Five authors have today been shortlisted
for the CWA
2014 Dagger in the Library award, sponsored by Dead Good Books.
This year, for the first time,
readers compiled the long list as crime lovers everywhere were invited to vote
online for their three favourite authors. The most popular ten authors were
whittled down to five by a panel of judges including previous winner Steve
Mosby, CWA Director Lucy Santos and a group of UK librarians.
Unlike most other literary
prizes, the Dagger in the Library honours an author’s body of work to date,
rather than a single title and an author must have published three books to be
eligible for the award. Previous winners include Belinda Bauer, Steve Mosby, Mo
Hayder, Colin Cotterill, Stuart MacBride and Alexander McCall Smith.
The short list, in alphabetical
order:
Sharon Bolton (Transworld)
Elly Griffiths (Quercus)
Mari Hannah (Pan)
James Oswald (Michael
Joseph)
Mel Sherratt (Thomas & Mercer)
Chair of the
Judging panel Mobeena Khan commented; "We were thrilled
by the number of nominations received this year, resulting in an excellent long
list. The judges have enjoyed reading through the long list and are
particularly pleased with the strong and varied shortlist for this year. Many
congratulations to all the nominees."
The winner will be announced at
the beginning of December.
Sharon
Bolton has been dubbed by The
Times as ‘the High Priestess of English Rural Gothic’. Bolton has written
eight crime novels and is the author of the Lacey Flint series.
Elly
Griffiths’ novels feature protagonist Ruth Galloway, the Head of
Forensic Archaeology at the University of North Norfolk. Her inspiration for
the series came when her husband gave up his city job to become an
archaeologist.
Mari
Hannah has published four books to date and is the author of the
DCI Kate Daniels series. A former Probation Officer, Mari lives in
Northumberland where her novels are set.
James
Oswald has written four books in the Inspector McLean series and
first found success as a self-publishing phenomenon. Set in Edinburgh, his
crime novels contain supernatural elements.
Mel
Sherratt is the author of what she calls ‘grit-lit’ – crime,
psychological thrillers and suspense. She has achieved huge success by self-publishing
her five books.
For more details please
contact: Lynsey Dalladay, Digital Marketing Manager, Penguin Random House UK at
LDalladay@RandomHouse.co.uk
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