Paul
Cleave became the Crown Prince of antipodean crime writing when his thriller
FIVE MINUTES ALONE was named the winner of the 2015 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best
Crime Novel on Sunday night.
The internationally bestselling author
made history when his “gritty and thoroughly absorbing” novel that “evokes
complex feelings about retribution and morality” was revealed as the winner
before a packed hometown crowd at a lively WORD Christchurch event at the Court
Theatre on 4 October.
“In a year with a remarkable quintet of
finalists, it’s fitting that Paul Cleave has become the first author to win the
Ngaio Marsh Award twice,” said Judging Convenor Craig Sisterson. “For almost a
decade he’s been leading our vanguard on the world stage in what’s becoming a
new heyday of local crime writing.”
In FIVE MINUTES ALONE, “wonderfully
complex protagonist” Theo Tate has been resurrected, as a cop and human being,
after recovering from a coma. He finds himself chasing a killer he can
empathise with: a vigilante who is disposing of society’s worst offenders,
giving victims of crime their ‘five minutes alone’ with the culprits. But
settling old scores is never as simple as it seems, as Tate knows well himself.
The judging panel, consisting of crime
fiction experts – authors, critics, and editors – from Scandinavia, the United
States, Great Britain, Australia, and New Zealand, said FIVE MINUTES ALONE was
packed with “moral dilemmas, and great writing, pacing, and characters,” and
demanded to be read in one sitting. “The
characters are sympathetic and human, never becoming black and white or easily
classified as good or bad,” noted one judge. “Cleave’s prose crackles like a
campfire, darkly hypnotic and dangerous.”
Cleave had previously won the Ngaio
Marsh Award in 2011 for BLOOD MEN. The Award is made annually for the best crime, mystery, or thriller
novel written by a New Zealand citizen or resident. Cleave also received a set
of Dame Ngaio’s novels courtesy of her publisher HarperCollins, a cash prize
provided by WORD Christchurch, and an invite to appear at a European crime
writing festival.
For more information
on the Ngaio Marsh Award, go to www.facebook.com/NgaioMarshAward or email ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com, or to
contact the Judging Convenor directly: craigsisterson@hotmail.com
No comments:
Post a Comment