B.V. Lawson's Blog, page 147
January 24, 2019
Mystery Melange
Awards season is in full swing, as we saw with Tuesday's announcement of the Edgars. But here are a few more to report:
The winners of this year's German Mystery Prize (Deutscher Krimi Preis 2019) were announced, including German-language winner, Mexikoring, by Simone Buchholz, which is the sixth in her state prosecutor Chastity Riley series. The international category was won by Yokoyama Hideo's novel, Six Four.
Congratulations also go to Grand Master and Cartier Diamond Dagger Winner (CWA) Sara Paretsky for being given the prestigious Fuller Award by the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. The award was created to acknowledge Chicago's greatest living writers. Paretsky will be officially honored on at a reception on Thursday, May 9 at Ruggles Hall
Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine announced the Barry Award Nominees for 2019. Winners will be handed out on October 31 at the Dallas Bouchercon Opening Ceremonies. The Best Novel contenders include Lou Berney, November Road; Michael Connelly, Dark Sacred Night; Allen Eskens, The Shadow We Hide; Craig Johnson, Depth of Winter; Mindy Mejia, Leave No Trace; and Abir Mukherjee, A Necessary Evil. For all the finalists for Best First Novel, Best Paperback Original, and Best Thriller, head on over to Mystery Fanfare's report.
Crimean author Jesper Stein has won the Harald Mogensen Award, which the Danish Criminal Academy awards for best crime book of the year, for Stein's novel Solo, the sixth volume in his popular and critically acclaimed series with police officer Axel Steen. The Academy's debut award goes this year to Søren Sveistrup for the thriller novel Kastanjemanden (The Chestnut Man). The Academy also awarded Michael Connelly the Palle Rosenkrantz Award for best foreign thriller novel for Two Kinds of Truth.
In other news:
Librarians deserve a lot of love, and if you're a librarian in the UK, London's new crime and thriller festival Capital Crime will offer librarians (and people on low incomes) discounted tickets. Capital Crime co-founder David Headley said: “We’re acutely aware of the important role librarians play in supporting authors and promoting books and this is our way of saying thanks and giving something back to the community at a time when libraries are under real pressure.”
The American Booksellers Association reported that unit sales at indie stores grew in 2018 by nearly 5% over 2017, and that sales in the holiday period were up at a similar level - with many stores having some of the best sales days ever. (HT to Shelf Awareness)
The anniversary of Edgar Allan Poe's birthday was January 19th, and PBS Newshour Online profiled the author's greatest mystery ... his own death.
With Rapid DNA machines, which provide results in 90 minutes can be operated by police themselves, genetic fingerprinting could become as routine as the old-fashioned kind. But forensic experts see a potential for misuse.
In the 1800s, Johann Maelzel created a robot ("automoton") that could play chess. Although it was later outed as a hoax, it did give one enterprising young journalist an opportunity to make a name for himself by writing an expose about the fraud. The young man's name was Edgar Allan Poe, and his essay that allowed him to play detective and investigative reporter turned out to be a precursor to Poe’s later detective stories featuring amateur detective C. Auguste Dupin.
The latest poem at the 5-2 crime poetry weekly is "I Heard a Copter" by Annette Gagliardi.
And in more good poetry news from The Guardian, poetry sales soared in the UK as political millennials "search for clarity." A record £12m sales last year were driven by younger readers, with experts saying hunger for nuance amid conflict and disaster were fueling the boom.







January 22, 2019
MWA 2019 Edgar Award Nominations
It's turning out to be a big day in Awards Land. First the Oscars and now the Edgars. The Mystery Writers of America announced this morning the nominations for the annual awards for the best in crime fiction, including:
BEST NOVEL
The Liar’s Girl by Catherine Ryan Howard (Blackstone Publishing)
House Witness by Mike Lawson (Grove Atlantic – Atlantic Monthly Press)
A Gambler’s Jury by Victor Methos (Amazon Publishing – Thomas & Mercer)
Down the River Unto the Sea by Walter Mosley (Hachette Book Group - Mulholland)
Only to Sleep by Lawrence Osborne (Penguin Random House – Hogarth)
A Treacherous Curse by Deanna Raybourn (Penguin Random House – Berkley)
BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR
A Knife in the Fog by Bradley Harper (Seventh Street Books)
The Captives by Debra Jo Immergut (HarperCollins Publishers - Ecco)
The Last Equation of Isaac Severy by Nova Jacobs (Simon & Schuster - Touchstone)
Bearskin by James A. McLaughlin (HarperCollins Publishers - Ecco)
Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens (Penguin Random House – G.P. Putnam’s Sons)
BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
If I Die Tonight by Alison Gaylin (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow)
Hiroshima Boy by Naomi Hirahara (Prospect Park Books)
Under a Dark Sky by Lori Rader-Day (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow)
The Perfect Nanny by Leila Slimani (Penguin Random House – Penguin Books)
Under My Skin by Lisa Unger (Harlequin – Park Row Books)
BEST FACT CRIME
Tinderbox: The Untold Story of the Up Stairs Lounge First and the Rise of Gay Liberation by Robert W. Fieseler (W.W. Norton & Company - Liveright)
Sex Money Murder: A Story of Crack, Blood, and Betrayal by Jonathan Green (W.W. Norton & Company)
The Last Wild Men of Borneo: A True Story of Death and Treasure by Carl Hoffman (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow)
The Feather Thief: Beauty, Obsession, and the Natural History Heist of the Century by Kirk Wallace Johnson (Penguin Random House - Viking)
I'll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman's Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer by Michelle McNamara (HarperCollins Publishers - Harper)
The Good Mothers: The True Story of the Women Who Took on the World's Most Powerful Mafia by Alex Perry (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow)
BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL
The Metaphysical Mysteries of G.K. Chesterton: A Critical Study of the Father Brown Stories and Other Detective Fiction by Laird R. Blackwell (McFarland Publishing)
Dead Girls: Essays on Surviving an American Obsession by Alice Bolin (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow Paperbacks)
Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s by Leslie S. Klinger (Pegasus Books)
Mark X: Who Killed Huck Finn's Father? by Yasuhiro Takeuchi (Taylor & Francis - Routledge)
Agatha Christie: A Mysterious Life by Laura Thompson (Pegasus Books)
BEST SHORT STORY
“Rabid – A Mike Bowditch Short Story” by Paul Doiron (Minotaur Books)
“Paranoid Enough for Two” – The Honorable Traitors by John Lutz (Kensington Publishing)
“Ancient and Modern” – Bloody Scotland by Val McDermid (Pegasus Books)
“English 398: Fiction Workshop” – Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Art Taylor (Dell Magazines)
“The Sleep Tight Motel” – Dark Corners Collection by Lisa Unger (Amazon Publishing)
BEST JUVENILE
Denis Ever After by Tony Abbott (HarperCollins Children’s Books – Katherine Tegen Books)
Zap! by Martha Freeman (Simon & Schuster – Paula Wiseman Books)
Ra the Mighty: Cat Detective by A.B. Greenfield (Holiday House)
Winterhouse by Ben Guterson (Macmillan Children’s Publishing Company – Henry Holt BFYR)
Otherwood by Pete Hautman (Candlewick Press)
Charlie & Frog: A Mystery by Karen Kane (Disney Publishing Worldwide – Disney Hyperion)
Zora & Me: The Cursed Ground by T.R. Simon (Candlewick Press)
BEST YOUNG ADULT
Contagion by Erin Bowman (HarperCollins Children’s Books - HarperCollins)
Blink by Sasha Dawn (Lerner Publishing Group – Carolrhoda Lab)
After the Fire by Will Hill (Sourcebooks – Sourcebooks Fire)
A Room Away From the Wolves by Nova Ren Suma (Algonquin Young Readers)
Sadie by Courtney Summers (Wednesday Books)
BEST TELEVISION EPISODE TELEPLAY
“The Box” - Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Teleplay by Luke Del Tredici (NBC/Universal TV)
“Season 2, Episode 1” – Jack Irish, Teleplay by Andrew Knight (Acorn TV)
“Episode 1” – Mystery Road, Teleplay by Michaeley O’Brien (Acorn TV)
“My Aim is True” – Blue Bloods, Teleplay by Kevin Wade (CBS Eye Productions)
“The One That Holds Everything” – The Romanoffs, Teleplay by Matthew Weiner & Donald Joh (Amazon Prime Video)
ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL AWARD
“How Does He Die This Time?” – Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Nancy Novick (Dell Magazines)
THE SIMON & SCHUSTER MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD
A Death of No Importance by Mariah Fredericks (Minotaur Books)
A Lady's Guide to Etiquette and Murder by Dianne Freeman (Kensington Publishing)
Bone on Bone by Julia Keller (Minotaur Books)
The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey (Soho Press – Soho Crime)
A Borrowing of Bones by Paula Munier (Minotaur Books)







Media Murder Addendum - The Oscars
As I noted yesterday, the nominees for the 91st Academy Awards were announced early this morning (too late for the regular Media Monday post). To see the full list, head on over to the official Oscars page. Several crime dramas got some recognition this year, including BlacKkKlansman for Best Picture of the year, Best Director (Spike Lee), and Best Supporting Actor (Adam Driver). Melissa McCarthy continued her awards season roll with a Best Actress nomination for her role as celebrity letter forger Lee Israel in Can You Ever Forgive Me?
In the Best Adapted Screenplay category, BlacKkKlansman scored a nod (for Charlie Wachtel & David Rabinowitz and Kevin Willmott & Spike Lee), as did Can You Ever Forgive Me? (screenplay by Nicole Holofcener and Jeff Whitty). Although not crime per se, another novel adaptation made the cut for Best Adapted Screenplay, the Harlem love story If Beale Street Could Talk, which is based on a 1974 novel by American writer James Baldwin.
I don't usually include superhero-style movies as crime dramas in the Media Murder reports, as they are as much a combination of fantasy and sci-fi as crime, but it's worth noting that Black Panther has made Academy Awards history by becoming the first superhero movie to be nominated for the Best Picture Oscar. The film was also nominated in six other categories, Best Original Score, Best Original Song (for Kendrick Lamar and SZA's "All the Stars"), Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing, Best Production Design and Best Costume Design.







January 21, 2019
Media Murder for Monday
Welcome to Monday and a new list of the latest crime drama news, minus the Oscar nominations, which won't be announced until tomorrow. But I'll have a special edition addendum at that time.
AWARDS
The Producers' Guild of America held its annual awards ceremony this weekend. Crime drama winners were mostly on the television side, with The Americans winning Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television – Drama, and The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story winning Outstanding Producer of Limited Series Television. If you're wondering who won the PGA's equivalent of "Best Film Drama," that honor went to Green Book (set in the 1960s about a a world-class African-American pianist and his white bodyguard/chauffeur). In its 29-year history, the PGA Awards have forecast the Best Picture winner on 20 occasions.
THE BIG SCREEN
John Boyega will executive produce the South African crime-thriller, God Is Good, described as being in the same vein as Prisoners and City Of God. Boyega is also launching a record label, UpperRoom Records, which will oversee the film’s soundtrack. Set in Cape Town’s Cape Flats, the English-language film will follow a reformed gangster-turned-pastor and a volatile detective who cross paths after an act of brutal violence sets them on collision course with a heinous gang lieutenant.
Oscar-winner Gary Oldman will co-star with Olga Kurylenko in the British action-thriller, The Courier, set to start shooting next month in London. Kurylenko will play a courier whose daily deliveries are interrupted when she discovers that her latest package is a bomb aimed at killing a witness who is about to testify against a ruthless crime lord (played by Oldman).
Corey Stoll and Billy Magnussen have been added to the cast of the much-anticipated Sopranos prequel film, The Many Saints of Newark, joining Jon Bernthal, Vera Farmiga, and Alessandro Nivola. It's unclear what roles Stoll and Magnussen will play in the film, although it was previously announced Nivola will play Dickie Moltisanti. Likewise, details for the project are being tightly withheld, but producers say that fans of the series can expect some of the beloved characters to appear in the project, which is set during the Newark riots in the 1960s when the African-Americans and the Italians of Newark were at each other's throats.
Christopher McQuarrie has signed on to write and direct the next two films in the popular Mission: Impossible franchise, according to Variety, which also reported that both films would be shot back-to-back, with the first premiering summer 2021 and the second in summer 2022. Sources confirmed that Tom Cruise would return as IMF agent Ethan Hunt, but a potential surprise is that Christopher McQuarrie is considering having Henry Cavill and Alec Baldwin reprise their respective roles in one or both movies. Since their characters died in the previous film, it is assumed the appearances would be through flashbacks.
A trailer was released for Red Joan, about 87-year-old Joan Stanly, a widow, devoted mother, and KGB spy (played by Judi Dench). The film is inspired by the real-life story of the life of Melita Norwood, a British civil servant who supplied Russian spy agencies with state secrets.
John Wick and his dog are back in the trailer for the third installment in the action franchise, John Wick Chapter 3: Parabellum, in which Keanu Reeves’ namesake killer is excommunicated from the secret society of assassins after the events of the second John Wick film. With a $14 million bounty on his head, Wick has to allude assassins trying to collect that sum. But this time, Wick has some help from Halle Berry, who joins the cast and brings with her a pair of attack dogs of her own.
A trailer was also released for the upcoming adaptation of Nancy Drew and the Hidden Staircase, starring Sophia Lillis as the titular teenage detective. The project is directed by the award-winning Katt Shea and based on a script from the screenwriting team of Nina Fiore and John Herrera (The Handmaid’s Tale, The Vampire Diaries). The film hits theaters in March.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
NBC has handed a pilot order to Lincoln (f/k/a The Bone Collector), based on the bestselling book series by Jeffery Deaver that was previously adapted into the 1999 movie of the same name starring Denzel Washington and Angelina Jolie. Lincoln follows legendary forensic criminologist Lincoln Rhyme, who was seriously injured during his hunt for the diabolic serial killer known as the Bone Collector. Called back into action when the killer re-emerges, Lincoln forms a unique partnership with Amelia Sachs, a young beat cop who helps him hunt the deadly mastermind while also taking on the most high-profile cases in the NYPD.
Bill Skarsgard (It) and Eliza Scanlen (Sharp Objects) will star in Antonio Campos' adaptation of The Devil All the Time, which Netflix has acquired for distribution. Skarsgard and Scanlen join an all-star cast that includes Tom Holland, Chris Evans, Mia Wasikowska, Robert Pattinson, and Tony Award-winner Gabriel Ebert. The story is based on Donald Ray Pollock's novel and is set in a place called Knockemstiff, Ohio, a forgotten backwoods where a storm of faith, violence and redemption brews. Netflix describes it as "a midwestern gothic involving a serial killer couple, a faith-testing preacher, and a corrupt local sheriff."
HBO's long-simmering Perry Mason drama is officially moving forward with the signing of The Americans' Matthew Rhys to star in the title role, taking over from Robert Downey Jr. Based on the characters created by Erle Stanley Gardner, HBO's Perry Mason will follow the character at a time in his life when he is living check-to-check as a low-rent private investigator. Mason is haunted by his wartime experiences in France and is suffering the effects of a broken marriage.
After an extensive search, young British actor Fabien Frankel has landed the lead role of Theo Sipowicz in ABC’s pilot NYPD Blue, a follow-up drama to the iconic cop drama that aired from 1995-2005. The sequel revolves around Theo (Frankel), the son of Dennis Franz’s Detective Andy Sipowicz character from the original series, who tries to earn his detective shield and work in the 15th squad while investigating his father's murder. Like the original series, the follow-up revolves around a core group of 15th Precinct police officers/detectives that also includes Detective Nicole Lazarus (Alana Tal) and Detective Craig Pettibone (Rick Gomez). Additionally, two cast members from the original series, Kim Delaney and Bill Brochtrup, will reprise their roles as Diane Russell and John Irvin, respectively.
Peter Sarsgaard is set for the lead role in Interrogation, CBS All Access’s true-crime drama. The project is based on a true story that spanned more than 30 years, in which a young man was charged and convicted of brutally murdering his mother. Each episode is structured around an interrogation taken directly from the real police case files. The first nine episodes of the series will be available to watch in any order, with the conclusive season finale to be released at a later date.
Producer Ryan Murphy is rounding out the cast for Ratched, his new Netflix series starring Sarah Paulson as a younger version of the diabolical Nurse Ratched. The stellar list includes Sharon Stone, Cynthia Nixon, Finn Wittrock, Jon Briones, Charlie Carver, Judy Davis, Harriet Harris, Hunter Parrish, Amanda Plummer, and Corey Stoll. Ratched is an origins story beginning in 1947, which will follow Ratched’s journey and evolution from nurse to full-fledged monster, tracking her murderous progression through the mental health care system. Ratched scored a two-season, 18-episode, straight-to-series order.
Unsolved Mysteries is back after Netflix revived the long-running true crime and paranormal franchise that was hosted by Robert Stack and ran for over 500 episodes between 1987 and 2010. The new 12-part show will use re-enactments in a documentary format to profile real-life mysteries and unsolved crimes, lost loves, cases involving missing persons, and unexplained paranormal events.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
Read or Dead hosts Katie McClean and Rincey Abraham talked about mystery books written by Native and Indigenous authors.
Speaking of Mysteries chatted with Matthew Quirk about his new thriller, The Night Agent, featuring FBI Agent Peter Sutherland.
In this week's Writer's Detective Bureau podcast, hosted by veteran Police Detective Adam Richardson, the topics included "Water-Related Deaths, Bail for Murder, Here comes the Judge, nd Researching the News."
THEATER
The Vertigo Theatre of Calvary, Canada's Mystery Series will stage a production of Ira Levin's classic play, Death Trap, from January 26 to February 24. The play centers on Sidney Bruhl, who is languishing in his Connecticut home, struggling to overcome a bout of writer's block that has seen his Broadway success turn to near bankruptcy. But the answer may have just arrived when Sidney receives a fantastic script written by his former student, Clifford Anderson. Anderson just wants his old mentor's opinion, but Sidney will do whatever it takes to get back on Broadway.
The Milton Keynes Theatre in the UK is producing The Girl on the Train from January 23-26. Adapted from Paula Hawkins’ novel, the story follows Rachel Watson (played by Samantha Womack) who lives vicariously through the train window every day by spying on a seemingly happy couple in their home. When Rachel learns that the woman she’s been secretly watching has suddenly disappeared, she finds herself as a witness and even a suspect in a thrilling mystery in which she will face bigger revelations than she could ever have anticipated. This is the first stop in a tour of the production that will take it throughout the UK through July.
Following his stage successes of Not Dead Enough, The Perfect Murder, and Dead Simple, best-selling author Peter James is back with a new spine-tingling world premiere play, The House on Cold Hill. Actor Joe McFadden and EastEnders' Rita Simons are joined by Charlie Clements and Persephone Swales-Dawson in the ghostly story of the Harcourt family, who move into the house of the dreams that has been empty for the last forty years. However, their dream home quickly turns into the stuff of nightmares as they begin to wonder whether they may not be the only residents at Cold Hill. This production is also heading on a UK tour, with the first stop at the Dartford, Orchard Theatre from January 23-26.







January 16, 2019
Mystery Melange
The Left Coast Crime conference announced the nominees for the annual Lefty Awards, to be presented on March 30, 2019, at the Hyatt Regency in Vancouver, British Columbia:
Lefty for Best Humorous Mystery Novel
Mardi Gras Murder by Ellen Byron
Hollywood Ending by Kellye Garrett
Nighttown by Timothy Hallinan
Death al Fresco by Leslie Karst
The Spirit in Question by Cynthia Kuhn
Scot Free by Catriona McPherson
Lefty for Best Historical Mystery Novel
Four Funerals and Maybe a Wedding by Rhys Bowen
The Long-Lost Love Letters of Doc Holliday by David Corbett
Island of the Mad by Laurie R. King
The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey
A Dying Note by Ann Parker
It Begins in Betrayal by Iona Whishaw
Lefty for Best Debut Mystery Novel
Broken Places by Tracy Clark
Cobra Clutch by A.J. Devlin
The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn
A Lady’s Guide to Etiquette and Murder by Dianne Freeman
What Doesn’t Kill You by Aimee Hix
Deadly Solution by Keenan Powell
Give Out Creek by J.G. Toews
Lefty for Best Mystery Novel
November Road by Lou Berney
Wrong Light by Matt Coyle
Kingdom of the Blind by Louise Penny
Under a Dark Sky by Lori Rader-Day
A Reckoning in the Back Country by Terry Shames
A Stone’s Throw by James W. Ziskin
Forensic anthropologist and thriller writer Kathy Reichs was named an honorary member of the Order of Canada, in recognition of her academic work and her 19 novels featuring anthropologist/sleuth Temperance Brennan. Reichs, an American citizen, lives in Montreal and in North Carolina.
The New Edinburgh University Press issued a call for papers for the first issue of their brand-new journal, Crime Fiction Studies. The editors are seeking abstract submissions of 400 words (with finished articles of 7,500 words) that provide thought-provoking, innovative answers to the question "why crime fiction today?" The deadline is July 1. (HT to Ayo Onatade at Shots Magazine)
Another call for papers was issued by the Solent University, Southampton UK conference on Agatha Christie, to be held September 5-6, 2019. The conference will investigate the significance of the Queen of Crime and her writings within academia and popular culture and further extend Christie Studies as an academic discipline, across and beyond the humanities. Organizers are inviting 300-word proposals for 20 minute papers, as well as creative presentations and panel proposals. The deadline is March 31. (HT also to Shots)
The latest issue of Flash Bang Mysteries is out, which you can read online via this link. Edited by B.J. Bourg, the January edition features new flash crime stories from Jacqueline Seewald, Barb Goffman, R. T. Lawton, Patricia Dusenbury, and yours truly.
J. Kingston Pierce shared his appreciation for Dell's Murder Ink and Scene of the Crime line of paperbacks that made mysteries into jigsaw puzzles. (An editorial note: I took this same inspiration for my Elegy in Scarlet book cover.)
If you're a book cover geek, check out Paul D. Marks' posting on the 7 Criminal Minds blog. Wondering if you *can* judge a book by its cover, he compared different covers of classic crime fiction titles from the 20th century.
Sometimes truth really is stranger than fiction: The New Yorker's Jake Halpern profiled the French burglar who pulled off one of the greatest art heists of all time. Skilled climber and thief Vjeran Tomic, whom the French press have dubbed "Spider-Man," has described robbery as "an act of imagination," spurred on by Tomic's aesthetic desire.
Art Taylor made the case for reading books that "make you uncomfortable."
The power of the bestselling author in action: When the largest daily newspaper in Maine decided it was going to stop publishing regional book reviews, it caused an uproar among local writers — including Stephen King, who complained about the move on Twitter. The newspaper, The Portland Press Herald, promptly responded with a challenge: If Mr. King could get his followers to buy 100 digital subscriptions, it would bring back the local reviews.
The latest poem at the 5-2 crime poetry weekly is "Wie Viel ist Genug?" by Charles Rammelkamp.
In the Q&A roundup, Publishers Weekly spoke with Niklas Natt Och Dag about his debut, The Wolf and the Watchman, which centers on a hideous murder in 1793 Stockholm; The Killing creator Soren Sveistrup chatted with iNews about his first novel,The Chestnut Man, and the enduring success of Scandi Noir; Vera writer Ann Cleeves opened up to Chronicle Live about bringing her hit novel series to life on TV.







January 14, 2019
Media Murder for Monday
Welcome to Monday and a new list of the latest crime drama news:
AWARDS
The British Independent Film Awards (BAFTA) nominations were announced last week and include a few crime dramas. BlacKkKlansman was nominated for Best Film (with Spike Lee snagging a Best Director nod), while the psychological thriller dramas Beast and You Were Never Really Here were recognized in the Best British Film category. On the Best Actress side, the nominees include Melissa McCarthy for her role in the forgery drama, Can You Ever Forgive Me?, and Viola Davis for the heist film Widows. To see all of the nominees in the various categories, check out the official BAFTA website.
THE BIG SCREEN
Amblin Partners has acquired the female-driven thriller The White Room, written by Bryce McGuire and directed by Rod Blackhurst, which takes place over the course of one night in the off-season of the remote Adirondack Mountains. When a mysterious young woman goes missing and it is up to a hardened local widow to find out the truth behind the disappearance.
Guardians of the Galaxy star Karen Gillan has signed on to topline the action thriller Gunpowder Milkshake, written and directed by Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado (Big Bad Wolves). Plot details are being kept under wraps, but the project is described as being in the assassin genre with a story that spans multiple generations and featuringan all-female cast centered on Gillan's character.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Al Pacino is in talks to make his episodic television debut in a 10-episode season of Amazon’s The Hunt, a vengeance-driven Nazi hunting series executive produced by Oscar-winning Get Out writer-director Jordan Peele. The Hunt follows a diverse band of Nazi Hunters living in 1977 New York City who've discovered that hundreds of high ranking Nazi officials are living among us and conspiring to create a Fourth Reich in the U.S. Logan Lerman plays Jonah Heidelbaum, who sets out to track the killer of his grandmother only to find himself swept up in the mysterious organization known as The Hunt, while Pacino will play the Nazi hunter who mentors him.
CBS TV Studios is developing a TV series project based on Michael Chabon’s alternative history book, Yiddish Policemen’s Union. The story follows Jewish refugees from Hitler’s Europe who found unlikely refuge on the Alaskan panhandle. In the present day of this world, Homicide Detective Meyer Landsman must overcome the shambles of his broken life and marriage to solve a mysterious murder with profound political and religious ramifications.
NBC has kicked off its pilot season orders with green lights to two dramas, Prism and Bluff City Law. Written and directed by Daniel Barnz, Prism is inspired by Rashomon, the 1950 Japanese period psychological thriller directed by Akira Kurosawa, and is described as a provocative exploration of a murder trial in which every episode is told through the perspective of a different key person involved. Bluff City Law, written by Dean Georgaris, is a character-driven legal drama that follows the lawyers of an elite Memphis law firm that specializes in the most controversial landmark civil rights cases. Led by legendary lawyer Elijah Strait and his brilliant daughter, Sydney Keller, they take on the toughest David-and-Goliath cases while navigating their complicated relationship.
NBC also greenlighted the mystery drama pilot Emergence. It's described as "a character-driven genre thriller" that centers on a sheriff who takes in a young child that she finds near the site of a mysterious accident who has no memory of what happened. The investigation draws the sheriff into a conspiracy larger than she ever imagined, and the child’s identity is at the center of it all.
Criminal Minds, one of the longest-running scripted series currently on television, is coming to a close with a shortened season 15 of ten episodes. There are hopes that some of the memorable bad guys from the past 14 seasons will make an appearance in addition to the return of several stars who have departed over the years, including original lead Mandy Patinkin, Thomas Gibson, and Shemar Moore.
Black Mirror star Maxine Peake is set to headline the British drama Reasonable Doubt, the true story of Ann Ming’s battle to change an 800-year-old double jeopardy law in the UK after her daughter Julie Hogg was killed by Billy Dunlop in 1989. She subsequently wrote a book, For The Love Of Julie, about the experience.
Netflix released a trailer for its upcoming thriller Polar (based on the Dark Horse graphic novel Polar: Came from the Cold by Victor Santos), which stars Mads Mikkelsen as the world’s top assassin, Duncan Vizla, a/k/a The Black Kaiser, who's settling into retirement when his former employer marks him as a liability to the firm who must be silenced at all costs. The film also stars Vanessa Hudgens, Katheryn Winnick, Matt Lucas, Johnny Knoxville, and Richard Dreyfuss.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
On Novel Suspects, bestselling thriller author Michael Connelly discusses his latest book, Dark Sacred Night, his new Murder Book true crime podcast, and his Amazon original series, Bosch.
The latest Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast episode features the first chapter of the mystery novella Ice Blonde by Elaine Viets as read by Julia Reimer.
Kristy Ramsey, the owner of Blue Lamp Books, a mystery novel and crime bookstore in Edmonton, talked to The Londoner about her love and passion for mystery and crime stories.
Suspense Radio welcomed Andrew Grant to talked about his latest thriller, Invisible, and Caesar Rondina, author of the three-part "Life Through A Mirror" murder mystery series.
Meet the Thriller Author chatted with author, screenwriter, and creator of television drama, Peter May, about his latest book, Snakehead, the fourth installment in May's China Thrillers.
D.P. Lyle, host of Criminal Mischief: The Art and Science of Crime Fiction, took on "rattlesnakes and murder."
The Writer's Detective Bureau, hosted by veteran Police Detective Adam Richardson, discussed "Coffee Mugs, Double Jeopardy, the Hiring Process, and Arrest Warrants."
THEATER
From January 16 to February 3, West Hartford, Connecticut's Playhouse on Park will stage Murder For Two, written by Joe Kinosian and Kellen Blair, with Kyle Metzger directing. Everyone is a suspect in this musical murder mystery with a twist: One actor investigates the crime, the other plays all of the suspects. And they both play the piano!
The Irving Community Theatre in Las Colinas, California, is presenting Ravenscroft: A Thrilling Mystery written by Don Nigro and directed by Andi Allen. On a snowy night, Inspector Ruffing is called to a remote house to investigate the headlong plunge of Patrick Roarke down the main staircase. Five alluring and dangerous women lead him through a bewildering labyrinth of contradictory versions of Patrick's demise and that of the late Mr. Ravenscroft. The production runs from January 18 to February 2.
GAMES
More than five years after Breaking Bad ended, fans of the show will be able to dive back into the meth-filled underbelly of New Mexico with the upcoming mobile game Breaking Bad: Criminal Elements. Criminal Elements will be a free-to-play mobile game with a strategy-focused offering that tosses players into the deep end of Vince Gilligan's absorbing, morally ambiguous universe.







January 12, 2019
Quote of the Week
January 11, 2019
FFB: The Man Who Didn't Fly
Scottish author Margot Bennett was born in 1912 and worked first first as a copywriter in the UK and Australia and then as a nurse during the Spanish Civil War before turning to writing. Her output in crime fiction was relatively small, yet successful: The Man Who Didn't Fly was shortlisted for the CWA Gold Dagger and was runner-up to Charlotte Armstrong's A Dram of Poison for Best Novel at the Edgars in 1956, and she won the Gold Dagger two years later in 1958 with Someone from the Past. She was also chosen to contribute a short story to the second CWA anthology, Choice Of Weapons, edited by Michael Gilbert.
But thereafter, a bit of mystery regarding Bennett herself began. She essentially stopped writing crime fiction, something discussed by Martin Edwards both and in the foreword he wrote for the Black Dagger Crime Series edition of The Man Who Didn't Fly. Bennett only wrote for television for awhile—including the early 60s UK adaptation of the Maigret novels by Simenon—with the exception of two non-mystery books (one of which had the intriguing title The Intelligent Woman's Guide to Atomic Radiation), before abandoning writing altogether in 1966. She died in 1980 at the age of 68.
In The Man Who Didn't Fly, four men are scheduled to take an ill-fated chartered flight to Dublin that crashes into the Irish Channel. Although the bodies can't be recovered, it becomes evident that only three men were on board the plane, yet all four are reported as missing. Inspector Lewis and Sergeant Young have their work count out for them trying to coax clues out of unreliable witnesses including the Wade family, Charles and his daughters Hester and Prudence.
The lives of the Wades intersected with all four of the missing men: Harry Walters, a desperate poet, who was in love with Hester Wade; Joseph Ferguson, a businessman who wife was more interested in Harry; Morgan Price, a nervous guest of the Wades; and Maurice Reid, something of a family friend. Slowly but surely, Lewis and Young piece together the details of the days leading up to the flight, finally uncovering the name of the missing man. But that just sets up a new problem: what happened to him and why?
Bennett's artful plotting was enough to capture the attention of the producers of NBC's Kraft Television Theater who created an episode in 1958 based on The Man Who Didn't Fly starring then 27-year-old William Shatner, Jonathan Harris (Dr. Smith of Lost in Space) and Walter Brooke (guest star in just about all TV series in the 60s, 70s, and 80s). The book was also chosen by Julian Symons as part of his 1958 "100 Best Crime Stories" for the London Sunday Times.







January 10, 2019
Mystery Melange
Noir at the Bar moves to Seattle tonight at the Alibi Room from 8-10pm. The lineup features Renee Patrick (Design for Dying), Bethany Maines (Bulletproof Mascara), Reb MacRath (The Big Bopper), Ashley Erwin (A Ballad Concerning Black Betty), Brian Thornton (Suicide Blonde), G.G. Silverman (The Redvale Zombie Prom series), Scotti Andrews (Blind Date), and Nick Feldman (Asshole Yakuza Boyfriend).
Stuart Turton has won the Costa First Novel Award for his debut, The Seven Deaths Of Evelyn Hardcastle. The crime novel has been sold in 20 territories to date and has been optioned for TV. The Costa Book Awards honor some of the most outstanding books of the year written by authors based in the UK and Ireland.
In association with the Newcastle Noir Festival, bestselling thriller author LJ Ross has established The Lindisfarne Prize, a crime writing award worth £2,500 to celebrate the North East region of the UK. Recognizing outstanding writing in the genre of crime or thriller fiction, the award is open to all new writers who are from, or whose work celebrates, the North East, and who have not previously had their work published in any form. Entrants must submit a short story of up to 10,000 words or the first two chapters and a synopsis of their work in progress, to be considered. Entries close on March 31.
There's a bit of sad news this week as we say goodbye to crime writer Brian Garfield, who began writing westerns then switched to contemporary crime fiction with a western flavor. His best-known books include Death Wish, which was adapted into a film starring Charles Bronson, and Hopscotch, a Cold War espionage thriller that won the Edgar for Best Mystery Novel and was adapted for a film starring Walter Matthau. (HT to Mystery Fanfare)
Writing for Forbes, Adam Rowe took a look back at publishing industry insights from 2018 revealed by a list of the U.K.'s top 100 print bestsellers and based on data from The Guardian's John Dugdale and analysis from author Chris McCrudden. McCrudden noted that "In fiction in 2018 there were crime thrillers, and then there was everything else." As the article notes, the analysis only extends to print sales in the UK since the data didn't cover the extensive ebook market.
Now that 2018 is history, it's time for a look ahead. Crime Fiction Lover, The Real Book Spy, Dead Good, and The Rap Sheet all offer up their takes on the most hotly awaited crime novels of 2019.
Author and Polis Books founder Jason Pinter discussed his publishing company's new crime imprint, Agora Books, with The New York Post. Agora Books was established to promote diversity in crime fiction, and the first three titles will come out in fall 2019 under the direction of editor Chantelle Aimée Osman, former editor-in-chief of RT Book Reviews Magazine. As Pinter stated, "There are authors out there who don’t feel welcome because of a lack of representation in the crime-fiction genre. And with this [new imprint] we’re saying, ‘Not only are you welcome, you are needed.'"
Adding a bit more to the topic of diversity, Writers Digest took a look at the changing face of crime fiction, profiling "6 Writers of Color on Writing Mysteries, Crime Novels and Thrillers."
Publishers are trying new marketing ploys to lure in readers, with one example being #taken by Tony Parsons. The sixth and final installment in the author's DC Max Wolfe detective series is being serialized online by British GQ ahead of the novel's publication with Century in April 2019.
Writing for the Washington Post, thriller author Brad Meltzer examined how a deadly plot against George Washington merely became a historical footnote.
Agatha Christie's missing 11 days in December 1926 are being made into a new film commissioned by Britain's Channel 5, and author Andrew Wilson took a look at other projects (including his own novel) that have taken on the subject of Dame Agatha's real-life mystery.
Wondering how to become a bestselling crime writer? Val McDermid, Sophie Hannah, and Stella Duffy weighed in on the topic for Marie Claire magazine.
It may be too late for Christmas, but anytime is a good time to try out some of these crime fiction board game recommendations from Criminal Element.
The latest poem at the 5-2 crime poetry weekly is "Borderline: An Elegy" by Robert Weibezahl.
In the Q&A roundup, James Lee Burke was one of the latest "By the Book" subjects for the New York Times; Louise Penny was taped speaking before a live audience at Sandwich High School and chatted about her new book, Kingdom of the Blind and other books in the Inspector Gamache series; and Publishers Weekly interviewed Harlan Coben about his new novel, Run Away, which he calls "the classic Hitchcockian dilemma of the “ordinary man/woman in an extraordinary situation."







January 7, 2019
Media Murder for Monday
Monday greetings to all with the latest roundup of crime drama news from stage to screen:
AWARDS
The Golden Globes were handed out last night in Beverly Hills. Although there weren't any crime drama winners on the film side, television nods went to The Americans for Best TV Drama Series, while The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story won for Best Limited Series. Patricia Arquette also won Best Actress (Limited Series) honors for her role in Escape at Dannemora and Darren Criss won Best Actor (Limited Series) for The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story. In the regular drama series category, Sandra Oh won Best Actress (Killing Eve) and Richard Madden Best Actor (Bodyguard).
The Producers Guild of America announced its 2019 award nominees, including several small-screen crime dramas. The Americans, Ozark, and Better Call Saul will compete in the Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television – Drama category, while The Assassination of Gianni Versace: American Crime Story, Escape at Dannemora, and Sharp Objects will square off in the Outstanding Producer of Limited Series Television division.
THE BIG SCREEN
Writing for Deadline, Peter Bart noted that gangster movies will return in a big way In 2019, awakening the genre "from its Hollywood dirt nap." At the top of the list are the two most anticipated 2019 releases, from Martin Scorsese (The Irishman) and Quentin Tarantino (Once Upon a Time in Hollywood).
The official U.S. trailer was released for the Mads Mikkelsen action-adventure thriller Arctic, which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival last year. Mikkelsen plays a man stranded in the Arctic after an airplane crash who must decide whether to remain in the relative safety of his makeshift camp or embark on a perilous trek through the unknown in hopes of making it out alive.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Mark R. Harris’ Los Angeles-based production shingle, The Harris Company, has optioned the crime series Darby Holland from veteran tattoo artist and crime novelist Jeff Johnson for six-figures in a bidding war that took place over the holiday. The project is set in the gritty urban wilds of Old Town Portland Oregon and follows fixer Darby Holland, who runs a venerable tattoo parlor and "leads his talented crew of misfits into battle against hellish art dealers, criminal real estate developers and the creeping doom of gentrification.”
Hulu is in early development stages on a series based on "Simultaneous," a short story by Arrival and Bird Box screenwriter Eric Heisserer. The streaming company struck a six-figure penalty deal in order to pick up the project, which is described as a cerebral detective thriller involving regenerative past lives.
BBC America has slotted an April 7 premiere date for the second season of its critically praised thriller series Killing Eve. In Season 2, Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer reprise their roles as Eve (Oh), an MI6 operative, and psychopath assassin Villanelle (Comer) in this story of two women bound by a mutual obsession and one brutal act.
Netflix released a trailer for season 2 of its series The Punisher, the high-caliber vigilante saga based on the popular Marvel Comics crime-fighting commando, which will return on January 18. The new season finds the Punisher, a.k.a. former marine-turned-vigilante Frank Castle (Jon Bernthal), as a nomad living on borrowed time.
Netflix debuted a trailer for the adrenaline-fueled action thriller, Close, directed by Vicky Jewson (Born of War; Lady Godiva). Close stars Naomi Rapace as bodyguard and counter-terrorism expert Sam, who takes a job protecting Zoe, a rich young heiress. Neither party is keen on the arrangement until a violent kidnap forces them to go on the run.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
Read or Dead hosts Katie McClean and Rincey Abraham looked ahead to the 2019 mysteries and thrillers that they are most excited about.
The Writer's Detective Bureau, hosted by veteran Police Detective Adam Richardson, focused on "Line of Duty Death Notifications, Escaping Your Identity, and Bank Robberies."
The Edmonton Journal spoke with Kristy Ramsey, the owner of Blue Lamp Books, a mystery novel and crime bookstore in Edmonton, about her love and passion for mystery and crime stories.
THEATER
The Long Beach Playhouse will stage a production of Agatha Christie's Spider's Web from January 12 - February 9. Christie wrote the play at the request of English actress Margaret Lockwood (who wanted to play a character that was neither sinister nor wicked), and came up with a work that parodied the mystery genre including her own works. It opened in London in 1954 and was her second longest-running play, next to Mousetrap.






