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Birmingham Literature Festival 2014: Birmingham Library devotes an evening to Scandi noir

Birmingham Literature Festival 2014: Dagmar Winther, one half of Danish crime-thriller-writing team Sander Jakobsen, will appear at The Library of Birmingham next week in an evening devoted to the popular genre of Scandi noir.

Dagmar Winther and Kenneth Degnbol, Danish crime-writing thriller team, who are coming to Birmingham Literature Festival.

Scandi noir is a literary trend that has also become compelling television with the likes of Wallander, The Bridge and The Killing. Author Dagmar Winther talks to Andrew Davies about how Birmingham inspired her to become part of the phenomenon.

When Dagmar Winther, one half of Danish crime-thriller-writing team Sander Jakobsen, next week in an evening devoted to the popular genre of Scandi noir, it will be in some ways a homecoming.

Twelve years ago, Dagmar spent six months as an intern at the Birmingham Post as part of her training as a journalist.

“You guys taught me everything I know about writing,” she says, only half joking.

“My time in Birmingham influenced me in a very big way.”

While with the news team, she shadowed reporters, which included visiting grieving families to talk about their stories.

“There were extremely disturbing cases – one involved people being burnt to death in their house; it was very grim,” she explains. “It was my first instance of meeting people and telling their story. You get to look into people’s lives when they’re not at their proudest or prettiest: it was a wake-up call.”

, Dagmar undertook a further internship with the European Commission in Brussels, before returning to her home in Aarhus. There, in Denmark’s second city, she became a journalism lecturer in a Danish school.