Showing posts with label Anthony Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Award. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 September 2023

Anthony Award Winners

 The Anthony Award Winners were announced on Saturday night at Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention. 


Non-Fiction: 

The Life of Crime by Martin Edwards

Short Story: 

Beauty and the Beyotch” by Barb Goffman

Best Short Story Anthology: 

Crime Hits Home, edited by SJ Rozan

Best YA/Childrens: 

Enola Holmes by Nancy Springer 

Best Debut: 

The Maid by Nita Prose

Best Historical: 

Anywhere You Run by Wanda Morris

Best Humorous: 

Scot in a Trap by Catriona McPherson

Best Paperback, E-book, Audiobook Origional: 

The Quarry Girls by Jess Lourey

Best Hardcover: 

Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett

Congratulations to all the winners and nominated authors.

The Anthony® Award is named for the late Anthony Boucher (rhymes with “voucher”), a well-known California writer and critic who wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Times Book Review, and also helped found Mystery Writers of America. First presented in 1986, the Anthony Awards are among the most prestigious and coveted literary awards. Bouchercon®, the World Mystery Convention founded in 1970, is a non-profit, all-volunteer organization celebrating the mystery genre. It is the largest annual meeting in the world for readers, writers, fans, publishers, editors, agents, booksellers, and other lovers of crime fiction.


Saturday, 9 November 2019

Q & A with Attica Locke

©Ayo Onatade
Attica Locke is the author of five award-wining novels.  Her first novel Black Water Rising (2009) was nominated and shortlisted for a number of awards including the Orange Prize, an Edgar Award, a NAACP Image, a Los Angeles Times Book Award and the Strand Magazine Critics Award to name a few.  The Cutting Season (2012) won the Ernest J Gaines Award for Literary Excellence, was a finalist for the Hurston-Wright legacy Award, was long-listed for the Chautauqua Prize and was the honour book by the Black Caucus of the American Library Association. Pleasantville (2015) won the Harper Lee Prize for Fiction and was long-listed for the Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction.  Bluebird, Bluebird (2017) won an Edgar Award, Anthony Award and the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award.


In addition, Attica Locke was a writer and a producer for the Fox drama Empire and more recently for Netflix’s When They See Us.  She recently received the Texas Writer of the Year Award  at the 2019 Texas Book Festival.

Q -
Your books have always had a political focus and many authors are now turning to crime fiction to explore the current political climate. Do you think this growing trend has come about because the general mood both in the UK and the US is that the crooks are in power? Do you feel crime fiction is the best lens to examine politics?

Attica -I don’t know about the “best lens,” but it’s a damn good one. Crime fiction takes the theoretical ideas and ideology behind politics and puts them into real character’s lives. And because crime fiction’s first responsibility is to be entertaining, and crime books are usually plot-heavy, writers can avoid being polemical, and readers can avoid feeling lectured to. It’s politics as a visceral experience.

Q -
You were screenwriter on one of the biggest and most critically acclaimed TV series of the year so far, When They See Us. Could you tell us about how that came about? As with your crime writing, are you more drawn to writing for shows that explore politics / injustice? 

Attica - Ava Duvernay knew of my books, and she knew that I also wrote for television, so she reached out to me. Our first meeting was by Skype. 

I don’t think it’s crime writing that draws me to stories of politics and injustices. It’s because I’m interested in politics and injustice that I was probably drawn to crime fiction in the first place. I grew up in a political family of former activists. My name is “Attica,” for goodness sake (named after the prison uprising at Attica Correctional Facility in upstate New York). I grew up thinking about politics and issues of injustice all the time.

Q -
The response to When They See Us was phenomenal. Were you expecting it to be such a smash hit?

Attica - No. But I wasn’t really thinking about anything but telling those men’s stories. The idea of an audience having a positive or negative reaction seemed small compared to the responsibility we all felt to get the truth out – no matter what happened next.

Q -
Heaven, My Home is the second book in your Highway 59 trilogy. Without giving too much away, what can we expect from book three?  

Attica - Not giving anything away at all. It ends on another cliffhanger, like Bluebird, Bluebird. So there will definitely be a third book. I think four in all. A quartet.

Q -
And finally, what are you hopeful for?

Attica - Very little at the moment, sad to say. But it’s been an ugly few months—few years, really—in the United States. I suppose knowing that there will always be good books to read makes me happy and hopeful. And that my daughter might get into a good high school.

Heaven My Home by Attica Locke (Published by Profile Books) Out now
Nine-year-old Levi King knew he should have left for home sooner; instead he found himself all alone, adrift on the vastness of Caddo Lake. A sudden noise - and all goes dark. Ranger Darren Matthews is trying to emerge from another kind of darkness; his career and reputation lie in the hands of his mother, who's never exactly had his best interests at heart. Now she holds the key to his freedom, and she's not above a little blackmail to press her advantage. An unlikely possibility of rescue arrives in the form of a case down Highway 59, in a small lakeside town. With Texas already suffering a new wave of racial violence in the wake of the election of Donald Trump, a black man is a suspect in the possible murder of a missing white boy: the son of an Aryan Brotherhood captain. In deep country where the rule of law only goes so far, Darren has to battle centuries-old prejudices as he races to save not only Levi King, but himself.

Thursday, 16 May 2019

Anthony Award Nominations

Bouchercon 2019 — “Denim, Diamonds, and Death” — will present this year’s Anthony® Awards in five categories at the 50th annual Bouchercon® World Mystery Convention to be held in Dallas, October 31 to November 3. The Anthony Awards will be voted on by attendees at the convention and presented on Saturday, November 2.

The Anthony Award nominees, for works published in 2018, have just been selected by vote of the Bouchercon membership, and we are delighted to announce the nominees:

Best Novel
Give Me Your Handby Megan Abbott (Little, Brown and Company)
November Roadby Lou Berney (William Morrow)
Jar of Heartsby Jennifer Hillier (Minotaur Books)
Sunburnby Laura Lippman (William Morrow)
Blackoutby Alex Segura (Polis Books)

Best First Novel
My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite (Doubleday)
Broken Places by Tracy Clark (Kensington)
Dodging and Burning by John Copenhaver (Pegasus Books)
What Doesn’t Kill You by Aimee Hix (Midnight Ink)
Bearskin by James A. McLaughlin (Ecco)

Best Paperback Original Novel
Hollywood Ending by Kellye Garrett (Midnight Ink)
If I Die Tonight by Alison Gaylin (William Morrow Paperbacks)
Hiroshima Boy by Naomi Hirahara (Prospect Park Books)
Under a Dark Sky by Lori Rader-Day (William Morrow Paperbacks)
A Stone’s Throw by James W. Ziskin (Seventh Street Books)

Best Short Story
The Grass Beneath My Feet” by S.A. Cosby, in Tough (blogazine, August 20, 2018)
Bug Appétit” by Barb Goffman, in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (November/December 2018)
Cold Beer No Flies” by Greg Herren, in Florida Happens (Three Rooms Press
English 398: Fiction Workshop” by Art Taylor, in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (July/August 2018)
The Best Laid Plans” by Holly West, in Florida Happens (Three Rooms Press)

Best Critical or Non-Fiction Work
Dead Girls: Essays on Surviving an American Obsession by Alice Bolin (William Morrow Paperbacks)
Mastering Plot Twists: How To Use Suspense, Targeted Storytelling Strategies, and Structure To Captivate Your Readers by Jane K. Cleland (Writer’s Digest Books)
Pulp According to David Goodis by Jay A. Gertzman (Down & Out Books)
Classic American Crime Fiction of the 1920s by Leslie S. Klinger (Pegasus Books)
I’ll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman’s Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer by Michelle McNamara (HarperCollins)
The Real Lolita: The Kidnapping of Sally Horner and the Novel that Scandalized the World by Sarah Weinman (Ecco)

The Anthony® Award is named for the late Anthony Boucher (rhymes with “voucher”), a well-known California writer and critic who wrote for the San Francisco Chronicle and the New York Times Book Review, and also helped found Mystery Writers of America. First presented in 1986, the Anthony Awards are among the most prestigious and coveted literary awards.

Bouchercon®, the World Mystery Convention founded in 1970, is a non-profit, all-volunteer organization celebrating the mystery genre. It is the largest annual meeting in the world for readers, writers, fans, publishers, editors, agents, booksellers, and other lovers of crime fiction. For more information, please visit www.bouchercon.com.

The honoured guests this year at Bouchercon in Dallas are Peter Lovesey (Lifetime Achievement), Hank Phillippi Ryan (American Guest of Honor), Felix Francis (International Guest of Honor), James Patterson (Distinguished Contribution to the Genre), Deborah Crombie (Local Guest of Honor), Harry Hunsicker (Toastmaster), McKenna Jordan (Fan Guest of Honor), and Charlaine Harris and Sandra Brown (Special Guests).

Wednesday, 16 January 2019

Fuller Award: Sara Paretsky

Huge congratulations go to Grand Master and Cartier Diamond Dagger Winner (CWA) Sara Paretsky for being given the prestigious Fuller Award by the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. The award was created to acknowledge Chicago's greatest living writers.

Sara Paretsky will be officially honoured on at a reception on Thursday 9 May 2019 at Ruggles Hall

More information can be found here.

Sara Paretsky also won a CWA Gold Dagger Award in 2004 for Blacklist and was also honoured in 2011 with an Anthony Award Lifetime Achievement Award.  

Her most recent book Shell Game was published in 2018.

More information about Sara Paretsky and her work can be found on her website

Wednesday, 9 May 2018

Anthony Award nominations


The Anthony Awards are given at each annual Bouchercon World Mystery Convention with the winners selected by attendees. Bouchercon is the World Mystery Convention. This year Bouchercon will take in St Petersburg, Florida, September 9-12, 2018. Winners will be announced at Bouchercon. Congratulations to all the nominees!
BEST NOVEL

The Late Show by Michael Connelly
Magpie Murders by Anthony Horowitz
Bluebird, Bluebird by Attica Locke
Glass Houses by Louise Penny
The Force by Don Winslow

BEST FIRST NOVEL
Hollywood Homicide by Kellye Garrett
She Rides Shotgun by Jordan Harper
The Dry by Jane Harper
Ragged; or, The Loveliest Lies of All by Christopher Irvin
The Last Place You Look by Kristen Lepionka

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
Uncorking a Lie by Nadine Nettmann
Bad Boy Boogie by Thomas Pluck
What We Reckon by Eryk Pruitt
The Day I Died by Lori Rader-Day
Cast the First Stone by James W. Ziskin

BILL CRIDER AWARD FOR BEST NOVEL IN A SERIES  
Give Up the Dead (Jay Porter #3) by Joe Clifford
Two Kinds of Truth (Harry Bosch #20) by Michael Connelly
Y is for Yesterday (Kinsey Millhone #25) by Sue Grafton
Glass Houses (Armand Gamache #13) by Louise Penny
Dangerous Ends (Pete Fernandez #3) by Alex Segura

BEST SHORT STORY
The Trial of Madame Pelletier by Susanna Calkins from Malice Domestic 12: Mystery Most Historical
God's Gonna Cut You Down by Jen Conley from Just to Watch Them Die: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Johnny Cash
My Side of the Matter by Hilary Davidson from Killing Malmon
Whose Wine Is It Anyway by Barb Goffman from 50 Shades of Cabernet
The Night They Burned Miss Dixie's Place by Debra Goldstein from Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery
Magazine, May/June 2017
A Necessary Ingredient by Art Taylor from Coast to Coast: Private Eyes from Sea to Shining Sea

BEST ANTHOLOGY     
Just to Watch Them Die: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Johnny Cash, Joe Clifford, editor
Killing Malmon, Dan & Kate Malmon, editors
Coast to Coast: Private Eyes from Sea to Shining Sea, Andrew McAleer & Paul D. Marks, editors
Passport to Murder, Bouchercon Anthology 2017, John McFetridge, editor
The Obama Inheritance: Fifteen Stories of Conspiracy Noir, Gary Phillips, editor

BEST CRITICAL/NON-FICTION BOOK 
From Holmes to Sherlock: The Story of the Men and Women Who Created an Icon by Mattias Boström
The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books by Martin Edwards
Killers of the Flower Moon: The Osage Murders and the Birth of the FBI by David Grann
Chester B. Himes: A Biography by Lawrence P. Jackson
Rewrite Your Life: Discover Your Truth Through the Healing Power of Fiction by Jessica Lourey

BEST ONLINE CONTENT  
Writer Types Podcast 

Thursday, 21 September 2017

2017 DAVID THOMPSON SPECIAL SERVICE AWARD to GEORGE EASTER

The Bouchercon National Board of Directors has selected George Easter as the recipient of its 2017 David Thompson Special Service Award for “extraordinary efforts to develop and promote the crime fiction field.”
 
 

The David Thompson Special Service Award was created by the Bouchercon Board to honor the memory and contributions to the crime fiction community of David Thompson, a much beloved Houston bookseller who passed away in 2010. Past recipients of the award include Ali Karim, Marv Lachman, Len & June Moffatt, Judy Bobalik, Otto Penzler, and Bill and Toby Gottfried.

Founded in 1970, and named after distinguished mystery critic, editor, and author, Anthony Boucher, Bouchercon is an all-volunteer non-profit organisation that each year brings together fans, authors, publishers, editors, agents, and booksellers from around the world in a different location for a four-day celebration of their shared love of the crime genre. This year's Bouchercon, Passport to Murder, will take place in Toronto, October 12-15, 2017

George Easter is the Founder, Editor, and Publisher of Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine, one of the premiere review periodicals in the mystery community. Deadly Pleasures, a great resource for readers, was started in 1992. DP also includes news of forthcoming releases in the U.S. and abroad, and columns, reviews, and interviews from an international group of contributors. Sneak previews of upcoming books are divided into soft boiled, hardboiled, medium boiled and more. Deadly Pleasures was nominated four times for an Anthony Award for Best Mystery Magazine and won the Anthony for Best Critical/Biographic Work in 1999.

But Deadly Pleasures was not enough for George, being a fan’s fan, and in 1997 he conceived the Barry Awards (named after fan Barry Gardner) that are presented by Deadly Pleasures Mystery Magazine in various categories for excellence. George also presents the Don Sandstrom Memorial Award for Lifetime Achievement in Mystery Fandom (named after fan Don Sandstrom).

George has served on the Bouchercon National Board, has attended every Bouchercon, except two, since 1991 in Pasadena, CA, and volunteered to produce the Program Book for the 2000 Bouchercon in Denver, CO. He was also responsible for getting publishers to donate books to the Book Bazaar giveaway at last year’s Bouchercon in New Orleans.

The Bouchercon Board is pleased to honor George Easter with the David Thompson award for all he has contributed to the mystery community and for his honoring both mystery authors and fans. George Easter is truly a Fan’s Fan.

H/T - Janet Rudolph
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Friday, 6 May 2016

Anthony Award Nominations


BEST NOVEL
 Night Tremors by Matt Coyle [Oceanview]
 The Killing Kind by Chris Holm [Mulholland]
 The Child Garden by Catriona McPherson [Midnight Ink]
 The Nature of the Beast by Louise Penny [Minotaur/Sphere]
 What You See by Hank Phillippi Ryan [Forge]

BEST FIRST NOVEL
 Concrete Angel by Patricia Abbott [Polis]
 Past Crimes by Glen Erik Hamilton [William Morrow]
 New Yorked by Rob Hart [Polis]
 Bull Mountain by Brian Panowich [G.P. Putnam's Sons/Head of Zeus]
 On the Road with Del & Louise by Art Taylor [Henery]

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
 The Long and Faraway Gone by Lou Berney [William Morrow]
 Gun Street Girl by Adrian McKinty [Seventh Street/Serpent's Tail]
 Little Pretty Things by Lori Rader-Day [Seventh Street]
 Young Americans by Josh Stallings [Heist]
 Stone Cold Dead by James W. Ziskin [Seventh Street]

BEST CRITICAL OR NONFICTION BOOK
 The Golden Age of Murder: The Mystery of the Writers Who Invented the Modern Detective Story by Martin Edwards [HarperCollins]
Meanwhile There Are Letters: The Correspondence of Eudora Welty and Ross Macdonald by Suzanne Marrs & Tom Nolan, editors [Arcade]
Forensics: What Bugs, Burns, Prints, DNA, and More Tell Us About Crime by Val McDermid [Grove]
The Lost Detective: Becoming Dashiell Hammett by Nathan Ward [Bloomsbury USA]
The Mystery Writers of America Cookbook: Wickedly Good Meals and Desserts to Die For by Kate White, editor [Quirk]

BEST SHORT STORY
"The Little Men: A Bibliomystery" by Megan Abbott [MysteriousPress.com/Open Road]
"The Siege" in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, Dec 2015 by Hilary Davidson [Dell]
"Feliz Navidead" in Thuglit Presents: Cruel Yule by Brace Godfrey/Johnny Shaw [CreateSpace]
"Old Hands" in Dark City Lights by Erin Mitchell [Three Rooms]
 "Quack and Dwight" in Jewish Noir by Travis Richardson [PM]
 "Don’t Fear the Ripper" in Protectors 2: Heroes by Holly West [Goombah Gumbo]

BEST ANTHOLOGY OR COLLECTION
 Safe Inside the Violence by Christopher Irvin [280 Steps]
 Protectors 2: Heroes-Stories to Benefit PROTECT by Thomas Pluck, editor [Goombah
Gumbo]
 Thuglit Presents: Cruel Yule: Holiday Tales of Crime for People on the Naughty List by Todd Robinson, editor [CreateSpace]
 Murder Under the Oaks: Bouchercon Anthology 2015 by Art Taylor, editor [Down & Out]
 Jewish Noir: Contemporary Tales of Crime and Other Dark Deeds
by Kenneth Wishnia, editor [PM]

BEST YOUNG ADULT NOVEL
 Need by Joelle Charbonneau [HMH Books for Young Readers]
 How to Win at High School by Owen Matthews [HarperTeen]
 A Madness So Discreet by Mindy McGinnis [Katherine Tegen]
 The Sin Eater’s Daughter by Melinda Salisbury [Scholastic]
 Fighting Chance by B.K. Stevens [The Poisoned Pencil]
 Ask the Dark by Henry Turner [Clarion]

BEST CRIME FICTION AUDIOBOOK
 Dark Waters by Chris Goff - Assaf Cohen, narrator [Blackstone Audio]
 The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins - Clare Corbett, Louise Brealey & India Fisher, narrators [Penguin Audio/Random House Audiobooks]
Causing Chaos by Deborah J. Ledford - Christina Cox, narrator [IOF Productions]
The Nature of the Beast by Louise Penny - Robert Bathurst, narrator [Macmillan Audio]
Young Americans by Josh Stallings - Em Eldridge, narrator [Josh Stallings]