Showing posts with label Gold Dagger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gold Dagger. Show all posts

Friday, 2 October 2020

CWA Debut Dagger Writing Competition 2021 Opens for Entries


Budding authors are invited to submit the opening of their novel to the coveted Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Debut Dagger competition 2021. The international writing competition opens for entries on October 1. Created in 1955, the Daggers are the oldest and most regarded awards in the genre, and for over two decades the CWA has been encouraging new writing with its Debut Dagger competition for unpublished writers. Submissions are judged by a panel of top crime editors and agents and all shortlisted Debut Dagger entrants receive feedback from the judges about their entries. Moreover, all shortlisted entries are sent to UK agents and publishers of crime fiction.

Anyone is eligible who has not had a full-length novel published by a traditional publisher and who, at the time of the competition closing, has not got a contract with a publisher or literary agent. Independently published authors, provided they fulfil the criteria above, are eligible to enter. Entries must send in their first 3,000 words and a 1,500-word synopsis of their novel. Writers do not need to have completed their novel in order to enter. The competition has helped launch the careers of established crime writers, including M W Craven, who entered the 2013 CWA Debut Dagger competition.

M W Craven said: “Little did I know that it would go on to change my life.” Craven was offered a publishing contract by an independent publisher who were influenced by the shortlisting. He went on to write The Puppet Show, which sold to Little, Brown and went on to win the CWA 2019 Gold Dagger for Best Crime Novel of the Year. It has been sold in 17 foreign language territories, and TV rights have also been sold. “All this success,” Craven said, “comes from entering the Debut Dagger.” Linda Stratmann, Chair of the CWA, said: “Winning the Debut Dagger ensures your work will be brought to the attention of leading agents and top editors, who have to date signed up over two dozen winners and shortlisted Debut Dagger competitors.” Leanne Fry, who was shortlisted for the Debut Dagger 2020 for Whipstick, said: “The CWA Debut Dagger shortlisting has sparked the sort of interest from agents and publishers that a new writer bashing out her first manuscript on the other side of the world could only dream of. I knew I needed to get my work in front of industry professionals which is why I sucked up the self-doubt and entered the Debut Dagger. It’s been a fantastic experience and I’d encourage every writer out there wondering what on earth to do with that manuscript they’ve been labouring over to submit to next year’s Debut Dagger.

The winner, who also receives £500, will be announced at the annual CWA Dagger Awards ceremony. Also launched on October 1 is the annual CWA Margery Allingham Short Mystery Competition. The Margery Allingham Society, set up to honour and promote the writings of the great Golden Age author, works with the CWA to run the writing competition. Submissions have a limit of 3,500 words and stories must pay homage to the author’s definition of a mystery. The winner is awarded £500. Linda added: “We’re proud to offer support and advice for writers at all stages of their career. Alongside our writing competitions, we host a welcoming Debuts community on Facebook where budding authors can ask questions, share experiences and help out fellow writers. The CWA’s Debuts mailing list provides information on author events, courses and the writing process via the monthly CRA & Debuts Newsletter, as well as an ezine – Case Files – showcasing the latest crime writing.

The closing date for submissions to both competitions is 6pm on Friday 26 February 2021.

For tips, case studies of shortlisted and winning Debut Daggers, and full details on how to enter both writing competitions, go to - https://thecwa.co.uk/the-debuts 


 

Thursday, 28 May 2020

CWA Daggers Longlists to be Announced

Longlists for the coveted 2020 CWA Daggers will be revealed at noon on Friday 5 June for its ten categories, including non-fiction, short stories and debut crime fiction.

The world-famous Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Daggers, which honour the very best in crime writing, are the oldest awards in the genre. Created in 1955, the CWA Daggers have been synonymous with quality crime writing for over half a century.

Past winners of the Gold Dagger (best crime novel) include Jane Harper, Mick Herron, Ann Cleeves, Ian Rankin, Belinda Bauer and Val McDermid. The Daggers are also renowned for showcasing new talent with the coveted John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger, which in the past has spotted now established names including Dreda Say Mitchell, Louise Welsh and Gillian Flynn.

Judging year 2019-2020 has seen a major reorganisation of the Daggers’ judging panels with an infusion of new blood to create a diverse cross-section of jurors.

CWA Honorary Vice Chair, Maxim Jakubowski, said the refreshed juries were to “move with the times and reflect the diversity of tastes and choices of the reading public.

Linda Stratmann, Chair of the Crime Writers’ Association, added: “It’s been an exciting period after a recent review and refreshing of the judging panels with existing judges moved to different categories, and new judges brought in. We are committed to ensuring the awards remain exciting, relevant and independent.

New judges include former Guardian crime correspondent turned author, Duncan Campbell, leading book blogger and Daily Express reviewer Anne Cater, popular culture chronicler Woody Haut, broadcaster Angela Rippon and head reviewer for Love Reading, Liz Robinson.


All titles for the CWA Dagger awards are put forward by publishers.

The shortlist will be announced later in the year, before the glittering awards ceremony which is due to take place on 22 October with guest speaker, the TV presenter turned crime novelist, Richard Osman. The ceremony will be conducted online, if required.

The longlist will be available on the CWA website from noon on 5 June, as well as via its Facebook, Twitter #CWADaggers and YouTube channel.

Saturday, 9 June 2018

Mick Herron, the UK’s new spy master at Greenwich Book Festival



Mick Herron has been hailed as ‘difficult to overpraise’ (The Telegraph), ‘the best thriller writer in Britain today’ (the Express), and ‘The greatest comic writer of spy fiction in the English language’ (The Times).


The Cold War had Ian Fleming and Le Carré; our omnishambles era of Trump, Brexit and Russian poisonings has Mick Herron’s mordantly funny Slough House (Slow Horses) series, literary thrillers following the varying misfortunes of a group of disgraced spies, stuck in a Kafkaesque internal exile. Come hear Mick discuss the series, its latest outing London Rules and his new standalone thriller, This is What Happened.

Mick Herron has been shortlisted and won a number of awards.  In 2013 Dead Lions the second novel in the Slough House series won the CWA Gold Dagger. The fourth book in the series Real Tigers won the CrimeFest Last Laugh Award in 2017. Spook Street the fifth book in the series won the Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award in 2017 and CrimeFest Last Laugh Award in 2018.

Tickets can be bought here.

Date and Time
Sat 16 June 2018
14:00 – 14:50 BST

Location
University of Greenwich, Council Room
Queen Anne Building
Old Royal Naval College, Park Row
London
SE10 9LS

Tuesday, 2 September 2014

CWA Specsavers Crime Thriller Shortlist Announced

Two novels from Transworld imprints and a further two from Little, Brown have been shortlisted for the CWA Goldsboro Gold Dagger for Best Crime Novel of the Year at the Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards.
Paula Daly’s Keep Your Friends Close (Bantam), which reveals what happens when a marriage falls apart with fatal consequences, is up against Wiley Cash’s This Dark Road to Mercy (Doubleday), a tale of blood and vengeance in a little town in North Carolina.
Also in the running are The First Rule of Survival (Constable) by Paul Mendelson, a thriller set in modern Cape Town where the discovery of two missing children reveals unwelcome truths, and Louise Penny’s story of rampant police corruption in an isolated Canadian hamlet with no links to the outside world, How the Light Gets In (Sphere).
Meanwhile the shortlist for the CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger for Best First Novel sees Antonia Hodgson’s The Devil In The Marshalsea (Hodder & Stoughton), which depicts the savage world of an 18th century gaol, facing M J Carter’s tale of murder, gambling, opium wars and crime, The Strangler Vine (Penguin Fig Tree). Two other debut novels are shortlisted: The Axeman's Jazz by Ray Celestin (Mantle), which follows an unknown axe-man who gives his address as "Hell", and The Silent Wife by A S A Harrison (Headline), in which Chicago is the backdrop for the slow, murderous disintegration of a marriage.
Robert Harris and Louise Doughty are both shortlisted for the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger for Best Thriller of the Year, for An Officer and a Spy (Random House) and Apple Tree Yard (Faber and Faber) respectively. Harris’ novel is a fictional telling of The Dreyfus Affair, while Doughty’s is a psychological thriller about a respected female scientist and the single reckless decision that leads to her standing trial for murder.
Also in the running for that award is I Am Pilgrim by Terry Hayes (Transworld), a race against time for a retired US intelligence expert who is drawn back into the world of forensic criminal investigation, and Greg Iles’ Natchez Burning (HarperCollins), where a son’s attempts to defend his father from charges of murder puts him in contact with a hardened, violent gang.
Lucy Santos, director CWA, called them “powerful and fantastic shortlists which we know will provide hours of reading pleasure for all", thanking sponsors Goldsboro Books and Ian Fleming Publications.
The winners will be announced at the awards on Friday 24th October at the Grosvenor House Hotel, London, along with winners in categories for film and television.
This September, ITV3 will run a Crime Thriller Season, featuring a TV series dedicated to crime writing. "The Crime Thriller Club", sponsored by Specsavers, will feature "Living Legends", a series of interviews with bestselling authors in the world of crime and thriller fiction. The authors interviewed this year will be Dean Koontz, Denise Mina, Robert Harris, Val McDermid, Michael Connelly and Lynda La Plante, who will all be members of the CWA Hall of Fame.
Each episode of "The Crime Thriller Club" will also include The Crime Thriller Book Club, in which six novels will be critiqued on air. This year’s selected titles are: Before We Met by Lucie Whitehouse (Bloomsbury); Entry Island by Peter May (Quercus); Letters To My Daughter’s Killer by Cath Staincliffe (Constable & Robinson); Treachery by S J Parris (HarperCollins); The Tilted World by Tom Franklin & Beth Ann Fennelly (Mantle); and Watch Me by James Carol (Faber & Faber).
Good luck everyone.

Hat tip: The Bookseller

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Launch of Gold Digger by Frances Fyfield


CWA Gold Dagger Author Frances Fyfield held the launch of her new book Gold Digger at Goldsboro Books on Thursday 29 November 2012.

David Shelley and Frances Fyfield © Ayo Onatade 2012
Gold Digger is a haunting tale of psychological suspenseful.  In a huge old school house by the sea, full of precious paintings, Thomas Porteous is dying.  His much younger wife Di holds him and mourns.  She knows that soon, despite her being his sole inheritor, Thomas's relatives will descend on the collection that was the passion of both of their lives.  And descend they do.  The two needy daughters, who were poisoned against their father by their defecting mother, are now poisoning themselves.  The family regard Thomas's wealth as theirs by right, with the exception of young Patrick, who adored his grandfather and is torn between his parents and Di, the interloper.  The family know Di's weaknesses, and she has to learn theirs.  After all, she met Thomas when she came to his house to rob him.  With the help of an unlikely collection of loners and eccentrics, she sets a trap to hoist the family members on their own greed.  And on the night they are lured to the house, Di will be ready.  Or will she?

Those joining Frances Fyfield at the launch included her editor David Shelley and Desk Editor Thalia Proctor from Little Brown, Hilary Hale, Marcel Berlins, Barry Foster and Liz Hatherall and Myles Allfrey (Crimefest).  She was also joined by a large number of her friends.  David Shelley gave a short speech, in which he explained that it had been three years since her last novel and that Gold Digger was certainly worth the wait as it was an amazing book.  His speech was followed by a brief speech by Frances Fyfield.  Frances Fyfield won the Duncan Lawrie Dagger in 2008 with her novel Blood From Stone.  She has also previously won the CWA Silver Dagger in 1991 with her novel Deep Sleep

 © Ayo Onatade 2012

Friday, 24 August 2012

2012 CWA Dagger Shortlist and Specsavers Awards are announced


The Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards Shortlists 2012 has been announced.  The winners of 12 Awards will be announced at The Specsavers Crime Thriller Awards on Thursday 18 October at the Grosvenor House Hotel.

The awards include –
 The CWA Gold Dagger for the Best Crime Novel of the Year,
The CWA Steel Dagger for the Best Thriller of the Year,
The CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger for the Best New Crime Writer of the Year,
The Specsavers Bestseller Dagger and Film and TV-based Daggers.

The CWA Gold Dagger (sponsored by Constable and Robinson)
Vengeance in Mind by N.J. Cooper (Simon and Schuster)
The Flight by M.R. Hall (Mantle)
The Rage by Gene Kerrigan (Harvill Secker)
Bereft by Chris Womersley (Quercus)

The CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger (sponsored by Goldsboro Books)
Heart-Shaped Bruise by Tanya Byrne (Headline)
Land More Kind than Home by Wiley Cash (Bantam)
Good People by Ewart Hutton (Blue Door)
What Dies in Summer by Tom Wright (Canongate)

The CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger – sponsored by Ian Fleming Publications
Dare Me by Megan Abbott (Picador)
A Foreign Country by Charles Cumming (HarperCollins)
The Fear Index by Robert Harris (Hutchinson)
Reamde by Neal Stephenson (Atlantic Books)






The Specsavers Awards are as follows -

The Specsavers Bestseller Dagger which is by public vote.
This award honours the success of authors throughout their careers, and is chosen by the reading public.  Readers can register their vote for their favourite bestselling author online hereThe winner will be presented with the Bestseller Dagger at the awards ceremony on the 18 October, after all the votes are counted on 12 October.  The nominees are –


Specsavers TV and Film Daggers:

The Film Dagger
Drive (Icon)
The Dark Knight Rises (Warner Bros)
The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo (Sony)
The Guard (Optimum)
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy (Studio Canal)

The TV Dagger
Appropriate Adult (ITV Studios/ITV1)
Line of Duty (BBC/BBC2)
Sherlock: Series 2 (Hartswood Films/BBC1)
Wallander (Left Bank Pictures, Yellow Bird/BBC1)
Whitechapel: Series 3 (Carnival/ITV1)

The International TV Dagger
Boardwalk Empire: Season 2 (HBO/Sky Atlantic)
Dexter: Season 6 (Showtime Networks, John Goldwyn Productions, TheColleton Company, ClydePhillips Productions/FX)
Homeland (Teakwood Lane Productions, Showtime Productions, Cherry Pie Productions, Keshet Media Group, Fox 21/Channel 4)
The Bridge (Danmarks Radio, Sveriges Television/BBC4)
The Killing II: Forbrydelsen (Arrow Films/BBC4)

The Best Actress Dagger
Brenda Blethyn for Vera (ITV Studios/ITV1)
Claire Danes for Homeland (Teakwood Lane Productions, Showtime Productions, Cherry Pie Productions, Keshet Media Group, Fox 21/Channel 4)
Sofie Gråbøl for The Killing II (Arrow Films/BBC4)
Sofia Helin for The Bridge (Danmarks Radio, Sveriges Television/BBC4)
Maxine Peake for Silk (BBC/BBC1)

The Best Actor Dagger
Kenneth Branagh for Wallander (Left Bank Pictures,Yellow Bird/BBC1)
Steve Buscemi for Boardwalk Empire (HBO/Sky Atlantic)
Benedict Cumberbatch for Sherlock (Hartswood Films/BBC1)
Damien Lewis for Homeland (Teakwood Lane Productions, Showtime Productions, Cherry Pie Productions, Keshet Media Group, Fox 21/Channel 4)
Dominic West for Appropriate Adult (ITV Studios/ITV1
  
The Best Supporting Actress Dagger
Frances Barber for Silk (BBC/BBC1)
Kelly Macdonald for Boardwalk Empire (HBO/Sky Atlantic)
Archie Panjabi for The Good Wife (Scott Free Productions, King Size Productions, Small Wishes, CBS Productions/More 4)
Sarah Smart for Wallander (Left Bank Pictures, Yellow Bird/BBC1)
Una Stubbs for Sherlock (Hartswood Films/BBC1)

The Best Supporting Actor Dagger
Alun Armstrong for Garrow’s Law (Shed Media/BBC1)
Alan Cumming for The Good Wife (Scott Free Productions, King Size Productions, Small Wishes, CBS Productions/More 4)
Phil Davis for Silk & Whitechapel (Silk: BBC/BBC1)(Whitechapel: Carnival/ITV1)
Laurence Fox for Lewis (ITV Studios/ITV1)
Martin Freeman for Sherlock (Hartswood Films/BBC1)

‘Best Detective Duo’ by Public Vote
The British public will also have the chance to vote for their favourite detective duo by phone vote. The phone lines open at 12:00pm on 7 September 2012.
The shortlist is as follows:
DCI Banks – DCI Alan Banks & DS Annie Cabbot – Call 090 16 16 14 01
Above Suspicion – DC Anna Travis & DCS James Langton – Call 090 16 16 14 02
Scott and Bailey- DC Jane Scott & DC Rachel Bailey – Call 090 16 16 14 03
Lewis – DI Robbie Lewis & DS James Hathaway – Call 090 16 16 14 04
Whitechapel – DI Joseph Chandler & DS Ray Miles – Call 090 16 16 14 05
Vera – DCI Vera Stanhope & DS Joe Ashworth – Call 090 16 16 14 06

Friday, 13 January 2012

In Memoriam - Reginald Hill

In Memoriam



3 April 1936 - 12 January 2012

Reginald Hill author of the bestselling series Dalziel and Pascoe has died at the age of 75 after a brain tumour. He was regarded as one of Britain's most consistently successful crime writers and had a huge loyal following. He was best known for his Dalziel and Pascoe (Supt Andrew Dalziel and Sgt Peter Pascoe) series the first of which was entitled A Clubbable Woman (1970). In the original pilot they were portrayed by the comedians Hale and Pace but when the television series was finally commissioned the characters were subsequently played to perfection by Warren Clarke and Colin Buchanan and were adapted for television by the BBC between 1996 to 2007.


Reginald Hill was also the author of five books featuring Joe Sixsmith, a black machine operator turned amiable private detective in a fictional version of Luton. The first book in the series was Blood Sympathy (1993) and the last book to be written featuring Joe Sixsmith was The Roar of Butterflies (2008).


Sadly it was to take twenty years before he won the Crime Writer's Association Gold Dagger with his novel Bones and Silence in 1990. Bones and Silence was also nominated for an Edgar Award® for Best Novel. In 1995 he was awarded the Crime Writer's Association Cartier Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement. In 1999 On Beulah Heights was nominated for an Anthony Award for Best Novel. In 2004 his novel Good Morning, Midnight won The Mystery Thriller Book Club People's Choice Award. His novel A Cure for All Diseases was shortlisted for the 2009 Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel. His short story On the Psychiatrist's Couch won the CWA Short Story Dagger in 1997.

Hill also wrote more than 30 other novels under the names Dick Morland, Patrick Ruell and Charles Underhill. Many of these books have been republished under his name Hill.


His last Dalziel Pascoe novel Midnight Fugue appeared in 2009. His last published novel The Woodcutter was published in 2010.


Richard Lea’s article in the Guardian can be found here. Mike Ripley’s obituary in the Guardian can be found here.

The Telegraph obituary can be read here, whilst the Independent obituary is available here.

A tribute from Martin Edwards can be read here.

Mike Ripley’s appreciation of Reginald Hill can be found here. Reginald Hill’s Deconstruction of Dalziel which he wrote for Shotsmag can be found here.


The death of Reginald Hill is a blow to the crime writing community and he will be sorely missed by not only his fellow crime writers but also his fans. Our condolences go to his family.

Thursday, 7 October 2010

Specsavers ITV3 Thriller Awards Results

The Specsavers Thriller Awards took place on Friday 8th October 2010 at the Grosvenor Park Hotel, Park Lane, London. It is the third year that the event has taken place and the second year that it has been sponsored by Specsavers in conjunction with the Crime Writers Association of Great Britain (CWA). The awards ceremony was hosted by Marcus Brigstocke and took place in the ballroom of the Grosvenor Park Hotel in the presence of a number of crime writers and actors including Philip Glenister, Nathaniel Parker, Rupert Penry Jones, Benedict Cumberbatch, Julia McKenzie, Colin Dexter, Amanda Redman and Dennis Waterman to name a few. CWA members that were present included Edwin Thomas (the current Chair of the CWA) Marry Forshaw, Mike Stotter, Michelle Spring, Margaret Murphy, Phillip Gooden, Mark Billingham, Margaret Kinsman and David Headley.

The CWA Awards that were given are as follows –

The CWA Gold Dagger was awarded to Belinda Bauer and was presented by Amanda Redman.


The shortlist consisted of
Blacklands by Belinda Bauer Corgi/Transworld
Blood Harvest by S J Bolton Bantam Press/Transworld
Shadowplay by Karen Campbell Hodder & Stoughton
The Way Home by George Pelecanos Orion

The CWA Ian Fleming Steel
Dagger (sponsored by Ian Fleming Publications Ltd) went to Simon Conway and was presented to him by Alex Norton and Blythe Duff of the Bill.

The shortlist consisted of -
A Loyal Spy by Simon Conway Hodder & Stoughton
Innocent by Scott Turow Mantle
The Dying Light by Henry Porter Orion
The Gentlemen's Hour by Don Winslow Heinemann/Random House

The CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger was awarded to Ryan David Jahn and was presented to him by Ray Mears .

The shortlist was made up of -
Acts of Violence by Ryan David Jahn Macmillan New Writing
Rupture by Simon Lelic Picador
The Holy Thief by William Ryan Mantle
The Pull of the Moon by Diane Janes Constable & Robinson

A number of awards were also presented in the film and acting category

The winner of the Film Dagger was Inception and was presented by Nathaniel Parker.

The complete shortlist was as follows:-
District 9 (Sony Pictures)
Inception (Warner Bros)
Sherlock Holmes (Warner Bros)
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (Momentum Pictures)

The winner of the TV Dagger was Sherlock Holmes and the award was presented to Benedict Cumberbatch by Harriet Walter and Laila Russo.

The complete shortlist for the TV Daggers were -
Ashes to Ashes (Series 3) (Kudos)
Luther (BBC)
Sherlock (BBC)
Wallander (Series 2) (Left Bank Pictures)

The winner of the International TV Dagger was Wallender and the award was presented by Matt di Angelo and Kelly Adams from the Hustle.

The shortlist was as follows:-
Damages (Season 3) (Sony Pictures)
The Good Wife (Season 1) (CBS)
Wallander (Series 2) (Yellow Bird Films)

The Best Actress Dagger was won by Maxine Peake and was presented to her by Denis Lawson

The Shortlist for the Best Actress Dagger consisted of -
Glenn Close (Damages)
Hermione Norris (Spooks)
Keeley Hawes (Ashes to Ashes & Identity)
Maxine Peake (Criminal Justice)
Sue Johnston (Waking the Dead)

The Best Actor Dagger was awarded to Benedict Cumberbatch and was presented to him by Emilia Fox

The Best Actor Dagger shortlist consisted of -
Benedict Cumberbatch (Sherlock)
Idris Elba (Luther)
Kenneth Branagh (Wallander)
Philip Glenister (Ashes to Ashes)

The winner of the Best Supporting Actress Dagger was Dervla Kirwan who received her award from Philip Glenister and Mark Warren.

Those on the shortlist were -
Dervla Kirwan (The Silence)
Gina McKee (The Silence)
Saskia Reeves (Luther)
Sophie Okonedo (Criminal Justice)

The Best Supporting Actor Dagger went to Matthew MacFadyen who presented with his award by Katy Brand

The short list consisted of -
Laurence Fox (Lewis)
Matthew Macfadyen (Criminal Justice)
Rupert Graves (Sherlock)
Tom Hiddleston (Wallander)

The winner of the public's People's detective vote was Christopher Foyle. The award was presented by Hugh Bonniville and Joan Froggett.

The short list consisted of -
Tom Barnaby
Christopher Foyle
Jack Frost
Sherlock Holmes
Robbie Lewis
Miss Jane Marple
Endeavour Morse
Hercule Poirot
John Rebus
Jane Tennison
Reg Wexford
Charles Wycliffe

George Pelecanos and Frederick Forsyth was inducted into the Hall of Fame as well. Pelecanos in his acceptance speech said that he was proud to be a crime writer and one of "us"









The television programme The Bill was presented with a special recognition award.

Congratulations to all the winners and the nominees. The ceremony will be transmitted on ITV3 on October 12.