What Was On Dragon Tattoo’s Lisbeth Salander’s IKEA Shopping List?

In “The Girl Who Played with Fire” — the second book of best-selling Millenium Triology by Stieg Larsson — the character Lisbeth Salander moves into a new apartment and goes shopping at IKEA — a rather mundane activity that IKEA fans will enjoy as they recognize specific product names and remember some of the discontinued products that are missed.

The section outlining her shopping has been described as “consumerist poetry” by Ariel Ramchandani, a contributing editor to The Economist’s More Intelligent Life blog.

To celebrate Lisbeth’s list — she spent about 90,000 Swedish Kroner, the equivalent of approximately $12,000 UDS — I’ve linked to specific products that are still available from IKEA in the passage below. For images of products that are no longer available, see the gallery images!



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Air Traffic Outage Halts Flights In Europe

BERLIN — A regional air traffic control system outage sharply limited flights around much of northern Europe Friday, causing delays for more than 1,000 planes.

An online map of flights showed delays of around 45 minutes for 1,036 flights landing, taking off from, or transiting Holland, northern Germany and parts of Belgium and Luxembourg at 1430 GMT (10:30 a.m. EDT).

The problem in the Maastricht, Netherlands, radar facility of the continent’s Eurocontrol system temporarily halted flights above 7,500 meters (24,606 feet), said Axel Raab, spokesman for German air traffic control. The Maastricht facility handles around 5,500 flights a day.

Pilots could choose to fly at lower altitude, although that airspace could clog quickly, Raab said.

Eurocontrol officials did not immediately return phone calls seeking comment, but advised operators via a website that the situation in the sector was improving and capacity was being increased.

A Frankfurt airport official, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to release the information to the media, said the problem had been fixed.

Air traffic over western Europe was reduced by 25 percent between 1315 and 1330 GMT (9:30 a.m. EDT), but capacity was expected to be back up at normal levels around 1500 GMT (11 a.m EDT), Swedish Air Navigation Services spokesman Per Frober said.

Normally, when air traffic is under radar control, the distance between planes at any given flight level is five nautical miles.

Radar failures cause delays because they force air traffic controllers to increase the separation between planes up to five minutes, or about 40 nautical miles, thus reducing flow through the affected air space.

Nearly 30,000 flights were using European airspace Friday. Officials in Britain, Poland, Austria and the Baltic countries said their airspace was not affected.

___

Associated Press Writers Slobodan Lekic in Brussels, Belgium and Kirsten Grieshaber in London contributed to this report.

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Fredrik Ericsson Dead: Climber Reportedly Killed At K-2

STOCKHOLM — The Austrian News Agency says Swedish climber and skier Fredrik Ericsson has fallen to his death on K-2 while trying to conquer the world’s second highest peak.

The agency cites members of his expedition as saying the accident occurred Friday during a sudden warm spell that increased the danger of the climb.

Fellow climber Christian Stangl told APA that fog also interfered with the climb.

At 8,611 meters (28,250 feet), the peak in the Chinese-Pakistani border region is the second highest after Mount Everest, at 8,848 meters (29,030 feet).

Sweden’s Foreign Ministry was informed about the accident by Ericsson’s family, but was waiting for local authorities to confirm his death, ministry spokesman Anders Jorle said.

Swedish news agency TT said Ericsson was 35.

A posting by a colleague on Ericsson’s official website on Aug. 4 said the warm conditions had prompted a lot of movement on the mountain and that “avalanches and rock fall could be heard all day.”

The site described Ericsson as an avid climber and skier who traveled to mountain peaks worldwide to do photo shoots for ski magazines, websites and sponsors.

He had made several trips to the Himalayas and was working on a project to ski the world’s three highest peaks, Mount Everest, K2 and Kangchenjunga.

___

Online: Ericsson’s website http://www.fredrikericsson.com

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Tiger Woods’ House Going To Elin Nordegren: Report

Tiger Woods’ primary house will not be his for much longer, RadarOnline reports. According to the web site, wife Elin Nordegren will gain control of the home as part of the couple’s still-rumored divorce settlement.

The Woods-Elin divorce rumors picked up in late June, with one report claiming that divorce papers were “about to be signed” and another saying that the negotiations were in their “final meetings.” The former Swedish model is rumored to be receiving as much as $750 million, although TMZ has disputed the claim.

While Nordegren has reportedly secured ownership of their primary home, Woods continues to struggle at professional golf — and his anger occasionally gets the best of him, as always. His earnings plummeted during the past year, but he is still one of the country’s favorite athletes.

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‘The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo’ Is All-Time Top Seller On Kindle

NEW YORK — It’s electronic milestone time for Stieg Larsson’s Millennium trilogy.

The late Swedish author’s blockbuster thrillers have sold more than 1 million copies in the e-book editions, publisher Alfred A. Knopf said Wednesday, making him at least the second author to join the e-million club. The ultra-prolific James Patterson also has more than 1 million e-book sales.

Amazon.com, the biggest player in the growing e-book market, told The Associated Press on Wednesday that Larsson’s “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” the first book in the Millennium trilogy, is the all-time top seller on the e-book reading device the Kindle. Kathryn Stockett’s novel “The Help” is No. 2.

Knopf lauded the sales of “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” about a journalist and a tattooed investigator trying to solve a decades-old disappearance.

“We are witnessing record-breaking sales for `The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’ in trade and mass market paperback as well as in audio, so it is not surprising that this trend is being mirrored with e-books,” Knopf spokesman Paul Bogaards said.

“Dragon Tattoo” has sold 500,000 e-books, Bogaards said. Sales for the trilogy in all editions top 30 million worldwide; in the U.S. alone, more than 400,000 copies are selling each week.

Bogaards also backed up a report earlier this week by Amazon that said the Internet retail giant was selling more e-books than hardcovers. Kindle sales for the most recent Larsson book, “The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest,” have topped those for the hardcover, said Bogaards, who added that he did not think hardcover sales had been hurt by the less expensive e-edition.

Larsson does not top every list. A spokesman for Sony’s e-book reading device, the Sony Reader, said Wednesday that “Dragon Tattoo” was the e-device’s No. 2 all-time seller, trailing Dan Brown’s “The Lost Symbol.” Patterson’s “Alex Cross” is No. 3.

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Alfred A. Knopf is a unit of Bertelsmann AG’s Random House Inc.

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Film Shorts

Page 1 of 3 OPENING: The Girl who Played with Fire (R) the sequel to the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo stars Michael Nyqvist as a Swedish journalist who finds his investigative partner (Noomi Rapace) the accused party in a high-profile murder case. also with Lena Endre, Sofia Ledarp, Peter Andersson, Georgi Staykov, Yasmine Garbi, Mikael Spreitz, Tehilla Blad, and Michalis Koutsogiannakis. (Opens Friday in Dallas) Predators (NR) Nimród Antal (Vacancy, Armored) continues the series, with a group of elite warriors transported to an alien planet to be hunted down by the natives

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World’s Oldest champagne found in Baltic Sea

Source A Swedish diver may have found the world’s oldest drinkable sparkling wine when he recovered several bottles of champagne amid the wreckage of a 230-year-old ship in the Baltic Sea, Swedish and Finnish media reported. Please visit Oldest champagne found in Baltic Sea for more detail.

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b twice

Biogen Idec and Swedish Orphan Biovitrum Present Data on Long-Lasting …National Post (registration) (blog)“Current prophylactic regimens for hemophilia B require intravenous injections twice per week, so there is great desire among physicians and patients for a …
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Lawn & LandscapeTrees, Ornamental & Bedding Plant: Follow the 'color brick' roadLawn & LandscapeCowan changes color twice a [...]

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Swedish Pirate Party to run the Pirate Bay from Parliament

Now the Pirate Party wants to take their stand even further, and plans to use a section of the Swedish Constitution to allow them to host the seemingly indefatigable TPB from inside Parliament.



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Norway Al Qaeda Arrests: 3 Suspected In Terrorist Bomb Plot

OSLO — Three suspected al-Qaida members were arrested Thursday morning in what Norwegian and U.S. officials said was a terrorist plot linked to similar plans in New York and England.

The three men, whose names were not released, had been under surveillance for more than a year. Officials believe they were planning attacks with portable but powerful bombs like the ones at the heart of last year’s thwarted suicide attack in the New York City subway.

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder has called that one of the most serious terrorist plots since 9/11. On Wednesday, prosecutors revealed the existence of a related plot in Manchester, England. Officials believe the Norway plan was organized by Salah al-Somali, al-Qaida’s former chief of external operations, the man in charge of plotting attacks worldwide.

The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case. The Norwegian Police Security Service said only that the three were arrested on suspicion of “preparing terror activities.”

Al-Somali, who was killed in a CIA drone airstrike last year, has been identified in U.S. court documents as one of the masterminds of the New York subway plot. Two men have pleaded guilty in that case, admitting they planned to detonate explosives during rush hour. A third man awaits trial.

A news conference was planned for later Thursday.

Officials said it was not clear the men had selected a target for the attacks but they were attempting to make peroxide bombs, the powerful homemade explosives that prosecutors say were attempted in both New York and England.

U.S. and Norwegian counterterrorism officials worked closely together to unravel the Norwegian plot, officials said. Janne Kristiansen, the head of the Police Security Service, traveled to the U.S. this spring to discuss some of the closely held intelligence that been gathered in the case.

In Washington, Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd had no comment.

Officials did not say why Norway was a target, but al-Qaida No. 2 Ayman al-Zawahri has called for attacks on Norway, among other countries.

Magnus Norell, a terrorism expert at the Swedish Defense Research Agency, said Norway’s 500 troops in Afghanistan could be a factor, as could the 2006 controversy sparked by a Danish newspaper’s publication of 12 cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad.

Norell said the controversy has extended to neighboring Norway and Sweden after newspapers there republished the cartoons and later published similar cartoons. Images of Muhammad, even favorable ones, are considered blasphemous by many Muslims.

__

Apuzzo and Goldman reported from Washington.

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