...five years after Stieg Larrson's untimely death and millions of
book sales later, the Swedish crime writer's estate is caught in a
bitter feud worthy of one of his thrillers, complete with a
strong-willed female protagonist, a murky bog of possible villains and
a plot that has transfixed this Scandinavian country.
It's a saga of love, literature and the law. Of blood versus bond,
pitting Larsson's relatives against his lifelong companion for control
of a posthumous publishing juggernaut that shows no sign of slowing...
Continued: http://tr.im/Stieg
Willow
Unless you actually want a family fight...........
Agreed, though. I have heard of such bitter, family-splitting disputes
over quite small differences.
Coincidentally, I just read this entry in Tim Gowers's blog.
"I can't resist sharing what is, by a long way, the silliest
piece of fictional mathematics I have ever come across.
It comes in "The Girl Who Played With Fire," by the
late Stieg Larsson, translated (not very well) by someone
called Reg Keeling...."
http://gowers.wordpress.com/2009/12/20/wiles-meets-his-match/#more-1377
> Coincidentally, I just read this entry in Tim Gowers's blog.
>
> "I can't resist sharing what is, by a long way, the silliest
> piece of fictional mathematics I have ever come across.
> It comes in "The Girl Who Played With Fire," by the
> late Stieg Larsson, translated (not very well) by someone
> called Reg Keeling...."
>
> http://gowers.wordpress.com/2009/12/20/wiles-meets-his-match/#more-1377
I enjoyed the entry. Thanks for posting it.
--
Jesse F. Hughes
"I often told you of the dangers of hubris, and most importantly of
all, I TOLD you that I wanted to change the institution of mathematics
worldwide." -- James Harris, on the evils of pride
http://therapsheet.blogspot.com/search/label/Stieg%20Larsson
Ali