The Australian Crime Writers Association announced the winners of the 2018 Ned Kelly Awards, which honor the finest crime writing in Australia. The Best Fiction nod went to Crossing the Lines by Sulari Gentill; Best First Fiction: The Dark Lane by Sarah Bailey; and Best True Crime: Unmaking a Murder: The Mysterious Death of Anna-Jane Cheney by Graham Archer.
The annual Killer Nashville Conference announced the winners of this year's Silver Falchion Awards in 12 categories, as well as the Claymore Awards for unpublished work. The Silver Falchion Award for Best Overall Novel went to The Devil's Bible by Dana Chamblee Carpenter. This year, editor, publisher, and bookstore proprietor Otto Penzler was also honored with the Killer Nashville 2018 John Seigenthaler Legends Award.
The National Book Festival returns to Washington, D.C., again this Saturday. Featured authors on the Genre Fiction Stage will include Brad Meltzer, Hank Phillippi Ryan, David Ignatius, Joseph Finder, Jeffery Deaver, and Louise Penny. For all the details and the complete lineup, head on over to the official Library of Congress Bookfest site.
The Poisoned Pen bookstore in Phoenix, Arizona, will host a combo Poisoned Pen Conference and RebusFest, celebrating Ian Rankin's 30th year of publishing in the U.S., September 2-3. Hank Phillippi Ryan, James Sallis and Dana Stabenow will host the two-day event, which includes book signings, panels, pitch sessions, and Sunday night concert with author James Sallis and his band, Three-Legged Dog. (HT to Mystery Fanfare)
Wallingford Museum is holding a special day of activities on Saturday, September 8 ahead of Agatha Christie Day 2018, which takes place seven days later. The crime writer lived with her archaeologist husband Max Mallowan in Winterbrook House, Wallingford from 1934 until her death in 1976 and is buried in Cholsey churchyard. Fans of the author can join guided walks from the town hall throughout the day, while a self-guided trail to Dame Agatha's grave is also available. An exhibition dedicated to the writer, At home with the 'Queen of Crime', is also open at the museum, with stories from those who came into contact with the iconic writer, personal photographs and handwritten letters. More information is available online via the museum's website.
Mystery Lovers Bookshop in Oakmont, Pennsylvania, has received another new lease on life. Tara Goldberg-DeLeo and Kristy Bodnar bought the bookstore from Natalie Sacco and Trevor Thomas, who put the store up for sale in May. They plan on expanding the children's literature section, increasing the store's online presence and reviving coffee service. Mary Alice Gorman and Richard Goldman opened Mystery Lovers Bookshop in 1990 and sold it in 2012 to Laurie Stephens, a librarian with bookstore experience. Stephens sold it to Sacco and Thomas in 2015. (HT to Shelf Awareness)
The Left Coast Crime national committee is offering five scholarships to Left Coast Crime in Vancouver, British Columbia, March 28-31, 2019. The LCC Scholarships include a free registration to the convention in Vancouver plus expense money. For more information, visit the conference "Whale of a Crime" website. (HT to Mystery Fanfare)
Lee Child's fan letters, notes, and manuscripts will become part of the British Archive for Contemporary Writing at the University of East Anglia (UEA). The archive boasts the literary holdings of Doris Lessing, Malcolm Bradbury and JD Salinger, among others, while the university has an international reputation for creative writing through its MA, with Ian McEwan among its alumni. Commenting on why he is giving the collection to the UEA, Child said: "It seems to me, from an author’s point of view, tremendously arrogant to imagine that anybody’s going to find it interesting … it wasn’t something I thought I would ever do. But East Anglia does have a reputation as a great university for writers and they … were convinced that it would be useful.”
A quirky 1950s-themed British double-decker bus has been turned into a 'hotel' of sorts in the Devon countryside. The project is a nod to one of the owner's favorite writers, Agatha Christie, and is full of Agatha Christie books and posters and is also called Bertram's Hotel after the Miss Marple novel which features a red bus on the cover.
From the true crime files: Some criminals are a lot less "competent" than others.
The latest poem at the 5-2 crime poetry weekly is "Running From Cops" by Scott T. Hutchison.
In the Q&A roundup, Christopher Huang chatted with Crime Fiction Lover about his debut novel, A Gentleman’s Murder; and George Pelecanos took the New York Times "By the Book" mini-interview challenge.