The Bloody Scotland
International Crime Writing Festival returns to the historic city of Stirling
on 22 June with local celebrity, BBC Radio Scotland presenter, Nicola Meighan
interviewing Ambrose Parry aka bestselling crime writer Chris Brookmyre and
consultant anaesthetist turned medical historian turned ‘powerful new voice in
crime fiction’ Marisa Haetzman live on stage in The Golden Lion Ballroom. They
will be launching their new historical crime novel, Voices of the Dead, which
will be published by Canongate later this month.
Stirling Council Leader,
Chris Kane, will say a few words then Festival Director, Bob McDevitt, will
reveal the 2023 programme at
The Golden Lion Hotel at noon on 22 June
immediately prior to the Ambrose Parry
event.
Tickets are deliberately priced at only £5 to encourage a local audience who
might normally not attend the festival to give it a go.
Anyone unemployed or on a low income can attend for free.
Other guests at the
programme launch will be the shortlisted authors for the Bloody Scotland Debut
Prize and the longlisters for the McIlvanney Prize for Scottish Crime Fiction
who will be revealed live on
BBC Radio Scotland Afternoon Show on 15 June.
Following questions regarding the prize criteria last year the rules and
judging process have been amended to encourage as much diversity as possible.
The biggest change has been the rule regarding how Scottish you have to be with
authors no longer being required to be resident in Scotland for 7 years before
being allowed to enter the prize and authors who can prove a long and enduring
connection with Scotland (for example parents) automatically allowed to enter.
In previous years the
longlist has been determined by a panel of readers. This year the reader scores
have been referred to an academy led by crime reviewer Ayo Onatade, Waterstones
category manager for crime fiction Gaby Lee and journalist and author, Craig
Sisterson. Their team includes crime reviewers / influencers Gordon McGhie, Zoe
Venditozzi, Mary Picken and Suze Clarke-Morris; librarians Jonathan Kaney
(Stirling), Steven Gough (Orkney) and Pearl Morrison (Aberdeenshire),
booksellers Steve Poulter (Waterstones Bluewater), Marjorie Marshall (The
Bookmark, Grantown), Cecile (Portoboello Bookshop), Sarah (The Book Nook Stewarton),
Ewan Wilson (Waterstones Glasgow) and the winner of last year’s Bloody Scotland
Debut Prize, Tariq Ashkanani.
The shortlist for the Bloody Scotland Debut Prize will be revealed on 15 June
and the shortlist for the McIlvanney Prize for Crime Fiction will be revealed
at the end of August.
The opening reception which offers an opportunity to rub shoulders with famous crime writers will be at 6.30 - 7.45pm in the Church of the Holy Rude. Authors shortlisted for each of the prizes will lead the torchlit procession from Stirling Castle to the Albert Halls where the winners will be revealed and interviewed on stage.
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