Showing posts with label ASA Harrison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ASA Harrison. Show all posts

Saturday, 13 February 2016

From the Domestic to the Dominant


CALL FOR CHAPTERS
‘From the Domestic to the Dominant: The New Face of Crime Fiction’
Edited Collection 
Gone Girl (Gillian Flynn), The Silent Wife (ASA Harrison), The Girl on the Train (Paula Hawkins), are just three recent novels that have captured the commercial imagination and conceivably shifted the critical perception of what a contemporary crime thriller is and should be doing in the second decade of the 21st Century. The terrain is domestic, the narrative perspective and criminal perpetrator firmly female. However, the political is of course ever present in relation to gender and society. The crime thriller has always been a peculiarly modern form. Its transition to an urgent, necessary and contemporary form of literary expression is arguable, and lies at the core of the discussion within this collection.

Julia Crouch (Cuckoo, The Long Fall, Tarnished and Every Vow You Break) recognised as the originator of the term ‘Domestic Noir’ stated that it ‘takes place primarily in homes and workplaces, concerns itself largely (but not exclusively) with the female experience.’ 

Domestic Noir is often concerned with crimes of an extremely intimate nature. Renee Knight’s Disclaimer and Claire Kendal’s The Book of You, both deal with unusually invasive forms of stalking. Christobel Kent’s The Crooked House and Erin Kelly’s The Poison Tree both detail the horror of long-buried secrets surfacing. Many of the novels deal explicitly with what Rebecca Whitney (The Liar’s Chair) describes as ‘toxic marriage and its fallout’, such as Emma Chapman’s How to be a Good Wife, and Lucie Whitehouse’s Before we Met. There are also versions of the marriage thriller that present economically or sexually independent women transgressing, such as Louise Doughty’s Apple Tree Yard and Jill Alexander Essbaum’s Hausfrau

Children and adolescents often figure in Domestic Noir as incendiary characters such as in Emma Donoghue’s Room, Kate Hamer’s The Girl in the Red Coat, and Lionel Shriver’s We Need to Talk about Kevin. Adolescent girls occupy centre stage in Megan Abbott’s reinterpretation of Lolita, The End of Everything, her twisted take on cheerleaders, Dare Me, and mass hysteria at a high school, The Fever. Also relevant here are Gillian Flynn’s first two novels Sharp Objects and Dark Places, and Tana French’s The Secret Place

Domestic Noir is a particularly crystallised version of crime fiction. These are novels that not only toe a strong narrative line but also address the very real issues of life, death, and how we relate to each other. As there has not yet been a publication that addresses Domestic Noir, we welcome chapters on all aspects of the sub-genre for a volume to be presented to a major UK or international publisher. You may wish to submit on the following topics, though this is by no means an exhaustive list: 

-    Literary antecedents of Domestic Noir (i.e. In a Lonely Place by Dorothy B. Hughes)
-    Female perpetrators, female gangsters, and women who kill
-    21st century crime fiction and its cultural relevance
-    The genesis of crime sub-genres
-    Gendered and generational readings of Domestic Noir
-    Crime and mental health in the 21st century
-    Location, geographies, and race in Domestic Noir
-    Intimate crimes (stalking, rape etc.)
-    New work and domestic patterns
-    Domestic Noir and the Bluebeard cycle.
-    Suburban Gothic
-    Small and big screen interpretations of Domestic Noir

SUBMISSION DETAILS

Abstracts of 400 – 500 words including up to five keywords should be sent to Laura Ellen Joyce (l.joyce@uea.ac.uk) or Henry Sutton (henry.sutton@uea.ac.uk) by 18 March 2016


Notification of acceptance: 22 April 2016

Full chapters of between 6000 – 8000 words are due by: 16 September 2016

Final versions are due by: 31 December 2016

Sunday, 27 April 2014

2014 Arthur Ellis Awards Shortlists and CWC Grand Master Award

Crime Writers of Canada announced the 2014 Arthur Ellis Awards Shortlists, and the winner of the CWC Grand Master Award for Crime Writing in Canada.

This is the inaugural year of the CWC Grand Master Award, intended to recognize Canadian crime writers who have a substantial body of work that has garnered national and international recognition.

This year’s winner of the CWC Grand Master Award is Howard Engel, the author of the award winning Benny Cooperman detective series. A mainstay of the Canadian crime writing scene for many years, Mr. Engel helped put Canadian crime writing on the map at a time when few mysteries were set in this country.

Excellence in Crime Writing Best Novel
Walls of a Mind by Jon Brooke (Signature Editions)
The Devil’s Making by Seán Haldane (Stone Flower Press)
Presto Variations by Lee Lamothe (Dundurn)
Miss Montreal by Howard Shrier (Vintage Canada)
An Inquiry into Love and Death by Simone St. James (Penguin Books)

Best First Novel
Almost Criminal by E.R. Brown (Dundurn)
The Silent Wife by A.S.A. Harrison (Penguin Books Canada)
Hot Sinatra by Axel Howerton (Evolved Publishing)
Messum, Bait by J Kent (Penguin Canada)
Die on Your Feet by S.G Wong (Carina Press)

Best Novella,
The Goddaughter’s Revenge by Melodie Campbell (Orca Books)
My Sister’s Keeper by Brenda Chapman (Grassroots Press)
A Woman Scorned by James Heneghan (Orca Books 1)

Best Short Story 
Watermelon Weekend by Donna Carrick in Thirteen, (Carrick Publishing),
Under Cap Ste. Claire by Jas. R. Petrin in Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, October 2013, (Dell Magazines)
Footprints in Water by Twist Phelan in Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, July 2013, (Dell Magazines)
The Emerald Skull by Sylvia Maultash Warsh in Thirteen (Carrick Publishing)
The Third Echo by Sam Wiebe in Girl Trouble: Malfeasance Occasional, (MacMillan/St Martin’s Press)

Best Book in French 
Saccages by Chrystine Brouillet (La courte échelle),
Et à l'heure de votre mort by Jacques Côté (éditions Alire)
L’enfant promis by Maureen Martineau (La courte échelle)
Le fils emprunté by Jacques Savoie (Éditions Libre Expression)

Best Juvenile/YA 
Apparition by Gail Gallant, (Doubleday Canada)
Bones Never Lie: How Forensics Helps Solve History’s Mysteries by Elizabeth MacLeod (Annick Press)
Who I’m Not by Ted Staunton (Orca Books)

Unhanged Arthur 
Death at the Iron House Lodge by L.J. Gordon
Cold Girl by Rachel Greenaway
The Snow Job by Charlotte Morganti
Descent by Kristina Stanley
Coiled by Kevin Thornton

Crime Writers of Canada was founded in 1982 as a professional organisation designed to raise the profile of Canadian crime writers from coast to coast. Members include authors, publishers, editors, booksellers, librarians, reviewers, and literary agents as well as many developing authors.