24 March 2010 awards, Crime Express, web

Spinetingler online short story nominees announced

Well, it was a very pleasant surprise to learn this morning that my short story “A Wild and Crazy Night” has been nominated for a Spinetinger award in the Best Short Story on the Web category. The story was published last year on the great Beat to a Pulp site. Looking at some of the competition, it’s safe to say that the cliche is true: It’s an honor just to be be nominated.

The annual awards from Spinetingler Magazine are always a great way to catch up on all of the top-notch crime fiction that has been published in the past year. The online short story category nominees were released early to give everyone a chance to read before voting; the rest of the nominations will be announced next week, with readers allowed to vote in all categories at that time.

The other Best Short Story on the Web nominees are:

At Least I Felt Something,” by Sophie Littlefield (from The Drowning Machine)
Blurred Lines,” by Michael Moreci (from A Twist of Noir)
Flesh Rule,” by Frank Bill (from Plots with Guns)
Insatiable,” by Hilary Davidson (from Beat to a Pulp)
My Father’s Son,” by Alan Griffiths (from A Twist of Noir)
M-N-S (n) murder-necrophilia-suicide,” by Anonymous 9 (from Plots with Guns)
The Present,” by Mark Joseph Kiewlak (from A Twist of Noir)
Survival Instincts,” by Sandra Seamans (from Pulp Pusher)
The Tut,” by Paul D. Brazill (from Beat to a Pulp)

Posted by John Kenyon 1 comment

Crime Express series offers short crime fiction

Another great new venue for crime fiction writers has debuted in the UK, and the results are well worth figuring out how to convert pounds to dollars so you can import them to your mailbox.

Crime Express
, a new series from Five Leaves Publishing, offers a series of short crime stories each published as a short pocket book. They retail for 4.99 pounds (about $8), and are short enough to devour in one sitting. Consider them something between a short story and a novella, something perfect to keep with you for those times when you have half an hour to kill.

If you can hold off that long, that is. The first I’ve read, Allan Guthrie’s Killing Mum, is a ripping good read in the vein of his longer works. Hitman Carlos Morales gets an unusual job: killing his mother. But who ordered the hit? And how could he possibly pull the trigger? With 15,000 words to tell the tale, Guthrie doesn’t make the reader wait long to find out the answers, yet that amount of space allows for more development and description than your typical short story.

Other authors in the series include Ray Banks (Gun), John Harvey (Trouble in Mind) and Lawrence Block (Speaking of Lust).The Block book was shortlisted for the Crime Writers Association short story Dagger this year. There are 10 Crime Express titles to date.

Five Leaves Director Ross Bradshaw answered a few questions about this exciting new series.

TIRBD: What was the genesis of the series and how does the work to date compare with that initial idea?

RB: For years I had the notion of publishing long short stories/short novellas, call them what you will. It stemmed from a couple of books I read, not crime, one being Swimmer in the Secret Sea by William Kotzwinkle, the other being Rain by Kirsty Gunn. I was impressed with what you could do with fiction that length. By chance I’m bringing out the Kotzwinkle in a new edition in the autumn, but that is by the by. Then I thought “series,” and then I felt that crime fiction would fit the series notion best of all. I know a fair amount of crime fiction writers and the first three I asked (John Harvey, Stephen Booth and Rod Duncan) were excited to try to write to the length I had in mind, 15,000/16,000 words, 20,000 max. It is quite a challenge writing to that length. And I thought they would work better as a stand alone imprint. Maybe get people following the series, collecting the set.

How are the authors chosen and what guidance are they given?

After those three David Belbin, a local writer best known for his young adult material but someone with a big interest in adult crime fiction, and the short story, came in as series editor. He’d already done the desk editing on the first three and years ago he’d edited an anthology of Nottingham crime short stories for us, City of Crime (boy did that title go down well with the then leader of our local Council). Dave’s been steadily building the list, and through everyday networking he gets the writers. I know he is concerned that the books work to their own length and are not a full length novel trying desperately to break out. That has implications for plot and character, and the number of characters of course.

I know the Lawrence Block story is a reprint from an anthology he edited. Do you foresee other opportunities to single out and highlight work that might otherwise have been overlooked?

Dave’s a big fan of Block and that story had been buried in a small press anthology series in the US that disappeared after two books, which was barely seen on this side of the pond. We were pleased to get such a big name on the list but after that the series has been, and will remain, all new work commissioned by us. Unfortunately we don’t have the time to read unsolicited material.

Is there an endpoint for the series, or will you keep things going as long as authors contribute and readers pick them up?

We’ve published eight so far. Some have sold very well, some less so. Unfortunately the major chains in the UK are not keen on the A6 size. When Murder One closed in London that meant that there is not a single crime shop in Britain (unlike the USA where there are many great independent mystery bookshops) which means we are very much in the hands of the big chain buyers. They are not keen on the format so we are looking at relaunching the series next spring. Same length, still Crime Express, but perhaps not the smaller format. Pity. A lot of readers did like that shape but the chains, the chains… We’ve commissioned a few ahead already.

How does it fit in with Five Leaves’ overall mission?

Five Leaves has done a few full length crime fiction books, but I thought the short ones would be better as a stand alone imprint. Al Guthrie and the previous book by Ray Banks are darker than the books we normally publish, but that is no bad thing. I don’t think we’ll go dark completely on the crime front but it seems to me that some of the most exciting crime fiction around is on the dark side. As to our overall mission… if I ever draw up a mission statement feel free to shoot me. Five Leaves publishes the books that excite us… social history, Jewish culture, young adult, a bit of poetry, a bit of this, a bit of that. And crime fiction.

Posted by John Kenyon 1 comment