Okay Mairiuna! 🙂 It’s with great pleasure that I will try to shed some light on the prestigious 2006 to 2008 Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award honoring the very best in English crime and thriller writings.
But before I disclose the names of the authors who received the ornamental dagger and a £20,000 prize tied to it, let me jot down some ” behind the scenes” facts leading to the biggest award of the planet for new crime fiction writing.
It all started in the year 1955 when The Crime Writer’s Association (CWA) founded The Crossed Red Herring Award to celebrate the best crime novel of the year.
In 1960 the award was renamed The CWA Gold Dagger, and it’s sister, The CWA Silver Dagger, for her part, was introduced in 1970.
The next change was in 2006 when The Duncan Lawrie Private Bank became sponsor of the award, therefore giving it their own name.
They sponsored as well the newly-formed Duncan Lawrie International Dagger which celebrates the best crime novel translated into English.
A complete chronological listing of each awards and winners is available on the CWA website .
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So, without further ado, let’s drill down the recipients of the CWA Dagger Awards:
Duncan Lawrie Dagger Award – Best Crime Novel Of The Year
Prize: £20,000 sponsored by Duncan Lawrie Private Bank.
2006 Ann Cleeves Raven Black – The Shetland Quartet Series (Macmillan).
“Ann Cleeves, the winner of the first Duncan Lawrie Dagger, offered “a huge thank you to Duncan Lawrie”, adding:“This prize will make a difference. It’ll save me from being so frantically busy that writing is done on slow Virgin trains and crammed into weekends”.
2007 Peter Temple – The Broken Shore (Quercus)
“This is a well written crime novel with excellent characterisation mingled with a subtle exploration of contemporary Australian landscape and mores. This is a first class read with a sympathetic engrossing police protagonist.”
2008 Frances Fyfield – Blood From Stone – published by Sphere (Little, Brown)
“A subtle and elegantly written exploration of contemporary themes.
The mystery behind the death of a troublesome female barrister is explored in ways that illuminate the dark corners of life in Britain today, while detailed attention to costume and dress as aspects of identity resonates with insights into the fabric of society.”
Many other CWA Dagger Awards are presented during the prize-giving ceremonies, and I can tell you right away that I will have a very exciting wishlist for my next visit to the library from the following winning titles:
The CWA International Dagger – Best Crime Novel Translated into English
Prize: £5000 going to the author and £1000 to the translator.
2006 Fred Vargas – The Three Evangelists (Harvill), translated by Siân Reynolds
2007 Fred Vargas – Wash this Blood Clean from my Hand (Harvill Secker), translated by Siân Reynolds
2008 Dominique Manotti – Lorraine Connection – EuroCrime (Arcadia Books), translated by Amanda Hopkinson and Ros Schwartz
2009 Fred Vargas – The first in the series of Adamsberg novels, The Chalk Circle Man, translated by Siân Reynolds ( 3 times in the last 4 years! )
The CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger
Prize: £2000 for the best adventure/thriller novel in the vein of James Bond.
2006 Nick Stone – Mr Clarinet (Penguin)
2007 Gillian Flynn – Sharp Objects (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
2008 Tom Rob Smith – Child 44 – Simon & Schuster
2009 Coming soon…
The CWA Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction
Prize: £2000 – awarded this and every even-numbered year.
2006 Linda Rhodes, Lee Shelden and Kathryn Abnett – The Dagenham Murder (The Borough of Barking and Dagenham)
2008 Kester Aspden – Nationality: Wog – The Hounding of David Oluwale – Jonathan Cape (Random House)
The CWA John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger
Prize: £1000 – awarded in memory of CWA founder John Creasey, for first books by previously unpublished writers.
2006 Louise Penny – Still Life (Headline)
2007 Gillian Flynn – Sharp Objects (Weidenfeld & Nicolson)
2008 Matt Rees- The Bethlehem Murders – Atlantic Books
The CWA Dagger in the Library
Prize: £1500 – awarded to “the author of crime fiction whose work is currently giving the greatest enjoyment to readers”
2006 Jim Kelly
2007 Stuart MacBride
2008 Craig Russell
2009 Colin Cotterill
The CWA Debut Dagger
Prize: £500 plus night’s stay for two in a top London Hotel after the prize ceremony dinner.
2006 Otis Twelve (pseudonym of US writer D V Wesselmann) with Imp: Being the Lost Notebooks of Rufus Wilmot Griswold In the Matter of the Death of Edgar Allan Poe.
2007 lan Bradley ( from British Columbia in Canada ) The Sweetness At the Bottom of the Pie.
2008 Amer Anwar( from West London ) Western Fringes.
2009 Catherine O’Keefe – The Pathologist
…..Boy oh boy….what a long title for Otis Twelve’s book! Are you aware of any prize awarded to the longest title given to a novel Mairiuna? 🙂
Does the above not prove that the CWA Dagger Awards are the longest established literary awards in the UK and are internationally recognised as a mark of excellence and achievement ?
I sincerely do think so!
And you know what Mairiuna?
Upon signing off this post, I just discovered there is also The CWA Cartier Diamond Dagger !!! It celebrates sustained excellence in the genre of crime writing.
Sue Grafton was the winner in 2008 and “previous winners include John Harvey, Elmore Leonard, Ian Rankin, Lawrence Block, Sara Paretsky, Colin Dexter, Ed McBain, Reginald Hill, Ellis Peters, Leslie Charteris, Ruth Rendell, Dick Francis, John Le Carré and PD James”.
Well…well …well…anymore out there of these prolific Dagger Awards? 😉
PS: Main source of information for this blog post is The Crime Writer Association website and we thank them for their help.
Cheers.
Talk soon.
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