
Snabba Cash
2021 • Crime, Drama • TV-MA
The lives of an ambitious businesswoman, a charming gang enforcer and a troubled teen collide amidst a desperate — and sinister — pursuit of wealth.
Why you should read the novels
Reading Jens Lapidus's 'Snabba Cash' trilogy—starting with Easy Money—offers a raw, unfiltered plunge into Stockholm's criminal underbelly that simply cannot be matched on screen. The novels grant deep access to the characters' inner worlds, revealing the driving ambitions, vulnerabilities, and moral dilemmas that shape their choices and destinies, far beyond what the TV adaptation allows.
Lapidus’s writing immerses you in the dark glamour, desperate hustle, and brutal realism of modern Sweden, delivering intricate plotlines and vivid perspectives from multiple viewpoints. The legal expertise of the author, himself a criminal defense lawyer, brings unmatched authenticity to every page, from street-level deals to high-society intrigues.
Dive into these books to savor the rich layers of the story, extensive character development, and the sociopolitical context shaping the action. While the series gives a taste, only the novels deliver the complete, unfiltered, and deeply human experience of Snabba Cash’s world—making them essential reading for fans of crime fiction.
Adaptation differences
One of the most significant differences between the 'Snabba Cash' TV series and the original novels is the time period and characters. While Jens Lapidus’s books follow JW, Jorge, and Mrado as they become entangled in Stockholm’s criminal environment in the early 2000s, the Netflix series shifts the action to present-day Sweden with an entirely new protagonist, Leya, charting her own dangerous ascent in the financial tech and drug trades.
The series modernizes the narrative by exploring contemporary issues such as start-up culture, immigrant entrepreneurship, and new forms of organized crime, diverging from the gritty but classically structured crime saga of the books. The result is a social commentary adapted for today’s audience, but which inevitably leaves behind several of the original thematic threads—such as JW’s obsessive drive for wealth at any price, and the complexities of class assimilation.
Characterization also diverges. The internal monologues, backstories, and psychological depth afforded to JW, Jorge, and Mrado in the novels are replaced by new challenges and motives for the show's characters. This alters the emotional impact and the moral ambiguity that made the books particularly resonant, offering instead a fast-paced plot with new faces and dilemmas.
Finally, the scope and structure differ. Whereas the novels form a connected trilogy with overlapping character arcs and a multi-layered look at Stockholm’s underbelly, the TV series opts for a fresh narrative that leaves out major book events and relationships. While gripping in its own right, the adaptation is more a spiritual successor than a direct retelling—offering a distinct experience from Lapidus’s original works.
Snabba Cash inspired from
Easy Money
by Jens Lapidus
Never Fuck Up
by Jens Lapidus
Life Deluxe
by Jens Lapidus