Thomas Sjöberg (journalist)
Thomas Sjöberg, born 1958 in Sweden, is a journalist and author based in Stockholm.[1]
He began his career as journalist in the late 1970s and for several years filled in for others in contributing articles to newspapers such as Expressen, Aftonbladet, Sydsvenska Dagbladet, and Dagens Nyheter. In the mid-1980s he switched to freelance employment and worked for, among others, Nöjesguiden and Elle. He made himself above all known as a writer of personal profiles and wrote a number of notable articles on people such as Berth Milton, Ingmar Bergman, Pierre Schori, Sven-Göran Eriksson, och Lennart Hyland.
Sjöberg has taught biographical journalism and contributed to Swedish television. In the first decade of the 21st century Sjöberg was editor for Scanorama, the in-flight magazine published by the Scandinavian Airline SAS.
Sjöberg has also written several books (see below), the most controversial of which was Carl XVI Gustaf: Den motvillige monarken (Carl XVI Gustaf: The Unwilling Monarch), which alleged that, as a young man, the future Swedish king had frequented stripclubs managed by the Mafia. The book was assailed not only for probing into the life of the monarch (traditionally a tabooed subject in Sweden) but also for questions about the anonymity and credibility of the sources.[2]
Books
Sjöberg, Thomas. (1996). Tommy Lindström: Mitt liv som snut (Tommy Lindström: My Life as a Cop). ISBN 91-7964-230-6.
Sjöberg, Thomas. (1998). Ingvar Kamprad och hans IKEA: en svensk saga (Ingvar and His IKEA: A Swedish Story) ISBN 91-7964-251-9.
Sjöberg, Thomas. (2002). Private med Milton och Milton (Private with Milton and Milton). ISBN 91-7054-887-0.
Sjöberg, Thomas. (2005). Barnflickan i Knutby: dramadokumentär (The Nanny in Knutby: A Documentary Drama). ISBN 91-46-21146-2.
Sjöberg, Thomas. (2010). Carl XVI Gustaf: Den motvillige monarken (Carl XVI Gustaf: The Unwilling Monarch). ISBN 978-91-7461-016-1.
Notes
- ^ This article is largely a translation of the same-titled article in the Swedish Wikipedia. For the original see the Swedish article on Thomas Sjöberg (journalist).
- ^ Sjöberg insisted on the legitimacy of his sources, but Anders Lettström of Sweden's TV4 called the book's allegations "speculations, falsifications and slander." Nordström, Louise (2010-11-04). "Swedish king pleads for peace and quiet after book digs into his private life". CanadaEast. Retrieved 2010-11-24.