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・ Kurt W. Fischer
・ Kurt W. Schuller
・ Kurt W. Tidd
・ Kurt Wagenseil
・ Kurt Wagner
・ Kurt Wagner (actor)
・ Kurt Wagner (general)
・ Kurt Wagner (musician)
・ Kurt Wahl
・ Kurt Wahl (fencer)
・ Kurt Wahle
・ Kurt Waitzmann
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Kurt Wallander
・ Kurt Walter
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・ Kurt Walter Leucht
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・ Kurt Warner's Arena Football Unleashed
・ Kurt Weber
・ Kurt Wegener
・ Kurt Wegner
・ Kurt Weidner
・ Kurt Weiland
・ Kurt Weill
・ Kurt Weinreich
・ Kurt Weinzierl
・ Kurt Weitzmann


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Kurt Wallander : ウィキペディア英語版
Kurt Wallander
Kurt Wallander ((:valˈlanːdər)) is a fictional character created by Swedish crime writer Henning Mankell (1948 – 2015). The protagonist of several mystery novels, set in and around the town of Ystad, south-east of the city of Malmö, in the southern province of Skåne. Wallander has been portrayed on screen by the actors Rolf Lassgård, Krister Henriksson and Kenneth Branagh.
==Biography==

As a young police officer, he was nearly killed when a drunk, whom he was questioning, stabbed him with a butcher's knife (this is mentioned in the account of his first case). Wallander was once married, but his wife Mona left him and he has since had a difficult relationship with his rebellious only child, Linda, who barely survived a suicide attempt when she was fifteen. He also had issues with his late father, an artist who painted the same landscape 7,000 times for a living; the elder Wallander strongly disapproved of his son's decision to join the police force and frequently derided him for it.
Wallander is a great fan of the opera; while in his car he regularly listens to recordings of famous opera singers such as Maria Callas, and when he can find the time goes to opera performances, sometimes crossing over to Copenhagen, Denmark for this purpose. At one time, Wallander had dreamed of making opera his life, leaving the police force and becoming the impresario of his friend, Sten Widén, a tenor who aspired to sing opera. But Widén's voice was not good enough and the dream came to naught—a crushing disappointment in Wallander's life (as in Widén's).
Inspector Wallander has few close friends and is known for his less-than-desirable lifestyle; he consumes too much alcohol and junk food, exercises very little, and sometimes struggles with anger. He frequently regards the crimes he investigates on a very personal level, throwing himself into catching criminals and going against the orders of his superiors to try to solve a case, often with negative effects on his emotional stability.
Over the years he has grown increasingly disillusioned with his work and often wonders whether he should have become a police officer at all. He was once falsely sued and harassed for police brutality and still lives with the guilt of having shot and killed a man in the fog, an act which drove him into depression and nearly led to his resignation. His relationships with his colleagues are tentative; they are alternately amazed by his intellect and frustrated by his brusque manner and aggressive tactics.
He is frequently at loose ends socially and with his family. After the breakup of his marriage, he had an affair with Annette Brolin, the prosecutor with whom he was working on some cases — but she was married and had children, and would not consider divorcing for his sake ("Faceless Killers"). In later years, he maintains a somewhat inconsistent romantic relationship with Baiba Liepa, a woman in Riga, Latvia, whom he met while investigating a murder there, until it eventually dissolves. Over the course of the series he is diagnosed with diabetes, and towards the end of his career he suffers from memory lapses, discovering he has developed Alzheimer's disease, with which his father was also afflicted.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Kurt Wallander」の詳細全文を読む



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