B.V. Lawson's Blog, page 94

May 6, 2021

Mystery Melange

Book Worm Book Art by Tammy Smith


The longlist was released for the annual Theakston Old Peculier Novel of the Year. This year’s longlist transports readers around the world from California to Sweden and Calcutta to a remote Irish island and explores every subgenre from Scandi noir to murderous families. There are several familiar faces on the list, as well as some fresh blood. Run by Harrogate International Festivals, the shortlist will be announced in June and the winner on July 22 at the opening evening of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival, with the public able to vote for the winner on harrogatetheakstoncrimeaward.com.




The Short Mystery Fiction Society announced the winners of this year's Derringer Awards. There was a tie for Best Flash Story, "Memories of Fire," by C.W. Blackwell (Pulp Modern Flash) and "War Words" by Travis Richardson (Punk Noir Magazine). There was also a tie for Best Short Story (1,001 to 4,000 words), "The Great Bedbug Incident and the Invitation of Doom," by Eleanor Cawood Jones (Chesapeake Crimes: Invitation to Murder) and "River" by Stacy Woodson (The Beat of Black Wings: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Joni Mitchell). Best Long Story (4,001 to 8,000 words) went to Sarah M. Chen's "Hotelin'" (Shotgun Honey), and Best Novelette (8,001 to 20,000 words) to Art Taylor for "The Boy Detective and the Summer of ’74" (Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine). This year's recipient of the Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer for Lifetime Achievement, annually awarded to an outstanding living writer of short mysteries and selected by a five-member panel, is Brendan DuBois. The full list of finalists can be found here.




Capital Crime announced the Amazon Publishing New Voices Award, a competition including a potential Thomas & Mercer publishing deal. Writers of unpublished mystery, thriller, and crime fiction manuscripts in English from around the world are eligible to compete for a cash prize and the potential publishing contract. Additionally, ten finalists will be considered for a potential offer of Thomas & Mercer publication, while also receiving day passes to the next Capital Crime Festival. The closing date for entries will be 3rd August 2021. (HT to Shots Magazine)




Maxim Jakubowski has been appointed the new chair of the UK's Crime Writers’ Association (CWA). He will succeed outgoing chair Linda Stratmann, after she served the maximum two-year term in the role at the organization, which aims to support and promote the literary genre and its authors. He was voted in unanimously at the CWA’s annual general meeting. Jakubowski has worked as an editor (compiling more than 120 anthologies), translator, publisher, author, and critic. Following an editorial career in both France and the UK, during which time he launched several crime imprints, including Black Box Thrillers and Blue Murder, he opened the Murder One bookstore in London.




A passing of note to report via the New York Times: Jason Matthews, who became a best-selling author of three spy thrillers after 33 years as a C.I.A. officer in Istanbul, Athens, Belgrade, Rome, Budapest and Hong Kong, died last week at his home in Rancho Mirage, Calif. He was 69. His wife, Suzanne Matthews, who was also a C.I.A. officer, said the cause was corticobasal degeneration, a rare degenerative disease. In his choice of a second career, Mr. Matthews followed other intelligence officers, like John le Carré, Ian Fleming, and Charles McCarry, "who became novelists — and who brought to their writing a knowledge of recruiting and handling foreign agents, of dead drops, brush passes, honey traps, debriefings, surveillance and countersurveillance."




There is a call for submissions for the third issue of Mean Streets: A Journal of American Crime and Detective Fiction on the topic of "American Golden Age Mystery and Detective Fiction (1920-1945)." Proposals are due by July 15 with final essays due December 1. The Shots Magazine blog has more details for interested authors, including suggested topics.




Mike Ripley's latest "Getting Away With Murder" column is out, although he notes that it's "not in its usual place. This is due to the main website having been hi-jacked by interweb pirates (probably Russian) and sailed into the Bermuda Triangle, or whatever it is happens in these cases. As you may have gathered, I am no expert when it comes to modern technology, but those who claim to be assure me that normal service will soon be resumed." The latest editions features feautures and reviews of oldies but goodies by William Le Quex, Michael Hamilton, Len Deighton, and more, as well as some new blood.




The Guardian profiled successful art theft detective, Christopher Marinello, who has spent three decades finding missing masterpieces, recovering half a billion dollars’ worth of art. He talked about threats from mobsters, tricky negotiations – and bungling thieves.




As the Rap Sheet blog noted, Kevin Burton Smith's iconic The Thrilling Detective website has moved to a new server. Although this means some of the links around the Web may no longer be operable, all the content will be available again soon. Meanwhile, Smith has also instituted a new Dick of the Day feature, where he highlights a different private eye each day on Twitter and Facebook.




McLean & Eakin Booksellers commissioned June Apothecary to make a fragrance for the store and "Pages" is the result. "We think it speaks to the feeling you have when you put your nose between the pages of a book," the bookshop posted on Facebook. The description of the scent read, "Crisp juniper fir mixes with luscious fig and bright lemon to create this truly unique and refreshing scent. Perfect to burn all year when you are missing your favorite book store up north!"




This week's crime poem at the 5-2 is "The Last Windmill" by Pamela Ebel.




In the Q&A roundup, Lisa Haselton interviewed mystery author, R.G. Belsky, about his latest mystery, Beyond the Headlines; Mark Billingham, author of a series featuring the country-music-loving detective, Tom Thorne, chatted about his background as a stand-up comic, scriptwriter, and rock musician; Author Interviews spoke with Anne Hillerman, who continues the Navajo detective stories featuring Joe Leaphorn and Jim Chee that her father Tony Hillerman made popular, including the latest, Stargazer; and Robert Dugoni was interviewed by Publishers Weekly about book eight of the Tracy Crosswhite series, in which the eponymous detective is reassigned to the Seattle police department’s cold case unit.




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Published on May 06, 2021 07:00

May 5, 2021

Anthony Accolades

Bouchercon


The finalists for the 2021 Anthony Awards were just announced. The Anthony Awards have been presented at the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention since 1986 and are named for Anthony Boucher (1911–1968), one of the founders of the Mystery Writers of America. This year's conference will take place August 25-29 in New Orleans. Here's the list:


Best Hardcover Novel



What You Don't See - Tracy Clark
Blacktop Wasteland - S.A. Cosby - Flatiron Books
Little Secrets - Jennifer Hillier - Minotaur Books
And Now She's Gone - Rachel Howzell Hall - Forge Books
The First to Lie - Hank Phillippi Ryan - Forge Books

Best First Novel



Derailed - Mary Keliikoa - Camel Press
Murder in Old Bombay - Nev March - Minotaur Books
Murder at the Mena House - Erica Ruth Neubauer – Kensington
The Thursday Murder Club - Richard Osman - Pamela Dorman Books
Winter Counts - David Heska Wanbli Weiden - Ecco Press

Best Paperback Original/E-Book/Audiobook Original Novel



The Fate of a Flapper - Susanna Calkins - Griffin
When No One is Watching - Alyssa Cole - William Morrow
Unspeakable Things - Jess Lourey - Thomas & Mercer
The Lucky One - Lori Rader-Day - William Morrow
Dirty Old Town - Gabriel Valjan - Level Best Books

Best Short Story



"Dear Emily Etiquette" - Barb Goffman - EQMM - Dell Magazines
"90 Miles" - Alex Segura - Both Sides: Stories From the Border - Agora Books
"The Boy Detective & The Summer of '74" - Art Taylor - AHMM (Jan-Feb) - Dell Magazines
"Elysian Fields" - Gabriel Valjan - California Schemin' - Wildside Press
"The Twenty-Five Year Engagement" - James W. Ziskin - In League with Sherlock Holmes - Pegasus Crime

Best Juvenile/Young Adult



Midnight at the Barclay Hotel - Fleur Bradley - Viking Books for Young Readers
Premeditated Myrtle - Elizabeth C. Bunce - Algonquin Young Readers
From the Desk of Zoe Washington - Janae Marks - Katherine Tegen Books
Holly Hernandez and the Death of Disco - Richie Narvaez - Piñata Books
Star Wars Poe Dameron: Free Fall - Alex Segura - Disney Lucasfilm Press

Best Critical or Nonfiction Work



Sometimes You Have to Lie: The Life and Times of Louise Fitzhugh, Renegade Author of Harriet the Spy - Leslie Brody - Seal Press
American Sherlock: Murder, Forensics and the Birth of American CSI - Kate Winkler Dawson - G.P. Putnam's Sons
Howdunit: A Masterclass in Crime Writing by Members of the Detection Club - Martin Edwards, ed. - Collins Crime Club
The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia - Emma Copley Eisenberg - Hachette Books
Phantom Lady: Hollywood Producer Joan Harrison, the Forgotten Woman behind Hitchcock - Christina Lane - Chicago Review Press
Unspeakable Acts: True Tales of Crime, Murder, Deceit, and Obsession - Sarah Weinman, ed. - Ecco Press

Best Anthology or Collection​



Shattering Glass: A Nasty Woman Press Anthology - Heather Graham, ed. - Nasty Woman Press
Both Sides: Stories from the Border - Gabino Iglesias, ed. - Agora Books
Noiryorican - Richie Narvaez - Down & Out Books
The Beat of Black Wings: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Joni Mitchell - Josh Pachter, ed. - Untreed Reads Publishing
California Schemin' - Art Taylor. ed. - Wildside Press
Lockdown: Stories of Crime, Terror, and Hope During a Pandemic - Nick Kolakowski and Steve Weddle, eds. - Polis Books

 


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Published on May 05, 2021 10:15

May 3, 2021

Media Murder for Monday

OntheairIt's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:




THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES




Lionsgate has acquired North American rights to Collin Schiffli’s thriller, Die in a Gunfight, with plans to release it as a multi-platform title this summer. The film is described as a modern-day take on "Romeo and Juliet" and centers on two rival families, the Rathcarts and Gibbons. Ben (Diego Boneta), a rebellious young man, falls in love with Mary (Alexandra Daddario), the daughter of his father's enemy, starting a battle full of love, lust, revenge, and betrayal.




Bruce Willis is set to star in the revenge thriller, Soul Assassin. The story begins with a woman’s husband being killed in action as part of an experimental new military program. A former black-ops soldier (Willis) then takes his place to find his killer. Jesse Atlas will direct the script, co-written with Aaron Wolfe based on their short, Let Them Die Like Lovers, which was nominated for Best Narrative Short at the Tribeca Film Festival.




Jurnee Smollett (Lovecraft Country), is boarding the Netflix movie, Lou, as star and executive producer. Smollett joins Oscar winner, Allison Janney, who is also starring (and executive producing) the Anna Foerster-directed film. Written by Maggie Cohn, the story is set in motion when a young girl is kidnapped. Her mother, with no other option, teams up with the mysterious older woman next door to pursue the kidnapper – a journey into the wilderness that will test their limits and expose dark and shocking secrets from their pasts.




This Is Us star, Justin Hartley, is joining Y’lan Noel, Cleopatra Coleman, Lex Scott Davis, and Shamier Anderson in A Lot Of Nothing. The project is described as a "dark comedy-thriller" where things spiral out of control when a married couple is compelled to take dangerous actions after discovering their next-door neighbor (Hartley) is the police officer who just murdered an unarmed motorist.




TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES




Noah Centineo has signed on to star in and executive produce a new unnamed spy thriller series for the streaming giant Netflix. Centineo will play a fledgling lawyer at the CIA who becomes enmeshed in dangerous international power politics when a former asset threatens to expose the nature of her long-term relationship with the agency—unless they exonerate her of a serious crime.




Nordic Entertainment Group has ordered the psychological crime drama, Sisterhood. The six-episode series looks into who was really responsible for a young girl’s disappearance in Iceland 25 years ago. Ambitious police detective Vera (Halldóra Geirharðsdóttir), dissatisfied with the original investigation, zeroes in on an unlikely trio of successful and respectable women.




Danish actress, Clara Rugaard, is to lead the cast for Sky’s The Rising, a supernatural crime thriller that was originally inspired by Belgian drama, Hotel Beau Séjour. The eight-part series has Rugaard starring as Neve Kelly, a woman who discovers she is dead. She’s scared and confused by this new existence at first, but when she realizes she has been murdered, she’s furious. She’s determined to find her killer and get justice, believing that it was someone she knew.




Josh Hartnett is to lead Sky’s four-part adaptation of the Robert Harris financial thriller, The Fear Index, directed by David Caffrey (The Alienist). Hartnett will play Dr. Alex Hoffmann, an American ex-pat physicist, who creates an AI-driven system that exploits fear in the financial markets and operates at lightning speed to make big returns. But on the day of launch, Alex’s sanity is shaken after he is viciously attacked at his home by a man who knows all of his security codes. After more unexplained occurrences, Alex becomes convinced he’s being framed. Other cast includes Leila Farzad, Arsher Ali, and Grégory Montel.




Domhnall Gleeson (Star Wars, Harry Potter) will portray John Dean in HBO's upcoming five-part series about the Watergate scandal, The White House Plumbers. At the time of Richard Nixon's reign, Dean was a young and zealous member of the White House Counsel who worked to orchestrate the illegal cover-up that ultimately ended Nixon's presidency. Gleeson joins previously announced cast members Justin Theroux (who will play G. Gordon Liddy) and Woody Harrelson (playing E. Howard Hunt). The project chronicles former President Nixon's downfall, highlighting how the so-called masterminds responsible for protecting Nixon's presidency — Giddy and Hunt — unwittingly sabotaged it. The show is based on public records and Integrity, a novel by Egil "Bud" Krogh and Matthew Krogh.




PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO




In a jam-packed episode of Writer Types, host Eric Beetner spoke with authors Chris Whitaker (We Begin At The End), Amy Suiter Clarke (Girl, 11), and Nicci French (The Other Side Of The Door). 




Queer Writers of Crime spoke with Robyn Gigl, an attorney, author, and activist who has been honored by the ACLU-NJ and the NJ Pride Network for her work on behalf of the LGBTQ+ community. Her debut legal thriller is By Way of Sorrow.




Alyssa Cole, author of the new thriller, When No One Is Watching, was interviewed by Robert Justice for the Crime Writers of Color podcast.




A new Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast is up featuring the mystery short story, "Not a Penny More," written by Jon Land and read by actor Larry Mattox.




The Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine podcast showcased novelist and short-story author, Jeff Soloway, reading his EQMM debut story from the January/February 2021 issue, "The Interpreter and the Killer," which features a central character in a job we don't see often in mystery fiction.




Two Crime Writers and a Microphone featured "In Conversation: Don Winslow and Anthony Horowitz with Phil Williams" from last summer's Locked-Up Festival.




Christine Feehan was the featured guest on Suspense Radio, discussing her latest book, Lightning Game, and much more.




My Favorite Detective Stories host, John Hoda, welcomed Sheldon Siegel, best-selling author of the critically acclaimed legal thriller series featuring San Francisco criminal defense attorneys Mike Daley and Rosie Fernandez.




Meet the Thriller Author chatted with UK author, Clare Whitfield, who's been a dancer, copywriter, amateur fire breather, buyer, and mediocre weightlifter. Her debut crime thriller is People of Abandoned Character.




Carmen Jaramillo stopped by Wrong Place, Write Crime to discuss "Open Up Your Heart," her novella in A Grifter's Song series, and more.




It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club sat down with award-winning investigative journalist, Caitlin Rother, to discuss her new true-crime book, Death on Ocean Boulevard.




Barry Forshaw hosted a new feature on the Crime Time FM podcast, where he gives insights into the world of crime drama based on the commentaries and sleeve notes he writes for new releases and reissues of books and movies.




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Published on May 03, 2021 07:30

May 1, 2021

Quote of the Week

Hope Quotation from Elegy in Scarlet


          
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Published on May 01, 2021 07:00

April 30, 2021

FFB: A Crime Remembered

Roderic-jeffries-aka-jeffrey-ashfordRoderic Jeffries (1926- ) was born in London, the son of writer Graham Montague Jeffries who was known for his series featuring the gentleman crook-sleuth "Blackshirt." Roderic Jeffries didn't immediately follow in his father's footsteps, going to sea at the ripe old age of 17. He later became an attorney, but the lure of writing was too great, and since publishing his first novel in 1951 (taking over the "Blackshirt" character), he's penned over one hundred and sixty novels under his own name and several other pseudonyms, including Peter Alding, Roderic Graeme, Graham Hastings and Jeffrey Ashford.



A Crime Remembered by Jeffrey AshfordThirty-six of the author's books featured Enrique Alvarez, police inspector on the island of Mallorca, but he wrote even more titles under his Jeffrey Ashford pen name, including A Crime Remembered from 1987. The plot centers on the Tourkville family, who has owned Highland Place for generations and whose present owner, Edward Pierre Darcy Tourkville, plans on keeping the estate his father almost ruined via neglect and mismanagement. Standing in his way is a sordid seafaring episode from his past during World War II he thought he'd been able to put behind him but now threatens to ruin everything he's built.



Detective-Constable Pete Noyes, a man with no love lost for the privileged upper classes, is assigned to the recent case of a middle-aged homosexual man found murdered, a large stash of bank-notes in his safe that could point to blackmail. With only minimal clues—the name of a town, Glinton, and the initials EPDT—Noyes's investigations take him square into the path of Tourkville. Both Tourkville and the murdered man served on the same ship in the Merchant Marine and were two of only four survivors of the ship's sinking. Hoping to pin the murder on Tourkville, Noyes gradually and grudgingly comes to admire the man, thanks in no small part to Tourkville's devoted wife Charlotte who begs Noyes to clear her husband's name.



As Kirkus Reviews pointed out, Ashford offers something other than a conventional whodunit, part murder-mystery, part psychological study, part police-portrait. The transformation of Noyes is as central to the plot as the murder on one level, or as Kirkus adds, "shrewdly counterpointing Noyes' rocky marriage with the Tourkvilles' sturdy-yet-threatened 40-year relationship." We learn where Noyes self-centered prejudices and tough shell came from, early on:


He despised weakness. Life was about fighting. Fighting the form bully because he couldn't name his father and although one-parent families were said to be fashionable, the form bully had decreed otherwise; fighting the viral infection which had baffled the doctors and specialists and which had, for a mind-numbing time, threatened to leave him paralysed; fighting his way out of a background which seldom let anyone go because most were stupid enough to believe that easy money need not carry a cost..."


As old case and new case intersect and two marriages are put to the test, Ashford skillfully weaves the threads together into a tapestry of regret, redemption and learning to let go of the past.


          
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Published on April 30, 2021 05:35

April 29, 2021

Edgar Excellence

The-edgars-banner




Mystery Writers of America announced winners of the 2021 Edgar Awards today via Zoom. Here are this year's honorees:


 


BEST NOVEL


Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara


Also nominated :


Before She Was Helen by Caroline B. Cooney 

Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman

These Women by Ivy Pochoda 

The Missing American by Kwei Quartey

The Distant Dead by Heather Young 


BEST FIRST NOVEL


Please See Us by Caitlin Mullen 


Also nominated:


Murder in Old Bombay by Nev March 

Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas 

Winter Counts by David Heska Wanbli Weiden 

Darling Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel 


BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL


When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole


Also nominated:


The Deep, Deep Snow by Brian Freeman 

Unspeakable Things by Jess Lourey 

The Keeper by Jessica Moor 

East of Hounslow by Khurrum Rahman 


BEST FACT CRIME


Death in Mud Lick: A Coal Country Fight Against the Drug Companies that Delivered the Opioid Epidemic by Eric Eyre 


Also nominated:


Blood Runs Coal: The Yablonski Murders and the Battle for the United Mine Workers of America by Mark A. Bradley 

The Third Rainbow Girl: The Long Life of a Double Murder in Appalachia by Emma Copley Eisenberg 

Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder, and a Woman's Search for Justice in Indian Country by Sierra Crane Murdoch 

Veritas: A Harvard Professor, a Con Man, and the Gospel of Jesus's Wife by Ariel Sabar


BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL


Phantom Lady: Hollywood Producer Joan Harrison, the Forgotten Woman Behind Hitchcock by Christina Lane 


Also nominated:


Howdunit: A Masterclass in Crime Writing by Members of the Detection Club by Martin Edwards 

Ian Rankin: A Companion to the Mystery & Fiction by Erin E. MacDonald (McFarland)

Guilt Rules All:  Irish Mystery, Detective, and Crime Fiction by Elizabeth Mannion & Brian Cliff 

This Time Next Year We'll be Laughing by Jacqueline Winspear 


BEST SHORT STORY


"Dust, Ash, Flight," Addis Ababa Noir by Maaza Mengiste 


Also nominated:


"The Summer Uncle Cat Came to Stay," Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Leslie Elman 

"Fearless," California Schemin' by Walter Mosley

"Etta at the End of the World," Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by Joseph S. Walker 

“The Twenty-Five Year Engagement,” In League with Sherlock Holmes by James W. Ziskin 


BEST JUVENILE


Premeditated Myrtle by Elizabeth C. Bunce 


Also nominated:


Me and Banksy by Tanya Lloyd Kyi

From the Desk of Zoe Washington by Janae Marks 

Ikenga by Nnedi Okorafor 

Nessie Quest by Melissa Savage 

Coop Knows the Scoop by Taryn Souders


BEST YOUNG ADULT


The Companion by Katie Alender 


Also nominated:


The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes 

They Went Left by Monica Hesse 

Silence of Bones by June Hur

The Cousins by Karen M. McManus


TV EPISODE/TELEPLAY


“Episode 1, Photochemistry” – Dead Still, Written by John Morton (Acorn TV)


Also nominated:


“Episode 1, The Stranger” – Harlan Coben’s The Stranger, Written by Danny Brocklehurst (Netflix)

“Episode 1, Open Water” – The Sounds, Written by Sarah-Kate Lynch (Acorn TV)

“Episode 1” – Des, Written by Luke Neal (Sundance Now)

“What I Know” – The Boys, Written by Rebecca Sonnenshine, based on the comic by Garth Ennis and Darick Robertson (Amazon)


SIMON & SCHUSTER MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD


The Cabinets of Barnaby Mayne by Elsa Hart 


Also nominated:


Death of an American Beauty by Mariah Fredericks 

The Lucky One by Lori Rader-Day 

The First to Lie by Hank Phillippi Ryan 

Cold Wind by Paige Shelton 


G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS SUE GRAFTON MEMORIAL AWARD


Vera Kelly is Not a Mystery by Rosalie Knecht


Also nominated:


The Burn by Kathleen Kent 

Riviera Gold by Laurie R. King

Dead Land by Sara Paretsky

The Sleeping Nymph by Ilaria Tuti 

Turn to Stone by James W. Ziskin


ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL


"The Bite,” Tampa Bay Noir by Colette Bancroft 


GRAND MASTERS


Jeffrey Deaver

Charlaine Harris


RAVEN AWARD


Malice Domestic


ELLERY QUEEN AWARD


Reagan Arthur, Publisher – Alfred A. Knopf


 


 


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Published on April 29, 2021 13:27

Mystery Melange

Book Art by Kerri Muller


The Crime Writers Association announced the longlist for this year's Debut Dagger, a competition for the opening of a crime novel by an uncontracted writer. Entries from shortlisted writers are sent to UK literary agents and publishers, many of whom have found representation. This year the Debut Dagger is being sponsored by ProWritingAid. (HT to Shots Magazine.)




Somehow, I missed this one earlier. The Lindisfarne Prize for Crime Fiction is a literary prize which recognizes outstanding writing in the genre of crime or thriller fiction, sponsored by the author L J Ross through her publishing imprint, Dark Skies Publishing, in association with the Newcastle Noir Crime Writing Festival and Newcastle Libraries. It is open to all writers who are from, or whose work celebrates the North East of England, and who have not previously had their submission published in any form (though they might have had other stories published before). The award organizers announced on social media in March that this year's shortlisted authors include Robert Scragg, Ellie Davies, Ed Walsh, Barbara Scott Emmett, and David Cooper.




Congrats also to Toronto crime author Howard Shrier, whose story, "Done With Him," about two brothers with conflicting motives, won the Toronto Star’s annual short story contest out of 1,000+ entries.




The deadline is fast approaching for applications for the Eleanor Taylor Bland Crime Fiction Writers of Color Award, sponsored by Sisters in Crime. The award is open to writers of color with an unpublished manuscript (short story or first chapters of a manuscript in-progress, 2,500 to 5,000 words). The last day for submissions for the annual grant of $2,000 is May 15.




Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine editor, Janet Hutchings, noted that this is the second year in which they've had to hold their annual Readers Award party virtually, so instead of the usual photos, she posted the 2021 awards video online.




In what’s become a tradition at CrimeReads, the editors partnered with Mystery Writers of America to organize a giant roundtable discussion between the Edgar nominees. They received responses from over 30 authors, each with their own fascinating take on crime fiction. The Edgar Awards Ceremony itself begins at 1 PM EST tomorrow, the 29th, via Zoom.




If you're a fan of women detectives, Publishers Weekly posted a list of "ten unstoppable women detectives," while Book Riot made note of crime novels where "women fight back."




Writing for The Bookseller, Ian Rankin noted that he would like a new generation of readers to come to the works of fellow Scottish author, William McIlvanney, known for his Jack Laidlaw books, a hard-boiled crime trilogy commonly cited as the foundation of Tartan Noir.




Writing for The Guardian, Caroline Crampton celebrated a century of honkaku, fiendishly clever Japanese whodunnit mystery novels that have spawned pop culture icons, anime, and a museum.




Robert Dugoni, author of the bestselling Tracy Crosswhite police series set in Seattle, applied the Page 69 Test to his new Crosswhite novel, In Her Tracks.




There are more than 9,000 public libraries in the U.S., and one man has been trying to win summer reading prizes from as many as he can. Not all librarians are happy about it.




This week's crime poem at the 5-2 is "Another World" by Tom Barlow.




In the Q&A roundup, Harlan Coben discussed why "we live in the golden age of crime novels"; humorist-turned-crime novelist, , spoke with Inside Hook about his new book, A Man Named Doll, a fast-paced neo-noir "that traffics in grit and laughs in equal measure"; Wallace Stroby spoke with CrimeReads about "Life, Death, and Noir on the Jersey Shore"; and Author Interviews chatted with Nev March, the recent winner of the Minotaur Books/Mystery Writers of America Award for Best First Crime Fiction.


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Published on April 29, 2021 07:30

April 26, 2021

Media Murder for Monday

OntheairIt's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:




AWARDS




The Academy of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences announced the winners of this year's Oscar Awards last night in a trimmed-down ceremony. Crime drama winners include a Best Supporting Actor nod to Daniel Kaluuya for his role in Judas and the Black Messiah and Best Original Screenplay to Promising Young Woman, written by Emerald Fennel. If you'd like to learn more about some of the lesser-known nominated films with a crime connection including those in the international, documentary, and animated categories, check out this article from Olivia Rutigliano at CrimeReads.




THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES


Universal Pictures bought the rights to the Brian Freeman novel, Infinite, with Thomas Dean Donnelly and Joshua Oppenheimer set to adapt the screenplay. The story follows Dylan Moran, consumed by grief after losing his wife, who begins hallucinating sinister versions of himself lurking in the shadows. When he ends up accused of murder, Moran undergoes a hypnotherapy treatment built on the idea that with every choice he makes, he creates an infinite number of parallel universes. It’s then he discovers he’s not insane at all—there’s another version of himself, from another reality. A psychopath that not only ruined his life, but countless other Dylans. Can Dylan stop this doppelgänger before he strikes again? Or will he lose himself…to himself?




Jason Isaacs, Barkhad Abdi, and Adan Canto have signed on for Agent Game, the indie spy thriller being directed by Grant S. Johnson. The new additions join previously announced cast members, Dermot Mulroney, Katie Cassidy, Rhys Coiro, Annie Ilonzeh, and Mel Gibson. The story centers on CIA officer Harris (Mulroney), who is involved in missions to detain and relocate foreign nationals for interrogation. When Harris’s superior (Isaacs) is murdered, he finds himself the scapegoat for the killing of a detainee (Abdi) and must run from a team of operatives sent to bring him in (Canto, Cassidy, Coiro), led by a ruthless double agent (Ilonzeh). Gibson plays a rogue intelligence official running the off-the-books operation to hunt down and kill Harris.




TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES




Apple TV Plus has ordered to series the bilingual drama, Now and Then. The project, to be shot in both Spanish and English and set in Miami with an all-Hispanic cast, is executive produced by Gideon Raff (Homeland; The Spy), who is set to direct the first two episodes. Now and Then is described as a "multi-layered thriller that explores the differences between youthful aspirations and the reality of adulthood," when the lives of a group of college best friends are forever changed after a celebratory weekend ends up with one of them dead. Now, 20 years later, the remaining five are reluctantly reunited by a threat that puts their seemingly perfect worlds at risk.




Amazon Studios announced it will co-produce the six-part BBC psychological thriller, Chloe, with a cast that features The Crown star, Erin Doherty. The project centers on the character of Becky, who becomes obsessed with the death of her estranged friend, Chloe. Becky assumes a new identity to infiltrate the enviable lives of Chloe’s closest friends as she attempts to establish what happened.




CBS has renewed NCIS: Los Angeles, starring LL Cool J and Chris O’Donnell, for Season 13 and ordered a new spinoff, NCIS: Hawaii, to series. The news comes after the recent announcements that the original NCIS had been renewed for a 19th season (with series star Mark Harmon returning), but NCIS: New Orleans, will end its seven-season run.




John Cameron Mitchell has been tapped to play the title character opposite Kate McKinnon in Joe Exotic (working title), based on the Wondery podcast, which is set to air across NBCU’s Television and Streaming Entertainment portfolio (NBC, USA Network, and Peacock). The limited series centers on Carole Baskin (McKinnon), a big cat enthusiast, who learns that fellow exotic animal lover Joe "Exotic" Schreibvogel (Mitchell) is breeding and using his big cats for profit. She sets out to shut down his venture, inciting a quickly escalating rivalry. But Carole has a checkered past of her own and when the claws come out, Joe will stop at nothing to expose what he sees as her hypocrisy. The results prove dangerous.




Gemma Whelan (Game Of Thrones, Killing Eve) has been cast as the lead in ITV’s drama series, The Tower, the three-part adaptation of Kate London’s Metropolitan Police novel, Post Mortem, from Homeland writer Patrick Harbinson. Whelan will play Detective Sergeant Sarah Collins, who investigates after a veteran beat cop and teenage girl fall to their deaths from a tower block in south-east London. Collins works to uncover the truth behind the grisly tower-block deaths and the related disappearances of a rookie police officer and a child. 




LisaGay Hamilton has been tapped for a key recurring role opposite Manuel Garcia-Rulfo in The Lincoln Lawyer, Netflix’s upcoming drama series based on Michael Connelly’s bestselling novels. The project revolves around Mickey Haller (Garcia-Rulfo), an iconoclastic idealist who runs his law practice out of the back seat of his Lincoln Town Car as he takes on cases big and small across the expansive city of Los Angeles. Hamilton will play Judge Mary Holder, presiding judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court — the most powerful trial judge in the city and a no-nonsense jurist who doesn’t suffer fools. It was also announced last week that Jamie McShane (playing Detective Lee Lankford) and Reggie Lee (playing Angelo Soto, an intimidating, wealthy businessman) will be recurring characters on the series.




AMC and UK’s Alibi has added new leads to the crime drama series, Ragdoll, with Henry Lloyd-Hughes (Killing Eve) and Thalissa Teixeira (Too Close) joining previously announced Lucy Hale. Adapted for television by Freddy Syborn from the novel by Daniel Cole, the six-part Ragdoll is described as "a modern-day Faustian thriller" that centers on the murder of six people whose bodies have been dismembered and sewn into the shape of one grotesque body — nicknamed "The Ragdoll." Assigned to the shocking case are DS Nathan Rose (Lloyd-Hughes), recently reinstated to the London Met; his best friend and boss, DI Emily Baxter (Teixeira); and the unit’s new recruit, DC Lake Edmunds (Hale). The killer taunts the police by sending them a list of his next victims, with detective Rose’s name at the very end




PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO




Author Kris Calvin joined Eric Beetner as guest co-host of this week's Writer Types podcast. Featured interviews include Alma Katsu (Red Widow) Peter Swanson (Every Vow You Break), and Wallace Stroby (Heaven's A Lie).




Read or Dead hosts, Katie McClean Horner and Nusrah Javed, celebrated the 100th episode of the podcast and talked about books that shaped them as mystery readers.




Meet the Thriller Author welcomed William Swanson, a Minneapolis journalist and true crime expert who has authored three true-crime books. Under his pen name of W.A. Winter, he writes crime fiction thrillers including his latest, The Secret Lives of Dentists, inspired by the 1955 case of a Minneapolis dentist tried for the murder of one of his young female patients.




Queer Writers of Crime spoke with Derek Farrell, author of five Danny Bird Mysteries all published by Fahrenheit Press, about "redefining the cozy noir mystery." 




Wrong Place, Write Crime host, Frank Zafiro, chatted with Shawn Reilly Simmons about cool jobs she's had, short stories, and her Red Carpet Catering mystery series.




It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club profiled three Scottish mystery writers you might want to check out.




At Crime Time FM, Ace Atkins spoke with Barry Forshaw about his new Spenser novel, Someone to Watch Over Me.




         Related StoriesMedia Murder for Monday 
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Published on April 26, 2021 07:47

April 24, 2021

Quote of the Week


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Published on April 24, 2021 07:00

April 23, 2021

FFB: Maigret Sets a Trap

Georges-SimenonBelgian-French author Georges Simenon (1903–1989) was certainly one of the most prolific writers of all time. I must admit that every time I read of Simenon's literary output, I am both amazed and envious. He published around 200 novels, 150 novellas, several nonfiction books and articles and an almost countless number of pulp novels written under more than two dozen pseudonyms. It's been said he churned out 60 to 80 pages a day (which in English would be equivalent to roughly 15,000 to 20,000 words).



Although his standalone psychological suspense novels are probably his best and most-highly reviewed works, it's his series featuring Inspector Jules Maigret, commissioner of the Paris Brigade Criminelle, for which Simenon is best remembered. Maigret is a heavy drinking, pipe smoking stocky man of average height whose laid-back sleuthing style relies more on pure intuition than traditional police leg work. The character has been the subject of several TV adaptations, such as the ITV series titled simply, Maigret, starring Michael Gambon, following an earlier film version (1958) with Jean Gabin in the title role, which won the Edgar Award and was nominated for 3 BAFTA Film Awards. The character has been portrayed by French, British, Irish, Austrian, German, Italian, Dutch, Japanese, and Russian actors.



Maigret-Sets-TrapIn Maigret Sets a Trap (Maigret tend un piège) from 1955, it's the middle of a hot and steamy summer in Paris, and the Parisians are terrified. A Jack the Ripper-style serial killer has evaded police for five months, stabbing and murdering a woman each month, all with similar physical descriptions and all killed in the same Montmarte neighborhood. Dubbed "The Montmartre Maniac" by the newspapers, the psychopathic villain seems to be smugly taunting the police, who have no clues. Under pressure from the public, Maigret takes the advice of a famous psychologist and uses the journalists' obsession with the case to devise an elaborate trap to play on the killer's ego and trick him into making a mistake.



Maigret dangles policewomen with the same physical characteristics as the previous victims as bait in the Montmarte target zone, including young rookie Marthe Jusserand, a newly-minted member of Maigret's team. The plan seems to have failed at first, but during the villain's escape, Jusserand manages to get the suspect's description and grab one of his buttons and a piece of cloth from his jacket. The man is tracked and arrested, case seemingly closed—until another victim is killed while the suspect is still in jail. Maigret has a slight crisis of conscience, wondering if they've nabbed an innocent man, but then he sets a second trap and reveals the killer in a dramatic twist.



A bit of interesting trivia: Inspector Maigret was allegedly based on a real-life French policeman named Charles Chevenier. For a bit of added fun, the Simenon tribute site Trussel.com has photos and a Google map of the murder locations mentioned in Maigret Sets a Trap.


          
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Published on April 23, 2021 06:00