Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Author R&R with Russell Wate

Russell lives in the UK, with his wife of 43 years Deborah, and their pride and joy are their eight grandchildren. He spent over thirty years as a police officer. Most of those years as a detective and most of those years as a senior homicide detective. He is best known internationally for his work on the murder of two 10 year old girls Holly Wells and Jessica Chapman. He is also well known for his work on developing in the UK and across the world, the police and the multi-agency response to the investigation of child deaths. He received an honor from the late Queen Elizabeth II for his work as a detective. He is academically a criminologist and his doctorate thesis was ‘Investigating child deaths the balanced approach between sensitivity and the investigative mindset.’ Today all of his professional work revolves around the safeguarding of children and vulnerable adults, carrying out reviews into their tragic deaths.


Russell has written five books in the DCI McFarlane crime mystery series, including his latest, Getting Away with Murder. When celebrated British violinist Arthur Barrington is found dead in his Vienna hotel room, a room he was sharing with his own father, the Austrian police are left scrambling. Was it an accident? Did he somehow take his own life? Or did someone kill him? With Arthur being a British citizen, and not much to go on, the Austrian police call in the help of DCI Sandy McFarlane from the Foreign Office to help them investigate this young man’s death. As Sandy digs deeper, the investigation takes a dark turn, leading him not only through the streets of Vienna but also back to his home turf and the quaint country lanes of Stamford, England. Will he be able to patch together this twisted case? Or will this be the one that finally stumps the infamous detective?

Russell stops by In Reference to Murder to take some Author R&R about researching and writing the book:


Because I was/am a homicide detective writing about the investigation parts of my novels come to me as second nature. However, there are always new techniques being developed that I need to keep on top of and I am luckily able to do this as I still carry out reviews into mostly child but also adult domestic murders. The techniques that are changing most frequently are those digital ones. The speed of change of modern technology and use of AI is a constant challenge for me to make sure, what I really try to achieve in my fiction books, that of authenticity of the investigation. Working with those senior detectives on these murders helps me to do this.

Alfred Lord Tennyson the Victorian poet said, ‘It is better have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.’ He wrote those words about a close friend of his Arthur Hallam whom he met at Trinity College in Cambridge, England. Arthur died as a 22 year old in a hotel room in Vienna in 1833. I thought 22 year old’s are not meant to die and I wondered what really happened to him. So, I set the story in modern times to ensure I could use all of the investigative techniques that I knew.

Off to Vienna I then went to carry out my research, because for me the feeling of ‘Place,’ also being authentic is so important to me. I don’t in my novels make up imaginary places, they are all the real places and real streets and landmarks. People often comment to me that they went and visited a certain town or place after reading about them in my novels, which please me greatly.

A key piece of research that took longer for this novel was getting my head around the structure of the Austrian Police Service and the law and techniques there, as they are different to those in the UK. Internet research was a key part to this for me but also finding a connection there to test out certain ideas on what could and couldn’t be feasible.

I have been told that all of the research was worthwhile and while the books and this one are an easy and entertaining read, the intricacies of the investigation reviewers find are very interesting. For me this is what makes my novels different to others in the genre as I take the reader for a walk with me in a homicide detectives shoes.

 

You can learn more about Russell Wate via his website and follow him on LInkedIn, Instagram, and Facebook. Getting Away with Murder is available from Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Bookshop.org, Waterstones, and Cranthorpe and Millner


Monday, May 11, 2026

Media Murder for Monday

It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:


THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES

Patrick Schwarzenegger has joined the S. Craig Zahler movie, The Bookie & The Bruiser, in which he will star in a dual role opposite Vince Vaughn and Theo James. The film is set in 1959 New York City and features a pensive Jewish fellow named Rivner (James) and an oversized Italian-American tough named Boscolo (Vaughn). Having served in World War II, the two return as changed men, no longer fitting into their old lives. Unwilling to take orders or play by the rules of polite society, the two partner up as a bookmaker and his enforcer and run an illicit gambling operation that proves highly profitable — but dangerous. Their operation thrives until they’re caught in a violent power struggle between the Mafia and an Irish gang, forcing them into a violent fight for survival. Schwarzenegger will play twin brothers Augie (a down-on-his-luck gambler) and Bernard (a family man upended by his brother’s deception).  


Stephen Dorff (True Detective) and Kevin Dillon (Entourage) are set to star in Red Stick Hoods, a Southern crime thriller set in Baton Rouge’s neon-lit underworld. Red Stick Hoods follows a seasoned criminal and his volatile young partner as a routine job spirals into a violent chain reaction neither can control. Lance Kawas (Good Thief) will direct and produce, with production getting underway this fall. The film marks the first original screenplay by crime novelist Victor Gischler (Fast Charlie).


Damian Lewis has joined Ella Purnell (Fallout) and Nicholas Galitzine (The Idea of You) in The Return of Stanley Atwell. Written and directed by Brian Welsh (Beats), the project is based on a story by Steven Soderbergh, who also serves as exec producer, and follows Stanley Atwell (Galitzine), the presumed dead son and heir to Lord Atwell’s title and fortune, who unexpectedly returns to the family estate, having escaped a decade of mysterious captivity. His shocking reappearance causes chaos as he finds his sister Beatrice fighting to claim his inheritance, while close friend Pamela (Purnell) manipulates his puzzling return and a dark family secret in a bid to seize control of the Atwell fortune.


Gerard Butler is set to star in the action-thriller, The Next, playing a sniper who receives an anonymous threat over the radio and must race against a ticking clock in order to save his family and 70,000 fans at the biggest sporting event on the globe – the World Cup. From a script by Aaron Benjamin and based on "real-life operatives," the film is due to begin production in early 2027.


TELEVISION/STREAMING


Apple TV has greenlit Disavowed, an action thriller series starring and executive produced by James Marsden (Paradise). In the series, Marsden will play legendary CIA Case Officer Brad Griffin, who is abruptly fired in the middle of a global hunt for an elusive assassin responsible for killing his colleague. Disgraced and outcast from the world of intelligence, all bets are off when Brad decides to go after the 15 million dollar federal bounty on the assassin’s head.


Netflix announced the upcoming fourth season of Netflix‘s spy thriller, The Night Agent, will be the series’ last. Gabriel Basso will return as agent Peter Sutherland.  In Season 3, agent Peter Sutherland (Basso) was called in to track down a young Treasury Agent who fled to Istanbul with sensitive government intel after killing his boss. This kicked off a sequence of events where Peter investigated a dark money network while avoiding its paid assassins. As previously announced, the drama has lined up more big-name series regular cast additions opposite Basso for its fourth and final season, including Bosch star Titus Welliver as a special DOJ prosecutor, Trevante Rhodes (Moonlight) as Peter’s new partner Dom, Li Jun Li (Sinners) as Dom’s wife, and Elizabeth Lail (You) as Peter’s ex-fiancée Zoe.


Jenna Elfman is set to play Stephen Fry’s boss and handler in the Fox drama series, The Interrogator. Elfman, who recently starred in three seasons of AMC’s Dark Winds, is the latest star to join the series, which was handed a 12-episode straight-to-series order for the 2026-27 season earlier this year. She joins the likes of Luke Kleintank and Michael Beach as a series regular in the show, which stars British comedian Fry as former MI6 agent Conrad Henry. When conventional methods have failed, Henry’s quirky charm, superior intellect, and mind-bending behavioral maneuvers make him the only man able to lockpick the minds of the world’s most dangerous criminals.


John Patrick Jordan (The Accountant 2) has joined the cast of AMC's Dark Winds for Season 5 in a key recurring role. Based on the Leaphorn & Chee book series by Tony Hillerman, Dark Winds is set in 1971 on a remote outpost of the Navajo Nation near Monument Valley and follows Lt. Joe Leaphorn (Zahn McClarnon) and Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon) of the Tribal Police. Season 4 focuses on the search for a missing Navajo girl, which takes Leaphorn, Chee, and Manuelito (Jessica Matten) from the safety of the Navajo Nation to the gritty terrain of 1970s Los Angeles in a race against the clock to save her from an obsessive killer with ties to organized crime. Details regarding the plot of Season 5 are currently under wraps, but Jordan will play Dale Hicks, an FBI agent newly stationed at the Sheriff’s department, alongside Leaphorn and Alvarado (Paola Núñez), who quickly gets wind of interference amongst his department’s investigations.


Prime Video's Scarpetta has assembled the new cast additions for Season 2, which started production last month in Nashville. David Arquette (The Mess We Made), Jodi Balfour (For All Mankind), William Zabka (Cobra Kai), Stella Baker (The Republic of Sarah), Kim Dickens (Deadwood), Troy Garity (Barbershop), Jerod Haynes (The Greatest), Michael “Killer Mike” Render (The Lowdown) and Holland Taylor (The Morning Show) are set to recur in the new installment of the forensic crime thriller. They join returning main cast members Nicole Kidman, who stars as Medical Examiner Kay Scarpetta, and Jamie Lee Curtis, who stars as her sister Dorothy Farinelli, Bobby Cannavale as Detective Pete Marino, Simon Baker as FBI profiler Benton Wesley, and Ariana DeBose as Kay’s tech-savvy niece Lucy Farinelli Watson.


ABC's High Potential has found a new showrunner, or showrunners, in the form of Nora and Lilla Zuckerman, who ran the breakout first season of Poker Face. They are replacing Todd Harthan, who stepped down in March after serving as showrunner for the first two seasons. Kaitlin Olson returns to star in the hit crime drama, playing Morgan Gillory, an intellectually gifted cleaning woman who becomes a police consultant.


It came down to the wire, but Law & Order has been handed a Season 26 renewal for 2026-27. The mothership Law & Order, which has spawned several spinoffs, has a star-heavy cast but has kept its size relatively small, with six series regulars this season, Tony Goldwyn, Hugh Dancy, Maura Tierney, Reid Scott, Odelya Halevi and David Ajala. Season 26 will apparently not be designated as final, although details are still being worked out regarding any potential budget cuts and other specifics.


Fox has given a Season 3 renewal for Murder in a Small Town. In the new 10-episode installment, returning leads Rossif Sutherland and Kristin Kreuk are being joined by Peter Gallagher (The O.C.) who has been tapped as a series regular. Based on the nine-book series by L.R. Wright, Murder In a Small Town follows Karl Alberg (Sutherland), who moves to a quiet, coastal town to soothe a psyche that has been battered by big-city police work and starts a relationship with the local librarian Cassandra (Kreuk). In a season-long arc, Gallagher will play Rod Finlayson, a charismatic, uber-independent, capable yet unreliable figure, whose arrival at the Gibsons’ marina on his beloved boat sets up a sequence of upheavals that Alberg and Cassandra will have to grapple with.


The broadcast networks and streaming services will be holding their "upfronts" today through Wednesday, too late for this blog post. Upfronts are usually where broadcasters reveal their lineups for the upcoming season to lure in advertisers. That being said, some scheduling news has already been announced, including over at NBC, which picked up four of its pilots to series, including the reboot of classic 1970s private eye drama, The Rockford Files, which will star David Boreanaz; Line of Fire, starring Peter Krause as part of a family of law enforcement agents; and Sunset P.I., which is a comedy, not a drama, about a group of Los Angeles-based private investigators. Sadly, another pilot that is not going forward is Key Witness, which would have featured Boreanaz's former Bones co-star Emily Deschanel as a criminal profiler working with the FBI, and the network also bailed on Puzzled, which was based on the “Puzzle Master” books by Danielle Trussoni.


PODCASTS/RADIO/AUDIO


Write Place, Wrong Crime interviewed Brian Brady about his long career in law enforcement and his Golden Gate mystery novels.


House of Mystery chatted with Royce Wilson about his law enforcement forensics experience and Riley Scott Novels.


On Crime Time FM, Victoria Selman spoke with Jack Butler, publishing director at Sphere Little Brown and Barbara Powell, founder of One Word Literary.

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Capital Crime Commendations


The Capital Crime festival today announced the shortlists for its annual Fingerprint Awards, which champion the very best in crime writing from the past year across the globe, as voted for by readers. The shortlists were selected by the festival’s board members from a longlist carefully curated by the Tastemakers Committee, a panel of leading independent bloggers and reviewers, who championed their standout titles across each category.  Readers can now vote for their preferred winners in each category on the Capital Crime website through Saturday, May 30th. The winners will be revealed at the Fingerprint Awards on the evening of Thursday, June 18th as part of the Capital Crime event in London at the Royal Leonardo Hotel. Congrats to this year's finalists!

Audiobook of the Year

  • Don’t Let Him In by Lisa Jewell
  • King of Ashes by  S A Cosby
  • We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough
  • Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney
  • Artificial Wisdom by Thomas R. Weaver

True Crime Book of the Year

  • Story of a Murder by Hallie Rubenhold
  • Nobody’s Girl by Virginia Roberts-Guiffre
  • Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers by Caroline Fraser
  • A History of Modern Britain in Twenty Murders by Prof. David Wilson
  • A Flower Travelled in My Blood by Haley Cohen Gilliland  

Debut Crime Book

  • Broken by Jón Atli Jónasson
  • Deadline by  Steph McGovern
  • Death at the White Hart by Chris Chibnall
  • The Day of the Roaring by Nina Bhadreshwar
  • This is Not A Game by Kelly Mullen

Genre-Busting Book

  • Kill Them with Kindness by Will Carver
  • Little Red Death by A. K. Benedict Book
  • Blood Like Ours by Stuart Neville
  • Small Fires by Ronnie Turner
  • Manhattan Down by Michael Cordy  

Historical Crime Book of the Year

  • The Art of A Lie by Laura Shepherd-Robinson
  • The Rush by Beth Lewis
  • Dangerous by Essie Fox
  • Burning Grounds by Abir Mukherjee
  • Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz 

Thriller Book of the Year

  • The Chemist by A A Dhand
  • Don’t Let Him In by Lisa Jewell
  • Human Remains by Jo Callaghan
  • The Man Made of Smoke by Alex North
  • Some of Us Are Liars by Fiona Cummins

Overall Crime Book of the Year

  • The Midnight King by Tariq Ashkanani
  • The Final Vow by M W Craven
  • Quantum of Menace by Vaseem Khan
  • The Good Father by Liam McIlveney
  • We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough

Killer Thrillers

 


The International Thriller Writers association announced the winners of the 2026 ITW Thriller Awards at the awards banquet at ThrillerFest XXI last evening at the New York Hilton Midtown, New York City. Congratulations to all the winners and finalists!


Best Standalone NovelMegan Collins – Cross My Heart (Atria)

Other finalists:

Ruth Knafo Setton – Zigzag Girl (Black Spring Press)
Gilly Macmillan – The Burning Library (William Morrow)
Sarah Pekkanen – The Locked Ward (St. Martin’s Press)
Olivia Worley – So Happy Together (Minotaur)

Best Series NovelRobert Crais – The Big Empty (Penguin/Putnam)

Other finalists:

James Byrne – Chain Reaction (Minotaur)
John McMahon – Head Cases (Minotaur)
Christopher Reich – The Tourists (Thomas & Mercer)
Vincent Zandri – Terminal Moonlight (Down & Out Books)

Best First NovelKelsey Cox – Party Of Liars (Minotaur)

Other finalists:

Chris Chibnall – Death At The White Hart (Pamela Dorman Books)
Sophie Stava – Count My Lies (Gallery/Scout Press)
Zoe B. Wallbrook – History Lessons (Soho Crime)
Liann Zhang – Julie Chan Is Dead (Atria)

Best AudiobookMichael Robotham – The White Crow (Simon & Schuster), narrated by Katy Sobey

Other finalists:

S. A. Cosby – King Of Ashes (Macmillan), narrated by Adam Lazarre-White
Mark Edwards – The Wasp Trap (Simon & Schuster), narrated by John Hopkins, Anna Burnett
Marisa Kashino – Best Offer Wins (Macmillan), narrated by Cia Court
Xan Kaur – When Devils Sing (Macmillan), narrated by Michael Crouch, Anjali Kunapaneni,  Jennifer Pickens, Landon Woodson
CN Mabry, N'Dia Rae – The Cheater's Wife (Simon Maverick), narrated by Ruffin Prentiss, Machelle Williams

Best Young Adult Novel:  Diana Rodriguez Wallach – The Silenced (Delacorte Press)

Other finalists:

Liz Lawson – Murder Between Friends (Delacorte Press)
Margot McGovern – This Stays Between Us (Penguin Young Readers)
Clay McLeod Chapman – Shiny Happy People (Delacorte Press)
Julie Soto – The Thrashers (Wednesday Books)

Best Short StoryJessica Van Dessel – “The Violent Season” (Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine)

Other finalists:

Katrina Carrasco – “Level Up” (Bywater Books)
Scott William Carter – “The Seduction of Dr. Dimension” (Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine)
Lee Child – “Eleven Numbers” (Amazon Original Stories)
David Lagercrantz – “False Note” (Amazon Original Stories)

Also receiving special recognition during the ThrillerFest XXI Awards Banquet:

  • 2026 ThrillerMaster, Lisa Scottoline
  • 2026 ThrillerMaster, Harlan Coben
  • 2026 Silver Bullet Award, Douglas Preston
  • 2026 Spotlight Guest, Rachel Howzell Hall
  • 2026 Spotlight Guest, Luis Alberto Urrea
  • 2026 Thriller Legend, Barbara Peters
  • 2026 ThrillerFan, Jordon Moblo
  • 2026 Thriller Volunteer of the Year, James L'Etoile





Sunday Music Treat

You're probably familiar with gamelan music and don't even know it. This form of music found in Indonesia that's mostly percussion instruments (gongs, xylophones, drums, etc.) has been used in many film scores and commercials. Here's a sample:

 


Saturday, May 9, 2026

Applauding the Anthonys

 


The finalists were announced today for the Anthony Awards, literary awards for excellence in crime fiction, which have been presented at the Bouchercon World Mystery Convention since 1986. The awards are named for the author, critic, and editor, Anthony Boucher (1911–1968). Voting will take place at Bouchercon in Calgary, with the winners announced at an awards ceremony on October 24, 2026. Congratulations to all the finalists!


Best Hardcover Novel

  • All This Could Be Yours by Hank Phillippi Ryan, Minotaur Books
  • The Black Wolf by Louise Penny, Minotaur Books
  • Crooks by Lou Berney, William Morrow & Company
  • Death of an Ex by Delia Pitts, Minotaur Books
  • King of Ashes by S.A. Cosby, Flatiron Books: Pine and Cedar

Best First Novel

  • History Lessons by Zoe B. Wallbrook, Soho Crime
  • Julie Chan is Dead by Liann Zhang, Atria Books,
  • Mask of the Deer Woman by Laurie L. Dove, Berkley Books
  • The Retirement Plan by Sue Hincenbergs, William Morrow & Company
  • Voices of the Elysian Fields by Michael Rigg, Level Best Books
  • Whiskey Business by Adrian Andover, Chestnut Avenue Press

Best Paperback Original/E-Book/ Audiobook Original Novel

  • Crimson Thaw by Bruce Robert Coffin, Severn River Publishing
  • Edge by Tracy Clark, Thomas & Mercer
  • River of Lies by James L'Etoile, Oceanview Publishing
  • This Violent Heart by Heather Levy, Montlake
  • Tricks of Fortune by Lina Chern, Bantam

Best Short Story

  • "AITA for Using My Husband's Hobby to Teach Him a Lesson", by Mindy Carlson, in Myopic Duplicity: Do the Ends Ever Justify the Means?, Kindle/Audible
  • "Brotherly Love", by Cheryl A. Head, in Every Day a Little Death: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of Stephen Sondheim, Level Short
  • "Finding Jimmy Baldwin", by Cheryl A. Head, in Crime Ink: Iconic: An Anthology of Crime Fiction Inspired by Queer Icons, Bywater Books
  • "Hollywood Prometheus", by Christa Faust, in Crime Ink: Iconic: An Anthology of Crime Fiction Inspired by Queer Icons, Bywater Books
  • "Six-Armed Robbery" by Ashley-Ruth M. Bernier, in Donna Andrews Presents Malice Domestic: Mystery Most Humorous, Wildside Press
  • "The Skies Are Red", by Richie Narvaez, in On Fire and Under Water: A Climate Change Crime Fiction Anthology, Rock and a Hard Place Press

Best Juvenile or YA

  • Death in the Cards by Mia P. Manansala, Delacorte Press
  • Miles in Time by Lee Matthew Goldberg, Wise Wolf Books
  • Risky Pursuit by Nancy G. West, Fire & Ice Young Adult Books
  • The Scammer by Tiffany D. Jackson, Quill Tree Books
  • Well-Behaved Children Seldom Make History by Chris Chan, Level Best Books

Best Critical or Nonfiction Work

  • Bone Valley: A True Story of Injustice and Redemption in the Heart of Florida by Gilbert King, Flatiron Books
  • L.A. Coroner: Thomas Noguchi and Death in Hollywood by Anne Soon Choi, Third State Books
  • Murderland: Crime and Bloodlust in the Time of Serial Killers by Caroline Fraser, Penguin Press
  • The Secret History of the Rape Kit: A True Crime Story by Pagan Kennedy, Vintage
  • Vacations Can Be Murder: A True Crime Lover's Travel Guide to New England by Dawn M. Barclay, Level Tru

Best Anthology or Collection

  • Blood on the Bayou: Case Closed: Bouchercon Anthology, Don Bruns (ed.), Down & Out Books
  • Crime Ink: Iconic: An Anthology of Crime Fiction Inspired by Queer Icons, John Copenhaver (ed.) and Salem West (ed.), Bywater Books
  • Hollywood Kills: An Anthology, Adam Meyer (ed.) and Alan Orloff (ed.), Level Short
  • On Fire and Under Water: A Climate Change Crime Fiction Anthology, Curtis Ippolito et al., Rock and a Hard Place Press
  • Whatever Kills the Pain by C.W. Blackwell, Rock and a Hard Place Press