The shortlist for crime
writing’s most wanted accolade, the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the
Year, has been announced.
Celebrating its twelfth
year, the Awards feature six titles whittled down from a longlist of 18 crime
novels published by British and Irish authors whose novels were published in
paperback from 1 May 2015 to 18 April 2016.
The award ceremony will be
hosted by broadcaster Mark Lawson on 21 July on the opening night of the 14th
Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival in Harrogate.
Also on the night, Val
McDermid will receive the Outstanding
Contribution to Crime Fiction Award, joining past winners Sara Paretsky,
Lynda La Plante, Ruth Rendell, PD James, Colin Dexter and Reginald Hill.
Executive Director of
T&R Theakston Ltd and Judge, Simon Theakston, said: “We’re particularly
delighted to be honouring Val McDermid this year. On a personal note, Val had
the vision to create this Festival with Harrogate International Festivals back
in 2003. Thanks to her far-reaching passion and generosity for crime fiction -
for writers and readers alike – it has become the biggest celebration of the
genre in the world. As a writer, she is rightfully known as the Queen of Crime.
Val is very deserving of this accolade in the pantheon of legendary crime
authors.”
The 2016 Award is run in
partnership with T&R Theakston Ltd, WHSmith, and The Radio Times.
The shortlist in full:
Time Of Death by Mark Billingham (Sphere)
Career
Of Evil by Robert
Galbraith (Sphere)
Tell
No Tales by Eva
Dolan (Harvill Secker)
Disclaimer by Renee Knight (Black Swan)
Disclaimer by Renee Knight (Black Swan)
I
Let You Go by Clare
Mackintosh (Sphere)
Rain
Dogs by Adrian
McKinty (Serpent’s Tail)
Two debut novels make the
shortlist. Renee Knight’s debut, Disclaimer, has been pitched as the new Gone Girl. The former TV documentary
maker spent a decade writing film scripts, with her first novel turned down by
every publisher, but persisted to write Disclaimer, a Sunday Times No. 1
bestseller, whose overseas rights have been sold in 35 countries and to Fox
Searchlight.
Clare Mackintosh first
thriller I
Let You Go was one of the
fastest selling titles of 2015 and became a Sunday Times bestseller and a
Richard & Judy book club winner. Clare spent twelve years in the police
force, including time on CID, and as a public order commander. She left the
police in 2011 and now writes full time. Praised widely for its
astonishing twist, overseas rights have now sold in 30 countries.
Robert Galbraith’s Career
of Evil - the third novel in
the Cormoran Strike series - was lauded by the critics and a number one
bestseller in both hardback and paperback. With the Cormoran Strike
novels in the process of being adapted for a major new television series for
BBC One, J.K. Rowling’s crime pseudonym has well and truly made his mark in the
genre.
Mark Billingham could make
it a hat-trick after winning the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year
Award in 2005 and 2009. A stalwart of the genre, Time
of Death is the astonishing
thirteenth Tom Thorne novel - a story of kidnapping, the tabloid press, and a
frightening case of mistaken identity. The novel is currently in adaptation
with BBC Drama North.
Rain Dogs is book
five in the critically-acclaimed Sean Duffy Thriller series set in 1980s
Belfast by Northern Irish writer, Adrian McKinty. McKinty was shortlisted for
the Steel Dagger in 2004 and has since been nominated for multiple awards in
the UK, USA, France and Australia. He won the Ned Kelly Award in 2014 for Sean
Duffy book three and book four was nominated for an Edgar in 2016. He currently
lives in Melbourne, Australia.
Eva Dolan’s Tell
No Tales is the second book
from the author BBC Radio 4 marked as ‘a rising star of crime fiction’.
Shortlisted for the CWA Dagger for unpublished authors when she was just a
teenager, her debut novel Long Way Home, was the start of a major
new crime series starring two detectives from the Peterborough Hate Crimes
Unit. Tell
No Tales focuses on murdered
migrant workers and racial tension.
Simon Theakston, said:
“It’s a remarkable shortlist that shows the crime genre shapes our cultural
landscape and dominates publishing.”
The winner will receive a £3,000 cash prize, as well as a handmade, engraved oak beer cask made by Theakston Old Peculier.
Gemma Rowland, Operations
Manager at Harrogate International Festivals, the arts organisation that
delivers the festival, said: “2016’s winner will join the list of game changing
authors who have won one of the most coveted awards over the last decade,
including Denise Mina, Lee Child, and Sarah Hilary. The public’s vote is
incredibly important as ultimately readers decide when it comes to judging a
book’s worth, so I’d encourage everyone to make their voice heard – it’s free
and simple to vote online.”
The overall winner will be
decided by a panel of Judges*, alongside the public vote. The public vote opens
on 1 July and closes 15 July at www.theakstons.co.uk.
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