SHORTLIST
FOR THE BLOODY SCOTLAND DEBUT SCOTTISH CRIME BOOK OF THE YEAR 2020 & LONGLIST
ANNOUNCED FOR THE McILVANNEY PRIZE 2020
Winners to be presented on Friday 18 September 2020
Winners to be presented on Friday 18 September 2020
Four
years ago the Scottish Crime Book of the Year Award was renamed the McIlvanney
Prize in memory of William McIlvanney who is often described as the Godfather
of Tartan Noir. Last year Bloody Scotland also introduced a prize for The
Bloody Scotland Debut Scottish Crime Book of the Year. This year both are
sponsored by the Glencairn Glass. At a time when debut writers have suffered
more than anyone else due to bookshop closures the debut prize is more
important than ever:
Shortlisted authors are:
Shortlisted authors are:
Hold
Your Tongue by Deborah Masson (Transworld)
The
Crown Agent by Stephen O’Rourke (Sandstone),
See
Them Run by Marion Todd (Canelo)
Pine by Francine Toon (Doubleday)
One, Francine Toon, is also longlisted for the McIlvanney Prize which includes:
Time for the Dead by Lin Anderson (Macmillan)
Bad Memory by Lisa Gray (Thomas & Mercer)
Whirligig by Andrew James Greig (Fledgling)
A Dark Matter by Doug Johnstone (Orenda)
How the Dead Speak by Val McDermid (Little, Brown)
The Island by Ben McPherson (HarperCollins)
Bury Them Deep by James Oswald (Headline)
The Art of Dying by Ambrose Parry (Canongate) aka Chris Broomyre and Marisa Haetzman
The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing by Mary Paulson-Ellis (Mantle)
The Red, Red Snow by Caro Ramsay (Severn House)
Watch Him Die by Craig Robertson (Simon & Schuster)
Pine by Francine Toon (Doubleday)
Finalists for the McIlvanney Prize will be revealed at the beginning of September and the winner of both prizes will be revealed on Friday 18 September.
Pine by Francine Toon (Doubleday)
One, Francine Toon, is also longlisted for the McIlvanney Prize which includes:
Time for the Dead by Lin Anderson (Macmillan)
Bad Memory by Lisa Gray (Thomas & Mercer)
Whirligig by Andrew James Greig (Fledgling)
A Dark Matter by Doug Johnstone (Orenda)
How the Dead Speak by Val McDermid (Little, Brown)
The Island by Ben McPherson (HarperCollins)
Bury Them Deep by James Oswald (Headline)
The Art of Dying by Ambrose Parry (Canongate) aka Chris Broomyre and Marisa Haetzman
The Inheritance of Solomon Farthing by Mary Paulson-Ellis (Mantle)
The Red, Red Snow by Caro Ramsay (Severn House)
Watch Him Die by Craig Robertson (Simon & Schuster)
Pine by Francine Toon (Doubleday)
Finalists for the McIlvanney Prize will be revealed at the beginning of September and the winner of both prizes will be revealed on Friday 18 September.
The
Bloody Scotland Debut Prize will be judged by a panel including crime writer
and founding director of Bloody Scotland Lin Anderson and representatives from
Waterstones and the Glencairn Glass.
The
McIlvanney Prize will be judged by Stuart Cosgrove, writer and broadcaster,
James Crawford, chair of Publishing Scotland and presenter of BBC series
Scotland from the Sky and Karen Robinson, Editor of The Times Crime Club.
The McIlvanney award recognises
excellence in Scottish crime writing, includes a prize of £1000 and nationwide
promotion in Waterstones. The 2020 longlist features established crime writers
and debuts, corporates and indies. Previous winners are Manda Scott with A
Treachery of Spies in 2019 (who chose to share her prize with all the
finalists), Liam McIlvanney with The Quaker in 2018, Denise Mina with The Long
Drop in 2017, Chris Brookmyre with Black Widow in 2016, Craig Russell
with The Ghosts of Altona in 2015, Peter May with Entry Island in 2014, Malcolm
Mackay with How A Gunman Says Goodbye in 2013 and Charles Cumming with A
Foreign Country in 2012. The inaugural Bloody Scotland Debut Prize 2019 was won
by Claire Askew with All The Hidden Truths.
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