Ads
related to: macavity award winning booksamazon.com has been visited by 1M+ users in the past month
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The following writers have all received a Macavity Award from the members of Mystery Readers International. For the individual books, short stories and magazines that have received Macavitys, see Category:Macavity Award–winning works.
The Macavity Awards, established in 1987, are a group of literary awards presented annually to mystery writers.Nominated and voted upon annually by the members of the Mystery Readers International, the award is named for the "mystery cat" of T. S. Eliot's Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats. [1]
The following books received a Macavity Award from the members of Mystery Readers International. For Macavity-winning writers, see Category:Macavity Award winners . Pages in category "Macavity Award–winning works"
Minotaur Books: Pages: 368: Awards: Agatha Award for Best Nonfiction Book (2013), Macavity Award for Best Nonfiction (2014), Anthony Award for Best Critical or Non-fiction Work (2014), Edgar Award for Best Fact Crime (2014) ISBN: 978-0-312-60022-8: Website: The Hour of Peril
Paul D. Marks (died February 28, 2021 [1]) was an American novelist and short story writer.His novel White Heat, a mystery-thriller set during the Rodney King riots of 1992, won the first Shamus Award for Independent Private Eye Novel from the Private Eye Writers of America.
Laura Lippman (born January 31, 1959) is an American journalist and author of over 20 detective fiction novels. [1] Her novels have won multiple awards, including an Agatha Award, seven Anthony Awards, two Barry Awards, an Edgar Award, a Gumshoe Award, a Macavity Award, a Nero Award, two Shamus Awards, and two Strand Critics Award.
This novel won the Macavity Award for Best Novel in 1989 [1] and was nominated for two others: The Edgar Award and the Anthony Award. Hillerman has set expectations high, as this novel is an award-winner, yet "Slightly less absorbing than the best Hillermans, but darkly atmospheric and ultimately powerful--with (as usual) effective contrasts ...
For Blanche on the Lam, Neely received an Agatha Award for best first novel (1992); [18] an Anthony Award for first best novel (1993); [19] the Go on Girl! Award from the Black Women's Reading Club for the best début novel; [20] and a Macavity Award for first best mystery novel (1993). [21] Neely also won two awards for her activism.