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Cool Canadian Crime thanks the Department of Canadian Heritage
for its support.
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ARTHUR ELLIS AWARDS
WINNERS
2008 |
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Once a year in the spring,
Crime Writers of Canada
presents the
Arthur Ellis Awards for the best in Canadian crime writing of the
previous year. The awards competition is open to any writer living in
Canada, regardless of nationality, and to Canadian writers living
outside Canada.
There are six categories for published books and
stories:
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Best crime novel
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Best first crime novel
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Best non-fiction crime writing
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Best juvenile crime book
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Best crime short story
·
Best crime book in the French language
This year is also the second year for the Arthur Ellis award for best unpublished first
crime novel (aka the Unhanged Arthur). Part of the CWC's mandate is to
encourage developing new crime writing in Canada, and what better way to
do it than to have an award for the best unpublished manuscript.
For a list of past winners, go to
http://www.crimewriterscanada.com/cwc/pages/pastawards.html.
The CWC would like to express our gratitude to
Sleuth of Baker Street
mystery book store in Toronto for donating the cash prize for best
novel, to Book City
in Toronto for donating the cash prize for best first novel, and to
McArthur & Company
for donating the cash prize for the Unhanged Arthur and for reading the
winning manuscript with an eye to possibly publishing it.
And now the envelopes have been opened and we have our winners...
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Best Novel
Jon Redfern, Trumpets Sound No More
Arthur Ellis
award-winning author Jon Redfern’s new novel is a Victorian historical
set in 1840s London. A young theatre entrepreneur is found murdered, and
Inspector Owen Endersby of the recently formed London Detective
Police must find the culprit. The book is an atmospheric
thriller, treating readers to a view of old London from the stalls
of Covent Garden market to the mansions of the rich to the backstage
world of Drury Lane Theatre. |
RendezVous Crime (Napoleon & Company)
Trade paperback
ISBN: 978-1-894917-40-7
November 2007
$20.95 |
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Best First Novel
Liam Durcan, Garcia's Heart
Neurologist Patrick Lazerenko
travels to The Hague to witness the war crimes trial of his beloved
mentor, Hernan García, a Honduran doctor accused of involvement in
torture. Driven by his own youthful memories of the man and his family,
Lazerenko is determined to get to the truth behind the shocking
accusations, even as the prosecution and a relentless journalist suspect
Patrick of hiding information. |
McClelland &
Stewart
Trade
paperback
ISBN: 978-0-7710-2941-7
April 2008 (originally published in hardcover April 2007)
$21.00
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Best Non-Fiction
Julian Sher, One Child at a Time:
The Global Fight to Rescue Children from Online Predators
The Internet has
helped make child abuse terrifyingly common. One Child at a Time
goes behind the headlines to show how law officers are fighting back
against this tide of abuse, from daring rescues in homes to the seizures
of millions of dollars in the offshore bank accounts of the porn
merchants. In riveting detail, Julian Sher shows how investigators are
turning the technology of the Internet against the perpetrators as they
race to find and rescue the victims – children who otherwise have no
voice. |
Vintage Canada
Trade paperback
ISBN: 978-0-679-31393-9
April 2008 (originally published in
hardcover March 2007)
$22.00 |
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Best Juvenile
Shane Peacock, Eye of the Crow
Sherlock Holmes,
just thirteen, is a misfit, but his keen powers of observation are
already apparent. He loves to amuse himself by constructing histories
from the smallest detail for everyone he meets. Partly for fun, he
focuses his attention on a sensational murder to see if he can solve it.
But his game turns deadly serious when he finds himself the accused —
and in London, they hang boys of thirteen. |
Tundra Books
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-0-88776-850-7
August 2007
$24.99
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Best Short Story
Leslie Watts, “Turners” in Kingston Whig-Standard
(July 7, 2007)
A little girl with Turner’s
Syndrome enters a painting of a garden in a local painting contest.
The painting is stolen and the only person who pays attention to the
child is the cop. What’s the value of a kid’s painting? Perhaps a
lot…to a murderer.
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Best Crime Writing in French
Mario Bolduc, Tsiganes
Les tsiganes forment un peuple
originaire de l'Inde, qu'ils ont quitté vers l'an 1000 pour se répandre
à travers l'Europe, surtout en Roumanie, voire même au Canada. Mario
Bolduc a suivi leur destin jusqu'à ce jour, en éclairant toutes les
facettes de leur ramification. Les assises de son roman bien documenté
sont d'ordre historique. Oeuvre instructive qui renseigne brillamment
sur le sort d'un peuple qui a servi de bouc émissaire à tous les péchés
du monde. |
Editions Libre Expression
Trade paperback
ISBN: 978-2764802724
February 2007
$29.95 |
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Best Unpublished First
Crime Novel (the Unhanged Arthur)
D.J. McIntosh, The Witch
of Babylon
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The award, the Arthur, is an articulated wooden jumping-jack figure on a
scaffold with a noose around his neck. Arthur "dances" when the string
is pulled -- a fitting tribute to Canada's former official hangman,
Arthur Ellis, after whom the award was named.
Every Arthur is
hand-carved from hard maple by artisan Barry Lambeck. The award is based
on a design and prototype by artist Peter Blais.
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These Arthur Ellis winners can usually be found at
-- or ordered online from
-- our Crime Writers of
Canada member
bookstores: |
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·
As the Plot
Thickens (Kingston,
ON)
www.astheplotthickens.com
Phone: (613) 548-4664
E-mail:
mystery@kingston.net
· Prime
Crime Books (Ottawa,
ON)
www.primecrimebooks.com
Phone: (613) 238-CLUE
E-mail:
prime.crime@rogers.com
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Sleuth
of Baker Street
(Toronto, ON)
www.sleuthofbakerstreet.com
Phone: (416) 483-3111
E-mail:
sleuthbooks@sympatico.ca
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