There’s fresh blood aplenty in the local crime
writing ranks and the usual suspects were nowhere to be found as the 2017 Ngaio
Marsh Awards finalists were named on Monday.
Now in
their eighth year, the Ngaio Marsh Awards celebrate the best New Zealand crime,
mystery, and thriller writing; fiction and non-fiction. “It’s been a remarkable year, and a tough one for our international
judging panels,” said awards founder Craig Sisterson. “After record entries last
year, we really weren't sure what to expect in 2017. None of our previous
winners were in the running, nor some other great Kiwi crime writers who'd been
multiple-times finalists. In fact, eighteen of the nineteen authors who'd been
finalists in the first few years of the awards were MIA.”
But
instead of a lull, this year’s Ngaios hit a new high-tide mark, powered by a
flood of fresh voices joining the genre – both debutant authors and established
writers turning to crime.
“Entries in our fiction categories were up
fifty percent, and the quality and variety has been really outstanding,” said
Sisterson. “New Zealand readers love crime, and our local authors are offering
plenty of world-class writing, both traditional detective tales and books
stretching the borders.”
The
international judging panels (thirteen authors, critics, and editors from five
countries) praised the inventiveness and freshness of the stories our Kiwi
writers were producing. “Talk about
judging apples and pears,” said Paddy Richardson, a two-time finalist and
now one of seven judges for the Best Crime Novel category. “It was more like apples, asparagus, avocados, and melons!”
This
year’s finalists will be celebrated, and winners announced, at a special WORD
Christchurch event to be held on 28 October. “We’re stoked to be working with Rachael King and her team,” said
Sisterson. “We’re really grateful that WORD Christchurch have been supporters right
from our very first year, and it’s lovely to celebrate our very best crime
writers in Dame Ngaio’s hometown.”
The finalists for the 2017 Ngaio Marsh Awards
are as follows.
BEST CRIME NOVEL
· Pancake Money by Finn Bell
· Spare Me The Truth by CJ Carver (Zaffre)
· Red Herring by Jonothan
Cullinane (HarperCollins)
· Marshall's Law by Ben
Sanders (Allen & Unwin)
· The Last Time We
Spoke by Fiona Sussman (Allison & Busby)
BEST FIRST NOVEL
· Dead Lemons by Finn Bell
· Red Herring by Jonothan
Cullinane (HarperCollins)
· The Ice Shroud by Gordon Ell (Bush Press)
· The Student Body by Simon Wyatt (Mary Egan
Publishing)
· Days are Like Grass by Sue Younger (Eunoia Publishing)
BEST NON FICTION
· In Dark Places by Michael
Bennett (Paul Little Books)
· The Scene of the
Crime by Steve Braunias (HarperCollins)
· Double-Edged Sword by Simonne
Butler with Andra Jenkin (Mary Egan Publishing)
· The Many Deaths of
Mary Dobie by David Hastings (AUP)
· Blockbuster! by Lucy Sussex (Text Publishing)
Each
category winner will receive a Ngaio Marsh Awards trophy and a cash prize.
For more information on the Ngaio Marsh Awards,
this year’s finalists or comments from the judges, please contact Craig
Sisterson at craigsisterson@hotmail.com
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