Shot at the Edgars
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Peter Lovesey, named an MWA Grand Master at the 2018 Edgar Awards. Photo by Peter Rozovsky for Detectives Beyond Borders. |
Labels: Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2018, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Peter Lovesey, photography
"Because Murder is More Fun Away From Home"
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Peter Lovesey, named an MWA Grand Master at the 2018 Edgar Awards. Photo by Peter Rozovsky for Detectives Beyond Borders. |
Labels: Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2018, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Peter Lovesey, photography
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Jeff Markowitz, head of the MWA's New York chapter, who really is as genial as he appears here. Photo by Peter Rozovsky |
Labels: Ben Keller, Chris Knopf, Dru Ann Love, Jeff Markowitz, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Sara Bladel, Tim O'Mara
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Peter Lovesey (Photograph for Detectives Beyond Borders by Peter Rozovsky) |
"The planning for this week of sport had begun more than a year ago, and the arrangements couldn't be altered at the drop of a hat. What with loaders, beaters, stops, pickers-up, drivers and catering staff, we could be using more than two hundred personnel."The accumulated weight of these vignettes adds up to a startling picture of sybaritism, a portrait of long, hard work by many devoted to the idle and momentary enjoyment of a few. And yet they work as action and description without ever coming off as shrill, polemical, condescending or anachronistically knowing.
"The dead birds were tidily lined up for counting, almost two hundred pheasants, one of the gamekeepers said, bringing our day's bag past seven hundred."
"I waited, flanked by my loaders, picturing the activity in the coverts as the fugitive birds scampered ahead of the beaters. A pheasant has a natural reluctance to take to its wings, and it requires a well-managed beat to put it up precisely over the guns without flushing too many other at once."
"This battue was faultless. They presented the birds in a long, soaring sequence almost vertically above us. I worked with three guns, receiving from the loader on my right, firing and passing it empty to the other man, never shifting my eyes from the sky."
Labels: Bertie and the Seven Bodies, Mystery Writers of America, Peter Lovesey
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Walter Mosley in a photo I wish I'd taken. |
Labels: Easy Rawlins, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2016, Fearless Jones, Mystery Writers of America, Paris Minton, Socrates Fortlow, Walter Mosley
Labels: Jeffery Deaver, Julie Hyzy, Lee Child, Mary Higgins Clark, Mystery Writers of America, S.J. Rozan, short stories, T. Jefferson Parker
Labels: Julie Hyzy, Mystery Writers of America, S.J. Rozan, short stories, T. Jefferson Parker
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Stephen King (All photos by your humble blogkeeper. List of winners and nominees at the Mystery Writers of America Web site.) |
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Charles Ardai |
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Sara Paretsky, Hilary Davidson |
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James Ellroy |
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Jon and Ruth Jordan |
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Ian Rankin, Stephen King, Karin Slaughter, and Stuart Neville |
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Sara Paretsky and her shadow |
Labels: Charles Ardai, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2015, Hilary Davidson, Ian Rankin, James Ellroy, Jon Jordan, Karin Slaughter, Mystery Writers of America, Ruth Jordan, Sara Paretsky, Stephen King, Stuart Neville
Labels: Charles Ardai, Crime Spree, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2015, Hard Case Crime, James Ellroy, Jon Jordan, Mystery Writers of America, Ruth Jordan
Labels: MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Philadelphia
Labels: Aunt Agatha's Bookstore, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2014, MWA, Mystery Writers of America
Labels: Asia, bookstores, China, Dennis Lehane, Ed Lin, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2013, Ken Follett, libraries, Margaret Maron, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Soho Crime, Taiwan
Labels: away, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2013, MWA, Mystery Writers of America
Labels: Alan Glynn, awards, Books to Die For, Declan Burke, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2013, Ireland, John Connolly, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Paul French
Labels: Alan Glynn, awards, Books to Die For, Declan Burke, Edgar Awards, Ireland, John Connolly, Mystery Writers of America
"Dispensing with formulaic plot devices such as puzzles," Wikipedia says, "Seichō incorporated elements of human psychology and ordinary life. In particular, his works often reflect a wider social context and postwar nihilism that expanded the scope and further darkened the atmosphere of the genre. His exposé of corruption among police officials as well as criminals was a new addition to the field."
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Seichō Matsumoto memorial museum,
Fukuoka Prefecture, Japan |
Labels: Asia, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2012, Edogawa Rampo, Japan, Keigo Higashino, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Seicho Matsumoto, The Devotion of Suspect X
Labels: Connecticut Post, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2012, Joe Meyers, John Cusack, Martha Grimes, MWA, Mystery Writers of America, Neil Gaiman, Publishers Marketplace, Sarah Weinman, Stuart Kaminsky
Labels: Anne Holt, Edgar Awards, Edgar Awards 2012, Mo Hayder, Mystery Writers of America, Nordic crime fiction, Norway, Norway crime fiction, Scandinavian crime fiction
Gone by Mo Hayder (Britain), The Devotion of Suspect X by Keigo Higashino (Japan), 1222 by Anne Holt (Norway), and Field Gray by Philip Kerr (Britain), for best novel and Death of the Mantis by Michael Stanley (South Africa) and Vienna Twilight by Frank Tallis (Britain) for best paperback original.Congratulations to all the nominees, and I'll see you at dinner. (Browse the complete list of nominees at the MWA Web site.)
Labels: Edgar Awards, MWA, Mystery Writers of America
"Nemesis may be Jo Nesbø's best novel, more tightly constructed, sticking more closely to its central story than his others, with only hints of the flashbacks that are such an integral part of The Redbreast. It muses philosophically but unobtrusively on revenge both personal and national and, as usual with Nesbø, it contains wonderful deadpan humor."Tyler surprised me at Crime Fest 2009 when he said he admired Allan Guthrie – unexpected for a self-described author of comic cozy mysteries. The Herring-Seller's Apprentice sparked much lively discussion on this blog, including a quiz for which Tyler graciously offered a copy of his follow-up novel, Ten Little Herrings, as a prize. (Revisit that discussion here.)
Labels: awards, Don Bartlett, Edgar Awards, Jo Nesbø, L.C. Tyler, Mystery Writers of America