The
2024 longlists for the prestigious Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) Dagger
awards, which honour the very best in the
crime-writing genre, have been
announced
[8pm, April 20 at the CWA annual conference, Brighton].
Created
in 1955, the world-famous CWA Daggers are the oldest awards in the genre and
have been synonymous with quality crime writing for over half a century.
Past
winners of the prestigious Gold Dagger, which is awarded for the best crime
novel of the year, include Ian Rankin,
John le Carré, Reginald Hill, and Ruth
Rendell.
Authors
in contention for the Gold Dagger this year include the debut novel Black
River from Nilanjana Roy. She is up against stalwarts of the genre Mick
Herron, Chris Hammer, and
Dennis Lehane.
Also
in the category are historical crime writer Alis Hawkins, the journalist turned
international bestseller, Julia Haeberlin, and the bestselling children’s
author Maz Evans with her first adult debut novel, Over My Dead Body.
The
Ian Fleming Steel Dagger, sponsored by Ian Fleming Publications Ltd, showcases
the thriller of the year.
The
longlist for 2024 includes James Wolff, who was a British intelligence officer
for over ten years before leaving to write espionage novels, with
The Man
in the Corduroy Suit.
He’s
joined by giants of the genre Linwood Barclay, David Baldacci, and Karin
Slaughter alongside relative newcomers such as Jordan Harper, whose second
thriller, Everybody Knows, makes the longlist.
Also
in contention are TJ Newman, the former flight attendant who became a Hollywood
sensation with her latest thriller, Drowning, and Japanese author Isaka
Kotaro for The Mantis; Kotaro is best-known for Bullet Train, which
was adapted into a Brad Pitt movie.
Vaseem
Khan, Chair of the Crime Writers’ Association, said: "As ever, the
announcement of the CWA Daggers longlist is greeted with immense excitement in
the crime and thriller writing world. Once again, our independent panels of
expert judges have mulled, cogitated, debated, and, when all else has failed,
challenged each other to duels, in their sterling efforts to pick longlists
from the incredible array of books submitted to each Dagger. The Daggers are
the gold standard of awards in the genre, and Dagger recognition has often
served as a stepping stone for careers. More importantly, a Dagger longlisting
means that genre readers can be assured of quality. Buy these books. You will
not be disappointed."
The
much-anticipated John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger highlights the best debut
novels.
Among
the rising stars of 2024 is Jo Callaghan with her BBC Between the Covers Book
Club pick, The Blink of an Eye; the sensational fiery debut featuring
a crime-solving queer punk nun, Scorched Grace by Margot Douaihy, and
the Victorian gothic, The Tumbling Girl from Bridget Walsh.
Booker
Prize winner John Banville is a heavyweight contender on the Historical Dagger
longlist. The prizewinning novelist and literary polymath is in the running
for The Lock-Up. Banville is up against established names including
Ambrose Parry, S.G. MacLean, Alis Hawkins, and James Lee Burke with Flags
on the Bayou.
The
Crime Fiction in Translation Dagger includes international hits such as The
Prey from the Icelandic author Yrsa Sigurðardóttir, translated by Victoria
Cribb; Maud Ventura’s My Husband, translated by Emma Ramadan, which
was a sensation in France, likened to Patricia Highsmith and Gone Girl.
And the Spanish writer Javier Castillo behind the international
phenomenon, The Snow Girl, which was adapted to screen by Netflix,
translated by Isabelle Kaufeler.
The
ALCS Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction includes Nicholas Shakespeare’s Ian
Fleming: The Complete Man; The Art Thief by Michael Finkel, the true
story of the world’s most prolific art thief who accumulated a collection
worth over $1.4 billion, and No Comment by Jess McDonald, who quit
her job as a Met detective to tell all about her work on rape and domestic
violence cases that left her with PTSD and a determination to speak out.
The
CWA Daggers are one of the few high-profile awards that honour the short story.
This
year sees the bestselling juggernaut Lee Child with his story Safe Enough.
He’s up against Robert Scragg with Revenge is Best Served Hot, Sanjida
Kay’s The Divide, and Rachel Amphlett with Three Ways to Die.
The
Dagger in the Library nominees are voted by librarians and library users,
chosen for the author’s body of work and support of libraries. This year sees
firm favourites from the genre including
MW Craven, Anthony Horowitz,
Vaseem Khan, and LJ Ross.
The
Best Crime and Mystery Publisher of the Year Dagger, which celebrates
publishers and imprints demonstrating excellence and diversity in crime
writing, pits big publishing houses including Harper Fiction Headline and Simon
& Schuster against independent publishers Joffe Books, Bitter Lemon Press
and Canelo.
The
Debut Dagger, which has been going for over 20 years, celebrates aspiring crime
novelists.
The
competition is open to unpublished authors, and is judged on the best opening
for an unpublished crime novel. The winner will gain the attention of
leading agents and top editors; over two dozen past winners and shortlisted
Debut Dagger authors have signed publishing deals to date.
The
CWA Diamond Dagger, awarded to an author whose crime-writing career has been
marked by sustained excellence, is announced in early spring and in 2024 it was
jointly awarded to Lynda La Plante and James Lee Burke.
The
CWA Dagger shortlists will be announced on 10 May at the UK’s largest crime fiction
convention, CrimeFest, hosted in Bristol.
The winners will be announced at the award ceremony at
the
CWA gala dinner on July 4.
The
Longlists in Full:
GOLD DAGGER
Maz
Evans Over My Dead Body, Headline
Chris
Hammer Dead Man’s Creek, Wildfire Books
Alis
Hawkins A Bitter Remedy, Canelo
Julia
Haeberlin Night Will Find You, Penguin (Michael Joseph)
Mick
Herron The Secret Hours, Baskerville (John Murray)
J G
Kelly The White Lie, Hodder & Stoughton
Vaseem
Khan Death of a Lesser God, Hodder & Stoughton
Dennis
Lehane Small Mercies, Abacus (Little Brown)
Una
Mannion Tell me What I Am, Faber & Faber
Kate
Morton Homecoming, Mantle (Pan Macmillan)
Nilanjana
Roy Black River, Pushkin (Vertigo)
Jesse
Sutanto Vera Wong’s Unsolicited Advice for Murderers, HQ (Harper Collins)
IAN FLEMING STEEL DAGGER
David
Baldacci Simply Lies, Macmillan (Pan Macmillan)
Linwood
Barclay The Lie Maker, HQ (HC)
S A
Cosby All the Sinners Bleed, Headline (Hachette)
Eli
Cranor Ozark Dogs, Headline (Hachette)
C M
Ewan The House Hunt, Macmillan (Pan Macmillan)
Jordan
Harper Everybody Knows, Faber & Faber
Kotaro
Isaka The Mantis, Harvill Secker (PRH)
Femi
Kayode Gaslight, Raven Books (Bloomsbury)
D L
Marshall 77 North, Canelo
T J
Newman Drowning, Simon & Schuster
Karin
Slaughter After that Night, HarperCollins
James
Wolff The Man in the Corduroy Suit, Bitter Lemon Press
ILP JOHN CREASEY (NEW BLOOD) DAGGER
Kathryn
Black A Most Unusual Demise, Bloodhound Books
Jo
Callaghan In The Blink of An Eye, Simon & Schuster UK
Amy
Chua The Golden Gate, Corvus (Atlantic Books)
Margot
Douaihy Scorched Grace, Pushkin Vertigo
Helen
Erichsen Murder By Natural Causes, Muswell Press
Kate
Foster The Maiden, Mantle (Pan Macmillan)
Jessa
Maxwell The Golden Spoon, Penguin
Dann
McDorman West Heart Kill, Raven Books
Liza
North Obsessed, Constable
Michelle
Teahan Go Seek, Headline Publishing Group
Charlotte
Vassell The Other Half, Faber & Faber
Bridget
Walsh The Tumbling Girl, Gallic Books
HISTORICAL DAGGER
Lucy
Ashe Clara & Olivia, Magpie (Oneworld Publications)
John
Banville The Lock-Up, Faber & Faber
James
Lee Burke Flags on the Bayou, Orion Fiction (Hachette)
Anita
Davison Murder in the Bookshop, Boldwood Books
Louise
Hare Harlem After Midnight, HQ (HarperCollins)
Alis
Hawkins A Bitter Remedy, Canelo
Jake
Lamar Viper's Dream, No Exit Press
S.G.
MacLean The Winter List, Quercus Fiction (Quercus)
Tom
Mead The Murder Wheel, Aries (Head of Zeus)
Leonora
Nattrass Scarlet Town, Viper (Profile Books)
Ambrose
Parry Voices of the Dead, Canongate Books
Isabelle
Schuler Lady MacBethad, Raven Books (Bloomsbury)
CRIME
FICTION IN TRANSLATION DAGGER
Javier
Castillo The Snow Girl, translated by Isabelle Kaufeler, Penguin Books
Juan
Gómez-Jurado Red Queen, translated by Nick Caistor, Macmillan
Arnaldur
Indridason The Girl By The Bridge, translated by Philip Roughton, Vintage
Kotaro
Isaka The Mantis, translated by Sam Malissa, Vintage
Âsa
Larsson The Sins Of Our Fathers, translated by Frank Perry, Maclehose
Press
Jenny
Lund Madsen Thirty Days Of Darkness, translated by Megan E.Turney,
Orenda Books
Cloé
Mehdi Nothing Is Lost, translated by Howard Curtis, Europa Editions UK
Schneider
Hansjörg He Murder Of Anton Livius, translated by Astrid Freuler, Bitter
Lemon Press
Im
Seong-sun The Consultant, translated by An Seong Jae, Raven Books
Mikhail
Shevelev Not Russian translated by Brian James Baer & Ellen
Vayner, Europa Editions UK
Yrsa
Sigurdardottir The Prey, translated by Victoria Cribb, Hodder &
Stoughton
Maud
Ventura My Husband, translated by Emma Ramadan, Hutchinson Heinemann
ALCS
GOLD DAGGER FOR NON-FICTION
Michael
Finkel The Art Thief, Simon & Schuster
Beverly
Gage G-Man, Simon & Schuster
Lara
Love Hardin The Many Lives of Mama Love, Endeavour
Matt
Johnson with John Murray No Ordinary Day, Ad Lib Publishers
Miles
Johnson Chasing Shadows, The Bridge Street Press
Patrick
Radden Keefe The Snakehead, Picador
Jennifer
McAdam with Douglas Thompson Devil’s Coin, Ad Lib Publishers Ltd
Jess
McDonald No Comment, Raven Books
Alex
Mar Seventy Times Seven, Bedford Square Publishers
Jennifer
Robinson & Keina Yoshida How Many More Women? Endeavour
Nicholas
Shakespeare Ian Fleming: The Complete Man, Vintage
David
Wilson Murder at Home, Sphere
SHORT
STORY DAGGER
Rachel
Amphlett Three Ways to Die from No W.W.M. - Thrill Ride
#3, edited by M. L. "Matt" Buchman, Buchman Bookworks, Inc
Lee
Child Safe Enough from An Unnecessary Assassin, edited by
Lorraine Stevens, Rivertree
Mia
Dalia The Last Best Thing from Bang!:An Anthology of Modern Noir
Fiction, edited by Andrew Hook, Head Shot Press
Andrew
Humphrey Slap Happy from Bang!:An Anthology of Modern Noir
Fiction edited by Andrew Hook, Head Shot Press
Benedict
J Jones The Also-Rans from Bang!:An Anthology of Modern Noir
Fiction edited by Andrew Hook, Head Shot Press
Sanjida
Kay The Divide from The Book of Bristol edited by Joe Melia
and Heather Marks, Comma Press
Ambrose
Parry The Spendthrift and the Swallow, Canongate Books
DG
Penny Drive from An Unnecessary Assassin edited by Lorraine
Stevens, Rivertree
FD
Quinn Best Served Cold from An Unnecessary Assassin edited
by Lorraine Stevens, Rivertree
Robert
Scragg Revenge is Best Served Hot from An Unnecessary Assassin edited
by Lorraine Stevens, Rivertree
DAGGER
IN THE LIBRARY
Louise
Candlish
MW
Craven
Lucy
Foley
Cara
Hunter
Anthony
Horowitz
Vaseem
Khan
Angela
Marsons
Kate
Rhodes
LJ
Ross
Diane
Saxon
PUBLISHERS’
DAGGER
Bitter
Lemon Press
Canelo
Harper
Fiction (HarperCollins)
Harvill
Secker (PenguinRandomHouse)
Headline
(Hachette)
Joffe
Books
Michael
Joseph (PenguinRandomHouse)
Pushkin
Press
Raven
(Bloomsbury)
Simon
& Schuster
DEBUT
DAGGER Sponsored by ProWritingAid
Katherine
Ahlert, Burnt Ranch
Caroline
Arnoul, Unnatural Predators
Matt
Coot, Vilomah
Judy
Hock, Good Criminals
JR
Holland, Vigilante Love Song
Alan
Jackson, Bluebirds
Richard
Jerram, Makoto Murders
Lynn
McCall, Long Way Home
Karabi
Mitra, Not a Good Mother
Jeremy
Tinker, The Last Days of Forever
James
Tobin, A Politician’s Guide to Murder
Megan Toogood, The Blond
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