Aiming the Derringers
The Rap Sheet
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18h ago
The Short Mystery Fiction Society has announced its winners of the 2024 Derringer Awards, in four categories. Best Flash Story (up to 1,000 words): “The Referee,” by C.W. Blackwell (Shotgun Honey, October 2023) Also nominated: “Sleep Rough,” by Brandon Barrows (Shotgun Honey, September 2023); “To Whom It May Concern,” by Serena Jayne (Shotgun Honey, January 2023); “Teddy’s Favorite Thing,” by Paul Ryan O’Connor (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, September/October 2023); and “Supply Chains,” by Andrew Welsh-Huggins (Black Cat Weekly #89) Best Short Story (1,001-4,000 words): “Last Day at the Ja ..read more
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Poe Prizes Aplenty
The Rap Sheet
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2d ago
During a ceremony last evening in New York City, the 78th annual Edgar Awards—“honoring the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction and television published or produced in 2023”—were handed out. The event was live-streamed on YouTube. Best Novel: Flags on the Bayou, by James Lee Burke (Atlantic Monthly Press) Also nominated: All the Sinners Bleed, by S.A. Cosby (Flatiron); The Madwomen of Paris, by Jennifer Cody Epstein (Ballantine); Bright Young Women, by Jessica Knoll (S&S/Marysue Rucci); An Honest Man, by Michael Koryta (Mulholland); The River We Remember, by William Kent Krueger (Atria ..read more
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The Paperback Detective and The D.C. Man
The Rap Sheet
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3d ago
(Editor’s note: March of this year brought the welcome re-release of four paperback thrillers from the 1970s, all starring Brian Petersen—otherwise known as The D.C. Man—and credited to James P. Cody. The essay below reveals Cody’s surprising background. It was penned by Tom Simon, who spent 26 years as an FBI Special Agent, and is now a licensed private investigator based in Jacksonville, Florida. He reviews vintage paperbacks for the blog Paperback Warrior and co-hosted 100 episodes of The Paperback Warrior Podcast. Tom can be found on both Instagram and TikTok at SimonInvestigations, where ..read more
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Reasons to Relish the Season
The Rap Sheet
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3d ago
With the sun finally breaking through the persistent cloud cover here in Seattle, and myriad birds finding their way back to my trees, I’m reminded of what Emily Brontë said: “May is the month of expectation, the month of wishes, the month of hope.” However, another author, Ellen Jackson, was also right when she remarked that “May can be a month of sneezing, itchy eyes, and runny noses.” At least for the nonce, my hay fever is leaving me be and letting me find a comfortable place on the front porch to do my reading. This fifth month of 2024 promises a plenitude of captivating new crime, myste ..read more
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Bath’s Odd Couple Is Back
The Rap Sheet
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3d ago
I have grown quite fond of the ITV-TV crime drama McDonald & Dodds over the last few years, so am pleased to hear that the first of three brand-new episodes is coming to BritBox on Thursday, May 23. Telly Visions tells us what to expect from this new season: Return to the beautiful city of Bath as mismatched detective duo [Detective Chief Inspector Lauren] McDonald and [Detective Sergeant] Dodds are presented with more original and inventive crimes to solve. Season 4 features three new emotionally engaging feature-length crime stories told with flair and mischief. In the first story, McDo ..read more
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Sansom Is Suddenly No More
The Rap Sheet
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5d ago
Historical crime fiction endured a stinging blow this last weekend with the demise C.J. Sansom, the UK author of seven novels starring hunchbacked 16th-century lawyer and investigator Matthew Shardlake. He was 71 years old. Cause of death is described as “multiple myeloma, a rare cancer that affects bone marrow.” “His publisher confirmed the news,” reports The Guardian, “noting that Sansom died on 27 April, just days before Shardlake, the TV adaptation of Dissolution starring Arthur Hughes and Sean Bean, is released on Disney+ on 1 May.” The newspaper goes on to recall that Christopher John S ..read more
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Agatha Acclamation
The Rap Sheet
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5d ago
The winners of the 2024 Agatha Awards for best “traditional mysteries” (defined as containing no explicit sex, excessive gore, or gratuitous violence) were given out this last weekend at the Malice Domestic conference in Bethesda, Maryland. Best Contemporary Mystery Novel: The Weekend Retreat, by Tara Laskowski (Graydon House) Also nominated: Wined and Died in New Orleans, by Ellen Byron (Berkley); Helpless, by Annette Dashofy (Level Best); A Case of the Bleus, by Korina Moss (St. Martin’s Press); and The Raven Thief, by Gigi Pandian (Minotaur) Best Historical Mystery Novel: The Mistress of ..read more
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Vying for Theakston Glory
The Rap Sheet
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1w ago
Eighteen novels have been longlisted in this year’s Theakston Old Peculier Crime Novel of the Year contest. A press release explains that “the longlist, voted for by an academy of crime writing authors, agents, editors, reviewers and members of the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing Festival Programming Committee, features stories that transport readers from the burning heat of the Chihuahuan Desert to the chill of nineties Berlin, from down-at-heel Blackpool to the splendour of Georgian London.” Here’s the complete inventory of 2024 contenders: • The Last Dance, by Mark Billingham (Sphe ..read more
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Excellence in Abundance
The Rap Sheet
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1w ago
Crime Writers of Canada has announced its shortlists for the 2024 Crime Writers of Canada Awards of Excellence in Canadian Crime Writing (former known as the Arthur Ellis Awards). Winners are to be announced on Wednesday, May 29. The Peter Robinson Award for Best Crime Novel: • The Drowning Woman, by Robyn Harding (Grand Central) • Everyone Here Is Lying, by Shari Lapena (Doubleday Canada) • Middlemen, by Scott Thornley (House of Anansi Press) • Sunset and Jericho, by Sam Wiebe (Harbour) • The Maid's Diary, by Loreth Anne White (Montlake) Best Crime First Novel: • The Bittlemores, by Jann Ar ..read more
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PaperBack: “The Ominous Orgy”
The Rap Sheet
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1w ago
Part of a series honoring the late author and blogger Bill Crider. The Ominous Orgy, by “Mallory T. Knight,” aka Bernhardt J. Hurwood (Award Books, 1969). Cover artist unidentified. This was the seventh of nine “sexpionage” novels by Hurwood (1926-1987), who was also a prolific writer of occult, erotica, and speculative fiction during the 1960s and ’70s. The Ominous Orgy stars Tim O’Shane, an agent for T.O.M.C.A.T. As blogger Randall Masteller explains in Spy Guys and Gals, [O’Shane] had been a Captain in the Marine Corps on special assignment to the Embassy in Paris in the fall of 1961 wh ..read more
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