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After her interment, noises were heard from the tomb, and she was subsequently discovered to have been buried alive. Since her premature burial, she is popularly known as "the girl who died twice", [1] and her tomb is one of the most famous in La Recoleta Cemetery.
"The Girl Who Died" is the fifth episode of the ninth series of the British science fiction television series Doctor Who. It was first broadcast on BBC One on 17 October 2015, and was written by Jamie Mathieson and Steven Moffat and directed by Ed Bazalgette .
Blomkvist receives a call from a coroner named Frederika Nyman about a dead homeless man who had Blomkvist's phone number on him and who died under mysterious circumstances. Eyewitness accounts, including reporter Catrin Lindas, who Blomkvist starts dating, suggest the man knew something about controversial Minister of Defense Johannes Forsell.
The sixth book in the Millennium series was released in August 2019. The Swedish title is Hon som måste dö (literally "She who must die") and the English title is The Girl Who Lived Twice. The seventh book in the Millennium series was released in November 2022.
Smirnoff's first entry in the series, The Girl in the Eagle's Talons, was published on October 31, 2022. An English translation by Sarah Death was published on August 29, 2023. [27] Smirnoff's second book, The Girl with Ice in her Veins, was published on September 29, 2024. An English translation will be published on August 28, 2025.
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Jane de Lange Lewis (September 10, 1915 – February 1, 2003), known by her pen names Lange Lewis, Jane Beynon and Jane Lewis Brandt, was an American author.She graduated from the University of Southern California (USC) in 1939 and began writing mystery novels, the first two of which – Murder Among Friends and Juliet Dies Twice – were set at a fictional university standing in for USC.
The Girl Who Died (2021; [4] translation of Þorpið, 2018) Outside (2022; [ 4 ] translation of Úti , 2021) White Death (2023; [ 4 ] translation of Hvítidauði , 2019)