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Tuesday, January 13, 2026

MWA 2026 Grand Masters, Raven, & Ellery Queen Award Recipients

Mystery Writers of America (MWA) announced the recipients of its special awards. The board chose Donna Andrews and Lee Child as the 2026 Grand Masters, the 2026 Raven Award recipient is Book Passage, and John Scognamiglio of Kensington Books will receive the Ellery Queen Award. They will accept their awards at the 80th Annual Edgar Awards Ceremony, which will be held April 29, 2026, at the Marriott Marquis Times Square in New York City.
 
“Donna Andrews has given us more than fifty novels, proving the cozy subgenre is more relevant than ever. In addition to her significant literary accomplishments, she has given back to the community in so many ways, by mentoring aspiring mystery writers, and serving as the MWA EVP. I’m thrilled to see Donna named as MWA Grand Master,” said MWA Executive Vice President James L’Etoile. “And Lee Child’s contributions to the genre are unparalleled. Aside from his thirty critically acclaimed novels featuring the iconic Jack Reacher, Lee Child is considered one of the most thoughtful and generous members of the mystery community. Writer, mentor, and Past President of MWA, he is a role model, and most deserving of being named MWA Grand Master.”
 
MWA’s Grand Master Award represents the pinnacle of achievement in mystery writing and was established to acknowledge important contributions to this genre, as well as for a body of work that is both significant and of consistent high quality. 
 
The Raven Award recognizes outstanding achievement in the mystery field outside the realm of creative writing. For 2026, Mystery Writers of America selected Book Passage in Corte Madera, CA.
 
Book Passage is honored and thrilled to receive the Raven Award from the Mystery Writers of America. Many of the 10,000 or more author events that we’ve had over the years have featured mystery writers. During the last 30 years or so, many of these writers have given of their time to participate in our annual Mystery Writers Conference and have helped nurture new writers towards successful careers,” Book Passage founder and president Elaine Petrocelli said. “We’ve found mystery writers to be resourceful, fearless, and ingenious in describing the problems of the world. More than that, they know how to keep their portrayal of the dark side of humanity on the written page. In person, they are wonderful, personable, and a pleasure to be around.” 
 
The Ellery Queen Award was established in 1983 to honor “outstanding writing teams and outstanding people in the mystery-publishing industry.” This year the Board chose to honor John Scognamiglio of Kensington Books, who began his career 40 years ago as a file clerk in the Contracts Department at Simon & Schuster in 1986 while still a sophomore at New York University. He later moved to where he always wanted to be—editorial—and from 1989 to 1992, Scognamiglio worked as an assistant editor for S&S’s mass-market division, Pocket Books. In February 1992, he joined Kensington Publishing as an editor and he became Editor-in-Chief in 2005. He launched his own imprint, John Scognamiglio Books, at Kensington in 2017.  Among his authors are New York Times bestsellers Lisa Jackson, Joanne Fluke, Ellen Marie Wiseman and Leslie Meier. 

The Edgar Awards, or “Edgars,” as they are commonly known, are named after MWA’s patron saint Edgar Allan Poe and are presented to authors of distinguished work in various categories. MWA is the premier organization for mystery writers, professionals allied to the crime-writing field, aspiring crime writers, and those who are devoted to the genre. The organization encompasses some 3,000 members including authors of fiction and nonfiction books, screen and television writers, as well as publishers, editors, and literary agents. For more information on Mystery Writers of America, please visit the website: www.mysterywriters.org 

Sunday, January 11, 2026

REMEMBERING GOLDEN AGE OF DETECTION PIONEERING AUTHOR R. AUSTIN FREEMAN: Guest Post by Andrew McAleer


British mystery author Dr. Richard Austin Freeman was born in Soho, London on April 11, 1862. He died in Gravesend, Kent on September 28, 1943. Dr. Freeman is largely remembered for his Dr. John Thorndyke mysteries published under the name “R. Austin Freeman."  

The Oxford Companion to Crime, & Mystery Writing praises Thorndyke’s creator as: “[T]he creator of Dr. John Thorndyke, detective fiction’s foremost medico-legal expert…. Thorndyke made his first full-fledged appearance in The Red Thumb Mark (1907), the book extolled by Howard Haycraft as ‘[O]ne of the undisputed milestones of the genre.’” (The final Thorndyke tale was, The Jacob Street Mystery [1942]).

In his superbly edited volume, Blood on the Tracks, Martin Edwards, the longest-serving Chair of the Crime Writer’s Association and a British Library Crime Classics consultant, says of Freeman, “[He] was, like Arthur Conan Doyle and Robert Eustace, a doctor who achieved greater fame as a crime writer than a medical practitioner.” Further, when discussing Freeman’s mystery, “The Case of Oscar Brodski,” Martin notes that this Freeman mystery is widely recognized as the first “inverted” detective story. In these type mysteries readers know everything and the fun is seeing how the unknowing detective pieces together the puzzle. For modern-day crime fiction fans the character of Lieutenant Columbo likely comes to mind.      

In 1976, recognizing Freeman’s invaluable contributions to the mystery genre, Thorndyke, an enthusiast Philip T. Asdell created and edited a magazine called, The Thorndyke File. In 1981, at Asdell’s request, editorial duties transferred to my father, John McAleer.

The following interview excerpts between my father and Dr. Freeman’s domestic helper, Mrs. Ethel Baldock, provide some insights into Freeman’s daily activities. The interview appeared in the Spring,1982, Thorndyke File and the full discussion will appear in a forthcoming Von Stray’s Crimestalker Casebook. (www.henryvonstraymysteries.com)
 
* * * 
THE FREEMANS OF THORNDYKE HOUSE
 
An Interview by Edgar Winner John McAleer

 
I [John McAleer] have been successful in locating Ethel Baldock, who, as Ethel Osborne, a girl in her early twenties, worked for Dr. and Mrs. R. Austin Freeman, at their home, “Rosemount,” 94 Windmill Street, Gravesend, Kent, from early 1940 to 1943, and again, after Dr. Freeman’s death, from 1944 to 1946. Mrs. Baldock graciously consented to the following interview:
 
John McAleer:  What were the Freemans like?
 
Ethel Baldock: They were the nicest people I worked for. They were—a very old-fashioned term—real gentlefolk!
 
McAleer: When did Freeman write?
 
Baldock: He wrote when he was what he called a “writing mood,” so far as I know all by hand.
 
McAleer: How were Dr. Freeman’s hearing and eyesight in his last years?
 
Baldock: Both were very good.
 
McAleer: We know little about Mrs. Freeman. What can you tell us?
 
Baldock: She was a very precise lady. Used to talk to me a lot. She was quite small, about five foot three or four. Weight not known, but fairly slim. She read quite a lot. Did beautiful crochet work. And was very thrifty, but—definitely—not mean.
 
McAleer: Did Dr. Freeman keep late hours?
 
Baldock: Being a daily domestic I don’t know what time the Freemans retired, but, when he was well, they were up when I got there, about 7:30 a.m.
 
McAleer: Were there any particular dishes that Dr. Freeman favored?
 
Baldock: During the time I was there—the war years—it was not possible to have very many preferences with food. They did have a glass of sherry every morning and, when I returned after an illness, insisted on my having one. Dr. Freeman also enjoyed his jar of Mazawatte Tea every afternoon.
 
McAleer: I gather that you found the Freemans thoughtful and kind?
 
Baldock: I did, yes. I have a book he gave me for my birthday, in 1940, signed by him—Pontifex, Son & Thorndyke(1931). When I was ill, Dr. Freeman walked to where I lived with a week’s wages, although, at that time, it was not usual to receive wages whilst one was sick. The remarkable thing was, he had to use two walking sticks, as he had been ill himself with rheumatics; his own G.P. (general practitioner) had said he would not be able to walk out again, but he was a very strong-willed person.

* * *
Those interested in learning more about R. Austin Freeman and his quintessential Golden Age Detective Dr. John Thorndyke should visit: Mystery Readers Journal: London Mysteries II, Vol. 41, No. 1 • Spring 2025.
 
Andrew McAleer is the best-selling author of the Detective Henry von Stray classic British crime series created by Edgar winner John McAleer. Von Stray’s adventures appear in A Casebook of Crime Volume One. A second von Stray collection, A Casebook of Crime Volume Two, is scheduled for release in March 2026 (Level Best Books). Mr. McAleer taught classic crime fiction at Boston College and served in Afghanistan as a U.S. Army Historian before returning to public service in the criminal justice system. Visit the Henry von Stray Museum of Criminal Artifacts at:  www.Henryvonstraymysteries.com 

Friday, January 9, 2026

Bookish: a new British mystery tv series


Bookish, a new British mystery show on PBS, starts Sunday, January 11. I haven't seen it yet, but a six episode show about a bookshop owner in post-war London who helps the police solve murders in post-war London sounds right up my alley. Mark Gatiss stars. 6 episodes.

Sunday, January 11, 10 p.m. EST, PBS.

From WSJ:

What the viewer will decide right off is that Book is the type of mischievous pedant who relishes setting grammarians straight about the sign on his shop, and displaying a similar sparkle while setting the police straight about the facts in a case. The constables don’t all appreciate the help, but Book has a chummy bond with Inspector Bliss (Elliot Levey), not to mention a “special letter from Churchill”—something he acknowledges whenever someone questions his status, or presence at a crime scene, or presumptuous interrogation of suspects. He merely taps his breast pocket, where the mysterious letter lies.

Thursday, January 8, 2026

Call for Articles Mystery Readers Journal (42:1): Faires, Fetes, & Festivals



Call for Articles: Mystery Readers Journal: Mysteries Set at Faires, Fetes, and Festivals (42:1); Spring 2026

For our next issue, we are looking for Crime Fiction set at Faires, Fetes, and Festivals.

If you have a mystery that fits this theme, please consider writing an Author! Author! essay: 500–1500 words, first person, up-close and personal about yourself, your books, and the 'faire, fete, or festival' connection. 

We’re also looking for reviews and articles

Send submission and queries to janet @ mysteryreaders.org 

Deadline: February 15, 2026. 

Author Essays are first person, about yourself, your books, and the "FFF" connection. 500-1000 words. Treat this as if you're chatting with friends and other writers in the bar or cafe (or on zoom) about your work and the "Faire, Fete, Festival" setting in your mysteries. Be sure and cite specific titles, as well as how you use Faires and Fetes in your books. Add title and 2-3 sentence bio. 

Reviews: 50-250 words. 

Articles: 500-1000 words. 

Deadline: February 15, 2026

Send to: Janet Rudolph, Editor. janet @ mysteryreaders . org  

Please let me know if you're planning to send an article, review, or author essay--or if you have any questions! 


Themes in 2026: Mysteries set at Faires, Fetes, & Festivals; Mysteries set in France; Cross-Genre Mysteries; Mysteries set in India.


Southern California: Mystery Readers Journal
Senior Sleuths: Mystery Readers Journal
Irish Mysteries: Mystery Readers Journal
Hobbies & Crafts in Mysteries: Mystery Readers Journal

And so many more... We are now in our 42nd year with articles, reviews, and essays from your favorite authors and reviewers. 
***

Love Mysteries? Love San Francisco? Left Coast Crime will be held in "Everybody's Favorite City" February 26-March 1, 2026.   Register Now! 




Tuesday, January 6, 2026

St Hilda's Crime Fiction Weekend: September 4-6, 2026

St Hilda's 33rd Crime Fiction Weekend announced its theme: Bad Apples: crime fiction's enemies and anti-heroes. 

St. Hilda's College, University of Oxford, Oxford, U.K.
September 4-6, 2026

From con artists to killers, crime fiction has served up some of the very best bad apples in all of literature. Ripley, Moriarty, Lecter and many more are responsible for prompting our heroes to action, presenting puzzles, peril and confrontations aplenty. This 33rd Crime Fiction Weekend explores the dark core of these characters, and discusses why we love them – or love to hate them – so much.

Guest of Honour: Andrew Taylor

Speakers:

Jo Callaghan 
Ajay Chowdhury 
Abigail Dean 
Vaseem Khan 
Remi Kone 
Simon Mason 
Ayo Onatade 
Hallie Rubenhold 
Laura Shepherd-Robinson 
Sarah Vaughan 
Martyn Waites

Monday, January 5, 2026

2026 Left Coast Crime “Lefty” Award Nominations

Left Coast Crime 2026 will be presenting four Lefty Awards at our 36th annual convention, to be held this February in San Francisco: Humorous, Historical, Debut, and Best. The awards will be voted on at the convention and presented at a banquet on Saturday, February 28, at the Hyatt Regency on the Embarcadero. The Lefty nominees have been selected by convention registrants. 

2026 Lefty Award nominees for books published in 2025:

Lefty for Best Humorous Mystery Novel

The nominees are:

• Ellen Byron, Solid Gold Murder (Kensington)

 Jennifer J. Chow, Star-Crossed Egg Tarts (St. Martin’s Paperbacks)

 Elizabeth Crowens, Bye Bye Blackbird (Level Best Books)

 Catriona McPherson, Scot’s Eggs (Severn House)

 Cindy Sample, All’s Faire in Love and Murder (Cindy Sample Books)

Lefty for Best Historical Mystery Novel for books set before 1970 
(The Bill Gottfried Memorial). 

The nominees are:

 Cara Black, Huguette (Soho Crime)

 Mariah Fredericks, The Girl in the Green Dress (Minotaur Books)

 Dianne Freeman, A Daughter’s Guide to Mothers and Murder (Kensington)

 Claire M. Johnson, City Lights (Level Best Books)

 Laurie R. King, Knave of Diamonds (Bantam)

 Rob Osler, The Case of the Missing Maid (Kensington)

Lefty for Best Debut Mystery Novel

The nominees are:

 Adrian Andover, Whiskey Business (Chestnut Avenue Press)

 Kristen L. Berry, We Don’t Talk About Carol (Bantam)

 Laurie L. Dove, Mask of the Deer Woman (Berkley)

 Sue Hincenbergs, The Retirement Plan (William Morrow)

 Marisa Kashino, Best Offer Wins (Celadon Books)

 Diane Schaffer, Mortal Zin (Sibylline Press)

Lefty for Best Mystery Novel (not in other categories). 

The nominees are:

 Lou Berney, Crooks (William Morrow)

 Claire Booth, Throwing Shadows (Severn House)

 Tracy Clark, Edge (Thomas & Mercer)

 Leslie Karst, Waters of Destruction (Severn House)

 James L’Etoile, River of Lies (Oceanview Publishing)

 Gigi Pandian, The Library Game (Minotaur Books) 

Left Coast Crime Conventions are annual events sponsored by mystery fans, both readers and authors. Held in the western half of North America, LCC’s intent is to host an event where readers, authors, critics, librarians, publishers, and other fans can gather in convivial surroundings to pursue their mutual interests. Lefty Awards have been given since 1996. 

Returning to The City, where Left Coast Crime held its first two conventions, the 36th Annual Left Coast Crime Convention will take place in San Francisco, February 26 – March 1, 2026. This year’s Guests of Honor are authors Robin Burcell and Gary Phillips. Randal Brandt is the Fan Guest of Honor, and author Leslie Karst will serve as Toastmaster.

Left Coast Crime is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation holding annual mystery conventions in the West. Each LCC convention raises money to support a local literary organization, and is staffed entirely by volunteers.

For more information on Left Coast Crime 2026, please visit www.leftcoastcrime.org/2026/

Sunday, January 4, 2026

Mystery Readers Journal: Northern California Mysteries II (41:4)

Mystery Readers Journal: Northern California II (41:4) is now available. 

You'll also want to order the companion issue, too: Mystery Readers Journal: Northern California Mysteries I (41:3)

If you're a print copy and/or PDF subscriber, you should have received your copy.
Contributor PDF copies went out today. 
Contributors: Thanks so much for your great articles, essays, and reviews!

Northern California Mysteries II
Volume 41, No. 4, Winter 2025

Northern California Mysteries II


Buy this back issue! Available in hardcopy or as a downloadable PDF.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ARTICLES

  • They Didn’t Intend to Be Detectives… by Aubrey Nye Hamilton
  • The Air Smelled Like Redwoods by Rona Bell

AUTHOR! AUTHOR!

  • Northern California—in My Blood, in My Books by Juliet Blackwell
  • A Time Traveler in the East Bay by Mary Adler
  • Did a Charlie Chan Film Influence the Zodiac Murders? by Lou Armagno
  • If You’ve Got the Lipstick… by David Corbett
  • Climate Fiction in Northern California by Mary Flodin
  • Just Say “Yes” to Stories from the Bay Area by Meredith Blevins
  • Why I Set My Stories in Northern California by Daryl Wood Gerber
  • San Francisco Wild by Toni Dwiggins
  • Setting: Real or Invented? by Vinnie Hansen
  • Mild-Mannered Men in Northern California by Walter Horsting
  • I Have a Wild Imagination by Nancy Lynn Jarvis
  • Following the Money to Silicon Valley by Ron Katz
  • Baking Up Good Mystery in the Northern California Redwoods by Victoria Kazarian
  • The Fault Lines in Northern California by Ellen Kirschman
  • 1860s San Francisco— A Perfect Place for a Mystery by Nancy Herriman
  • It Had to Be San Francisco… by Barry Lancet
  • The City, My City by Lexa Mack
  • World Building: It’s Not Just for Science Fiction and Fantasy by A.B. Michaels
  • Feng Shui-by-the-Sea by Denise Osborne
  • A Fog-Shrouded Lens by Tim Maleeny
  • A Fish Out of Water in Oakland by Brad Parks
  • The Babylon Deception, a Northern California Mystery by Ray Pace
  • The Estuary Kept Its Secrets by Susan Paturzo
  • Red Rock Island: Where Imagination Found a Home by Alec Peche
  • The Cook, the Inspector, and the City by the Bay by Joanne Pence
  • A Reader and a Writer Walk into a Bar by Karen A. Phillips
  • Northern California: The Lost Highway by Alexandra Sokoloff

COLUMNS

  • Mystery in Retrospect: Reviews
  • Crime Seen: The Streets of San Francisco by Kate Derie
  • Cop Ten: The Streets of… Everyplace Else but San Francisco by Jim Doherty
  • From the Editor’s Desk by Janet A. Rudolph
***
Time to renew your subscription for 2026: Themes: Mysteries set at Fetes, Fairs, and Festivals;  Mysteries set in France; Cross-Genre Mysteries; Mysteries set in India. Subscriptions are PDF. 

Print-on-Demand issues will be available as each issue is published. We'll post here and elsewhere with a link when each print-on-demand issue is ready. First issue for 2026 will be out in March.

Cartoon of the Day: TBR


 

Saturday, January 3, 2026

SHETLAND: Season 10


Shetland, Season 10, episode 1, is now available on BritBox in the U.S. There will be 6 episodes. If you have Britbox Premiere, you can watch all 6 episodes now. Otherwise, there will be a new episode every week. 

Other good news is that there will be a Season 11. 

The Shetland series is based on the best-selling books by award-winning writer Ann Cleeves.

In Series 10, Tosh and Calder probe a remote village where a woman’s death reveals old grudges and rising tensions, pulling hidden conflicts dangerously to the surface.  

The scenery is enough to watch this show, but I also enjoy the stories. 

Friday, January 2, 2026

A Crime Novelist Steps Back into the Real World: Guest Post by Keith Raffel

Over two decades ago, I turned to writing crime fiction as a way to escape the world as it is. I loved my family and my friends and sometimes my job, but I didn’t much care for real life where violence, poverty, prejudice, and injustice ran rampant. 

What better way to get away from it all than concentrating on the creation of fictional realms, where justice (usually) triumphed and I had (some) control over what happened? I started thinking of myself as a crime fiction novelist following in the footsteps of heroes of my youth like Franklin W. Dixon, Carolyn Keene, and Erle Stanley Gardner. I’ve had five thrillers published, and my agent has the sixth in his hands. 

For years, writing fiction was enough. In the past few years, it hasn’t been.

I lived in this world. I had to face what was going on in real life. I sent off an op-ed to the San Jose Mercury News suggesting the country would be a whole lot better off if only women voted and another to the New Haven Register asking why certain graduates of Harvard and Yale Law Schools sought to undermine democracy. I told the San Francisco Chronicle that Trump acted like a Russian dupe and Harvard Magazine that college students cared more, a lot more, about making money than the state of the world they would live in after graduation. Finally, I collected my scattered writings and sent them to Creators Syndicate, a company that could distribute my essays to newspapers and websites across the country. Bingo! Creators signed me up, and since 2023, I have been writing a weekly column that runs in papers from Maui to San Diego to suburban Washington, D.C.

So nowadays I write a rough draft of the column on Tuesday morning, send a semifinal version to my wife early the next day, and submit it Wednesday afternoon. Without those two days of articulating my concerns and frustrations, of ranting, I’d explode. On the outside, I might look a lot older than I appeared in my 20s, but on the inside I’m an even angrier young man than I was back in those days. 

The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche warned against spitting into the wind. Sometimes it feels as though that's exactly what I'm doing on a weekly basis. My column has not stopped gun deaths, terrorism in the Middle East, government roundups on American streets, or corruption at the highest levels. My column on reading Tolstoy’s War and Peace did not appreciably increase sales of the masterpiece that contains so many gripping passages and life lessons. Still my column lets me vent for 28% of the week, and I can get back to novel-writing, teaching, advising, and doting on my grandkids the other 72%.

An arithmetic miracle comes along with writing that weekly column of around 800 words. At the end of two years or so, there’s enough material for a book. My just-published book of collected columns, The Raffel Ticket: Betting on America, does say a lot about the perpetrators of real-world crimes and near crimes—namely, members of Congress who ignore the Constitution, a would-be king who yearns to follow in the footsteps of George III, terrorists who kill based on religion or nationality, the rich and mighty who value money gotten by any means over peace and justice, and even college students who shun the study of English, history, and philosophy. 

One of the most satisfying elements of writing about the real world has been the support I received from fellow crime novelists. The back cover of my book features a quote from, of all people, Lee Child, whom I have long esteemed not only for his bestselling thrillers, but also for his politics and generosity. When he wrote, “Keith Raffel is someone I really pay attention to—he doesn’t always change my mind, but he always makes me think,” I was gobsmacked, over the moon. 

My own novel with the highest sales, A Fine and Dangerous Season, plays out against the background of the Cuban Missile Crisis of 1962. Spoiler alert: The USSR and US do not fire off nuclear weapons, and the world is saved. Despite all, I am betting the real world that has me so verklempt will be saved, too.  

I do have faith. 

Wishing you and yours a 2026 of joy, peace, meaning, and great reads,

Keith Raffel

***

Keith Raffel is a storyteller, historian, and observer of our turbulent times. The author of five published thrillers, he has now turned to nonfiction with The Raffel Ticket: Betting on America, a collection of essays examining justice, politics, education, technology, and books. Lee Child comments Raffel “doesn’t always change my mind, but he always makes me think.” Whether through crime novels or essays, Raffel does invite readers to think harder, laugh louder, and believe in better.

A resident of the Bay Area for decades, he currently spends the fall and spring as a resident scholar at Harvard University.