Sunday, 5 July 2026

The 2026 Shamus Awards Finalists

The finalists for 2026 The Private Eye Writers Of America Shamus Awards, for private eye novels and short stories first published in the United States in 2025, have just been announced. The winners will be announced at the 2026 Bouchercon‘s Opening Ceremonies in Calgary, Alberta.


BEST PI HARDCOVER

The Big Empty by Robert Crais (G.P. Putnam’s Sons)

Photograph by Brian Freeman (Blackstone Publishing)

Hatchet Girls by Joe R. Lansdale (Little, Brown and Company)

Gray Dawn by Walter Mosley (Little, Brown and Company)

Mirage City by Lev AC Rosen (Minotaur Books)


BEST FIRST P.I. NOVEL

Chase Harlem by Elise Burke Brown (Rising Action Publishing)

Miles in Time by Lee Mathew Goldberg (Wise Wolf Books)

Where the Bones Lie by Nick Kolakowski (Datura Books)

Shadow of the Eternal Watcher by Josh Mendoza (Inkshares)

The Witch’s Orchard by Archer Sullivan (Minotaur Books)


BEST ORIGINAL PAPERBACK P.I. NOVEL

The Hook and the Eye by Raymond Benson (Ian Fleming Publications)

Sunday or the Highway by Cindy Fazzi (Thomas & Mercer)

City Lights by Claire M. Johnson (Level Best Books)

Midnight Streets by Phil Lecomber (Titan Books)

Catch Me on a Blue Day by M.E. Proctor (Shotgun Honey Books)


BEST P.I. SHORT STORY

“The Roosevelt Affair” by Adam Meyer (Crimeucopia – Not So Frail Detective Agency, Murderous Ink Press)

“The One Cry” by F.H. Batacan (Accidents Happen, Soho Crime)

“Dr. Bones” by Libby Cudmore (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, May/June)

“Hours on the Phone” by Gregory Fallis (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, July/August)

“The Shadows” by Charles John Harper (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, May/June)


Saturday, 4 July 2026

Reading Peace, Writing Granite by Nina Allan

As they left the Highbury pitch that afternoon, as the sporting men of Fulham shook their hands, slapped their backs and wished United luck, the very best of luck, Bobby had his head bowed, he did not speak, a few folk even said he looked distraught, though they could not think, not fathom why, why would he look distraught? United were in the final of the Cup, the FA bloody Cup, doesn’t get much better than that now, does it, Bobby lad? Come on, Bobby, smile, why don’t you smile? You scored a goal, you’re in the Final!’

My mother remembered Munich; she was fourteen when it happened. I first learned about the crash from when she happened to mention it to me, years ago. I have forgotten exactly what she said, but I know she talked about the Busby Babes, about the tragedy of what happened to Manchester United. The odd England game aside, my mother is not a football person, never has been. But she remembered Munich. 

On the afternoon of February 6th 1948, the plane carrying the team home from their European Cup fixture against Red Star Belgrade crashed at the end of the runway at Munich airport. Of the forty-four passengers on board British European Airways Flight 609, only twenty-one survived. Of the twenty-three who died, eight were Man United players. The team’s manager Matt Busby was so badly injured he took months to recover. 

At the time of the Munich Air Disaster, David Peace’s father, Basil Dunford Peace was in London studying to be a teacher. He attended the match United played and won against Arsenal at Highbury the week before. He judged it the greatest game he’d ever seen. Though Basil Peace was always a Huddersfield Town supporter, it was the Babes he talked about. When his father died in 2022, David Peace set aside the book he had been working on and began to write Munichs, a novel of the crash and of its immediate aftermath, a novel about football but also – equally, tellingly – about grief.

British society after the war was slow to change. Deferential and still massively class-bound, it was a society in which the traditional hierarchies of family, church and community were strongly upheld. In Munichs, the second world war is still tangibly close. The older men – the football managers, the sports journalists – have fought in the war. Some of them have fought in two. Bobby Charlton and his friend Duncan Edwards are still doing National Service. All the young players are encouraged to learn a trade – bricklayer, builder, plumber, sparks – in case football doesn’t work out. The idea of taking their game into Europe is still very new, and they feel nervous about venturing ‘behind the Iron Curtain’. More than one of the boys who ended up on that flight would have preferred to stay at home. 

Peace evokes a world in which it is still not unusual for only one house on the street to have a telephone, where families sit anxiously around the radio, waiting for news. Where women – especially working class women – are really only expected to be wives and mothers. Where young lads who’ve just been in an air crash are expected to be out on the pitch winning matches just a fortnight later. 

When you look at photos of Matt Busby’s team, what hits you in the gut is just how young they were. Several of those who died were barely in their twenties. Those who survived received no trauma counselling. They were not encouraged to talk, even by their families, about what had happened to them. And once they were home there were the match-day chants, shouts that they ‘should have died at Munich’, accusations that they were burn-outs, selfish for standing in the way of fresher talent. Jackie Blanchflower and John Berry, who survived the crash but who were too badly injured to continue in the game, were quickly asked to vacate their subsidised flats in order to make way for the players who would replace them.

There are intimations in Munichs of the increasingly commercial route football would follow. Even before the crash, Manchester United were sneered at for being ‘Hollywood United’, a team more interested in big names, big money and foreign travel than the home game. Matt Busby was criticized for taking the team into Europe in the first place. 

In some ways, what happened at Munich represents a dividing line between the 1950s and the 1960s. The more open, socially permissive era that followed the disaster promised greater freedom and openness but less security and fewer certainties. Less emphasis on moral values, more on getting ahead. It is a harsher time, a more ruthless time, and not just in football. Is it fanciful to suggest that Munich is where Thatcherism begins? Worth remembering that Thatcher was selected as the Conservative candidate for Finchley in April 1958, just two months after Munich, that she was elected to parliament less than eighteen months after that? 

There has to be something in this, at least for a writer. And for a writer the story of Munich is not all about Man United. Eight journalists as well as eight footballers were killed in the crash – a horrible symmetry – men who had known each other for longer than most of the players had been alive. In the world of sport they were famous. The funeral of Henry Rose, the most-read football columnist the Daily Express ever had, was bigger even than Duncan Edwards’s or Tommy Taylor’s. When these men died, whole lifetimes of knowledge and memory went with them, gaps that could never be filled and that marked the end of an era in British sports writing. 

There is also the broader question of what caused the crash. The inquiry into the accident went on for years, undermined by disagreements and conflicts of interest between British European Airways and the German airport authorities. The pilot, James Thain, was a former RAF officer and an experienced flyer. Thain, who had just turned thirty-eight at the time of the crash, was subjected to an ongoing barrage of vitriol hurled at him by the press and by a public who were desperate for someone to blame. BEA sacked him two Christmases later, anxious to cover their backs; the German authorities were determined from the outset that Thain was at fault. It took him ten years to clear his name. He died of a heart attack not long afterwards, aged just fifty-four.

I could spend a lot of time reading and thinking about this bitter aftermath. A large part of my passion for true crime literature is in my hunger for knowledge, an obsession with the question of what really happened. Munichs though is not so much an investigation as an exhumation, an evocation of a time as viewed through the lens of a single event. The novel captures the language and texture of a grief that is both national and personal, personal not just for the fans and families of Manchester United but for Peace himself. A means of replaying his father’s memories, reimagining the effect of those headlines, that heartbreak, the abysmal sense of shock. Of bringing his father back to life, even. A way to continue with a conversation that had been cut short. 

Peace’s present tense narrative rolls in a slow wave between crash survivors and the victims’ families, shellshocked staff on the ground at Old Trafford, newspaper reporters, doctors, older players coaxed back to the game by a desperate management, teenage reserves hurriedly brought on side. Hostile supporters of rival teams, keyboard warriors before their time. Taxi drivers, grieving brothers, even a monk. And of course the Dead, who haunt Peace’s account from its opening pages. Everyone has their own version of what happened at Munich. Some have more than one, hence Munichs plural, though that is not the only meaning of the novel’s title. 

Peace never feels the need to use elevated language. As a potter constructs a miracle from humble red clay, so Peace achieves poetry through paying attention to the sound and rhythm of ordinary words. The language heard on the street or down the pub. Of tabloid headlines, the cliches of condolence, the gulf that exists between what is spoken and what is felt. You hear this novel as you read it: the voices of the regions, the heft and weight of sentences, the way words work harder and divulge more secrets when they are put together in a particular way. 

Munichs is as much a piece of music as it is a novel, a battery of half-rhymes and assonance achieved through Peace’s habitual, repeated process of reading aloud. A symphony of sorrowful songs, a hymn to all of the Dead, including his dad.

I kept reading around David Peace before I actually read him. I remember seeing him on the 2003 Granta list and feeling drawn to what he was saying about how fact works in fiction. About how his first books had been inspired by the years-long, error-strewn hunt for the Yorkshire Ripper. I have always been interested in true crime for its detailed evocations of particular memories, of particular times and places. I remember also the feelings of guilt and uncertainty I used to have around reading it. True crime was sensationalist and exploitative, the stuff of tabloid newspapers. It was OK to read Crime and Punishment and talk about how it was really a crime novel but reading about real murders was somehow taboo. At least if you were serious, at least if you had taste. 

Then I read an interview with Peace that upended my thinking and ultimately changed my direction as a writer. Speaking in 2010, Peace described the crime genre as ‘the perfect tool to understand why crimes take place, and thus tell us about the society we live in and the country we live in and who we are.’ I had heard similar arguments before, but Peace went further, saying that he was ‘drawn to when writers take on history, take on real crimes. There’s just so much that happens in real life that we don’t understand, that we can’t even fathom. I don’t really see the point of making up crimes.’

I remember feeling electrified when I read that. Peace was writing densely textured works that embodied the vision and freedom to experiment that fiction offers, but that were tied to experiential reality in a way that made them even more powerful. I felt energized and inspired. I was beginning to think in a new way about what I wanted to write. At the same time I felt deeply uncertain about whether I was truly capable of this kind of writing. Whether I could bring anything new to the table. Whether I could do justice to my subject matter. 

Neither could I help noticing that the field of work I was becoming interested in was dominated by men. Macho, in-your-face men like Norman Mailer and Peace’s own literary idol James Ellroy. James Ellroy is about as far from British self-deprecation as you’re going to get. But he has the goods to back up his words and in the end that’s all I care about, the quality of the writing. If Ellroy feels OK comparing himself with Beethoven then good on him, because he’s not far wrong. I wish I had his nerve. 

I have since come to realise that my uncertainty had less to do with not being Norman Mailer than with not being ready. I didn’t feel I had the technical ability and I was probably right. I took the slow way round, feeling my way towards stories that made sense for me to tell, pushing the envelope of my abilities with each new thing I tried. When I finally came to write A Granite Silence it still felt like a risk, the most difficult and challenging project I had yet attempted. But I had come to a point where I sensed I might be capable of solving the problems the book presented, and where the writing itself – the words on the page – stood a chance of reaching a standard I felt I could live with. 

I had arrived at the moment where the risk felt not just possible, but necessary.

In the autumn of 2021 I travelled to Liverpool to meet up with a friend I hadn’t seen in person since before the first lockdown. Just being in the city put me on a high. Rain fell heavily the night before I headed home again, and when I went to catch my train I discovered that the West Coast Main Line was partially flooded, that all services heading north were severely delayed. I was told to take a train to Preston and await further instructions. 

What happens when I get to Preston?” I asked. No one could tell me, because nobody knew. When I got there the scenes I encountered were predictably insane. Trains arriving and disgorging hundreds of passengers with nowhere to go. People sweeping in tides from platform to platform as rumours of trains that might get us into Scotland flared up, spread like wildfire and then guttered out. The one that finally arrived had limped all the way from Plymouth. By the time it turned up in Preston it was three hours late. I crammed myself into a luggage stand, fenced in by people’s knees and a couple of bikes. As we crossed the border at Berwick-on-Tweed an announcement crackled through the overhead speakers that all passengers were now obliged to put on their masks. The woman sitting next to me – I’d managed to grab a seat just after Newcastle – asked me if I’d managed to catch what they were saying. She’d been on the train since Birmingham. I reluctantly broke the news. 

Jesus!” she groaned. I told her if she didn’t feel like complying with Scottish law that was fine by me. We’d all been breathing each other’s air for several hours in any case. I was exhausted. I was increasingly pessimistic about making the last ferry. But what I remember most about that journey is reading David Peace’s 1980 and 1983, in a breathless six hours of immersion that were still ongoing. And how strange it was, that I was passing through the places I was reading about: those hard-nosed northern moorlands and back-to-backs, streaming past beyond the windows in a reel of silent film.

From the Redbeck car park back into Castleford – 

Silence in the black of the back of the van – 

Dim lights down black back roads – 

Sat in the back of the black of the van – 

Yorkshire, 1972:

You’ll wake up some morning as unhappy as you’ve ever been before. 

When David Peace started work on 1974 he did so with the youthful ambition to write the best crime novel ever written. That the Red Riding novels have become classics proves the strength of that ambition, though Peace now feels ambivalent about the first movement of his quartet. Perhaps he feels that it does not stray far enough from the roots of the genre. But whilst it is true that some of those roots are showing – Derek Raymond, Ted Lewis – how could it be otherwise? When you first start writing you’re lucky, not to mention talented, if anything you produce is entirely yours. Peace had written earlier, unpublished novels before finding his true direction, grounding the story he wanted to tell in the Yorkshire of the seventies and early eighties, a time that coincided with the beginnings of his desire to write and that in some sense formed it. 

He brought to it also some of the kitchen-sink sensibility of the previous generation of northern writers, whose novels he had been introduced to through his father’s book collection: Stan Barstow, who lived just a few streets away from Peace in his hometown of Ossett; Alan Sillitoe, who as well as being a novelist was also a poet. And there was something else too, something extra: the gritty, poetic rigour that marks Peace’s own style, a confidence around his material that increases as the sequence moves forward. 

The material by itself is challenging enough. Peace’s portrait of a corrupt and increasingly beleaguered police force offers none of the familiarity and consolation of traditional detective fiction, and few writers have come anywhere close to confronting the traumatic effects of violence and poverty as Peace has done. In terms of story, the Red Riding novels are masterpieces of ambiguity. But what makes these books truly groundbreaking is their insistence on being more than a story, on being words on a page. Peace’s language becomes increasingly codified, more condensed, so close to poetry in places there is really no difference. The language of 1983 especially gains a kind of transcendence, hammering the page like rain on windows, staining the paper like mould. 

You can feel it being written.

I first read TS Eliot’s The Waste Land in English class when I was fourteen. I count myself as lucky. I would bet the farm – if I had one – that they don’t teach Eliot now. My mother has always loved poetry. She used to read it aloud to me throughout my early childhood, and so I had the advantage of being familiar with how poetry works. I think even at fourteen I knew instinctively how to read The Waste Land, which I recognized as a country of the imagination as much as a symbolic portrait of the postwar landscape. 

I was so excited by what I read it made my heart race. I felt angry and frustrated with my classmates, who did not get it, who kept flipping back and forth between the text and the notes at the end, trying to discover the poem’s ‘meaning’ from references they had no hope of understanding. I didn’t understand the notes either – they were too esoteric, notes from a bygone era even then – but I knew enough to know that I didn’t need them. There was something happening between me and the words, and that was enough. I was discovering phrases and cadences and – more even than that – a way of looking at language that was to become the central strand of my writer’s DNA. 

To Carthage then I came

Burning burning burning burning

There was something about Eliot’s images that made my teeth chatter. Over in my German class I was coming to know the stories of Wolfgang Borchert, who had worked with similar raw material, even though his register of language and lexicon of references are very different. I began to understand how one work of literature could inform another. Storming through Red Riding forty years later I became convinced that Peace must have experienced a similar epiphany. That mental thrill, which is also visceral. The narrowing of the gap between the thought and the word.

As an adolescent, Peace harboured a secret fear that his father might be the Yorkshire Ripper, that his mother might be the Ripper’s next victim. What is any writing but the stuff you are most interested in or obsessed by? Ideas you keep having. Stories you keep noticing. Ambitions that won’t keep quiet or go away.

Finding a path towards your material can be a tortuous process. I had ambitions to write a novel based around true events for most of ten years before I found myself at work on A Granite Silence. It happened almost without my realizing it – as I describe in the novel itself, the story I had set out to write was very different. Allowing aspects of that story to keep resurfacing became essential to the narrative as it developed.

Every novel is a set of problems waiting to be solved. Paying attention to how other writers have solved their problems may not help you solve your own – the problems you have will be different, or should be – but it should at least hold out the hope that a solution is possible. David Peace’s work continues to speak to me directly. The chord it first struck was so powerful it has never died away. 

A Granite Silence by Nina Allan (Quercus Publishing) Out Now

A Granite Silence is an exploration - a journey through time to a particular house, in a particular street, Urquhart Road, Aberdeen in 1934, where eight-year-old Helen Priestly lives with her mother and father. Among this long, grey corridor of four-storey tenements, a daunting expanse of granite, working families are squashed together like pickled herrings in their narrow flats. Here are Helen's neighbours: the Topps, the Josses, the Mitchells, the Gordons, the Donalds, the Coulls and the Hunts. Returning home from school for her midday meal, Helen is sent by her mother Agnes to buy a loaf from the bakery at the end of the street. Agnes never sees her daughter alive again. Nina Allan explores the aftermath of Helen's disappearance, turning a probing eye to the close-knit neighbourhood - where everyone knows everyone, at least by sight - and with subtlety and sympathy, explores the intricate layers of truth and falsehood that can coexist in one moment of history. Full of echoes, allusions and eerie diversions, A Granite Silence is an investigation into a notorious true crime case, but also a stylish, imaginative inquiry into who gets to tell a story, how it is told, and why.

Nina Allan is a highly acclaimed and inventive novelist and short story writer, whose work has won multiple prizes including the Novella Award, the British Science Fiction Award and the Grand Prix de L’Imaginaire for Best Translated Work. A Granite Silence won the prestigious CWA Historical Dagger Award and was long-listed for the RSL Ondaatje Prize. More information about Nina Allan can be found on her website.


Thursday, 2 July 2026

Crime Writers’ Association Announce 2026 Dagger Winners

 


The winners of the prestigious 2026 Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Dagger Awards, which honour the very best in the crime-writing genre, have been announced.

Created in 1955, the world-famous CWA Daggers are the oldest awards in the genre and have been synonymous with quality crime writing for over half a century.

The awards were announced on 2 July at the CWA gala dinner at De Vere Grand Connaught Rooms, London.

The coveted KAA Gold Dagger, sponsored by Kevin Anderson & Associates, which is awarded for the best crime novel of the year, went to Abigail Dean for The Death of Us, a haunting literary thriller that examines how a violent crime reverberates through a marriage over decades. Dean transitioned from a successful legal career—including working as a lawyer at Google—to become one of the UK's most acclaimed contemporary thriller writers.



S.A. Cosby, the only author to be shortlisted for an unprecedented three Dagger awards, took home the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, which honours the best thriller of the year, with his book, King of Ashes.

Cosby is one of the most celebrated crime writers working today, regularly praised by Barack Obama in his Books of the Year selections, known for blending fast-paced noir thrillers with sharp explorations of race, class, masculinity, and life in the modern American South. He worked in construction, retail and security, writing on the side, before breaking through with the acclaimed novel, Blacktop Wasteland

King of Ashes, is a Southern Gothic crime epic inspired in part by The Godfather. The novel combines family drama, organised crime, revenge, and long-buried secrets.

Nadine Matheson, Chair of the CWA, said: “It is a genuine pleasure to congratulate every winner of this year's Daggers. The range and quality on display are a reminder of just how much vitality there is in crime fiction and how it continues to push at its own boundaries, and this year's winners are leading that charge. Congratulations.

Nina Allan received the Historical Dagger for A Granite Silence, an atmospheric mystery that uses the disappearance of a young girl in 1930s Aberdeen to explore memory, truth, and the stories communities tell themselves about tragedy. Nina made a name for herself in the Science Fiction genre, but her literary thrillers cross categories and have been highly praised by critics.

The Twisted Dagger for psychological suspense went to Sarah Pinborough, for her haunting Gothic novel, We Live Here Now. Pinborough is best-known for her New York Times bestselling breakout novel (and hit Netflix show) Behind Her EyesWe Live Here Now was praised for its eerie atmosphere and signature Pinborough-style ending.

The Whodunnit Dagger for books with an intellectual challenge at the heart of a good mystery, sees Mel Pennant take home the award for A Murder for Miss Hortense

A playwright, screenwriter, and novelist A Murder for Miss Hortense is Pennant’s breakthrough novel featuring the sharp-witted Jamaican-born retired nurse living in Birmingham who investigates a murder. The book was praised for combining a compelling mystery with a warm portrayal of the Windrush generation and Caribbean-British life.

The global reach of the genre is showcased in the Crime Fiction in Translation Dagger. Finland’s Antti Tuomainen came top in a hotly contended category, with The Winter Job. Tuomainen is one of Finland's most internationally acclaimed crime writers, often described as the "King of Helsinki Noir" and dark comedy. His translator David Hackston, is also recognised in the award, which is sponsored in honour of Dolores Jakubowski.

The ALCS Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction was awarded to Susannah Stapleton for That Dark Spring

Stapleton is a historian specialising in uncovering forgotten stories from the early twentieth century, particularly women’s stories. That Dark Spring is an absorbing true-crime mystery that reopens the unsolved 1929 death of an eccentric British artist in Provence, revealing a world of secrets, rivalries, and unanswered questions.

The Daggers are one of few high-profile genre awards that celebrate the short story. This year’s recipient of the Short Story Dagger goes to Ambrose Parry for The Apple Falls Not Far. Ambrose Parry is the joint pen name of Scottish crime novelist Chris Brookmyre and his wife, former consultant anaesthetist Marisa Haetzman.



The Dagger in the Library, voted for by librarians, recognises authors whose bodies of work have resonated with readers over time. Tim Sullivan took the accolade in a stellar shortlist that included Paula Hawkins, Clare Mackintosh, Freida McFadden, and Abir Mukherjee.

An accomplished television writer-director, Tim Sullivan reinvented himself as a bestselling crime novelist through the hugely successful DS George Cross mysteries, combining classic detective fiction with a distinctive neurodivergent protagonist.

The CWA Daggers are also known for providing a platform for emerging talent, with the much-anticipated ILP John Creasey First Novel Dagger and the Emerging Author Dagger competition, sponsored by Fiction Feedback; over two dozen past winners and shortlisted debut authors have signed publishing deals to date. 

The Emerging Author Dagger went to Michael Nikitin for Blind Side of the Sun.

 

Laura McCluskey received the Creasey First Novel Dagger with The Wolf Tree. The Australian writer, editor, actor and filmmaker worked across theatre and film, before becoming a novelist. The Wolf Tree is an atmospheric crime thriller set on the fictional Hebridean island of Eilean Eadar, partly inspired by her Scottish family heritage and research into Scottish folklore.

The Best Crime and Mystery Publisher category recognises the publishers behind the genre’s success. The respected independent publisher Bitter Lemon Press beat heavyweights including Faber & Faber, Pan Macmillan, No Exit Press and Simon & Schuster to the award.

Founded in London in 2003 by François and Frédéric von Hurter and Laurence Colchester, Bitter Lemon Press specialises in bringing award-winning crime, noir, mystery, and thriller novels from around the world into English, often through new translations.

The CWA Diamond Dagger, sponsored by Karen Baugh Menuhin, is awarded to an author whose crime-writing career has been marked by sustained excellence, is announced in early spring and in 2026 was awarded to Mark Billingham.

Mark Billingham said: “I could not be more thrilled or honoured. To be added to a list that features most of my literary heroes is fantastic.”

The winners in full:    

                                  

CWA KAA Gold Dagger

The Death of Us by Abigail Dean (HarperCollins/Hemlock Press)

Ian Fleming Steel Dagger 

King of Ashes by S. A. Cosby (Headline)

ALCS Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction 

That Dark Spring by Susannah Stapleton(Pan Macmillan/Picador)

Historical Dagger

A Granite Silence by Nina Allan (Quercus/riverrun)

Crime Fiction in Translation Dagger

The Winter Job by Antti Tuomainen (Orenda Books) translated by David Hackston

Whodunnit Dagger

 A Murder for Miss Hortense by Mel Pennant (John Murray Press/Baskerville)

Twisted Dagger

We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough (Orion Fiction)

ILP John Creasey (First Novel) Dagger

The Wolf Tree by Laura McCluskey (HarperCollins/Hemlock Press)

Short Story Dagger

‘The Apple Falls Not Far’ by Ambrose Perry (Canongate)

Emerging Author

Blind Side of the Sun by Michael Nikitin

Dagger in the Library

Tim Sullivan  

Best Crime & Mystery Publisher

Bitter Lemon Press

Diamond Dagger

Mark Billingham

 




Friday, 26 June 2026

The Japanese Bond by Ros Pearl

When Shots asked for a piece on writing The Japanese Bond, I was rather flummoxed. There is only one James Bond. The enormous impact of Ian Fleming’s character has proved to be an enduring and phenomenal legacy, which has inspired countless books and films and has revolutionised the spy genre for over 70 years. Yes, our protagonist is half Japanese, and he is also a spy. If anyone mentions him in the Bond context, I feel extremely flattered!

Background to writing A Strange Way to Die (The first book in the Hiroshi Suzuki Files)

When my son-in-law George Bamford asked if I might be interested in collaborating with him to write an action-adventure spy thriller, I was intrigued. For years, George had had ideas revolving in his head and wanted to do something positive with these daydreams. 

At the time, my experience of published pieces was confined mostly to player-profiles of famous sportsmen and women for various magazines. George recognised that I had no background as an author, but he liked my style of writing. He’s very positive, enthusiastic and persuasive, so I agreed to try my hand at writing a few chapters based on his ideas. 

We agreed that we’d only go ahead if a) he liked what I’d written, and b) if I enjoyed the process. The answer was ‘yes’ from both of us, so I bought a book on how to write a novel! The first sentence to catch my eye stressed the importance of writing about what you know. This posed an immediate problem. As a sixty-year-old wife, mother and grandmother, the world of espionage was not on my radar. I’ve always enjoyed action adventure and spy books and films, but that certainly wouldn’t be enough.

What plusses did I have on my side? I’m a daydreamer with a vivid imagination and a love of the written word and have always enjoyed creating stories. I’ve travelled widely and have a working knowledge of many aspects of the background information needed for the plot, including polo, golf, luxury cars, helicopters, glamorous locations, business dealings and the corridors of power. George has in depthexpertise in fields ranging from luxury watches and classic cars to yachts, private jets and global culture and much more. Together we’ve tried to infuse these stories with texture, authenticity, and style. The result is an ongoing series of books rich in detail and momentum: one which we hope will pull readers in and keep them turning pages.

To write a convincing story I realised that I’d need specialist help with the technical details, so I set about looking for the right people. A few of them George and I already knew, but the majority were strangers. I was delighted to find that there were generous experts out there, who loved their subject and were willing to help. This was before the advent of AI and my initial research was spent trawling through the internet. I then wrote what I wanted to happen, asked my experts to read the text and see if what I’d written was a) credible, b) factually correct and c) that if I’d made any howlers, please would they let me know. Any technical jargon they provided was a major bonus to writing accurate and plausible parts to a story, on subjects of which I had zero experience.

The inspiration behind The Hiroshi Suzuki Files - George first visited Japan as a child and fell in love with the country and the people. He was fascinated by the blend of the high-tech modern world combined with Japan’s ancient history, traditions and cultural identity. As he puts it, “It’s a land of constant discovery.”

He envisaged a character with an English father and a Japanese mother, who’d been brought up in both countries, embraced both cultures and felt equally at home both in the West and the East. He said that he wanted to know the answer to a single compelling question: what kind of hero emerges from mystery, legacy, and untold stories? We set out to create a character who stands entirely on his own: bold, intelligent, and credible.

Hiroshi Suzuki (27) steps onto the pages as an experienced covert operative working for CIRO, the Japanese Secret Service. I really like and admire our hero. We’ve endowed him with many qualities and values to help him on his missions. He’s intelligent, skilled and highly trained. He’s well educated, cosmopolitan, with a keen sense of right and wrong. He has a sense of humour and is popular with his friends and colleagues. While some may consider his traditional values somewhat dated, he is honourable, intensely loyal and has a sense of duty. Failure is not a word in his vocabulary. Does he have any weaknesses and failings? Yes, of course he has, which are for the readers to discover.

How our collaboration works - George discussed his ideas in depth. As I finished the first draft of each chapter, I sent them to him for his comments and thoughts. We spoke often, refining the way the story was progressing and working-in various new ideas as they occurred to us. George has been incredibly flexible in allowing me to diverge from some of his original ideas and positively encouraged me to include new ones, and a sub-plot or two.

This is the way we collaborate, and it works well for us.

We hope readers will enjoy this first book as a few hours of escapist fun, and find it an entertaining, fast-paced thriller, with glamorous characters, set in exotic locations.

I’ve been overwhelmed by the initial feedback and positive comments made by book reviewers. Thanks to you all.

Dying for Power, the second book in the series will be available in October, the third, Dead Men’s Moneywill be published next April.


A Strange Way to Die by R Pearl and G Bamford (Arlingham Press)

An emperor marked for death. A killer wave that shouldn't exist. One agent caught in the crossfire. When Hiroshi "H" Suzuki, a deadly Anglo-Japanese operative, is sent to track a phantom assassin in Paris, he uncovers a chilling link to a billionaire genius with a secret agenda. As the clock ticks toward a global catastrophe, H is drawn into a high-stakes game of deception, desire, and ruthless ambition, where nothing is what it seems and failure isn't an option.

Dying for Power by R Pearl and G Bamford (Arlingham Press)

A shattered Bullet Train. Rising tensions between superpowers One agent to stop a bloody war. When a high-speed Japanese train is destroyed in a devastating explosion, Hiroshi "H" Suzuki is plunged into a deadly plot to trigger a war between China and Japan. From the neon streets of Tokyo to the windswept coast of Ireland and the glittering lure of Monte-Carlo, H must outwit ruthless enemies and unravel a global conspiracy before time runs out and history is rewritten in blood.




Thursday, 25 June 2026

Stephen King’s crime thriller NEVER FLINCH

 

To celebrate the release of Stephen King’s crime thriller NEVER FLINCH in paperback, Hodder and Stoughton have kindly offered readers of Shots Magazine three copies in a competition.

But first, we wrote last year on the release of NEVER FLINCH

Though the undisputed master of the horror genre, after this latest release perhaps Stephen King will be anointed the king of crime fiction. Never Flinch features the return of Private Investigator Holly Gibney, tasked to bodyguard the controversial feminist speaker Kate McKay. It seems McKay is being stalked by a deranged brother [and sister] duo from a radical religious sect intent on disrupting her promotional book tour.

Add to the mix a serial killer referred to as Bill Wilson [aka ‘Trig’] whose intention is to '…..kill thirteen innocents and one guilty…’ in retribution for the murder of an innocent man [wrongly incarcerated] in the Ohio state penitentiary.

Read the full review HERE

In order to win one of three copies of NEVER FLINCH in paperback name three previous works [Novella, Novel, or Story Appearance] by Stephen King that also feature the character of Holly Gibney.

Email your answer to shotseditor@yahoo.co.uk by midnight on Tuesday 30th of June 2026 – three winning entries will be picked at random and full terms and conditions of entry are noted at the bottom of this article.

GOOD LUCK!

And Hodder and Stoughton in conjunction with Stephen King present a short extract from NEVER FLINCH >

It’s April now. In the Second Mistake on the Lake, the last of the snow is finally melting.

Izzy Jaynes gives a one-knuckle courtesy knock on her lieutenant’s door and goes in without waiting. Lewis Warwick is tilted back in his chair, one foot resting on the corner of his desk, hands loosely clasped on his midsection. He looks like he’s meditating or dreaming awake. For all Izzy knows, he is. At the sight of her he straightens and puts his foot back on the floor where it belongs.

‘Isabelle Jaynes, ace detective. Welcome to my lair.’

‘At your service.’

She doesn’t envy him his office, because she’s aware of all the bureaucratic bullshit that comes with it, accompanied by a salary bump so small it might be called ceremonial. She’s happy enough with her humble cubicle downstairs, where she works with seven other detectives, including her current partner, Tom Atta. It’s Warwick’s chair that Izzy lusts after. With its high, spine-soothing back and reclining feature, it’s meditation-ready.

‘What can I do for you, Lewis?’

He takes a business envelope from his desk and hands it to her. ‘You can give me an opinion on this. No strings attached. Feel free to touch the envelope, everybody from the postman to Evelyn downstairs and who knows who else has had their paws on it, but the note should maybe be fingerprinted. Partly depending on what you say.’

The envelope is addressed in capital block letters to DETECTIVE LOUIS WARWICK at 19 COURT PLAZA. Below the city, state, and zip, in even larger capitals: CONFIDENTIAL!

‘What I say? You’re the boss, boss.’

‘I’m not passing the buck, it’s my baby, but I respect your judgement.’

The end of the envelope has been torn open. There’s no return address. She carefully unfolds the single sheet of paper inside, holding it by the edges. The message has been printed, almost certainly on a computer.

To: Lieutenant Louis Warwick

From: Bill Wilson

Cc: Chief Alice Patmore

I think there should be a corollary to the Blackstone Rule. I believe the INNOCENT should be punished for the needless DEATH of an innocent. Should those who caused that death be put to death themselves? I think not, because then they would be gone and the suffering for what they did would be at an end. This is true even if they acted with the best will in the world. They need to think about what they did. They need to ‘Rue the Day.’ Does that make sense to you? It does to me, and that is enough.

I will kill 13 innocents and 1 guilty. Those who caused the innocent to die will therefore suffer.

This is an act of ATONEMENT.

Bill Wilson

 

NEVER FLINCH by STEPHEN KING - EXTRACT FOR SHOTS MAGAZINE

Chapter 1 (p.5 – p.6 in Never Flinch paperback)

TEXT © 2025 – 2026 Stephen King and Hodder and Stoughton

More information available HERE

Terms and conditions for the NEVER FLINCH competition

# Closing date for entries is midnight 30.06.2026

# All correct entries will be entered into a prize draw and will be picked at random on 01.07.2026

# Entry is restricted to UK and Ireland.

# The winners will be notified by email within 3 days of the promotion closing date and are required to accept their prize by email or phone call within 7 days of notification.

# In the event of non-acceptance within the specified period, the promoter reserves the right to reallocate the prize to the next randomly drawn correct and valid entry.

# No responsibility can be accepted for lost or misplaced entries

# The prizes are non-transferable and there is no cash alternative

# Only one entry per person

# Incorrect or illegible answers or entries received after the entry date will not be entered into the prize draw

# The judge’s decision is final and no correspondence will be entered into.

Stephen King reads from Never Flinch via Simon & Schuster  


 Stephen King Reads from Other Worlds Than These via Simon & Schuster  


Shots Magazine wish to thank Stephen King, Kallie Townsend, Louise Court,

Francesca Russell and Philippa Pride of Hodder and Stoughton Publishing for organising this competition.

Jacket Cover Images used from Hodder and Stoughton and Simon & Schuster  

Stephen King Readings © Simon & Schuster  

Tuesday, 23 June 2026

How to Survive in The Woods - Q & A with Kat Rosenfield

Ayo:- How to Survive in the Woods is as much as about the wilderness as it is about control betrayal and survival. What sparked the idea for the story.

Kat:- I love the wilderness as a setting for two reasons: first and foremost and very pragmatically, it's an elegant solution to the thriller writer's most annoying challenge, which is putting your characters into situations where they can't ruin the story by pulling out an iPhone. (After 6 books, the amount of time I've spent trying to figure out ways to separate fictional characters from their devices probably adds up to months at this point.) But the wilderness is also a character unto itself: a place where pretense falls away, where things come to the surface that you might have been able to keep hidden in more civilised circumstances. Which is to say, if you want someone to show you who they are? Take them camping.

Ayo:- What actually does it mean to be a survivor? 

Kat:- I'm very interested in, among other things, how social media has caused "survivor" to become not just a descriptive noun but a personal brand — and an identity you can opt into because you like how it looks on you. It's central to the conflict between these three characters that each one is a survivor, but not necessarily the same kind.

Ayo:- One of the central questions in the novel is how difficult is it to decide what one would sacrifice to stay alive. If you had to, what would you sacrifice?

Kat:- When I was about 12 years old, I read a short story by Stephen King called "Survivor Type"; without going into detail, it involves a surgeon who ends up shipwrecked on a desert island where there's nothing to eat except his own body, and, well, you can probably guess the rest. I think about that story whenever someone asks me about extreme survival scenarios: would I cut my leg off to survive? Yes, but I think I'd draw the line at eating it. (Of course, this is easy for me to say now.)

Ayo:- Unreliable narrators also play a big and important part. Do you have any favourite unreliable narrators?

Kat:- The nameless narrator from Fight Club, Amy Dunne from Gone Girl, and Humbert Humbert from Lolita

Ayo:- There is a great sense of place in How To Survive in the Woods and the Appalachian Trail play a big part. Do you think that the story would have worked if they were not in such a rural place?

Kat:- The central premise of How to Survive in the Woods is a riff on the setup of a certain mid-century French film (I won't name it here for the sake of spoilers, but anyone who's seen it will know exactly what I'm talking about) — and I have no doubt that the drama between these characters could have played out just as well in a different setting. But that would have been a different story; for me, for this book, I always knew it would happen in the woods. 

Ayo:- How important is research and did you have to do much for How to Survive in the Woods?

Kat:- This book was born in the wilderness— I had the initial idea for the story while hiking to the very same pond where Emma, Logan, and Taylor spend their first night in the woods — and while I ultimately fudged some details of the trail here and there to better fit the story, it was very important to me that the setting and stakes feel real, especially to anyone who's spent time in the North Woods in Maine. So I did spend a lot of time hiking for this book, especially on and around the section of the Appalachian Trail where it takes place. I also had some subject matter experts for things I couldn't or didn't want to do myself, like apocalypse prepping, or mountaineering, or (most extreme of all) sleeping in a tent outside.

Ayo:- The book touches on themes focusing on emotional endurance, the morality of survival, and the dangers of toxic, controlling relationships. Was there a deliberate message that you were trying to convey about the characters' moral compasses?

Kat:- I think the great thing about fiction, apart from its entertainment value, is that it provides a place to ask questions about what it means to be human — who we are, what we do to each other — without needing to answer them fully or even necessarily at all. I'm draw to stories where some characters are more morally centered than others, but nobody is purely good or bad, and everyone is sympathetic — which is to say, you may not like what this person is doing, but you understand why they're doing it. I would say that How to Survive in the Woods is a place to explore these ideas and draw your own conclusions about them, if you're so inclined, but I would never tell anyone what those conclusions ought to be! 

Ayo:- What are you working on next?

Kat:- I'm at work on my next novel, which I'm trying to peck away at in between promoting this book and my work as a culture writer. I'd rather not share many more details this early in the process, but will say I'm looking forward to doing on-site research in a place where there is a zero percent chance of being attacked by a bear!

How to Survive in the Woods by Kat Rosenfield (Zaffre) Published on 25th June 2026

Emma Sharp knows the rules of survival. From being raised by a doomsday-fearing father and hardened by the startup world, she has learned how to endure - especially in her marriage to Logan Grant, a charismatic tyrant who keeps her under tight control. To Emma, her marriage is a cage: it keeps you in, but it also keeps you safe. Until it doesn't. When Emma forms an unexpected bond with Logan's former girlfriend, the two women form a plan to help Emma reclaim her life. Destination: the punishing final stretch of the Appalachian Trail. After all, bad things happen in the woods all the time. As the three venture deeper into Maine's backcountry, desire and dread curdle into something unpredictable, dark and deadly. Someone is lying. Someone is watching. And in the remote heart of the forest, someone is about to be lost . . . or found.

More information about Kat Rosenfield can be found on her website. You can also find her on Substack and on X @katrosenfield