of Bjurman raping Salander.
In the offices of Millennium magazine, Paolo explains that he tracked down Niedermann and learned that he has congenital analgesia which makes him unable to feel pain. They trace Niedermann to a company owned by 'Karl Axel Bodin.' Blomkvist has Erika Berger forward documents to Bublanski and sets out to find Salander.
Salander crosses the grounds and enters the Gosseberga house, but Niedermann has been alerted by motion detectors and knocks her out. She awakens to see her father, Alexander 'Zala' Zalachenko, an old man who walks with a stick and is heavily scarred by the burns that she inflicted as a child. He dismisses her mother as a whore and belittles her rape at the hands of Bjurman. He reveals that Niedermann is her half-brother and that Niedermann killed Bjurman to prevent him from revealing any of Zalachenko's secrets.
They lead Lisbeth to a shallow grave in the woods. She tells him that the police will find him soon and all that he has said has been published online through her hidden cellphone. Seeing through her bluff, he shoots Lisbeth several times as she attempts to escape and buries her alive. Salander digs her way out using her cigarette case. Hidden in the woodshed, she surprises Zalachenko sticking an axe into his leg. She then keeps Niedermann at bay with Zalachenko's gun as Blomkvist comes coasting up the driveway. Ambulances and police arrive to take away Salander and Zalachenko who are both very badly injured.
Cast[edit]
Michael Nyqvist as Mikael Blomkvist
Noomi Rapace as Lisbeth Salander
Lena Endre as Erika Berger
Peter Andersson as Nils Erik Bjurman
Per Oscarsson as Holger Palmgren
Georgi Staykov as Alexander Zalachenko
Sofia Ledarp as Malin Eriksson
Yasmine Garbi as Miriam Wu
Annika Hallin as Annika Giannini
Tanja Lorentzon as Sonja Modig
Paolo Roberto as himself
Johan Kylén as Jan Bublanski
Magnus Krepper as Hans Faste
Ralph Carlsson as Gunnar Björck
Micke Spreitz as Ronald Niedermann
Anders Ahlbom as Dr. Peter Teleborian
Tehilla Blad as young Lisbeth Salander
Production[edit]
Daniel Alfredson takes over from Niels Arden Oplev, who directed The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, the first part of the trilogy.
Reception[edit]
Critical response[edit]
The film received mostly positive reviews from critics, although some noted it a step down from its predecessor. On review aggregation website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 69% based on 156 reviews with an average rating of 6.2/10.[2]
Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three and a half out of four stars, describing the film as a step down from The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, but only because the first film was so 'fresh and unexpected'.[3]A. O. Scott of The New York Times praised Rapace's performance, stating, 'tiny and agile, her steely rage showing now and then the tiniest crack of vulnerability, belongs to another dimension altogether. She makes this movie good enough, but also makes you wish it were much better.'[4] Lisa Kennedy of The Denver Post described Lisbeth Salander as 'worth the trouble' and having a 'cold stare' the like of which has not been seen since 'Clint was roaming the Italian hillsides.' She noted the film uses the linked themes of bureaucratic corruption and misogyny, where the previous film linked misogyny with fascism. The review contrasted the violence against women and heroism of Fire with the violence of The Killer Inside Me, complaining that the latter gives in to the worst impulses, noting that only the former story 'works' as some redemption is provided through revenge.[5]
Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune wrote that the film is much the same as its predecessor, despite the new director (Daniel Alfredson) and screenwriter (Jonas Frykberg), and is likely to please those who enjoyed the first film. He wrote that Rapace remained the chief asset of the series, and that she worked well with Michael Nyqvist, who he likened to a more sincere, Swedish version of Larry Hagman. He wrote further that, even though Rapace and Nyqvist 'could not be better' in their roles, the film needed to acknowledge the middle ground between the righteous heroes and the evil villains in order to work better as cinematic pulp fiction.[6]Rashke qamar mp3 song download.
Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gives the film 3 out of 4 stars.[7]
Rick Groen of The Globe and Mail describes the film as 'Tepid and downright confusing' for those who have not read the books, although he suspects there are few who have not; he notes that the plot, 'already thick on the page, often seems impenetrable here.' Although he concedes the plot generates some suspense, he complains it more often results in confusion but hopes the next film in the trilogy will bring greater clarity.[8]
Box office[edit]
Before being released in the United States the film had already earned $51,259,526 at the international box office.[1]
During its first week of release in the United States, it grossed $904,998, being released in three times as many theaters as the first film and grossing three times as much.[1] The film has a worldwide gross of $67,126,795.[1]
See also[edit]
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Swedish adaptation)
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (American adaptation)
References[edit]
^ abcd'The Girl Who Played with Fire (2010)'. Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^'The Girl Who Played with Fire (Flickan som lekte med elden) (2009)'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 29 November 2018.
^Ebert, Roger (7 July 2010). 'The Girl Who Played with Fire'. Chicago Sun-Times. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^Scott, A. O. (8 July 2010). 'Even in the Rising Heat, She Stays Pretty Cool'. The New York Times. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^Kennedy, Lisa (8 July 2010). 'Movie reviews: 'The Girl Who Played With Fire' and 'The Killer Inside Me''. The Denver Post. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^Phillips, Michael (8 July 2010). ''Girl Who Played With Fire' keeps bringing the pain for pulp fans'. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^Travers, Peter (7 July 2010). 'The Girl Who Played With Fire'. Rolling Stone. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
^Groen, Rick (8 July 2010). 'The Girl Who Played with Fire: Less poetic, more confusing'. The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 7 December 2011. Gone is the first film’s director, replaced by the prosaic Daniel Alfredson, who starts things off by swarming us with a perplexing array of characters.
External links[edit]
The Girl Who Played with Fire on IMDb
The Girl Who Played with Fire at the Swedish Film Institute Database
The Girl Who Played with Fire at Box Office Mojo
The Girl Who Played with Fire at Rotten Tomatoes
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Girl_Who_Played_with_Fire_(film)&oldid=874042750'
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(Millennium #2)
Part blistering espionage thriller, part riveting police procedural, and part piercing exposé on social injustice, The Girl Who Played with Fire is a masterful, endlessly satisfying novel. Mikael Blomkvist, crusading publisher of the magazine Millennium, has decided to run a story that will expose an extensive sex trafficking operation. On the eve of its publication, the..more
Published July 28th 2009 by Alfred A. Knopf (first published May 9th 2006)
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Jackelin BravoI would definitely recommend it for you, if you haven't read it already. It's a great book, intense and graphic, but I guess it's nothing you don't…moreI would definitely recommend it for you, if you haven't read it already. It's a great book, intense and graphic, but I guess it's nothing you don't know already. There ARE graphic descriptions of killings and intercourse. (less)
Susan LewisYES. You can follow the plot without reading the first. However, the first book is all about character development and the relationship between…moreYES. You can follow the plot without reading the first. However, the first book is all about character development and the relationship between Blomquist and Salander. If you miss their shared history, you miss the foundation. The whole trilogy is a 'tale of revenge' which is why we find Salander's character so fascinating and her actions so satisfying. There are many characters and you won't get the same satisfaction if you don't know the back story.(less)
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Rating details
Jul 24, 2009Grace Tjan rated it it was amazing
ILLUSTRATED! What I learned from this book (in no particular order): 1. Swedish billionaires furnish their multi-million dollar apartments with IKEA --- well, at least ONE peculiar Swedish billionaire. [image error] Poang Chair $40 2. Asperger's Syndrome may give you the idea that a T-shirt that says ‘I’M AN ALIEN’ is acceptable office wear, but also photographic memory and phenomenal mathematical ability. 3. 'Sweden is one of the countries that imports the most prostitutes per capita from Russia and..more
Aug 01, 2013Jayson rated it really liked it · review of another edition
(A-) 82% Very Good Notes: An entirely different mood, pace and atmosphere than its predecessor, it thrives off the strength of a single character.
The first book was for the most part plot-driven. The 40-year old mystery took a while to unfold, but was interesting when it did. So was Lisbeth, although she wasn't the main focus. Enter, The Girl Who Played With Fire. The story has now turned character-driven with Lisbeth as the protagonist. But instead of having much of a plot of any character revelations about her early on, we read about her buying a new apartment, grocery shopping, and what furniture she picked out at IKEA in *great* detai..more
Stieg Larsson doesn't really do subtle. If he thinks an issue is important, he will shout it from the rooftops. With a megaphone. But since he is condemning misogyny and violence towards women, I'm ok with that.
'Salander was the woman who hated men who hate women.'
This book, much more than its predecessor, focuses on the tiny-but-tough Lisbeth Salander. We learn quite a bit about the fascinating and horrific backstory that led to Salander developing her unique, defensive, prickly personality...more
Jul 26, 2010Brad rated it really liked it · review of another edition
I am confident that Stieg Larsson has a reason for this, but Lisbeth Salander is not much of a heroine. Let's list her transgressions from The Girl Who Played With Fire (and these will be deliberately out of context): 1. She forces herself on a 16 year old boy in Granada. 2. She kills a man on the beach during a hurricane. 3. She shuts out Blomkvist for a very long time for a perceived slight, giving him no explanation. 4. She fails to take or show the necessary care with her ex-guardian after his s..more
Feb 13, 2013Melissa ♥ Dog/Wolf Lover ♥ Martin rated it it was amazing
Very short review due to the glitches on GR. This is the second book in the trilogy. I loved it and I loved the movie. The book bogs down a little but it's all good. Lisbeth is back and doing her own thing. Lisbeth has been away from Mikael for some time. But, they come back together when Lisbeth is accused of killing that jerk rapist of hers. *****Spoiler***** Lisbeth looks into a sex trafficking ring that Mikael is involved in and finds out some things about her past she didn't want to know. He..more
Apr 27, 2013Jeffrey Keeten rated it really liked it
He had come. He smelled of aftershave. She hated the smell of him. He..observed her for a long time. She hated his silence. Then he spoke to her. He had a dark, clear voice that stressed, pedantically, each word. She hated his voice. He laid the back of a moist hand on her forehead and ran his fingers along her hairline in a gesture that was probably intended to be friendly. She hated his touch.
Lisbeth Salander is simply unforgettable. I read the first book in this trilogy the year it was published..more
Feb 04, 2019Ken rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I’ll always consider the Millennium series as a trilogy, this is due to all three original novels being adapted into movies in 2009. It’s only taken me 10 years to finally read the books! It’s true that the second volume isn’t as strong as the first, but the character of Lisbeth is so strong and fascinating that it’s hard to not get hooked by her exploits. The trilogy is so good because this second volume explores her backstory and the reader gets a better sense of what makes her tick. This part is..more
Jun 02, 2013Ahmad Sharabiani rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Flickan som lekte med elden = The Girl Who Played with Fire (Millennium, #2), Stieg Larsson The Girl Who Played with Fire (Swedish: Flickan som lekte med elden) is the second novel in the best-selling Millennium series by Swedish writer Stieg Larsson. It was published posthumously in Swedish in 2006 and in English in January 2009. The book features many of the characters who appeared in The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2005), among them the title character, Lisbeth Salander, a brilliant computer..more
Jun 18, 2014Laz rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
A downright masterpiece. The action sequences, the constant tension continually building up to lead to a tremendous ending. Lisbeth freaking Salander, she may actually be one of the best, and most complex characters I've ever had the pleasure of reading about. Introverted, extremely genial, and dangerous if need be, she's the epitome of the formula to the creation of a super-intriguing character. Like the first book, this was a complete investigation-kind-of-book. But unlike the first one, this h..more
Mar 08, 2017Ninoska Goris rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Español - English Lisbeth ha desaparecido, se ha tomado un tiempo para superar lo de Mikael. Mikael esta escribiendo un gran reportaje sobre el tráfico y la prostitución. Sus caminos se cruzarán nuevamente.. ---- Lisbeth has disappeared, she has taken time to overcome Mikael. Mikael is writing a great story about trafficking and prostitution. Their paths will cross again..
Feb 25, 2012Dan Schwent rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Three people are dead and Lisbeth Salander's finger prints are on the murder weapon. Can Mikael Blomkvist clear her name before the police find her? And what does Lisbeth's situation have to do with an expose of the Swedish sex trade two of the murder victims were working on? I was afraid The Girl Who Played With Fire would suffer from the sophomore jinx. I'm pleased to say it did not. Larsson must have figured out he had a good thing in Lisbeth Salander while working on The Girl With The Dragon T..more
Jan 07, 2012James rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Book Review 4 of 5 stars to The Girl Who Played with Fire, the second book in the Millenium thriller series written in 2006 by Stieg Larsson. Although I am very fond of this book, it wasn't quite as good as the first one, The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. But it's a very strong follow-up sequel worth reading. It packs an even larger punch as far as violence and drama, as well as brings out the sexual chemistry and tension between Mikhail and Lisbeth. But this book is all about Lisbeth.. and i..more
Jul 01, 2017Helene Jeppesen rated it it was amazing
4.75/5 stars. This sequel to 'The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo' is brilliant! This is some of the best crime fiction that exists, in my opinion, and Lisbeth Salander remains one of my favourite fictional characters of all time. The plot of this novel is clever and the diverse set of characters fascinating. The only reason why this novel is not just as good as the first one, is because it contains some passages that at times seemed dwelling and somewhat repetitive. That being said, the conclusion..more
Apr 02, 2015Kai rated it it was amazing
“There are no innocents. There are, however, different degrees of responsibility.” Wow. Stieg Larsson did it again. He took my breath away. Larsson's style of writing is unique. It is so very detailed and everything seems to be perfectly planned. The characters are diverse and interesting and I am not only talking about Lisbeth Salander, the novel's heroine, but about most side characters as well. This novel is full of nerve-wracking suspense and thrill, especially the beginning and the middle. Howev..more
Much later. After such insistence on preserving my idea of my father, my memory of our last meeting, this happened a couple of Fridays ago. I opened up some photos taken by my brother and there my father is, dead in his coffin. I must confess to being quite distressed. And I still don't understand why on earth is this something to preserve? I don't get it one little bit. ---------------- Hooked. Totally, completely, utterly hooked. I read this book yesterday during lunch even though I was with two..more
Nov 13, 2008Manny rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Unfortunately not as good as Män som Hatar Kvinnor. He has gone too far, and Lisbeth Salander is no longer a fully credible person; also, the puzzle isn't as satisfying as in the first one. Start geek-rant: as a former mathematician, I was annoyed by his sloppiness concerning Fermat's Last Theorem. To start off with, he misquotes it several times. And the whole idea that Lisbeth is able to solve it on her own in just a few months, with no formal mathematical training, is cheap. If this were the o..more
Jun 06, 2009Fiona rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This is the sequel to The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and it was immediately as good as the first but this time I knew this from the very first page. The first one I felt was slightly more clumsy at the beginning and took a while to truly love it. I speak only for myself of course. This one it starts off with a bang and you know immediately from the first page it is going to be just as good if not better. Blomkvist takes a back seat here and Salander takes the lead. She after all is really the mos..more
Jun 21, 2011Amanda rated it really liked it
If loving the Millennium books is wrong, baby, I don't want to be right. In scanning through the other reviews, I have to concur with many of the problems mentioned: superfluous detail (specific IKEA furniture is mentioned several times--as if I know what any of it looks like just because I have the model number provided, sandwiches are made, coffee is brewed, Billy's Pan Pizzas are consumed); there's a real dearth of poetic or stylized language; there's a cast of hundreds (maybe not quite, but i..more
Nov 01, 2011مصطفي سليمان rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
O_o O_o O_o هو اللي انا قريته دا حقيقي؟ يعني فيه واحد كدا عادي مسك ورقة وقلم او اي الة طباعة وبدا يكتب عادي يعني فكرة وبعدين قعد يشتغل عليها وطلعت الرواية دي؟؟؟؟ خليني اسئل سؤال كام مرة حد قرأ جزء تاني وكان بينافس او علي الاقل ف نفس مستوي الجزء الاول بالنسبة ليا نسبة صغيرة جدا دايما العمل الاول بيبقي فيه تفاصيل الراجل دا كسر الموضوع الجزء التاني من اول 50 صفحة انت متبنج حاسس ببنج ف عقلك الاحداث عامله تنقلك الفكرة عاملة تخليك تسئل مليون سؤال رسمه للشخصيات لا يقال عليه شئ غير سحري متأكد ان فيه ملف كامل لكل شخصية مف..more
May 10, 2010Fabian rated it liked it · review of another edition
There is ample description of our titular heroine in the first third of 'The Girl Who Played with Fire.' Lisbeth Salander is composing and arranging a new life for herself while still maintaining the baggage left over from her early years (tons of child abuse) and the occurrences of Book #1. And she's still acting, to put it nicely, quite unconventional. It is precisely this mask, as well as people's prejudices & judgements that make her the ideal infiltrator of conspiracies in the highest e..more
“Not him too.” “Not him too what?” “Another admirer of Fröken Salander.”
Why yes, I am too! Lisbeth has earned herself another admirer. Well, not completely but mostly. This was a BR with the Lisbeth Fanatic who promised me a mindfuck but unfortunately I didn’t get that and then the said fanatic disappeared soon after we commenced the journey got busy reading! ;) Happy now? :P This is a hard book to review without giving anything out and since I myself haven’t read the last part, I can’t say what..more
Nov 23, 2018Jo rated it really liked it · review of another edition
This book was pretty slow getting started, but when it did, it did it with stupendous style. Lisbeth Salander ran the show in this one, which I really loved. I liked Lisbeth in the first book, but in this one, we see more sides to her than ever before. Let me put this plainly, I want to slurp freshly brewed coffee and scoff Billy pan pizza's with this woman, even if she is a cold and calculated pain in the ass at times. What I especially liked about this book, was all the weird twists and turns...more
Larsson's second novel about Lisbeth Salander, or about MIkhail Blomkvist of Millennium Magazine, either as it may be, was a suspenseful gem. A little slow to get started, this one lacked the steady momentum of the first, but the second half more than makes up for the inconsistent and morose first half. Larrson was immensely talented and it is a great shame that we can look forward to no more novels from him. As Blomkvist was the center of attention in the first, Salander is definitely the subje..more
I struggled through this 514-page book. To begin with, all the homo, bi, double-partner, and heterosexual talk was a bit much. Way beyond my comfort level. To be fair, once I got about half-way through the book - after all the characters' sexual preferences were clearly established - it did become a page-turner as I raced to find out the ending. If you like books with lots of character sketches, this might work for you. I was tempted to get out a notepad and sketch out all the characters and their..more
I LOVED THIS 2nd book by Larsson. The 'Tattoo' Girl (The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo), is a wonderful character --even better in `this` book! Keeps getting better... I've already ordered the 3rd book from the United Kingdom. It comes out Oct. 1st...more
Nov 15, 2018Sara rated it really liked it
I liked The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, I thought it was clever and well-written and Lisbeth Salander is a unique and intriguing character, but I wasn’t knocked off my feet. I had the two follow up books on my shelf, but I wasn’t in a hurry to get to them, just thinking I would when I could. This week I picked up The Girl Who Played With Fire and stepped back into Lisbeth’s world, with a bang. This book is even better than the first one, perhaps because you already have a feeling of knowing who..more
Jul 19, 2015Karina rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Wow! Such an intense story. Can't wait to read the third book because this cliffhanger is crazy
Awesome! Incredible! Inspiring! 10 of 10 stars
Aug 25, 2012Meredith Holley rated it really liked it
Culture imposes on women constant indoctrination of the idea that our vaginas should make us small, weak, and incapable of caring for ourselves or others. 'A woman could obviously never be a fire fighter, for example.' 'We couldn't send a woman to do that military job because what if she got her period? She couldn't take a week off when she's there!' 'There are just some days in the month when a woman diplomat wouldn't be able to do her job.' 'I wouldn't watch women's sports because women aren't..more
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Stieg Larsson (born as Karl Stig-Erland Larsson) was a Swedish journalist and writer who passed away in 2004. As a journalist and editor of the magazine Expo, Larsson was active in documenting and exposing Swedish extreme right and racist organisations. When he died at the age of 50, Larsson left three unpublished thrillers and unfinished manuscripts for more. The first three books (The Girl Wit..more
Girl Who Played With Fire
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“There are no innocents. There are, however, different degrees of responsibility.” — 1096 likes
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“Don’t ever fight with Lisbeth Salander. Her attitude towards the rest of the world is that if someone threatens her with a gun, she’ll get a bigger gun.” — 402 likes