The 6th Annual Gumshoe Awards are given by Mystery Ink to recognize the best achievements in crime fiction. This year's nominees were chosen from books first published in the United States in 2006.
Best Mystery:
Julia Spencer-Fleming - All Mortal Flesh
The Nominees:
Ace Atkins - White Shadow
Ariana Franklin - City of Shadows
George Pelecanos - The Night Gardener
Joseph Wambaugh - Hollywood Station
Best Thriller:
Robert Ferrigno - Prayers for the Assassin
The Nominees:
Lee Child - The Hard Way
Barry Eisler - The Last Assassin
William Lashner - Marked Man
M.J. Rose - The Venus Fix
Best European Crime Novel:
Karin Fossum - When the Devil Holds the Candle
The Nominees:
Ken Bruen - The Dramatist
Gianrico Carofiglio - A Walk in the Dark
Philippe Claudel - By a Slow River
Barbara Vine - The Minotaur
Best First Novel:
John Hart - The King of Lies
The Nominees:
Dave Case - Out of Cabrini
James Church - A Corpse in the Koryo
Thomas Lakeman - The Shadow Catchers
Cornelia Read - A Field of Darkness
Lifetime Achievement:
Robert B. Parker
Robert B. Parker revolutionized the modern detective novel, helping
to bridge the gap between the classic Hammett-Chandler-Macdonald
tradition and the contemporary stories of Block, Grafton and Lehane.
His creation of Spenser, the quintessential private eye, will live on
long after his contemporaries have faded into obscurity. (Read the
tribute essay to Robert B. Parker.)
Best Crime Fiction Website:
Demolition Magazine
http://www.demolitionmag.com
Edited by Bryon Quertermous and David White, Demolition Magazine is one of the best of the new wave of web-only magazines dedicated to publishing short crime fiction. With stories by such talented writers as Victor Gischler, Mike Maclean, Patricia Abbott and more, Demolition has quickly distinguished itself as a fresh new voice in crime fiction, and a publication worth noticing.
Yahoo!!
Posted by: Elaine Flinn | May 01, 2007 at 10:10 PM
Excellent choices! Congratulations to all.
Posted by: Dorie | May 01, 2007 at 10:25 PM
Thanks Dave, very cool.
Posted by: Dave White | May 02, 2007 at 06:31 PM
I sometimes think Robert Parker doesn't get enough credit -- despite all the credit he gets, if that makes sense. The Spenser books are absolutely can't-miss amazing. Big congrats to the guy.
Posted by: Charles Finch | May 24, 2007 at 06:21 PM