Sunday, 26 January 2014

Nordic Fun at Nordicana 2014


Nordicana is an annual expo in London celebrating Scandinavian film, TV, and fiction with an emphasis on the crime genre but also incorporating food, design, music and lifestyle elements.  This year (2014) Nordicana is due to take place on Saturday 1st February 2014 and Sunday 2nd February 2014 at The Old Truman Brewery, Ely’s Yard 15 Hanbury Street (Off Brick Lane), London E1 6QL.

The schedule for the two days is below.
  
SATURDAY 1ST FEBRUARY

DOORS OPEN 9.30AM

10.00 – 10.45 ‘POST DOGME 95 - REALITY RULES!’ Director Michael Noer discusses and shows excerpts from his films ‘R’ & ‘Northwest’ plus Tobias Lindholm’s ‘A Hijacking’ with lead actors Pilou Asbæk & Roland Møller – Screen 2

10.30 – 12.10 THE HOUR OF THE LYNX – starring Sofie Grabøl and Søren Malling – UK Premiere – Screen 3

11.00 - 12.00 ‘BUILDING BORGEN’ – A panel discussion with lead actress Sidse Babett Knudsen, co-star Pilou Asbæk, creator Adam Price, producer Camilla Hammerich & composer Halfdan E by Radio Times Editor Ben Preston – Screen 1 (with additional live feed into screen 2)

12.15 – 12.45 ‘A GREAT SCANDINAVIAN CINNAMON BUN-OFF’ Day 1 judging session hosted by Signe (Scandilicious) Johansen with Celebrity Masterchef winner Emma Kennedy, Borgen composer and Danish Masterchef Allstars competitor Halfdan E & Borgen creator and celebrated chef Adam Price - Screen 2

12.30 – 14.10 NORTHWEST – a film by Michael Noer starring Roland Møller - UK Preview – Screen 3

13.00 – 14.45 The Danish and Swedish Embassies in London present THE BRIDGE 2 - EPISODE 9 – advance preview introduced by The Ambassador of Denmark Mr Claus Grube followed by a Q&A with Sofia Helin & Kim Bodnia by broadcaster Suzi Perry – Screen 1 (with additional live feed into screen 2)

15.00 – 17.30 PIONEER – a film by Erik Skjoldbjærg (Insomnia) - special UK preview + Q&A with lead actor Aksel Hennie (Headhunters) by BAFTA nominated editor of ‘Gravity’ Mark Sanger – Screen 3

15.15 – 16.15 ‘BEING WALLANDER’ - Krister Henriksson & Charlotta Jonsson discuss their on-screen father and daughter relationship with Doktor Glas producer Victoria Jeffrey – Screen 1

15.15 – 16.15 ‘THE KILLING AROUND THE WORLD’ The Killing Handbook writer Emma Kennedy and actors Carsten Bjørnlund (The Killing II) and Marie Askehave (The Killing II) talk the success of ‘The Killing’ with Neil Midgley – Screen 2

16.15 – 17.00 ‘THE SWEDISH CRIME NOVEL’ - Håkan Nesser & Arne Dahl in conversation with Barry Forshaw – Screen 2

17.00 – 18.00 ‘DECONSTRUCTING THE KILLING’ with The Killing 1-3 author David Hewson – Screen 2

17.15 – 19.00 THE LEGACY EPISODE 1 – UK PREMIERE of the new series from DR, producers of The Killing & Borgen + Q&A with lead actor Carsten Bjørnlund by Neil Midgley – Screen 1

17.30 – 19.00 A HIJACKING – a film by Tobias Lindholm starring Pilou Asbæk & Roland Møller - Screen 3

From 19.00 PROJECT FRESH SOCKS The Norwegian DJ Duo round-off day one of Nordicana – a great and atmospheric accompaniment to a chilled Reyka
  
SUNDAY 2ND FEBRUARY

DOORS OPEN 10.00AM

10.30 – 11.30 ‘THE STATSMINISTER & BEYOND’ - Interview with Sidse Babett Knudsen by Radio Times Editor Ben Preston – Screen 1

10.30 – 11.30 ‘EAT LIKE A SCANDI’ Scandilicious Signe Johansen hosts a celebrity food expert panel to discuss the Nordic diet and palette and share some secrets of good Scandi cooking with Trine Hahnemann, Anette Moldvaer & Bronte Aurell – Screen 2

10.30 – 12.10 THE HOUR OF THE LYNX - starring Sofie Grabøl and Søren Malling UK PREMIERE – Screen 3

12.00 – 13.45 THE LEGACY Episode 1 – another chance to see a preview of the new series from DR, producers of The Killing & Borgen + Q&A with lead actor Carsten Bjørnlund by Jasper Rees – Screen 2

12.00 – 14.15 WALLANDER – THE TROUBLED MAN – Special preview + Q&A with Krister Henriksson & Charlotta Jonsson by Doktor Glas producer Victoria Jeffrey – Screen 1

12.30– 13.30 ‘DECONSTRUCTING THE KILLING’ another chance to hear this enlightening talk with The Killing 1-3 author David Hewson – Screen 3

15.30 – 16.30 ‘THE SWEDISH CRIME NOVEL’ – another chance to hear Håkan Nesser & Arne Dahl in conversation with Barry Forshaw – Screen 2

13.50– 14.45 PIONEER – a film by Erik Skjoldbjærg (Insomnia).  Another chance to see this superb thriller based on a true story - Screen 3

14.15 – 14.45 ‘A GREAT SCANDINAVIAN CINNAMON BUN-OFF’ Day 2 judging session hosted by Signe (Scandilicious) Johansen with Celebrity Masterchef winner Emma Kennedy, Borgen composer and Danish Masterchef Allstars competitor Halfdan E & Great British Bake-Off winner John Whaite –
Screen 2

14.45 – 16.45 The Danish and Swedish Embassies in London present THE BRIDGE 2 - EPISODE 10 introduced by The Ambassador of Sweden Ms Nicola Clase followed by a Q&A with Sofia Helin & Kim Bodnia by Radio Times TV Editor Alison Graham – Screen 1

16.00 – 17.00 THE LEGACY EPISODE 1 –a final chance to preview the new series from DR, producers of The Killing & Borgen – Screen 3

The schedule is subject to change due to any unforeseen circumstances such as flight delays, illness and changing work commitments and will be updated at times up to the event itself.

For a glimpse of how good Nordicana 2013 was have a look at the clip below.


Tickets for both days can be booked here.

More information about Nordicana 2014 can be found on the website and also on their Facebook page.  Also follow them on Twitter @NordicanaUK

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Criminal Splatterings!

According to the Bookseller, publishing house Quercus is up for sale!  This is despite less than a week after c.e.o. Mark Smith saying that a merger was not on the cards for the firm.

According to Booktrade.info Harlequin Mira have won the rights to three crime novels by Death in Paradise creator and writer Robert Thorogood.  More information can be read here. Harlequin will publish the first novel in hardback in January 2015, with the paperback edition following in June 2015.

One should not be surprised, but according to USA Today Dan Brown’s novel Inferno was the bestselling novel of the year.  The full article can be found here.

Really good article in the Guardian by Anne Cleeves on crime books in translation.  She talks about her favourite ones which include Simenon and Camillieri. The full article can be read here.

The British Library are to host the biggest British Comic Exhibition this year.  Comics Unmasked Art and Anarchy in the UK is due to take place at the British Library from 2 May until 2014 until 19 August 2014 and will feature some of the biggest names in comics, including Alan Moore (Watchmen, V for Vendetta), Neil Gaiman (Sandman), Mark Millar (Kick-Ass) and Grant Morrison (Batman: Arkham Asylum), the British comics tradition stretches back to the Victorian era and beyond.  More information can be found at the BBC and in the Guardian and The Telegraph.  The British Library are also due to host Terror and Wonder: The Gothic Imagination between 3 October until 27 January 2015 an exhibition that will examine how Horace Walpole's The Castle of Otranto in 1764 influenced the likes of Mary Shelley, Edgar Allen Poe and Bram Stoker.  Coinciding with the exhibition will be a BBC Four season on gothic literature, due to be broadcast in the autumn.

Laura Wilson’s round-up of crime fiction in the Guardian includes the final book in Malcolm Mackay’s Glasgow trilogy, Eva Dolan and Willey cash.

And if you missed this news in between Christmas and New Year a legal ruling has given film-makers and authors the right to create their own Sherlock Holmes stories in the US without having to pay a licence fee. The article in the Guardian can be read here.

Interesting article in The Telegraph by Jon Stock on what is supposed to be the latest book craze “Chick Noir”. He talks not only about Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl but also Season to Taste by Natalie Young which has just been published by Tinder Press.

According to the BBC and Deadline it appears that the plug has been pulled on the planned remake of Murder, She Wrote.  The new version was due to star Oscar winner Octavia Spencer. 

According to the BBC the hugely successful Father Brown series based on the stories by GK Chesterton, has been recommissioned for a third series by BBC One Daytime in collaboration with BBC Worldwide.

Also for the first time in 20 years Michael Palin is to head the cast of a supernatural thriller.  Remember Me is due to be shown on BBC One and Palin will play Tom Parfitt, a frail, old Yorkshire man seemingly alone in the world, whose admittance to a nursing home triggers a series of inexplicable events.  More information can be found here.
 
Deutscher Krimi Preis have announced the winners of the thirtieth Deutscher Krimi Preis with the German-language prize going to M, by Friedrich Ani, with second place going to Robert Hültner’s Am Endes Des Tages ( At the End of the Day) and third place going to Matthias Wittekindt’s Marmormanner (Marble Men).  The translated prize going to Ladrão de Cadáveres by In Praise of Lies-author Patrícia Melo.  Second plac went to John Le Carré's  Delicate Truth  whilst Jerome Charyn’s Under The Eye of God took third place.
 
According to Booktrade.info Northern Irish crime fiction writer Anthony Quinn's The Blood-Dimmed Tide his first historical crime thriller, featuring W.B. Yeats, to Ion Mills at No Exit Press, in a three-book deal, for publication in 2014, by Paul Feldstein at The Feldstein Agency
 

Monday, 20 January 2014

Books to Look Forward to from PanMacmillan and Mantle

Harbour Street is by Anne Cleeves and is due to be published in January 2014.  As the snow falls thickly on Newcastle, the shouts and laughter of Christmas revellers break the muffled silence. Detective Joe Ashworth and his daughter Jessie are swept along in the jostling crowd onto the Metro. But when the train is stopped due to the bad weather, and the other passengers fade into the swirling snow, Jessie notices that an old lady hasn't left the train: Margaret Krukowski has been fatally stabbed as she sat on the crowded train. Why would anyone want to harm this reserved, elegant lady? Arriving at the scene, DI Vera Stanhope is relieved to have an excuse to escape the holiday festivities. As she stands on the silent, snow-covered station platform, Vera feels a familiar buzz of anticipation, sensing that this will be a complex and unusual case. Soon Vera and Joe are on their way to the south Northumberland town of Mardle, where Margaret lived, to begin their inquiry. Then, just days later, a second woman is murdered. Vera knows that to find the key to this new killing she needs to understand what had been troubling Margaret so much before she died -- before another life is lost. Retracing Margaret's final steps, Vera finds herself searching deep into the hidden past of this seemingly innocent neighbourhood, led by clues that keep revolving around one street ...Why are the residents of Harbour Street so reluctant to speak?

Oslo, 1968. Ambitious young detective Inspector Kolbjorn Kristiansen is called to an apartment block, where a man has been found murdered. The victim, Harald Olesen, was a legendary hero of the Resistance during the Nazi occupation and at first it is difficult to imagine who could have wanted him dead. But as Detective Inspector Kolbein Kristiansen (known as K2) begins to investigate, it seems clear that the murderer could only be one of Olesen's fellow tenants in the building. Soon, with the help of Patricia -- a brilliant, young woman confined to a wheelchair following a terrible accident -- K2 will begin to untangle the web of lies surrounding Olesen's neighbours; each of whom, it seems, had their own reasons for wanting Olesen dead. Their interviews, together with new and perplexing clues, will lead K2 and Patricia to dark events that took place during the Second World War ...This gripping, evocative and ingenious mystery -- the first in a series featuring K2 and Patricia -- pays homage to the great Agatha Christie and will plunge readers into Norwegian history, and into a world of deceit and betrayal, revenge and the very darkest murder.  The Human Files  is by Hans Olav Lahlum and is due to be published in March 2014.
Towards the end of the Second World War a young British artist called Kenneth Brill is arrested for painting landscapes near the old village of Heathrow. The authorities suspect his paintings contain coded information about the new military airfield that is to be built there. Brill protests that he is merely recording a landscape that will soon disappear. Under interrogation a more complicated picture emerges as Brill tells the story of his life - of growing up among the market gardens of The Heath, of his life on the London art scene of the 1930s, and his brief spell as a master at a minor public school. But a darker picture also comes to light, of dealings with the prostitutes and pimps of the Soho underworld, of a break-in at a royal residence and of connections with well-known fascist sympathisers at home and abroad. So who is the real Kenneth Brill? The hero of El Alamein who, as a camouflage officer, helped pull off one of the greatest acts of military deception in the history of warfare, or the lover of Italian futurist painter and fascist sympathiser Arturo Somarco? Why was he expelled from the Slade? And what was he doing at Hillmead, the rural community run by Rufus Quayle, friend of Hitler himself? Vanishing sees the world through the eyes of one of the forgotten geniuses of British Art, a man whose artistic vision is so piercing he has trouble seeing what is right in front of him.  Vanishing is a blackly comic novel of camouflage and mystery by Gerard Woodward and is due to be published in March 2014.
The Nashes are a close-knit family. Tom, a popular teacher, is father to the handsome, roguish Eli and his younger sister Deenie, serious and sweet. But their seeming stability is thrown into chaos when two of Deenie's friends become violently ill, and rumours of a dangerous outbreak sweep through the whole community. As hysteria swells and as more girls succumb, tightly held secrets emerge that threaten to unravel the world Tom has built for his kids, and destroy friendships, families, and the town's fragile idea of security. The Fever is by Megan Abbott and is a chilling story about guilt, family secrets, and the lethal power of desire.  The Fever is due to be published in June 2014.

Cell is by Robin Cook and is due to be published in February 2014. George Wilson, M.D., a radiology resident in Los Angeles, is about to enter a profession on the brink of an enormous paradigm shift, foreshadowing a vastly different role for doctors everywhere. A new smartphone app is being developed that is far more than a mere reference tool, rather it is a fully customizable personal physician capable of diagnosing and treating patients more efficiently than the real thing. It is called iDoc. George's initial collision with this incredible innovation is devastating. He awakens one morning to find his fiancee dead in bed alongside him, not long after she participated in an iDoc beta test. Then several of his patients die after undergoing imaging procedures. All of them had been part of the same beta test. Is it possible that iDoc is being subverted by hackers -- and that the US government is involved in a cover-up? Despite threats to both his career and his freedom, George relentlessly seeks the truth, knowing that if he's right, the consequences could be lethal.
New Orleans, 1919. As a dark serial killer - The Axeman - stalks the city, three individuals set out to unmask him ...Though every citizen of the 'Big Easy' thinks they know who could be behind the terrifying murders, Detective Lieutenant Michael Talbot, heading up the official investigation, is struggling to find leads. But Michael has a grave secret - and if he doesn't get himself on the right track fast - it could be exposed ...Former detective Luca d'Andrea has spent the last six years in Angola state penitentiary, after Michael, his protegee, blew the whistle on his corrupt behaviour. Now a newly freed man, Luca is back working with the mafia, whose need to solve the mystery of the Axeman is every bit as urgent as the authorities'. Meanwhile, Ida is a secretary at the Pinkerton Detective Agency. Obsessed with Sherlock Holmes and dreaming of a better life, Ida stumbles across a clue which lures her and her musician friend, Louis Armstrong, to the case - and into terrible danger ...As Michael, Luca and Ida each draw closer to discovering the killer's identity, the Axeman himself will issue a challenge to the people of New Orleans: play jazz or risk becoming the next victim. And as the case builds to its crescendo, the sky will darken and a great storm will loom over the city ...Inspired by a true story, The Axeman’s Jazz is set against the heady backdrop of jazz-filled, mob-ruled New Orleans. The Axeman’s Jazz  is an ambitious, gripping debut historical thriller by Ray Celestin and it is due to be published in May 2014. 
The mission is to enter one of the most dangerous countries in the world. The target is one of the toughest to reach. The result could be momentous - or it could be Armageddon. There is no margin for error. US government operatives Will Robie and Jessica Reel have to prove they are still the best team there is. But are they invincible when pitted against an agent whose training has been under conditions where most would perish? An old man is dying in an Alabama prison hospital, it seems there is one more evil game he has still to play. And it's a game which comes close to home for Reel and Robie. But this time the stakes might be way too high. The Target is by David Baldacci and is due to be published in April 2014.
He's touching the front of his coat, feeling the shape of the gun. Should have got rid of it. On any other night, any other job, he would. This isn't any other job. This, he intends, will be his last ...It begins with two deaths: a money-man and a grass. Deaths that offer a unique opportunity to a man like Calum MacLean. A man who has finally had enough of killing. Meanwhile two of Glasgow's biggest criminal organisations are at quiet, deadly war with one another. And as Detective Michael Fisher knows, the biggest -- and bloodiest -- manoeuvres are yet to come ...The stunning conclusion to Malcolm Mackay's lauded Glasgow Trilogy, The Sudden Arrival of Violence will return readers to the city's underworld: a place of dark motives, dangerous allegiances and inescapable violence ...  The Sudden Arrival of Violence is due to be published in January 2014.

San Francisco, 1876: a stifling heat wave and smallpox epidemic have engulfed the City. Deep in the streets of Chinatown live three former stars of the Parisian circus: Blanche, now an exotic dancer at the House of Mirrors, her lover Arthur and his companion Ernest. When an eccentric outsider joins their little circle, secrets unravel, changing everything - and leaving one of them dead. Frog Music is by Emma Donoghue and is inspired by true events. It is an evocative novel of intrigue and murder: elegant, erotic and witty and is due to be published in March 2014.
Virtual romance becomes terrifying obsession in Want You Dead...Single girl, redhead, 33, with a love life that's crashed and burned, seeks new flame for fun, friendship and -- who knows -- more maybe? When Red Cameron meets handsome, charming and rich Bryce Laurent through an online dating agency, there is an instant attraction. But as their love blossoms, the truth about his past, and his dark side, begins to emerge. Everything he has told Red about himself turns out to be a tissue of lies, and her infatuation with him gradually turns to terror. Within a year, and under police protection, she evicts him from her flat and her life. But her nightmare is only just beginning. For Bryce is obsessed with her, and he intends to destroy everything and everyone she has ever known and loved - and then her too...  Want You Dead is by Peter James and is due to be published in June 2014.
Where Evil Lies  is by Jøgen Brekke and is due to be published in January 2014.  1528. A young Franciscan monk travels to Norway to collect a set of scalpels from a barber surgeon with whom he shares a dark and mysterious obsession with the dissection of human corpses. He travels north and settles in a remote village. His deadly legacy is a mysterious manuscript, the Book of John, bound in human skin. Nearly five hundred years later, it seems that the ancient practice is experiencing a revival. 2010. Trondheim, Norway. Inspector Odd Singsaker leads the investigation into the flaying of the University librarian, Gunn Brita Dahle, and the theft of the priceless Book of John. The prime suspect is a security guard at the library who was once an academic high-flier, and now lives an isolated, almost twilight, existence following the unexplained disappearance of his wife and son some years back. 2010. Richmond, Virginia. When the curator of the Edgar Allan Poe museum suffers the same fate as Dahle, US Detective Felicia Stone flies to Norway to join Singsaker in the hunt for a serial killer. The more they delve into the past, the more sinister their discoveries become. The key to the psychopath's next move is held in the manuscript. Can they work out the clue before another person has to die.
Detective Inspector for homicide, Sarah Lund, is contacted by old flame Mathias Borch from National Intelligence. Borch fears that what first appeared to be a random killing at the docks is the beginning of an assassination attempt on Prime Minister Troels Hartmann. The murder draws attention towards the shipping and oil giant, Zeeland, run by billionaire Robert Zeuthen. When Zeuthen's 9-year-old daughter, Emilie, is kidnapped the investigation takes on a different dimension as it soon becomes clear that her disappearance is linked to the murder of a young girl in Jutland some years earlier. Hartmann is in the middle of an election campaign, made all the more turbulent because of the mounting financial crisis. He needs Zeeland's backing. Lund needs to make sense of the clues left by Emilie's perpetrator before it's too late. And can she finally face the demons that have long haunted her? The Killing 3 is by David Hewson and is due to be published in February 2014.

Detective Sergeant Jessica Daniel has barely left her house in months, isolated away from friends and colleagues. She may have given up on herself but one man is sure she still has something to offer. DCI Jack Cole gives her a chance at redemption: An opportunity to help a neighbouring force by discovering what is going on with a reclusive community living in a stately home in the middle of nowhere. People are going missing, turning up dead with only a vague link back to the house. But can Jessica beat her own demons in time to find out exactly what's going on behind closed doors?  Behind Closed Doors is by Kerry Wilkinson and is due to be published in January 2014.
The House of Dolls is by David Hewson and is due to be published in April 2014. Anneliese Vos, sixteen-year-old daughter of Amsterdam detective, Pieter Vos, disappeared three years ago in mysterious circumstances. Her distraught father's desperate search reveals nothing and results in his departure from the police force. Pieter now lives in a broken down houseboat in the colourful Amsterdam neighbourhood of the Jordaan. One day, while Vos is wasting time at the Rijksmuseum staring at a doll's house that seems to be connected in some way to the case, Laura Bakker, a misfit trainee detective from the provinces, visits him. She's come to tell him that Katja Prins, daughter of an important local politician, has gone missing in circumstances similar to Anneliese. In the company of the intriguing and awkward Bakker Vos finds himself drawn back into the life of a detective. A life which he thought he had left behind. Hoping against hope that somewhere will lay a clue to the fate of Anneliese, the daughter he blames himself for losing ...
This was a big mistake ...Because he didn't think at all about the investigation, the burglars, or Mr. Z. He thought about Angelica ...When Vigata's elite are targeted in a series of perfectly executed burglaries, Inspector Montalbano reluctantly takes the case. It isn't long though before the irascible detective finds himself taken with one of the victims, the captivatingly beautiful young Angelica. But as Montalbano's growing attraction to Angelica begins to consume him, a series of dangerous, anonymous letters begin to arrive, threatening not only his relationship with his girlfriend Livia, but the Inspector's entire career ...With the allure of Angelica ever in his mind, his relationship with Livia crumbling, and his job under threat, Montalbano must focus his mind to solve this complex investigation before it is too late ...  Angelica’s Smile is by Andrea Camilleri and is due to be published in June 2014.

Maybe it was time I forgot about Nico Peterson, and his sister, and the Cahuilla Club, and Clare Cavendish. Clare? The rest would be easy to put out of my mind, but not the black-eyed blonde ...It is the early 1950s. In Los Angeles, Private Detective Philip Marlowe is as restless and lonely as ever, and business is a little slow. Then a new client arrives: young, beautiful, and expensively dressed, Clare Cavendish wants Marlowe to find her former lover, a man named Nico Peterson. Soon Marlowe will find himself not only under the spell of the Black-Eyed Blonde; but tangling with one of Bay City's richest families -- and developing a singular appreciation for how far they will go to protect their fortune ...In this gripping and deeply evocative crime novel, Benjamin Black returns us to the dark, mesmerising world of Raymond Chandler's The Long Goodbye and his singular detective Philip Marlowe; one of the most iconic and enduringly popular detectives in crime fiction.  The Black-Eyed Blonde  is due to be published in February 2014.
Jessica Mayhew has a new client at her psychotherapy practice. Artist Pandora Powell is in shock following the death of her mother, Ursula, who was murdered during the theft of a valuable painting at her studio. And Jess has problems of her own, as she struggles to adjust to the demands of being a single parent. Pandora is a beautiful but shy and vulnerable young woman who has grown up in the shadow of her famous ancestors, the Welsh painters Augustus and Gwen John, and under the wing of her twin sister, Isobel. There is a suggestion that Isobel's husband, art dealer Blake Thomas, might be responsible for Ursula's murder. Blake is riding high with the success of his latest protege, reclusive ex-miner and would-be revolutionary Hefin Morris, who is fast becoming the enfant terrible of the contemporary art world. When Blake too dies in mysterious circumstances, Jessica is drawn into a quest that not only leads her into mortal danger but also threatens to destroy her entire moral code as a therapist. Black Valley tells the story of how Jessica and Pandora, as therapist and client, slip between their different roles, becoming caught in a net from which neither can escape - except through treachery and betrayal.  Black Valley is by Charlotte Williams and is due to be published in June 2014.
Never Look Back is a chilling and compelling debut crime thriller by Clare Donoghue set in South East London and is due to be published in March 2014. Three women have been found brutally murdered in south London, the victims only feet away from help during each sadistic attack. And the killer is getting braver ...Sarah Grainger is rapidly becoming too afraid to leave her house. Once an outgoing photographer, she knows that someone is watching her. A cryptic note brings everything into terrifying focus, but it's the chilling phone calls that take the case to another level.DI Mike Lockyer heads up the regional murder squad. With three bodies on his watch, and a killer growing in confidence, he frantically tries to find the link between these seemingly isolated incidents. What he discovers will not only test him professionally but will throw his personal life into turmoil too.
Detective Inspector James Quill and his wily squad of supernatural crime-busters are coming to terms with their new-found second sight. They have a handle on the ghosts and ghouls, but the rest of London's supernatural underworld is still unknown. When a seemingly invisible murderer kills a top cabinet minister in unusual circumstances, the team knows this is a case for them. Attempts to learn more about this mysterious figure are hampered when their chief detective goes missing, and a core member of their team becomes more focussed on bringing her father back to life than finding their missing detective. Soon the team seems to be falling apart as each member pursues their own interests. Throw in an ancient and vengeful spirit and a Rat King, and their mission soon becomes a trip to Hell - literally. The Severed Streets is by Paul Cornell and is due to be published in May 2014.
Marked is by David Jackson and us due to be published in January 2014.  In New York's East Village a young girl is brutally raped, tortured and murdered. Detective Callum Doyle has seen the victim's remains. He has visited the distraught family. Now he wants justice. Doyle is convinced he knows who the killer is. The problem is he can't prove it. And the more he pushes his prime suspect, the more he learns that the man is capable of pushing back in ways more devious and twisted than Doyle could ever have imagined. Add to that the appearance of an old adversary who has a mission for Doyle and won't take no for an answer, and soon Doyle finds himself at risk of losing everything he holds dear. Including his life.
The Acolyte follows on from events in Seth Patrick's first novel, Reviver and is due to be published in June 2014.  A woman is violently murdered in an alleyway. Strange shadows are appearing on people's shoulders. Could these both be linked?
The first thing I notice is her face. It is so perfect it seems unlikely that it could ever exist in the real world. Her white skin is flawless, her features perfectly symmetrical, her lips red and wet and full, parting with every gasp. It is her eyes that hold me, though. They are a shade of blue I have never seen, with flecks of gold and crystal, and they are so penetrating it feels as though they are reaching out straight through his eyes into mine, begging me for ...something I can't quite make out. It's like those eyes have captured the dialectic of every human emotion that ever mattered -- love and hate; ecstasy and terror; comfort and jealousy -- and rolled them into a single glance that could level entire cities. I am slaughtered. Imagine being able to create and experience your deepest dreams and your darkest fantasies ...Boston entrepreneur and techno whizz-kid, Nick Caldwell with the help of his long-time friend and colleague, Yvette, has worked on a programme where people can do just that -- all from the safety and comfort of their home. NextLife is an exciting young company which promises its subscribers the chance to experience anything they want. Climb Everest. Dive off the Barrier Reef. Go to a 1970s Rolling Stones concert. Walk the Great Wall of China. But it seems that one of their clients has much more sinister desires. And it involved the girl with the wonderful blue eyes ...  The Game of Death is by David Hosp and is due to be published in February 2014.
The Second World War has ended, leaving a bruised and fragile peace. But this tranquillity is threatened when a shocking murder takes place in the Sussex countryside. Before long, police experts discover a link to another, earlier, killing hundreds of miles away ...While Scotland Yard detective Billy Styles struggles to find a link between these two murders, a strange twist of fate brings former Detective Inspector John Madden into the investigations. As the victim count rises it becomes clear that to catch this serial killer Madden, Styles and young policewoman Detective-Constable Lily Poole must act quickly. But Madden remains haunted by the mysteries at the heart of the case. Why was his name in a letter the second target had been penning, just before he died? Could the real clue to these perplexing murders lie within the victims' pasts? And within his own? With this stunning, atmospheric crime novel teeming with twists and moving between the 1950s, the First and Second World Wars, in The Reckoning which is due to be published in June 2014 Rennie Airth, presents his greatest and most compelling novel yet.

The Hidden Girl is by Louise Millar and is due to be published in May 2014.  Hannah Riley and her musician husband, Will, hope that a move to the Suffolk countryside will promise a fresh start.Hannah, a human rights worker, is desperate for a child and she hopes that this new life will realise her dream.Yet when the snow comes, Will is working in London and Hannah is cut off in their remote village. Life in Tornley turns out to be far from idyllic, who are the threatening figures who lurk near their property at night? And why is her neighbour so keen to see them leave? Plus Will's behaviour is severely testing the bonds of trust.Hannah has spent her professional life doing the right thing for other people. But as she starts to unbury a terrible crime, she realises she can no longer do that without putting everything she's ever wanted at risk. But if she does nothing, the next victim could be her ...
Fukuoka Prison, 1944. Beyond the prison walls the war rages; inside a man is found brutally murdered. Watanabe, a young guard with a passion for reading, is tasked with finding the killer. The victim, Sugiyama - also a guard - was feared and despised throughout the prison and investigations have barely begun when a powerful inmate confesses. But Watanabe is unconvinced; and as he interrogates both the suspect and Yun Dong-ju, a talented Korean poet, he begins to realise that the fearsome guard was not all he appeared to be ...As Watanabe unravels Sugiyama's final months, he begins to discover what is really going on inside this dark and violent institution, which few inmates survive: a man who will stop at nothing to dig his way to freedom; a governor whose greed knows no limits; a little girl whose kite finds her an unlikely friend. And Yun Dong-ju - the poet whose works hold such beauty they can break the hardest of hearts. As the war moves towards its devastating close and bombs rain down upon the prison, Watanabe realises that he must find a way to protect Yun Dong-ju, no matter what it takes. This decision will lead the young guard back to the investigation - where he will discover a devastating truth ...At once a captivating mystery and an epic lament for lost freedom and humanity in the darkest of times The Investigation  is by Jung-Myung Lee and is due to be published in March 2014.
A family tragedy. A buried secret. What lies hidden in the flames? A dense, bitterly cold fog
has settled over the Wye Valley when Bristol Coroner Jenny Cooper is called to the scene of a dreadful tragedy: in the village of Blackstone Ley, a house has burned to the ground with three members of a family inside. Though evidence of foul play is quickly uncovered, it isn't long before the police investigation is drawn to a close. It seems certain that the fire was started by one of the victims, Ed Morgan, in a fit of jealous rage. But their infant son is still missing and Ed had left a message for his surviving wife, Kelly Hart, telling her that she would never find the child ...As Jenny prepares the inquest, she finds herself troubled by the official version of events. What could have provoked Ed's murderous rampage? How might the other, guarded inhabitants of the village have been involved? And what could the connection be with the mysterious abduction of a little girl ten years ago? Battling to supress gruelling events in her own life, Jenny soon becomes entangled in another perplexing inquiry that may have surprising links to this one. Can she unearth Blackstone Ley's secrets, before it's too late?   The Burning is by M R Hall and is due to be published in February 2014.

The Lying Down Room is the debut novel by Anna Jaquiery and is due to be published in April 2014. At night Armand lay in bed with a sadness in his heart that ballooned until there was room for nothing else. He thought with horror of the lying-down room ...Paris; in the stifling August heat, Commandant Serge Morel is called to a disturbing crime scene. An elderly woman has been murdered to the soundtrack of Faure's Requiem, her body then grotesquely displayed. At first this strange case seems to offer few clues; and Morel has problems of his own. His father - always a great force in his life - is beginning to succumb to senility; and he is unsettled by the reappearance of the beautiful Mathilde, the woman he once loved. Only origami can help calm the detective and focus his thoughts on this troubling crime. As the investigation progresses, the key suspects to emerge are a middle-aged man and a mute teenage boy who have been delivering religious pamphlets in the city's suburbs. But as more elderly ladies are targeted, Morel will find his enquiries leading him back into the past, from the French countryside to Soviet Russia - and to two young boys with the most terrible of stories to tell ...

Summer in the High Arctic. When young Inuit Martha Salliaq goes missing from her
settlement, her teacher, ex Polar Bear Hunter Edie Kiglatuk enlists her police friend Derek Palliser to help search for the girl. But once a body is discovered floating in a polluted lake on the site of a decommissioned Radar Station, Edie's worst fears are realised. As the investigation into Martha's murder begins, the Inuit community -- and Martha's devastated family -- are convinced the culprits lie within the encampment of soldiers stationed nearby. Before long Sergeant Palliser finds evidence linking two of the men with the dead girl. But Edie and local lawyer Sonia Gutierrez remain unconvinced. Why are the military quite so willing to cooperate with the investigation? What has Edie's boyfriend Chip Muloon, a simple academic researcher, got to hide? And why has the lake where Martha's body was found been suddenly cordoned off? A gripping, atmospheric thriller set in the Arctic's long white nights, in The Bone Seeker the very personal murder of a young girl will explode a decades-long tale of the very darkest betrayal.  The Bone Seeker is by M J McGrath and is due to be published in June 2014.

Thursday, 16 January 2014

2014 Edgar Allan Poe Awards announced by the Mystery Writers of America



Mystery Writers of America is proud to announce, as they celebrate the 205th anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe, the Nominees for the 2014 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, honoring the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction and television, published or produced in 2013. The Edgar® Awards will be presented to the winners at our 68th Gala Banquet, May 1, 2014 at the Grand Hyatt Hotel, New York City.




BEST NOVEL
Sandrine’s Case by Thomas H. Cook (Grove Atlantic – The Mysterious Press)
The Humans by Matt Haig (Simon & Schuster)
Ordinary Grace by William Kent Krueger (Simon & Schuster – Atria Books)
How the Light Gets In by Louise Penny (Minotaur Books)
Standing in Another Man’s Grave by Ian Rankin (Hachette Book Group – Reagan Arthur Books)
Until She Comes Home by Lori Roy (Penguin Group USADutton Books)

BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR
The Resurrectionist by Matthew Guinn (W.W. Norton)
Ghostman by Roger Hobbs (Alfred A. Knopf)
Rage Against the Dying by Becky Masterman (Minotaur Books)
Red Sparrow by Jason Matthews (Simon & Schuster – Scribner)
Reconstructing Amelia by Kimberly McCreight (HarperCollins Publishers)

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
The Guilty One by Lisa Ballantyne (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow Paperbacks)
Almost Criminal by E. R. Brown (Dundurn)
Joe Victim by Paul Cleave (Simon & Schuster – Atria Books)
Joyland by Stephen King (Hard Case Crime)
The Wicked Girls by Alex Marwood (Penguin Group USA – Penguin Books)
Brilliance by Marcus Sakey (Amazon Publishing – Thomas and Mercer)

BEST FACT CRIME
Duel with the Devil: The True Story of How Alexander Hamilton and Aaron Burr Teamed Up to Take on America’s First Sensational Murder Mystery by Paul Collins (Crown Trade Group)
Mortal Sins: Sex, Crime, and the Era of Catholic Scandal by Michael D’Antonio (Thomas Dunne Books)

The Good Nurse: A True Story
of Medicine, Madness and Murder by Charles Graeber (Grand Central Publishing – Twelve)
The Secret Rescue: An Untold Story of American Nurses and the Medics Behind Nazi Lines by Cate Lineberry (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown and Company)
The Hour of Peril: The Secret Plot to Murder Lincoln Before the Civil War by Daniel Stashower (Minotaur Books)

BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL
Maigret, Simenon and France: Social Dimensions of the Novels and Stories by Bill Alder (McFarland & Company)
America is Elsewhere: The Noir Tradition in the Age of Consumer Culture by Erik Dussere (Oxford University Press)
Pimping Fictions: African American Crime Literature and the Untold Story of Black Pulp Publishing by Justin Gifford (Temple University Press)
Ian Fleming by Andrew Lycett (St. Martin’s Press)
Middlebrow Feminism in Classic British Detective Fiction by Melissa Schaub (Palgrave Macmillan)

 Best Short Story
The Terminal in Kwik Krimes by Reed Farrel Coleman (Amazon Publishing – Thomas & Mercer)
So Long, Chief  in Strand Magazine by Max Allan Collins & Mickey Spillane (The Strand)
The Caston Private Lending Library & Book Depository” in Bibliomysteries

by John Connolly (Mysterious)
“There are Roads in the Water” in Ellery
Queen Mystery Magazine
by Tina Corey (Dell Magazines)
There That Morning Sun Does Down” in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine
by Tim L. Williams (Dell Magazines)

 BEST JUVENILE
Strike Three, You’re Dead by Josh Berk (Random House Children’s Books – Alfred A. Knopf BFYR)
Moxie and the Art of Rule Breaking by Erin Dionne (Penguin Young Readers Group – Dial)
P.K. Pinkerton and the Petrified Man by Caroline Lawrence (Penguin Young Readers Group – Putnam Juvenile)
Lockwood & Co.: The Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud
(Disney Publishing Worldwide – Disney-Hyperion)
One Came Home by Amy Timberlake (Random House Children’s Books – Alfred A. Knopf BFYR)

BEST YOUNG ADULT
All the Truth That’s In Me by Julie Berry (Penguin Young Readers Group – Viking Juvenile)
Far Far Away by Tom McNeal (Random House Children’s Books – Alfred A. Knopf BFYR)
Criminal by Terra Elan McVoy (Simon & Schuster – Simon Pulse)
How to Lead a Life of Crime by Kirsten Miller (Penguin Young Readers Group – Razorbill)
Ketchup Clouds by Amanda Pitcher (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown Books for Young Readers)

BEST TELEVISION EPISODE TELEPLAY
“Episode 3″ – Luther, Teleplay by Neil Cross (BBC Worldwide)
“Episode 1″The Fall, Teleplay by Allan Cubitt (Netflix)
“Legitimate Rape” – Law & Order: SVU, Teleplay by Kevin Fox & Peter Blauner (NBC Universal)
“Variations Under Domestication” – Orphan Black, Teleplay by Will Pascoe (BBC Worldwide)
“Pilot” – The Following Teleplay by Kevin Williamson (Fox/Warner Bros. Television)

 ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL AWARD
“That Wentworth Letter” – Criminal Element’s Malfeasance Occasional By Jeff Soloway (St. Martin’s Press)

GRAND MASTER

RAVEN AWARDS
Aunt Agatha’s Bookstore, Ann Arbor, Michigan

 THE SIMON & SCHUSTER – MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD
(Presented at MWA’s Agents & Editors Party on Wednesday, April 30, 2014)

There Was an Old Woman by Hallie Ephron (HarperCollins Publishers – William Morrow)
Fear of Beauty by Susan Froetschel (Prometheus – Seventh Street Books)
The Money Kill by Katia Lief (HarperCollins Publishers – Harper)
Cover of Snow by Jenny Milchman (Random House Publishing Group – Ballantine Books)
The Sixth Station by Linda Stasi (Forge Books)