An outstanding book about courage and morality, well substantiated, exciting and at times so moving that I got tears in my eyes and had to take a deep breath before I continued reading.
— Ingalill Mossander, literary critic Aftonbladet

This book was awarded the Lengertz literature award and the Gisela och Oscar Trapps memorial award, both in 2021. The author was also rewarded honorary scholarships for it.

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THE BOOK

 THE HELSINGØR CROSSING (Swedish title: Sundets röda nejlikor), out at Bonnier/Forum September 2020, is a reportage on the Danish resistance group code-named The Elsinore Sewing Club (DK: Helsingør).

Together with the Swedish security police they managed to transport 1,500 refugees and resistance members across the sound between Denmark and Sweden during the Nazi occupation of Denmark. Conny's gripping narrative recounts the true story of how The Sewing Club helped their fellow humans in need, sometimes at the cost of their own lives.⁣

Conny started writing in his early teens and since his 2005 debut, he has published nine books to date. He has received multiple awards for his work, including the Helsingborgs Dagblad’s Cultural Prize, Umeå Short Story Prize and the Selma Prize.

When he's not writing, Conny works as an editor, literary critic and ghost writer. He has made a documentary film about the story of The Elsinore Sewing Club, and enjoys photography in his free time.⁣

This is the best book I’ve read in the last year.
— / Borås newspaper, critics top list 2020

THE AUTHOR

Born in 1973, Conny Palmkvist grew up in the small town of Jonstorp in southern Sweden. He began writing when he was just fourteen, processing his father’s death through a series of poems that spanned far beyond the backwater where he lived.

Conny spent several years glued to his trusty old typewriter, slowly developing his characteristic style. Ironically enough, it was another tragic event that led him to the publication of his debut novel in 2005, written as he worked through the loss of his mother.

The manuscript took just five days to sell, with the rights being snapped up by one of Sweden’s most respected publishing houses. It proved to be a great success with both readers and critics.

Since then, Conny has written another ten novels, which have been recognised by a number of Swedish literary awards, including Helsingborgs Dagblads kulturpris, Umeå Novellpris and Selmapriset. The latter was awarded for his depiction of the Auschwitz women’s orchestra.

Conny is often praised for his ability to capture a range of voices in his novels, and has featured a whole host of characters over the years—from a seventeen-year-old girl in a death camp to an elderly man living out his final days at ninety. His signature is, and will always be, his close perspective, as well as the poetic undercurrent in his texts.

Attempting to avoid becoming completely bogged down in his role as an author, Conny occasionally works as an editor, ghostwriter, literary critic, and photographer. In a moment of weakness in 2016, he agreed to making a documentary about the Danish Jews’ flight from Denmark to Sweden during the Second World War—without ever having worked with the medium of film before. The result was a documentary entitled The Straight Escape, the rights to which were bought by Danish TV. The film has now been broadcast a total of twelve times since 2018.

Conny lives with his family in Helsingborg southern Sweden.

RIGHTS SOLD

Czech: Albatros
Denmark: Turbine Forlaget

PRESS / CRITICS

A dramatic and captivating story about how the police and a sewing club together saved hundreds of Danish refugees during the Second World War.
— Smålandsposten (critic top list)
The book alternates between relatable, well-researched reporting style, and descriptive, literary elements when the author reproduces lines and thoughts. It will be a captivating and important portrayal of human courage and willingness to sacrifice.”
Overall rating: 4
— BTJ (Johan Brinck)
The author has unearthed material that has not previously been used, he has interviewed relatives of sewing club members and can tell a completely unlikely, but true story about how people conscientiously took great risks because they could not do anything else.”
Rating 4/5
— Åland newspaper
It is an important contribution Palmkvist makes when he brings these red carnations of the Sundet out of the shadows. His book is a depiction of a rather unknown chapter in Nordic war history. It is a well-written and endlessly exciting story about brave people from all walks of life .
— Swedish leading literary critic Yukiko Duke
The text moves in a constant now, a stylistic approach that the author effectively manages to use partly to heighten the dramatic effect, partly to emphasize that the main characters did not sit with any conclusions. And Palmkvist skillfully achieves this feeling without doing violence to the truthfulness of the story.
— Kristianstadsbladet
This book about how a group of Danish resistance fighters and Swedish security police rescue refugees across the Öresund during World War II is hard to put down. Enlightening and thriller-like page-turner.
— Oskarshamns-Tidinningen
It’s a fantastic book that made me cry.
— / Joakim Thåström in Dagens Nyheter
The book’s writing style artfully pulls us along through the wealth of information. And Conny Palmkvist has the courage to abstain from censuring. He presents us with dum-dum bullets, violent rapes, horrible torture. Kjaer was captured and sent to the camps that he had saved so many from. But the bookbinder turned skipper survived and lived till ripe old age and he continued binding books.
— Sydsvenskan, literary critic
Palmkvist brings to life the bookbinder who risked his life to save the Danish Jews.
— Helsingborgs Dagblad
In the hands of an inferior stylist, it would’ve become an overly literal and overloaded work. But here, every word finds its place, with selectiveness and restraint and in longer sections the author remains behind the scenes. The fate-heavy, tension-focused, tension-driven material speaks for itself.
— NST