Monday, January 30, 2023

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

Academy Award nominee, Amy Ryan, is joining the cast of the Apple Original Films thriller Wolves (working title) starring George Clooney and Brad Pitt, that will be written, directed, and produced by Jon Watts (Spider-Man: No Way Home). Ryan’s role is being kept under wraps, but the film will star Clooney and Pitt as two fixers who prefer to work alone but find themselves assigned to the same job. Ryan was nominated for an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in 2007 for her performance in Ben Affleck’s directorial debut, Gone Baby Gone, based on the novel by Dennis Lehane.

TELEVISION/STREAMING

Hulu is developing The Midcoast, a drama series based on Adam White’s bestselling novel, from Escape at Dannemora co-creator Brett Johnson, The Littlefield Company, and 20th Television. With a script adaptation by Johnson, The Midcoast is an hourlong drama set on the scenic coast of Maine exploring the rise and fall of Ed Thatch, a lobster fisherman turned blue collar criminal with an unstable devotion to his wife. From the blurb, the story "explores the machinations of privilege, the dark recesses of the American dream, and the lies we tell as we try, at all costs, to protect the ones we love."

Bill Camp (The Queen’s Gambit) and Elizabeth Marvel (The Dropout) have been tapped to star opposite Jake Gyllenhaal and Ruth Negga in Presumed Innocent, Apple TV+’s upcoming limited series from David E. Kelley, J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot, and Warner Bros. Additionally, Greg Yaitanes (House of the Dragon) has come on board as director on the series alongside Anne Sewitsky. Inspired by Scott Turow’s courtroom thriller, Presumed Innocent is the story of a horrific murder that upends the Chicago Prosecuting Attorneys’ office when one of its own is suspected of the crime. The book was published in 1987 and was turned into a 1990 feature starring Harrison Ford in the role Gyllenhaal is taking on.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

A new Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast is up featuring something a bit different, an excerpt from a sci-fi novel that has a mystery side to it, "The Path" by Peter Riva, read by actor Terrance McArthur.

Crime Time FM host, Paul Burke, spoke with the director of American Murderer, Matthew Gentile, about the movie starring Tom Pelphrey and Ryan Philippe, which is based on a true story about a dogged FBI agent determined to take down a charismatic con man.

On the latest episode of It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club, Missy, Tracey, and Ann talked about a few of the new movies they enjoyed over the past few weeks. Each of these movies is currently available on Netflix including The Glass Onion and more.

On Read or Dead, Katie McLain Horner and Kendra Winchester discussed cozy mystery novels.

Friday, January 27, 2023

Agatha Accolades

The annual Malice Domestic conference announced this year's finalists for the Agatha Awards. The Agatha Awards celebrate the traditional mystery, best typified by the works of Agatha Christie, for whom the award is named. The genre is loosely defined as mysteries that contain no explicit sex, excessive gore, or gratuitous violence, and would not be classified as "hard-boiled." Winners will be presented Saturday, April 29, 2023, during Malice Domestic 35 in Bethesda, Maryland.

Best Contemporary Novel

  • Bayou Book Thief by Ellen Byron (Berkley Prime Crime)
  • Death By Bubble Tea by Jennifer J. Chow (Berkley)
  • Fatal Reunion by Annette Dashofy (Level Best Books)
  • Dead Man's Leap by Tina de Bellegarde (Level Best Books)
  • A World of Curiosities by Louise Penny (Minotaur)

Best Historical Novel

  • The Counterfeit Wife by Mally Becker (Level Best Books)
  • Because I Could Not Stop for Death by Amanda Flower (Berkley)
  • The Lindbergh Nanny by Mariah Fredericks (Minotaur)
  • In Place of Fear by Catriona McPherson (Mobius)
  • Under a Veiled Moon by Karen Odden (Crooked Lane Books)

Best First Novel

  • Cheddar Off Dead by Korina Moss (St. Martin’s)
  • Death in the Aegean by M. A. Monnin (Level Best Books)
  • The Bangalore Detectives Club by Harini Nagendra (Constable)
  • Devil’s Chew Toy by Rob Osler (Crooked Lane Books)
  • The Finalist by Joan Long (Level Best Books)
  • The Gallery of Beauties by Nina Wachsman (Level Best Books)

Best Short Story

  • "Beauty and the Beyotch," by Barb Goffman (Sherlock Holmes Magazine, Feb. 2022)
  • "There Comes a Time," by Cynthia Kuhn (Malice Domestic Murder Most Diabolical) Wildside Press
  • "Fly Me to the Morgue," by Lisa Q Mathews,( Malice Domestic Mystery Most Diabolical) Wildside Press
  • "The Minnesota Twins Meet Bigfoot," by Richie Narvaez, (Land of 10,000 Thrills, Bouchercon Anthology) Down & Out Books
  • "The Invisible Band," by Art Taylor (Edgar & Shamus Go Golden) Down & Out Books

Best Non-Fiction

  • The Life of Crime: Detecting the History of Mysteries and Their Creators by Martin Edwards (HarperCollins)
  • The Handbook to Agatha Christie: The Bloomsbury Handbook to Agatha Christie by Mary Anna Evans and J. C. Bernthal (Bloomsbury Academic)
  • The Science of Murder: The Forensics of Agatha Christie by Carla Valentine (Sourcebooks)
  • Promophobia: Taking the Mystery Out of Promoting Crime Fiction, Diane Vallere Ed.(Sisters in Crime)
  • Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman, by Lucy Worsley (Pegasus Crime)

Best Children's/YA Mystery

  • Daybreak on Raven Island by Fleur Bradley (Viking Books for Young People)
  • In Myrtle Peril by Elizabeth C. Bunce (Algonquin Young Readers)
  • #shedeservedit by Greg Herren (Bold Strokes Books)
  • Sid Johnson and the Phantom Slave Stealer by Frances Schoonmaker (Auctus Publishers)
  • Enola Holmes and the Elegant Escapade by Nancy Springer (Wednesday Books)

Thursday, January 26, 2023

Mystery Melange

In addition to the announcement of the Edgar Awards by Mystery Writers of America, various other tributes also related to Edgar Allan Poe transpired around his birthday anniversary this month. The decades-long "Poe Toaster" Baltimore tradition continued at Westminster Presbyterian Church in which an unnamed man paid tribute at Poe's gravesite with flowers, words in Latin, and a toast. Several publications also contributed to the lore, as in the Washington Post's look at Poe's brief military journey; and Raidió Teilifís Éireann's take on how Poe became the darling of the maligned and misunderstood. Untapped New York listed "10 Places to Remember Edgar Allan Poe in NYC." And if you want to own a piece of Poe memorabilia all your own, you can bid on a rare signed letter by Poe at the online Bonhams Skinner's Fine Books and Rare Manuscripts Sale. Plus, coming up Feb 16 – Mar 2 at the 92 Street Y in NYC, Warburg Institute Professor and author John Tresch will conduct a mini-workshop on a lesser-known side to Poe: a man of science who was an avid consumer of scientific developments.
 

Janet Rudolph's Mystery Fanfare blog is celebrating the Chinese New Year with a look back at Mystery Readers Journal: Mystery in Asia (Volume 34: 3: 2018), and a list of mysteries that take place during the Lunar New Year.

The Mystery Writers of America Midwest chapter is sponsoring Queering the Crime Genre, a panel discussion with Greg Herren, John Copenhaver, JM Redmann, and Robyn Gigl, hosted by Anne Laughlin and Meredith Doench. This an online event on February 9 at 6:00pm Cental / 7:00pm Eastern, and you can register for free to attend via this link.

A Katonah Village Library mystery and thriller writers panel will be held Thursday Feb. 2, at 6:30 p.m. Fran Hauser will moderate the panel featuring authors Wendy Corsi Staub, Katie Sise, Wendy Walker, and Liao Butler discussing their latest releases. The event in Katonah, New York, is free and open to the public with no advance registration required.

More and more crime conferences are returning to in-person events after going online only during Covid. The California Crime Writers Conference (CCWC) will also be back with an in-person, two-day event to be held June 10-11, 2023 at the Hilton Los Angeles (Culver City). This year’s Guests of Honor are Deborah Crombie, bestselling and award-winning author of the Duncan Kincaid and Gemma James detective series, and critically acclaimed crime novelist Rachel Howzell Hall.

Twenty years after the end of the iconic television series Columbo, featuring Peter Falk as the seemingly bumbling but shrewd Los Angeles homicide detective, Tumblr users have rediscovered "the ultimate comfort TV show" and turned it into one of the internet's new darlings.

Writing for Book Riot, Adam Rizer investigated the history of "the Butler Did It" trope in crime fiction.

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author, Allison Brennan, applied the Page 69 Test to her new novel, Don't Open the Door.

If you're currently part of the dating scene and also love mysteries, you might want to help this guy out.

This week's crime poem at the 5-2 weekly is "Roe vs. Wade Falls" by Jennifer Lagier.

In the Q&A roundup, Indie Crime Scene interviewed Chad Boudreaux, whose debut novel, Scavenger Hunt, will be published on January 31, 2023; Writers Who Kill spoke with Annette Dashofy about the first book in her new series featuring photographer Emma Anderson and police detective Matthias Honeywell, Where the Guilty Hide; and Nerd Daily spoke with thriller author Allison Brennan about Don’t Open The Door, the second installment in her Regan Merritt series and follows Regan and her husband, Grant, seeking justice for their murdered 10 year-old son.

Monday, January 23, 2023

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

The thriller drama, Rainbow Six, a sequel to the 2021 film Tom Clancy’s Without Remorse, is now officially moving forward. Helmed by the director behind the John Wick movies, Chad Stahelski, and based on Tom Clancy’s 1988 novel (which also has long been a popular video game franchise), Rainbow Six will star Michael B. Jordan reprising his role as John Kelly, a Navy SEAL who becomes a CIA operative. The actor’s 2021 debut as the Tom Clancy character was released straight to Amazon Prime. Clancy's novel sees Jordan's character (named John Clark in the novels) become the newly named head of Rainbow, an international task force dedicated to combating terrorism. In a trial by fire, he must stop a terrorist group of men and women so extreme that their success could literally mean the end of life on earth as we know it.

TELEVISION/STREAMING

PBS’s MASTERPIECE Mystery! announced that it will co-produce and broadcast Moonflower Murders, a new six-part drama based on the best-selling novel written by Anthony Horowitz. The first book in that series, Magpie Murders, was adapted as a PBS miniseries in 2022. Returning in the lead roles they originated in Magpie Murders are Academy Award-nominee Lesley Manville (The Crown, Phantom Thread) as editor-turned-sleuth, Susan Ryeland, and Timothy McMullan (Patrick Melrose, The Crown) as famous literary detective, Atticus Pünd. Published in 2020, Moonflower Murders was lauded as "a fiendishly plotted crime novel, with a fabulous twist" by The Guardian and picks up where Magpie Murders left off: Susan has left the cut-throat world of publishing and is living in Crete with her longtime boyfriend, Andreas. She ends up returning to London when she is asked to investigate a mystery relating to Alan Conway, the author of the best-selling Atticus Pünd mysteries, whose death changed her life in Magpie Murders.

Fox is developing a one-hour drama about undercover FBI agents from Joy Blake (Beacon 23), The Nacelle Company, and Fox Entertainment Studios. Written and executive produced by Blake, the untitled project follows a female FBI agent suffering a bad case of career burnout who is sent to train a team of ambitious, determined rookies in what it takes to go deep undercover. Former FBI agents Scott Payne and Melissa Fortunato are serving as consultants to the project.

Only Murders in the Building is adding the legendary Meryl Streep to the third season cast. In a surprise announcement made via social media, star Selena Gomez posted a behind-the-scenes video that shows her with her co-stars Steve Martin, Martin Short, Andrea Martin, and Paul Rudd. Suddenly, Streep pops up to make sure her new castmates are comfortable with pillows. Hulu confirmed the news but didn't provide additional information about Streep’s character.

NBC has ordered a pilot for the drama series Murder by the Book from Good Girls creator, Jenna Bans. Good Girls executive producer, Bill Krebs, will pen the script with Bans. Starring actor/comedian "Retta," the story will follow a big city Instafamous book reviewer who takes a page from the murder mystery books she reviews and becomes an unlikely detective to uncover the shocking truths about an eccentric seaside town. The project, which had received a put pilot commitment in September, reteams Retta with Bans and Krebs after the actress previously starred in all four seasons of NBC’s crime comedy-drama, Good Girls.

Netflix’s The Lincoln Lawyer has added Matt Angel (Dave) to its Season 2 cast in a recurring role. Angel joins previously announced additions Yaya DaCosta and Lana Parrilla. He will portray Henry Dahl, the host of a successful true crime podcast. Distrustful of Henry’s motives, Mickey (Manuel Garcia-Rulfo) warns him not to interfere with an ongoing case. Based on the series of bestselling novels by Michael Connelly, The Lincoln Lawyer follows the redemption of Mickey Haller, a Los Angeles attorney who regains much of what he lost due to addiction with hard work and hustle. His success is also thanks to his devoted supporters: his ex-wives Maggie (Neve Campbell) and Lorna (Becki Newton), his driver and unofficial sponsor Izzy (Jazz Raycole), and the best investigator in town—and Lorna’s newly minted fiancé—Cisco (Angus Sampson).

Sharon Taylor (Fire Country) has joined the cast of the Amazon Original series, Cross, which stars Aldis Hodge in the role of Alex Cross. Taylor will portray Lt. Oracene Massey, Alex’s immediate superior at the Metro PD, and replaces the originally cast Karen LeBlanc, who exited due to scheduling conflicts. Alex Cross is a detective and forensic psychologist, uniquely capable of digging into the psyches of killers and their victims, in order to identify — and ultimately capture — the murderers. He is brilliant, flawed, and full of contradictions. A doting father and family man, Cross is single-minded to the point of obsession when he hunts killers. He is desperate for love, but his wife’s murder has left him too damaged to receive it. The series, which is based on the bestselling books by James Patterson, also stars Ryan Eggold, Isaiah Mustafa, Alona Tal, Johnny Ray Gill, Eloise Mumford, and Siobhan Murphy.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

Speaking of Mysteries featured City Under One Roof, Academy Award-nominated screenwriter Iris Yamashita’s debut crime fiction novel.

On the latest Crime Writers of Color podcast, Robert Justice interviewed Sulari Gentill, author of The Woman in the Library.

Spybrary Spy Book podcast host, Shane Whaley, interviewed David Brierley (Big Bear, Little Bear), joined by Mike Ripley, publisher, thriller critic, and author of the award-winning "Angel" series of comedy thrillers.

The Red Hot Chili Writers chatted with crime writer Helen Fields to discuss her new novel, The Institution; dissect Prince Andrew's autobiography; and talk about their favorite biographies, "quite possibly the best biographies of all time."

On the Writer's Detective Bureau, Detective Adam Richardson took a look at US Marshal Task Forces; warrant time restrictions; and "good faith."

It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club chatted with Claire Douglas, author of The Girls Who Disappeared.

Crime Time FM's Paul Burke continued his look ahead to the crime titles of 2023 with the second part in that series.

THEATRE

The world premiere of Rebus: A Game Called Malice will be staged at Queen's Theatre Hornchurch in London, February 2-5. The play is written exclusively for the stage by Ian Rankin (based on the character from Rankin's novels) and Simon Read, and will be directed by award winner Robin Lefevre. The lead role will be played by John Michie (best known for his roles as DI Robbie Ross in STV’s Taggart and Karl Munro in ITV’s Coronation Street). Michie will be joined by Rebecca Charles, Billy Hartman, Emily Joyce, Forbes Masson, and Emma Noakes. A splendid dinner party concludes with a game created by the hostess. A murder in a stately home needs to be solved. Suspects, clues and red herrings await… but the dinner-party guests have secrets of their own, threatened by the very game they are playing. And among them is Inspector John Rebus. True crime is his calling – is he playing an alternative game, one to which only he knows the rules? There is danger with every twist and turn – and a shocking discovery will send this game called Malice hurtling towards a gasp-inducing conclusion. (HT to Shots Magazine)

Thursday, January 19, 2023

Mystery Melange

Joffe Books announced the shortlist for the Joffe Books Prize for Crime Writers of Colour 2022. This year's pool of entries covered the gamut of gritty police procedurals to wrenching domestic suspense, evocative historical mysteries to page-turning cosies. Out of the longlist of twenty, five stood out, forming the official shortlist: The Labelled Bones by FQ Yeoh; Everyone Is Going To Know by Kingsley Pearson; The Smiling Mandarin by Mai Le Dinh; Red Obsession by Rose Lorimer; and Savage Territory by Sam Genever. The winner will be announced in January 2023.

More sad news for fans of mystery-themed bookstores, as Toronto’s Sleuth of Baker Street, announced it is closing. After forty years, owners Marian Misters and J.D. Singh have decided to retire from both work and bookselling. As Marian noted, "Spending forty years doing something we love has been a great pleasure, but the time has come for other things. There will be a transition period, naturally. What the transition will look like exactly, or how long the transition period will be, is not perfectly clear in our minds—there are a few moving parts and after forty years, it’s with considerable trepidation that we undertake this last, final, turn to our bookselling career—but our need and desire to do this is quite clear. We’ll stumble through this and make decisions as they need to be made."

The 15th year of Writers' Police Academy will once again offer hands-on training classes and sessions taught by leading law enforcement and forensics experts, scientists, and other industry professionals. This year's they've also added a special focus on homicide investigations that includes classes taught by top homicide and crime scene investigators, a coroner who’s also a flight nurse and author, evidence experts, SWAT team members, narcotics experts, behavioral health professionals, use of force and tactical response experts. This year's Guest of Honor is Hank Phillippi Ryan, and the special guest presenters include photojournalist Mike De Sisti, homicide detective/TV personality Steven Spingola (Cold Justice), and renowned serial killer expert Dr. Katherine Ramsland. Registration for the 2023 Writers’ Police Academy is scheduled to open February 1, 2023. 

There will be an exhibition featuring Sherlock Holmes materials from Occidental College's Ned Guymon Collection of Mystery and Detective Fiction during the 55th California International Antiquarian Book Fair held February 10–12 in Pasadena. The collection, one of the world's largest in the genre, is composed of some 16,000 items including such Holmesian treasures as an 1887 copy of A Study in Scarlet and other first edition books, magazines, and rare, fascinating ephemera.  (HT to Elizabeth Foxwell at The Bunburyist)

As crime fiction continues to dominate sales and its critical reception grows, it has become an increasingly important part of Creative Writing courses. Clues: A Journal of Detection is looking for 500-750 word contributions for a new regular feature for the journal, a forum on teaching. Accounts from all classroom spaces (college, high school, graduate school, prisons, etc.) and teachers at all stages of their careers are welcome, as well as student voices.  Submissions are due February 1, 2023. For more information or to submit essays, please contact Jamie Bernthal- Hooker (j.bernthal-hooker@uos.ac.uk).

On January 26, Penguin Modern Classics will publish three well-regarded novels from the father of the spy thriller, Eric Ambler (1909-1998), including Passage of Arms, The Light of Day, and A Kind of Anger. Ambler is often said to have invented the modern suspense novel, and his disciples include John le Carré, Alfred Hitchcock, Graham Greene, and Len Deighton. (HT to Shots Magazine

This week's crime poem at the 5-2 weekly is "George Santos, Republican Representative-Elect From New York's Third Congressional District" by Robert Cooperman.

In the Q&A roundup, thriller author MHR Geer joined Lisa Haselton to talk about Geer's new suspense novel, Assumed; Grace Topping chatted with Kait Carson at Writers Who Kill to discuss the reissue of her book, Death by Blue Water; and Thomas Perry took the Page 69 test about his latest thriller, Murder Book.

Edgar Excellence

As Mystery Writers of America celebrates the 214th anniversary of the birth of Edgar Allan Poe, MWA announced the nominees for the 2023 Edgar Allan Poe Awards, honoring the best in mystery fiction, non-fiction, and television published or produced in 2022. The 77th Annual Edgar Awards will be celebrated on April 27, 2023, at the New York Marriott Marquis Times Square.
 

BEST NOVEL

Devil House by John Darnielle (Farrar, Straus and Giroux - MCD)
Like a Sister by Kellye Garrett (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books)
Gangland by Chuck Hogan (Hachette Book Group – Grand Central Publishing)
The Devil Takes You Home by Gabino Iglesias (Hachette Book Group – Little, Brown & Co./Mulholland Books)
Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka (HarperCollins – William Morrow)
The Maid by Nita Prose (Penguin Random House – Ballantine Books)

BEST FIRST NOVEL BY AN AMERICAN AUTHOR
 
Jackal by Erin E. Adams (Penguin Random House - Bantam)
Don’t Know Tough by Eli Cranor (Soho Press – Soho Crime)
Shutter by Ramona Emerson (Soho Press – Soho Crime)
More Than You’ll Ever Know by Katie Gutierrez (HarperCollins – William Morrow)
Portrait of a Thief by Grace D. Li (Penguin Random House – Tiny Reparations Books)

BEST PAPERBACK ORIGINAL
 
Quarry’s Blood by Max Allan Collins (Hard Case Crime)

On a Quiet Street by Seraphina Nova Glass (Harlequin Trade Publishing – Graydon House
Or Else by Joe Hart (Amazon Publishing – Thomas & Mercer)
Cleopatra’s Dagger by Carole Lawrence (Amazon Publishing – Thomas & Mercer)
A Familiar Stranger by A.R. Torre (Amazon Publishing – Thomas & Mercer)
 
BEST FACT CRIME

Slenderman: Online Obsession, Mental Illness, and the Violent Crime of Two Midwestern Girls by Kathleen Hale (Grove Atlantic – Grove Press)
Tell Me Everything: The Story of a Private Investigation by Erika Krouse (Flatiron Books)
Trailed: One Woman's Quest to Solve the Shenandoah Murders by Kathryn Miles (Hachette Book Group – Workman Publishing – Algonquin Books)
American Caliph: The True Story of a Muslim Mystic, a Hollywood Epic, and the 1977 Siege of Washington, D.C. by Shahan Mufti (Farrar, Straus and Giroux)
American Demon: Eliot Ness and the Hunt for America's Jack the Ripper by Daniel Stashower (Minotaur Books)

 
BEST CRITICAL/BIOGRAPHICAL
 
The Life of Crime: Detecting the History of Mysteries and Their Creators by Martin Edwards (HarperCollins – Collins Crime Club)
The Bloomsbury Handbook to Agatha Christie by Mary Anna Evans & J.C. Bernthal (Bloomsbury – Bloomsbury Academic)
The Crime World of Michael Connelly: A Study of His Works and Their Adaptations by David Geherin (McFarland)
The Woman Beyond the Attic: The V.C. Andrews Story by Andrew Neiderman (Simon & Schuster – Gallery Books)
Agatha Christie: An Elusive Woman by Lucy Worsley (Pegasus Books – Pegasus Crime)
 
BEST SHORT STORY

"Red Flag," Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by Gregory Fallis (Dell Magazines)
"Backstory," Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by Charles John Harper (Dell Magazines)
"Locked-In," Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by William Burton McCormick (Dell Magazines)
“The Amnesty Box," Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms by Tim McLoughlin (Akashic Books)

“First You Dream, Then You Die," Black is the Night by Donna Moore (Titan Books)
 
BEST JUVENILE

The Swallowtail Legacy: Wreck at Ada’s Reef by Michael D. Beil (Holiday House – Pixel+Ink)
The Area 51 Files by Julie Buxbaum (Random House Children's Books - Delacorte Press)
Aggie Morton Mystery Queen: The Seaside Corpse by Marthe Jocelyn (Penguin Random House Canada - Tundra Books)

Adventures on Trains: Murder on the Safari Star by M.G. Leonard & Sam Sedgman (Macmillan Children's Publishing - Feiwel & Friends)
Chester Keene Cracks the Code by Kekla Magoon (Random House Children's Books - Wendy Lamb Books)
 
BEST YOUNG ADULT
 
Pretty Dead Queens by Alexa Donne (Random House Children’s Books – Crown BFYR)
Frightmares by Eva V. Gibson (Random House Children’s Books - Underlined)
The Black Girls Left Standing by Juliana Goodman (Macmillan Children’s Books – Feiwel & Friends)
The Red Palace by June Hur (Macmillan Children’s Books – Feiwel & Friends)
Lock the Doors by Vincent Ralph (Sourcebooks - Fire)

BEST TELEVISION EPISODE TELEPLAY

“One Mighty and Strong" - Under the Banner of Heaven, Written by Brandon Boyce (Hulu/FX)
“Episode 1” – Magpie Murders, Written by Anthony Horowitz (Masterpiece/PBS)
“Episode 1" - Karen Pirie, Written by Emer Kenny (BritBox)
“When Harry Met Fergus" - Harry Wild, Written by David Logan (Acorn TV)
“The Reagan Way" - Blue Bloods, Written by Siobhan Byrne O’Connor (CBS)

"Eighteen Wheels A Predator" - Law & Order: SVU, Written by Brianna Yellen & Monet Hurst-Mendoza (NBC Universal)
 
ROBERT L. FISH MEMORIAL AWARD

"Dogs in the Canyon," Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Mark Harrison (Dell Magazines)

 
THE SIMON & SCHUSTER MARY HIGGINS CLARK AWARD
 
Because I Could Not Stop for Death by Amanda Flower (Penguin Random House - Berkley)
The Woman in the Library by Sulari Gentill (Sourcebooks – Poisoned Pen Press)
The Disinvited Guest by Carol Goodman (HarperCollins – William Morrow)
A Dreadful Splendor by B.R. Myers (HarperCollins – William Morrow)
Never Name the Dead by D.M. Rowell (Crooked Lane Books)
 
THE G.P. PUTNAM’S SONS SUE GRAFTON MEMORIAL AWARD
 
Secret Lives by Mark de Castrique (Sourcebooks – Poisoned Pen Press)
An Unforgiving Place by Claire Kells (Crooked Lane Books)
Hideout by Louisa Luna (Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group – Doubleday)
Behind the Lie by Emilya Naymark (Crooked Lane Books)
Secrets Typed in Blood by Stephen Spotswood (Knopf Doubleday Publishing – Doubleday)
 
THE LILIAN JACKSON BRAUN MEMORIAL AWARD
 
The Shadow of Memory by Connie Berry (Crooked Lane Books)
Buried in a Good Book by Tamara Berry (Sourcebooks – Poisoned Pen Press)
Smile Beach Murder by Alicia Bessette (Penguin Random House – Berkley)
Desert Getaway by Michael Craft (Brash Books)
The Marlow Murder Club by Robert Thorogood (Sourcebooks – Poisoned Pen Press)
 
SPECIAL AWARDS
 
GRAND MASTER
 
Michael Connelly
Joanne Fluke
 
RAVEN AWARD
 
Crime Writers of Color
Eddie Muller for Noir Alley and The Noir Foundation
 
ELLERY QUEEN AWARD
 
The Strand Magazine

Wednesday, January 18, 2023

Lefty Love

Left Coast Crime 2023 — Trouble in Tucson— will be presenting four Lefty Awards at the convention in Tucson, Arizona. Registrants of the Left Coast Crime Conventions in Tucson and Albuquerque were able to nominate three titles in each category. The 2023 Lefty awards will be voted on at the convention and presented at the Awards Banquet on Saturday, March 18, 2023, at the El Conquistador Tucson.

 

Lefty Nominees for Best Humorous Mystery Novel

  • Ellen Byron, Bayou Book Thief (Berkley Prime Crime)
  • Jennifer J. Chow, Death by Bubble Tea (Berkley Prime Crime)
  • A.J. Devlin, Five Moves of Doom (NeWest Press)
  • T.G. Herren, A Streetcar Named Murder (Crooked Lane Books)
  • Catriona McPherson, Scot in a Trap (Severn House)

Lefty Nominees for Best Historical Mystery Novel
The Bill Gottfried Memorial for books covering events before 1970

  • Dianne Freeman, A Bride’s Guide to Marriage and Murder (Kensington Books)
  • Catriona McPherson, In Place of Fear (Mobius)
  • Wanda M. Morris, Anywhere You Run (William Morrow)
  • Karen Odden, Under a Veiled Moon (Crooked Lane Books)
  • Ann Parker, The Secret in the Wall (Poisoned Pen Press)
  • Iona Whishaw, Framed in Fire (Touchwood Editions)

Lefty Nominees for Best Debut Mystery Novel

  • Erin E. Adams, Jackal (Bantam Books)
  • Eli Cranor, Don’t Know Tough (Soho Crime)
  • Ramona Emerson, Shutter (Soho Crme)
  • Meredith Hambrock, Other People’s Secrets (Crooked Lane Books)
  • Harini Nagendra, The Bangalore Detectives Club (Pegasus Crime)
  • Rob Osler, Devil’s Chew Toy (Crooked Lane Books)
  • Jane Pek, The Verifiers (Vintage Books)

Lefty Nominees for Best Mystery Novel

  • Kellye Garrett, Like a Sister (Mulholland Books)
  • Laurie R. King, Back to the Garden (Bantam Books)
  • James L’Etoile, Dead Drop (Level Best Books)
  • Gigi Pandian, Under Lock & Skeleton Key (Minotaur Books)
  • Louise Penny, A World of Curiosities (Minotaur Books)
  • Alex Segura, Secret Identity (Flatiron Books)

 

To be eligible for the 2023 Lefty Awards, titles must have been published for the first time in the United States or Canada during 2022, in book or ebook format. (If published in other countries before 2022, a book is still eligible if it meets the US or Canadian publication requirement.)

Monday, January 16, 2023

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

Alona Tal (SEAL Team), Jake Busey (Predators), and Craig Sheffer (A River Runs Through It) have joined Mark Feuerstein, Neal McDonough, Dermot Mulroney, and Christopher Lloyd in Man in the Long Black Coat, from director Salvador Litvak. The film tells the story of a troubled teen accused of a shocking murder, and the unlikely detective who seeks to prove his innocence and expose a far more sinister truth.

Paul Ben-Victor (Plane) and Mercedes Varnado (The Mandalorian) are the newest additions to the cast of the action-thriller, The Collective, which follows a group of righteous assassins. The members take aim at a highly sophisticated human trafficking ring backed by a network of untouchable billionaires. With their backs against the wall, The Collective has no choice but to put their most important mission in the hands of rookie assassin, Sam Alexander (Lucas Till). What he lacks in experience he makes up for in savvy, grit, and a keen ability to improvise in the most dangerous situations. He is aided on his journey by Hugo (Tyrese Gibson) and Liam (Don Johnson), former CIA operatives turned rogue vigilantes.

The first trailer was released for Marlowe, the upcoming film starring Liam Neeson as Raymond Chandler's iconic detective, which premieres on February 15. Academy Award-winning screenwriter William Monahan (The Departed) adapted the project, with Neil Jordan (The Brave One) directing. The noir crime thriller is set in late 1930’s Los Angeles and centers around a street-wise, down-on-his-luck detective, Philip Marlowe, who is hired to find the ex-lover of a glamorous heiress (Diane Kruger), daughter of a well-known movie star (Jessica Lange). The disappearance unearths a web of lies, and soon Marlowe is involved in a dangerous, deadly investigation where everyone involved has something to hide.

TELEVISION/STREAMING

AMC Networks has acquired the rights to John Maxim’s Bannerman spy book series for development as a potential television series. In the first of the books, The Bannerman Solution, Paul Bannerman was once his nation’s deadliest weapon – a top covert operative heading up the most lethal group of contract agents and network specialists in all of Europe. Now Bannerman is a liability, so the agency makes the decision that Bannerman and his people must be quietly eliminated. But Bannerman has other plans.

MGM+, formerly Epix, unveiled its programming lineup and development slate. The newly rebranded streaming service will launch on January 15 in conjunction with the season three premiere of Godfather of Harlem starring and executive produced by Forest Whitaker. Among the new projects are The Emperor of Ocean Park, a suspenseful take on Stephen L. Carter’s best-selling novel that centers around the death of a Black judge, whose daughter believes was actually murdered; Hoodlum, based on the 1997 MGM film written by Chris Brancato and based on the true story of 1930s Harlem numbers queen, Stephanie St. Clair, and her rise to prominence; and the docuseries, Wonderland Murders & the Secret History of Hollywood, a project executive produced by Bosch novelist, Michael Connelly.

In a competitive situation, veteran producer Clark Peterson (Monster, Rampart) and his Story and Film, Inc, has optioned Sara Foster’s thriller novel, The Hush, for development as a television series. Set in a near-future, surveillance-state London, The Hush follows a group of women who join forces with a midwife to save her daughter, who is the latest in a string of pregnant teens that have mysteriously disappeared. In the six months since the first case of a terrifying new epidemic, the government has passed sweeping new laws to monitor all citizens, and young pregnant women are vanishing without a trace.

Independent studio, wiip, has preemptively acquired An Honest Man, an upcoming novel by Michael Koryta, to develop as a television drama series, with Koryta attached to pen the adaptation. An Honest Man tells the story of Israel Pike, a man just released from prison for killing his own father, who returns to his ancestral island home in northern Maine and quickly becomes the primary suspect when seven men, including two Senate rivals and the prosecutor who sent Pike to prison, are found dead aboard a yacht drifting offshore. Lt. Jenn Salazar of the Maine State Police takes the lead in the investigation on Salvation Point Island, operating with secrets of her own to protect.

Nicholas Logan and Jeri Ryan have joined the cast of Dark Winds, AMC’s Western noir thriller series based on Tony Hillerman’s popular Leaphorn & Chee books. Set in 1971 on a remote outpost of the Navajo Nation near Monument Valley, Dark Winds follows Lieutenant Joe Leaphorn (Zahn McClarnon) and officer Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon) of the Tribal Police as they are besieged by a series of seemingly unrelated crimes. Logan plays Colton Wolf, a twisted assassin with a secret that puts him on a collision course with Leaphorn. Ryan portrays Rosemary Vines, a femme fatale whose physical frailties hide her naked ambition as she leaves a trail of bodies in her wake. Jessica Matten, Deanna Allison, and Elva Guerra also star.

As part of a press tour, actor Timothy Olyphant talked about returning to Justified amid controversy surrounding police misconduct in the U.S. Based on the books by Elmore Leonard and his character of U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens, Justified ended in 2015, but the crime drama is returning in the form of Justified: City Primeval, expected to premiere in summer 2023. Olyphant noted that "We’re not a show that’s a cheerleader for law enforcement" and that the storylines won’t gloss over the topic of police brutality and inequality. Set ten years after the finale of the original Justified, the new crime drama finds Givens juggling work with raising his teenage daughter Willa (Olyphant’s real-life daughter Vivian), with the action moving from Kentucky to the city of Detroit, where Givens joins the police department’s investigation into "The Oklahoma Wildman," known as Clement Mansel (Boyd Holbrook).

AMC announced that the premiere date for the second season of Dalgliesh (an Acorn TV Original) will be in April of this year. The new season is based on three more P.D. James novels, Death of an Expert Witness, A Certain Justice, and The Murder Room, with Bertie Carvel reprising his role as the enigmatic chief investigator.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

Good Morning America spoke with James Patterson and Mike Lupica, authors of The House of Wolves, the story of a father’s murder and the family feud over his billion-dollar empire that follows.

The first Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast episode of 2023 is up featuring the mystery short story, "Owl Be Damned," written by Nikki Knight and read by actor Ariel Linn.

On Crime Time FM, Steve Cavanagh (Eddie Flynn series) and Imran Mahmood (All I Said Was True) discussed courtroom thrillers with Victoria Selman; why we all love Atticus Finch; the courtroom as a cathedral; and having a pint with Rumpole.

Thursday, January 12, 2023

Mystery Melange

ITW is awarding two separate scholarships for ThrillerFest 2023: One scholarship to a BIPOC author writing a thriller manuscript featuring a BIPOC protagonist and one scholarship to an unpublished author who is writing a mystery/thriller novel (80-100k words). Each scholarship recipient will receive a $1000 (USD) stipend and a free pass to attend ThrillerFest XVIII, which takes place May 30 - June 3, 2023 in New York City. A panel of esteemed judges will review the submissions. Applications must be submitted by March 20, 2023 by 11:59pm EST.

From Friday, April 21 to Sunday, April 23, fans of crime fiction from around the world will finally be able to join international bestselling crime authors at the Gŵyl CRIME CYMRU Festival, the first in-real-life gathering since it was launched online in 2021. Due to the Covid pandemic and social distancing restrictions, a second online event took place in 2022, featuring more than a dozen panels with more than 30 authors, over six crime fiction-filled evenings.

Murderous March 2023 is scheduled for March 10-11, sponsored by The Uppder Hudson Chapter of Sisters in Crime. In addition to a Master Class by Guest of Honor, bestselling author Deborah Crombie, there will be a Pitch Workshop with Edwin Hill, a Master Class with Bruce Robert Coffin, plus various panels. All panels are live and will be offered virtually online only.

Although every year brings hope for new beginnings, goals, and dreams, the end of a year is time to reflect on those who have left the stage. Jeff Pierce over at The Rap Sheet blog has a list of notable deaths specifically within the crime-fiction community with the note that "Our lives and world were improved by the presence of the people mentioned below, and have been diminished by their loss."

Mystery Readers Journal has a call for articles on the upcoming themed issue, "Mysteries Set in Africa." Editor Janet Rudolph is seeking articles, reviews and Author! Author! essays (500-1,000 words) about mysteries set in Africa. The deadline is January 15, 2023, and materials (including title and 2-3 sentence bio/tagline) can be sent to janet@mysteryreaders.org.

Issue 36 of the Film Noir Foundation’s magazine, Noir City, sees the passing of the torch as editor Vince Keenan hangs up his editing pencils. The issues has the usual fine essays, reviews, film reviews, and more—including the farewell edition of Keeenan's Cocktails & Crime column, with one last libation for the road.

In April 2015, B.K. Stevens debuted the blog series "The First Two Pages," hosting craft essays by short story writers and novelists analyzing the openings of their own work. The series continued until just after her death in August 2017, when the blog series relocated to Art Taylors website. The latest offering is via "Scars of Love" by Brendan DuBois.

This week's crime poem at the 5-2 weekly is "Getting Even and Getting Ahead" by Charles Rammelkamp.

In the Q&A roundup, Writers Who Kill's E.B. Davis interviewed Sherry Harris about Rum and Choke, the fourth book in the Chloe Jackson Sea Glass Saloon mystery series. Davis also spoke with V. M. (Valerie) Burns about Bookclubbed to Death, the eighth book in her Mystery Bookshop Mystery series.

 

Tuesday, January 10, 2023

Author R&R with Michael Kaufman

Michael Kaufman holds a PhD in political science and has worked in fifty countries with the United Nations, governments, companies, and NGOs engaging men to promote women’s rights, support diversity and inclusion, and to positively transform the lives of men. He also turned his hand to writing crime fiction in 2021 with The Last Exit, which introduced Police Detective Jen B. Lu and her "partner," Chandler, a SIM implant in her brain and her instant link to the Internet and police records, as well as being a constant voice inside her head. Kaufman's latest installment in that series is The Last Resort, which the author describes as "Margaret Atwood meets Raymond Chandler meets Greta Thunberg."


It’s March 2034 in Washington, D.C., when environmental lawyer and media darling, Patty Garcia, dies in a truly bizarre accident on a golf course. Of the eight billion people on the planet, only D.C. Detective Jen Lu thinks she was murdered. After all, Garcia just won a case for massive climate change reparations to be paid by oil, gas, and coal companies.

Soon Jen is in the crosshairs of those who will ensure the truth never comes to light. Is the culprit an oil and gas big shot? Or Garcia’s abusive ex-husband? Whoever it is, Jen has to move quickly before she’s marked as the next victim on the killer’s hit list.

Today, Michael stops by In Reference to Murder to take some Author R&R about writing and researching The Last Resort:

 

How do you research and write a mystery set in 2034

The easy way would be to claim (since this is the second book of my Jen Lu/Chandler series) that I’m now the world’s expert on what’s happening in Washington D.C. eleven years from now.

So, it was easy?

Sorry, I couldn’t do that. For one thing, I hate reading a book where the details are wrong. For another, years ago while a graduate student and later writing a number of non-fiction books, I pummeled my brain with a clear message: know everything that you can.

Can an author do too much research?

No, but you can show off your research too much. One of the cardinal sins of fiction is showing your research. We’ve all seen this. The bits with way too much detail about technical facts.  Or the author who is so fascinated by the place they just visited that they write a travelogue. Or perhaps they don’t want all that research to “go to waste”.  I’m lucky that I get to write both fiction and non-fiction. When I want to educate and explain things, I write non-fiction. When I want to entertain, thrill, amuse and just perhaps enlighten, I write fiction.

Was it fun doing research for The Last Resort?

Totally! To the annoyance of my wife and kids, I’m one of those people who constantly talks to strangers, asking them about, well, whatever. Doing research gives me permission to do just that.

For this one, I spoke to librarians and archivists in the Library of Congress and the National Archives and got to ask questions like, “How would a bad guy go about stealing something from you?”  

Since there’s a theme about resistance by Big Oil to climate change reparations (which, as you’ll find out in a few years, will be a very big deal) and because one of the suspects is a chemical-engineer-turned-executive, I spoke at length to a chemical engineer. It turned out that not a single question was directly relevant, but by talking to this person, I understood my character much better.

I got to wander around some of my DC faves, including the always-inspiring Library of Congress and the glass conservatory at the US Botanic Garden.

I invented the ultra-exclusive golf course where the story begins, but I tromped around the existing low-budget public course to see the land on which the private course will be built in a few years. Similarly, I walked and ran along the surrounding pathways of Rock Creek Park.

And the challenges actually writing the book?

The first big challenge is that The Last Resort is set in the near future. Climate change is hitting hard and economic and social inequality are worsening. Yet, I didn’t want this series to be another grim dystopia. The Last Resort is fun to read and, in spite of crappy things going on, there’s a sense of hope and optimism about our capacity as humans to create a better future.

The second challenge is that each book of this series engages one or more social issues. This one has themes around the oil and gas industries and also violence against women. However, these books aren’t political theory. They’re entertainment. So the big trick is to tell a page-turning story that also mentally engages readers. I really believe that my readers are smart people who are engaged in the world, but also want a place they can escape into. It’s a fun balance that takes hard work, but in the end, it’s story-telling that wins out.

Another big one was the specific challenge when writing a series. I wanted this book to be completely stand alone, but also to build on what’s come before. That required a lot of rewriting and tough choices, both about which characters and which storylines from the first of the series (The Last Exit) to include. Turns out that many of the main characters are with us again, but the storyline is totally new.

Finally, was it hard to find your narrative voice for this series?

There are actually two narrative voices. Half the book is a third person narration, but half the book is narrated by the bio-computer named Chandler who is implanted into the brain of D.C. Detective Jen B. Lu.  Chandler is a wannabe tough guy, but has a hard time pulling it off since he’s only three years old. Readers and reviewers keep saying they love him which, as a writer, is really gratifying.

What was really interesting to me is how Chandler’s voice came instantly to me. But what I didn’t know until I was half-way into the first book, was how much Chandler would become a complex character who evolves both within each book and from one book to the next.  

 

You can find out more about the author and his books via his website and follow him on FacebookTwitter, and MastodonThe Last Resort is now available via all major booksellers, your favorite indie store, Penguin Random House, and Crooked Lane Books.

Monday, January 9, 2023

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

Jason Clarke will star opposite Kiefer Sutherland in The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial from Paramount Global and Showtime, playing the character of Lieutenant Barney Greenwald, a defense attorney who begrudgingly represents Stephen Maryk (Jake Lacy). While the USS Caine was engulfed in a deadly typhoon off the coast of Iran, Maryk invoked Article 184 of Naval Regulations to relieve his superior, Lt. Commander Phillip Francis Queeg (Sutherland), of duty. Maryk, self-righteous and insistent that his extreme actions were justified, argued Queeg was mentally unstable and that his paranoid delusions were endangering the ship and crew. As a result, Maryk took command and in doing so, steered the Caine directly into the storm. Fortunately, the ship and her entire crew survived, giving Maryk a deep belief that his actions were warranted. The Caine Mutiny Court-Martial was originally written in 1951 by Herman Wouk and will reportedly be retold for modern times. Other recently added cast members include Monica Raymund, Lance Reddick, Griffin Dunne, Elizabeth Anweis, Lewis Pullman, Francois Battiste, and Gabe Kessler.

TELEVISION/STREAMING

Oscar and Tony-nominated Ruth Negga has been tapped to star opposite Jake Gyllenhaal in Presumed Innocent, Apple TV+’s upcoming limited series from David E. Kelley, J.J. Abrams’s Bad Robot and Warner Bros. TV. Inspired by Scott Turow’s courtroom thriller novel, Presumed Innocent is the story of a horrific murder that upends the Chicago Prosecuting Attorneys’ office when one of its own is suspected of the crime. The book was published in 1987 and was turned into a 1990 feature starring Harrison Ford in the role Gyllenhaal is taking on. Negga will play Barbara Sabich, the role played by Bonnie Bedelia in the film. Barbara is an artist, gallerist, mother, and wife whose life is upended when her husband, Rusty Sabich (Gyllenhaal), is accused of murdering his mistress. Barbara fights to keep her family intact as she tends to her broken heart and broken marriage, and contends with her husband’s highly publicized trial. 

Nicole Kidman is set as a lead alongside Zoe Saldaña and Laysla De Oliveira on Taylor Sheridan’s CIA drama series, Lioness, at Paramount+. Lioness is based on a real-life CIA program and follows Cruz Manuelos (De Oliveira), a rough-around-the-edges but passionate young Marine recruited to join the CIA’s Lioness Engagement Team to help bring down a terrorist organization from within. Saldaña will play Joe, the station chief of the Lioness program tasked with training, managing, and leading her female undercover operatives. Kidman will play Kaitlyn Meade, the CIA’s senior supervisor who has had a long career of playing the politics game. The cast also includes series regulars Jill Wagner, Dave Annable, LaMonica Garrett, James Jordan, Austin Hébert, Hannah Love Lanier, Stephanie Nur, and Jonah Wharton.

Peacock is developing the mystery series Freeman, set in a small, picturesque town in Georgia. Peacock reportedly won the project in a highly competitive battle and has set up a mini writers’ room. The story follows a family, which moves to a small, picturesque town in Georgia after acquiring a lucrative inheritance, including the mysterious house known as Freeman Manor. It’s soon discovered that there are mysteries and darkness hidden within the walls—and the town at large—that go back generations. 

Disney+ is ready to give the greenlight to an adaptation of CJ Sansom’s bestselling Shardlake novels, depicting an unlikely detective working under Henry VIII’s reign. With a working title of Shardlake, the series will shoot in the UK this year and sources said it could comprise four episodes, although if it's successful, it might lead to further seasons. The first book in Sansom's series, Dissolution, introduces readers to Dr. Matthew Shardlake, a hunchback lawyer-turned-detective in Tudor England. He is sent by Thomas Cromwell, the ultimate Tudor powerbroker, to investigate the beheading of Robin Singleton, a commissioner responsible for disbanding monasteries after Henry VIII declared himself supreme head of the Church of England. The BBC explored adapting the Shardlake novels for television in 2007 and even cast Sir Kenneth Branagh to play the detective. The project never made it to air, however, and Branagh eventually signed up to star in Wallander for the BBC.

There will no second season for the mystery thriller series, 1899, which was canceled by Netflix. 1899 was a series about the mysterious happenings on the deck of a migrant steamship heading west to leave the old continent. The passengers, a mixed bag of European origins, are united by their hopes and dreams for the new century and their future abroad. But their journey takes an unexpected turn when they discover another migrant ship adrift on open sea. What they will find on board, will turn their passage to the promised land into a horrifying nightmare. The series starred Emily Beecham, Aneurin Barnard, Andreas Pietschmann, and Miguel Bernardeau. Production of 1899 took place on a newly-built, state of the art virtual production stage housed at Babelsberg Studios in Germany—the largest such facility in Europe.

Meanwhile, The Nurse, a Danish thriller TV series adapted from the book by Kristian Corfixen, will make its debut on Netflix later this year. The project is based on the true story of nurse Christina Aistrup Hansen, who was sentenced to life in prison in 2016 for four counts of attempted murder of patients at Nykøbing Falster Hospital. Produced by SAM Productions and directed by Kasper Barfoed, The Nurse stars Josephine Park as Hansen and Fanny Louise Bernth as her colleague, Pernille Kurzmann Larsen. 

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

The Spybrary podcast welcomed journalist Adam Brookes, author of the espionage novels, Night Heron, Spy Games, and The Spy’s Daughter

The latest episode of the Crime Cafe podcast featured Debbi Mack's interview with crime writer Lynn Slaughter about her crime writing and her young adult fiction.

CWA Cartier Diamond Dagger Winner, Robert Goddard, spoke with Paul Burke on Crime Time FM about This is the Night They Come for You and The Fine Art of Invisible Detection.

The Red Hot Chili Writers spoke with thriller author, Lisa Jewell; discussed a cunning plan to meet your New Year's resolutions; talked about books to look out for in 2023; and revealed 101 recipes using chickpeas that no one really wants to eat.

Katie Tallo stopped by My Favorite Detective Stories to speak with John Hoda about her thrillers Dark August and Poison Lilies, featuring amateur sleuth Augusta (Gus) Monet.

Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine podcast featured a thrilling tale of art forgery and lofty aspirations that go awry in "What Kind of Criminal," read by author LaToya Jovena.

THEATRE

If you haven't already seen The Ohio State Murders on Broadway at the James Earl Jones Theatre, you don't have much longer, as the play is scheduled to close January 15. The play made history by being the first Broadway production of acclaimed 91-year-old playwright Adrienne Kennedy works and stars Audra McDonald as a writer and lecturer coming to terms with a horrific incident from her past: the murders of her two infant daughters.

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Mystery Melange

They've announced the winners of this year's Deutscher Krimipreis, a leading German crime fiction award. The German category was won by Johannes Groschupf's Die Stunde der Hyänen (The Hour of the Hyenas); second place went to Oliver Bottini's Einmal noch sterben (Die once more); and third place to Sybille Ruge for Davenport. The international category was won by Onda Riku's The Aosawa Murders; 2nd place: Jacob Ross - The Bone Readers; and 3rd Place: Cherie Jones - How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps the House. The German Crime Prize, awarded since 1985 by a jury of crime critics, literary scholars, and crime booksellers, is bestowed on novels that "give new impetus to the genre with their original content and literary skill."

The Saltire Society announced the winners of 2022 Scotland’s National Book Awards at a ceremony at the Traverse Theatre in Edinburgh early in December. Alexander McCall Smith, librettist, playwright, poet, polymath, and novelist (of the Ladies' #1 Detective Agency series) was awarded the 2022 Saltire Society Lifetime Achievement Award for his contribution to Scottish literature.

Kate Jackson a/k/a "The Armchair Sleuth" over at the Cross-Examining Crime blog announced the winners of the blog's Reprint of the Year awards, drawing from over 160 possible reprints to choose from that were voted on by participating bloggers and blog readers. I think the book in the #1 position will be a surprise to many.

A slew of new creative works (music, movies, books) enter the public domain in the U.S. in 2023, including The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes, meaning that every Sherlock story will be out of copyright. This is legally important since the Arthur Conan Doyle estate has been suing just about everybody in recent years, even when it comes to certain public domain works. Most infamously, the Doyle Estate went after the creators of the Enola Holmes series, claiming a copyright over Sherlock stories where Holmes was "capable of friendship," "expressed emotion," or "respected women," based on the idea that these character traits are copyrightable. Although the cased was dismissed "with prejudice" (e.g. likely settled), with all Holmes stories now in public domain, such cases will no longer be tying up the courts. Author Cory Doctrow has an overview of the 2023 public domain landscape.

The 100 pages pages of a 1934 murder mystery, Cain’s Jawbone, were intentionally printed out of order by a British crossword master. As the book's cover declared, "It is possible — through logic and intelligent reading — to sort them into the only correct order, revealing six murder victims and their respective murderers." A relatively obscure work, it recently took on a new life on TikTok, which made it a global sensation, especially when it was revealed that only four people have solved the puzzle since its publication nearly eight decades ago.

It appears that a book-loving fungus has alien-hunting scientists excited.

This week's crime poem at the 5-2 weekly is "Where Donald T. Trump Has Been Jumping the Shark" by Clay Thistleton.

Monday, January 2, 2023

Media Murder for Monday

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

THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES

Gabriel Byrne (In Treatment) is the latest addition to the John Wick spinoff film, Ballerina, starring Ana de Armas. Production on the film is currently underway, with Len Wiseman directing from a screenplay penned by Shay Hatten (John Wick: Chapter 4). Previously announced ensemble cast members include Ian McShane, Anjelica Huston, Lance Reddick, Catalina Sandino Moreno, and Norman Reedus. The story is set between the events of John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and Chapter 4 and follows ballerina-assassin Rooney (de Armas) as she hunts the assassins who killed her family.

Netflix revealed the title for its long-simmering Luther standalone movie that returns Idris Elba as the complicated detective in the crime drama that ran for five seasons on the BBC. Luther: The Fallen Sun, will arrive on the streamer in March 2023, with Jamie Payne directing from a script by series creator, Neil Cross. The film is being billed as a "continuation and re-imagination" of the BBC series, which scored 11 Emmy nominations during its run. The story follows a gruesome serial killer who is terrorizing London, while brilliant but disgraced detective John Luther sits behind bars. Haunted by his failure to capture the cyber psychopath who now taunts him, Luther decides to break out of prison to finish the job by any means necessary.

TELEVISION/STREAMING

NBC has picked up drama pilot, The Irrational, starring Jesse L. Martin, to series. Written by Arika Lisanne Mittman, The Irrational is based on Dan Ariely’s bestselling novel, Predictably Irrational. The show follows Alec Baker (Martin), a world-renowned professor of behavioral science who lends his expertise to an array of high-stakes cases involving governments, law enforcement, and corporations with his unique and unexpected approach to understanding human behavior. Maahra Hill, Travina Springer, Molly Kunz, and Arash DeMaxi also star.

In a "sizzle reel" for upcoming HBO and HBO Max programming, HBO unveiled the first footage from True Detective: Night Country, the long-anticipated fourth season of its Emmy-winning crime drama anthology True Detective. The new season, coming in 2023, stars two-time Academy Award winner Jodie Foster (The Silence of the Lambs) and actor-boxer Kali Reis (Catch the Fair One) and picks up after the long winter night falls in Ennis, Alaska, as the six men that operate the Tsalal Arctic Research Station vanish without a trace. To solve the case, Detectives Liz Danvers (Foster) and Evangeline Navarro (Reis) will have to confront the darkness they carry in themselves, and dig into the haunted truths that lie buried under the eternal ice. The promo reel also teases such upcoming shows as The Last of Us, The Idol, and White House Plumbers, as well as new seasons of series like Perry Mason, Succession, and Barry.

PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO

The latest episode of the Crime Cafe podcast features Debbi Mack's interview with crime writer, Tessa Lunney, about her Kiki Button series set in 1920s Paris and experiencing the joys of bohemian living, if only vicariously. 

On the latest Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine podcast, Kevin Egan draws on his career as a clerk in Manhattan's supreme court for many of his stories. "Term Life," from the June 2014 issue, is another example of his mastery over crime fiction that thrills and entertains. This time, his recurring character Fox is out to save the life of a local judge.

Crime Time FM chatted with Simon Stephenson about his novel, Sometimes People Die; working in the National Health Service; scriptwriting in Hollywood; entering writing competitions; editing; medical serial killers through time; and the murder house. And in the show's 2022 finale, Jeffery Deaver (Lincoln Rhyme/Colter Shaw) spoke with Victoria Selman about "pulling the rug out from under your reader so often they’ll be sending you their chiropractor’s bills"; Hamilton tees; and "getting a character in."

Red Hot Chili Writers interviewed global crime writing superstar, Jane Harper, author of The Dry, to discuss Outback Noir and to pontificate on the merits of sexy Christmas underwear.

On Read or Dead, Katie McLain Horner and Kendra Winchester discussed books they didn’t manage to get to in 2022.

All About Agatha closed out 2022 with Maureen Johnson, the talented writer of YA mysteries very much inspired by Agatha Christie.