Showing posts with label ngaio marsh awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ngaio marsh awards. Show all posts

Friday, November 21, 2025

Review: THE MIRES

THE DEEPER THE DEAD by Catherine Lea (Bateman Books, 2025)

Reviewed by Karen Chisholm

Three women give birth in different countries and different decades. In the near future, they become neighbours in a coastal town in Aotearoa New Zealand. Single parent Keri has her hands full with four-year-old tearaway Walty and teen Wairere, a strange and gifted child, who always picks up on things that aren't hers to worry about. They live next door to Janet, a white woman with an opinion about everything, and new arrival Sera, whose family are refugees from ecological devastation in Europe.
 
When Janet’s son Conor arrives home without warning, sporting a fresh buzzcut and a new tattoo, the quiet tension between the neighbours grows, but no one suspects just how extreme Conor has become. No one except Wairere, who can feel the danger in their midst, and the swamp beneath their street, watching and waiting.

Hopefully more and more of us are looking for answers to the state of the world in the right directions, but then again you look at the state of world politics and the rise of the nationalistic mobs, environmental degradation and climate change denial, and it's getting hard to see any light at the end of an increasingly long, dark tunnel. Tina Makereti has chosen to take this situation, and the hopelessness generated hyper-local, with THE MIRES. Into a small community, living on top of a swamp in Kapiti, on the North Island of Aotearoa New Zealand which is trying to coexist, and it's in their interactions and responses to threats that we have been given the opportunity to learn something,

The story is centred around three women - all from different countries and different decades, all of whom with children and life experience that vary dramatically. First up is Keri, a Māori woman who lives with the aftermath of domestic violence, struggling to feed her two children - a lively four year old called Walty and her reserved teenage daughter Wairere, who hears the voices of her ancestors and has the gift of sight.

She lives between, on the one side, refugees from ecological breakdown in Europe - Sera, her husband Adam and baby Aliana. On the other Janet, another survivor of domestic violence, she's a white New Zealander woman with very fixed ideas about how everybody else should live. Meanwhile her son, Conor, is becoming increasing radicalised, behaving very secretly and strangely.

These three women - Keri, Sera and Janet - form the core of this novel, but it's Conor who becomes the catalyst, returning home without warning, sporting tattoos and a buzzcut, his behaviour really causing the tension to ramp up. Whilst the older women may not immediately realise just how warped Conor's beliefs have become, Wairere immediately senses the danger.

As with the outstanding and very moving KATARAINA, central to the core of the Māori people is their connection to vital areas of the landscape - in this case, again, a swamp that forms both part of the community and their sensibility for want of a better description. The novel starts out quite deceptively, with the feel of a gentle, domestic styled story about women, families and living in small communities or suburbs. As friendships are formed, and the younger children in particular form initial bridges between them, the novel itself starts to build through the gathering of strangers and the perceived threat of difference to a very particular threat within. Conor and his extremist right-wing connections, isolation, and targeting of women and migrants in particular becomes something that could break this small, almost insulated world apart.

Informed strongly by indigenous sensibilities, beliefs and spiritual connections to Country, and ancestors, THE MIRES also isn't afraid to use the examples of the horror of white supremacy, the massacres that are all too often performed in its name, and attempt to shine a light on that darkest of human behaviour whilst more importantly, providing examples of how the best of humanity can rise above. 

Whilst parts of THE MIRES were devastating, and very discomforting to read, it's message of hope and connection shone through. It has a particularly indigenous sensibility - the things that matter - people / community / connection to those and to place, always to place, feels very much like an answer we could all be looking towards. .

Karen Chisholm is one of Australia's leading crime reviewers. She created Aust Crime Fiction in 2006, a terrific resource - please check it out. Karen also reviews for Newtown Review of Books, and has been a regular judge of the Ned Kelly Awards and Ngaio Marsh Awards. This review was first published on Karen's website; she kindly shares some of her reviews of crime and thriller novels written by New Zealanders adn Australians on Crime Watch as well as on Aust Crime Fiction

Thursday, September 25, 2025

15 Years of the Ngaios: our first trophy and first winner, belatedly photographed





When the Ngaio Marsh Awards was originally launched in 2010, it marked a new era in New Zealand crime, mystery, and thriller writing (later nicknamed #yeahnoir, thanks Steph Soper).

We finally had an award to celebrate our best Kiwi works in the world's most popular storytelling genre. Murmurs around the local literary world were largely positive, and a big September 200 event - including a murder mystery-themed performance by the famous Court Theatre - was scheduled to headline that year's Christchurch Writers Festival in the prime Saturday night slot.

Unfortunately, everything changed when a few days beforehand the first of two major earthquakes struck Christchurch. Fortunately no lives were lost then (unlike the devastating 'quake a few months later), but infrastructure was badly damaged, and the festival was cancelled. Then, in December 200 a good crowd turned out for a one-off special event, fundraising for earthquake recovery, complete with finalists Vanda Symon and Neil Cross, and Christchurch crime writer Paul Cleave. Unfortunately, as s/he was writing under a pseudonym at that time, the inaugural winner was not there to claim their well-earned prize in person: Alix Bosco for their terrific debut thriller CUT & RUN.

For a while we thought we may see our first Ngaios winner onscreen, as it was in development, with Robyn Malcolm set to star as heroine Anna Markunas, a middle-aged legal researcher who gets caught up in a celebrity murder case. But we never had a picture of our very first winner with the first award - a terrific and distinctive handcrafted trophy created by sculptor Gina Ferguson. We did get some great pics of Paul Cleave with his 2011 Ngaio, and Neil Cross with his 2012 one, etc.

Our original Ngaios evening was still a fabulous night, and it was great to have New Zealand crime fiction finally being celebrated in such a way. The Ngaio Marsh Awards have gone from strength to strength in the years since, but as founder of the Ngaios it did irk me for a while that we didn't have a picture of Greg McGee (who 'came out' as Alix Bosco in 2011) with the very first trophy.

Fortunately, a few years later, thanks to talented Kiwi photographer Maja Moritz, we did. 

The lovely photo above was part of a photographic series of 43 New Zealand authors that Moritz did for DPA Picture Alliance in Germany in association with New Zealand being the Guest of Honour at the Frankfurt Book Fair. As part of that project, Moritz took some photos of Greg McGee at his house, including this one of him holding up the Ngaio Marsh Award he'd won as 'Alix Bosco' a couple of years before. Later, Maja and I connected, and she kindly let us use the pic of Greg and the Ngaios trophy.

Thank you Maja. As we approach our 15th anniversary event in Christchurch tonight, we still really appreciate you sharing your talent, and work, with us in our early years. So who will be taking pics with Ngaios trophies in 2025? You can find out tonight at "The Ngaio Marsh Awards and The Murderous Mystery" at Turanga Christchurch City Libraries from 6pm. 

For those in the Canterbury area, here's some further and details for last-minute tickets: https://wordchristchurch.co.nz/programme/the-ngaio-marsh-awards-and-the-murderous-mystery/


Here are the prime suspects (2025 finalists) who are in the running, across three categories. 

BEST NON-FICTION
  • THE TRIALS OF NURSE KERR by Scott Bainbridge (Bateman Books)
  • THE SURVIVORS by Steve Braunias (HarperCollins)
  • THE CREWE MURDERS by Kirsty Johnstone & James Hollings (Massey Uni Press)
  • THE LAST SECRET AGENT by Pippa Latour & Jude Dobson (Allen & Unwin)
  • GANGSTER’S PARADISE by Jared Savage (HarperCollins)
  • FAR NORTH by David White & Angus Gillies (Upstart Press)
BEST FIRST NOVEL
  • DARK SKY by Marie Connolly (Quentin Wilson Publishing)
  • LIE DOWN WITH DOGS by Syd Knight (Rusty Hills)
  • A FLY UNDER THE RADAR by William McCartney 
  • THE DEFIANCE OF FRANCES DICKINSON by Wendy Parkins (Affirm Press)
  • THE CALL by Gavin Strawhan (Allen & Unwin)
  • KISS OF DEATH by Stephen Tester (Heritage Press)
BEST NOVEL
  • RETURN TO BLOOD by Michael Bennett (Simon & Schuster)
  • A DIVINE FURY by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
  • WOMAN, MISSING by Sherryl Clark (HarperCollins)
  • HOME TRUTHS by Charity Norman (Allen & Unwin)
  • 17 YEARS LATER by JP Pomare (Hachette)
  • THE CALL by Gavin Strawhan (Allen & Unwin)
  • PREY by Vanda Symon (Orenda Books)

So, whodunnit and whowunnit? We'll find out very soon who's joining Greg McGee and several other superb Kiwi crime, mystery, and thriller writers on our Ngaio Marsh Awards roll of honour. 

Friday, August 29, 2025

Character first: 2025 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists revealed

 











Character first: 2025 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists offer page-turning tales that explore people and place

From a young Māori chef to a grieving family torn asunder by internet disinformation, wartime spies to comical Northland drug runners, the finalists for the 2025 Ngaio Marsh Awards offer readers a kaleidoscopic array of unforgettable characters, fictional and real, among compelling tales full of mystery and thrills, touching on vital issues of modern times and eras past

“In our fifteenth anniversary season of the Ngaio Marsh Awards, we’ve been blessed with a fascinating range of entries across our three categories, from a diverse array of Kiwi voices and stories, styles, and settings, making our international judging panels’ jobs both very enjoyable and at times very tricky,” says Ngaio Marsh Awards founder Craig Sisterson.

Now in their sixteenth season, the Ngaio Marsh Awards celebrate excellence in mystery, thriller, crime, and suspense writing from Aotearoa storytellers. The 2025 finalists were announced today in Best Non-Fiction, Best First Novel, and Best Novel categories. 

“As the likes of Val McDermid and Dennis Lehane have said, if you want to better understand a place, read its crime fiction,” says Sisterson. “Crime writing in its wider sense can deliver interesting insights alongside rollicking entertainment, and is an ideal form for delving into people and place, as well as broader societal issues. And in our case with the Ngaios, we certainly see that across both our fiction and non-fiction entries and finalists.” 

The Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Non-Fiction is a biennial prize first presented in 2017, and previously won by Michael Bennett, Kelly Dennett, Martin van Beynen, and Steve Braunias. 

From a fascinating array of 2025 entrants, this year’s six finalists explore some truly remarkable real-life tales, ranging from a fresh look at New Zealand’s most infamous cold case to the little-discussed deadly legacy of a 1930s Devonport nurse. The finalists are:

  • THE TRIALS OF NURSE KERR by Scott Bainbridge (Bateman Books)
  • THE SURVIVORS by Steve Braunias (HarperCollins)
  • THE CREWE MURDERS by Kirsty Johnstone & James Hollings (Massey Uni Press)
  • THE LAST SECRET AGENT by Pippa Latour & Jude Dobson (Allen & Unwin)
  • GANGSTER’S PARADISE by Jared Savage (HarperCollins)
  • FAR NORTH by David White & Angus Gillies (Upstart Press)

This year’s finalists for the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best First Novel, an annual award first presented in 2016, and won last year by Rotorua author Claire Baylis for DICE, her extraordinary novel providing a jury-eyed-view of a sexual assault case, are: 

  • DARK SKY by Marie Connolly (Quentin Wilson Publishing)
  • LIE DOWN WITH DOGS by Syd Knight (Rusty Hills)
  • A FLY UNDER THE RADAR by William McCartney 
  • THE DEFIANCE OF FRANCES DICKINSON by Wendy Parkins (Affirm Press)
  • THE CALL by Gavin Strawhan (Allen & Unwin)
  • KISS OF DEATH by Stephen Tester (Heritage Press)

“It’s really heartening each year to see the range of new voices infusing fresh perspectives into the crime and thriller backstreets of our local literary landscape,” says Sisterson. 

This year that ranges from a mystery set at Tekapo's Mt John Observatory to a legal thriller set against the Spanish flu epidemic, from a blackly comic crime caper from a Devonport lawyer to the gritty first novel from one of our most acclaimed screen storytellers. 


Lastly, the finalists for the 2025 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel, selected by an international panel of crime and thriller experts from a remarkable 15-book longlist, are:

  • RETURN TO BLOOD by Michael Bennett (Simon & Schuster)
  • A DIVINE FURY by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
  • WOMAN, MISSING by Sherryl Clark (HarperCollins)
  • HOME TRUTHS by Charity Norman (Allen & Unwin)
  • 17 YEARS LATER by JP Pomare (Hachette)
  • THE CALL by Gavin Strawhan (Allen & Unwin)
  • PREY by Vanda Symon (Orenda Books)

“It’s a dazzling group of finalists to emerge from a terrific longlist, and a fascinating broader group of entries that seems to get deeper and stronger every year,” says Sisterson. “Our international judges were full of praise for the entire longlist, and remarked on the world-class writing as well as compelling storytelling in many books that didn’t become finalists, as well as the overall variety within #yeahnoir, our Kiwi take on a globally popular genre.”

The 2025 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists will be celebrated and this year’s winners announced at a special event, “The Ngaio Marsh Awards and The Murderous Mystery”, to be held in association with WORD Christchurch at Tūranga on Thursday, 25 September. The thrilling evening includes an improv murder mystery performance by the famed Court Theatre.  

Wednesday, July 16, 2025

Fifteen years, fifteen stories: 2025 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel longlist revealed




















Fifteen years, fifteen stories: 2025 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel longlist revealed

A Māori sleuth trying to leave policing behind, a New York bartender with an entourage of dead girls, a colonial Wellington tale entwined with infamous Edinburgh body-snatchers, a gay investigator in Renaissance Florence, a probation officer whose beloved husband is sucked into the pit of internet disinformation, and a couple of bookselling former British coppers are among the diverse array of characters and stories named today on the longlist for the 2025 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel.

“While we named Aotearoa’s awards after one of the legendary Queens of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, this year’s longlistees – and our entrants more broadly – clearly demonstrate the depth, diversity, and evolution of our local take on crime, mystery, and thriller writing, aka #yeahnoir,” says Ngaio Marsh Awards founder Craig Sisterson. “We’ve come a long way since the classic murder mysteries that Dame Ngaio penned from her house in the Cashmere Hills, and were devoured by readers all over the world.”

This year’s longlist includes a mix of past Ngaio Marsh Award winners and finalists, some first-time authors and other fresh voices, and several storytellers who’ve won and been shortlisted for a range of other local and international book awards, from the famed CWA Daggers in the UK to the ABIA General Fiction Book of the Year in Australia, the Beltie Prize in the United States, and the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction.

The longlist for this year’s Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel prize is:

RETURN TO BLOOD by Michael Bennett (Simon & Schuster)
THE HITCHHIKER by Gabriel Bergmoser (HarperCollins)
A DIVINE FURY by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
LEAVE THE GIRLS BEHIND by Jacqueline Bublitz (Allen & Unwin)
WOMAN, MISSING by Sherryl Clark (HQ Fiction)
HELL’S BELLS by Jill Johnson (Black & White)
THE MIRES by Tina Makereti (Ultimo Press)
A FLY UNDER THE RADAR by William McCartney
HOME TRUTHS by Charity Norman (Allen & Unwin)
17 YEARS LATER by JP Pomare (Hachette)
OKIWI BROWN by Cristina Sanders (The Cuba Press)
A HOUSE BUILT ON SAND by Tina Shaw (Text Publishing)
THE CALL by Gavin Strawhan (Allen & Unwin)
PREY by Vanda Symon (Orenda Books)
THE BOOKSHOP DETECTIVES: DEAD GIRL GONE by Gareth & Louise Ward (Penguin)

“Ranging across settings, centuries, and sub-genres, it’s a fascinatingly varied longlist that’s already giving our international judging panel plenty to ponder and debate,” says Sisterson, who helped establish the awards in 2010. 

The finalists for Best Novel, Best First Novel, and Best Non-Fiction will be announced in mid-August, with the finalists celebrated and the 2025 Ngaio Marsh Award winners announced as part of a special event in conjunction with WORD Christchurch and featuring the Court Jesters on Thursday, 25 September. 

Saturday, May 10, 2025

Review: A FLY UNDER THE RADAR

A FLY UNDER THE RADAR by William McCartney (2024)

Reviewed by Karen Chisholm

Lawyers, drugs, deaths, and sneakiness, in New Zealand.

This book should have come with a warning - I mean a blurb that simply said 'Lawyers, drugs, deaths, and sneakiness, in New Zealand.' just doesn't cut it. 

It should have mentioned: 1) Shouldn't be read in public unless you want people to think you're having a breakdown; 2) Definitely shouldn't be read if you're planning a serious and earnest career in the law;
Might not necessarily reflect the reality of the practice of law in New Zealand (that one's more of fervent hope than a warning); 3) Will make you laugh at the MOST inappropriate things; and 4) Don't climb any ladders to fiddle with any smoke alarms whilst reading.

The story revolves around Van Stilton, lawyer to FatMan (aka Fred Turner) whom he came across one Sunday morning in 2019. An odd phone call that included a hint: 'I have said nothing thus far.'

Thus?

Leading to the introduction to the reader (not Stilton) of his junior, a baby lawyer referred to as Grasshopper. I'll leave you to work out the implications.

The story evolves. Fatman is in a spot of bother over cocaine dealing, Stilton is in a spot of bother trying to get his client out of a tricky position, Grasshopper is hanging on to the wildest ride of her life. Potential jurors are being assessed: "The first six were unremarkable. The seventh a large blonde woman who looked like she hadn't even considered the brooking of any kind of nonsense since 1974."

The story gets madder, the action gets crazy, the potential for serious jail time switches around, Fatman gets into trouble, Stilton finds himself even deeper in the potential mire and Grasshopper, well she hangs onto the wildest ride of her life.

And I laughed more than I should have at what is essentially a criminal ride of excess, death, a bit of gore and a ladder. Oh and at passages like this:
The judge gave her decision immediately. She began by stating the facts of the search as she had determined them to be. Then she considered the wording of section 30 of the Evidence Act, and gave due regard to previous decisions by the Court of Appeal as to how section 30 should be applied. Then she undertook an overall balancing process, giving approximate weight to the impropriety of the search, but also taking proper account of the need for an effective and credible system of justice that would not easily let offenders avoid the consequences of their actions. Eventually, she came down in favour of the side that had not said that her head was up her arse.
More please.

Karen Chisholm is one of Australia's leading crime reviewers. She created Aust Crime Fiction in 2006, a terrific resource - please check it out. Karen also reviews for Newtown Review of Books, and has been a judge of the Ned Kelly Awards and Ngaio Marsh Awards. This review was first published on Karen's website; she kindly shares some of her reviews of crime and thriller novels written by Australians and New Zealanders on Crime Watch as well as on Aust Crime Fiction

Wednesday, February 26, 2025

Review: A DIVINE FURY

A DIVINE FURY by DV Bishop (Macmillan, 2024)

Reviewed by Alyson Baker

Florence. Autumn, 1539. Cesare Aldo was once an officer for the city’s most feared criminal court. Following a period of exile, he is back – but demoted to night patrol, when only the drunk and the dangerous roam the streets.

Chasing a suspect in the rain, Aldo discovers a horrifying scene beneath Michelangelo’s statue of David. Lifeless eyes gaze from the face of a man whose body has been posed as if crucified. It’s clear the killer had religious motives.

When more bodies appear, Aldo believes an unholy murderer is stalking the citizens of Florence. Watching. Hunting. Waiting for the perfect moment to strike again… 

“Investigating a murder that involves the Church never ends well in Florence.” Cesare Aldo and Carlo Strocchi are back pounding the beat in 1539 Florence. Literally pounding the beat for Aldo, who has been assigned to months of night-patrolling the curfew since his return from banishment to the Tuscan countryside. But one night Aldo makes a gruesome discovery at the feet of Michelangelo’s David, and Aldo and Strocchi are once again pursuing a murderer.

As they hasten to find the killer, there are more murders, and then multiple suspects – neither the victims not the suspects appearing to have anything in common. However, eventually they all have links to a particular church, and to the rite of exorcism – possibly being used as a punishment for “those who were different” rather than a purification ritual. Now Aldo and Strocchi must deal with the power of the Church as well as their incompetent superior at the Otto criminal court, Segretario Massimo Bindi.

A Divine Fury has all the characters that followers of the Cesare Aldo series have come to love, as well as those they loathe. A great thing about a good series with ongoing characters is that you get to follow their development through time. “Life was simpler when I lived in a village” – Strocchi, now promoted to an officer of the Otto, is maturing into a thoughtful investigator, albeit needing the calming influence of his wise wife, Tomasia, now expecting their second child.

Aldo is becoming bolder and more carefree: “Yes, he wanted to see justice done, far more than he cared about the laws of Florence.” His being demoted and now subordinate to Strocchi plays a part in this, along with being back nearer to his soulmate Doctor Saul Orvieto, renewing his acquaintance with Duke Cosimo de’ Medici, and encountering a woman who is his equal in wit and manipulation: Contessa Valentine Coltello.

The Contessa is, and wants to remain, a Venetian spymaster – a pivotal role in a society that turns on intelligence and deceit, always judging “how much and to whom to share information.” The book give you the feel of 16th Century Venice; you can smell the “merda”, be intrigued by the political manoeuvrings, feel frustrated for the women who must manipulate men to have any agency – and cheer on those who are confident of their skills, such as Saul’s assistant, Rebecca. 

A Divine Fury might have all the elements of historical fiction, but it also has modern resonances. Sometimes this is overt: “Honestly the poor people of Milan would not notice good sewing or gorgeous gowns if they tripped over such delights in the street”, but often by allusion. Many areas of the world today would recognise the bigotry and prejudice of 1539 Florence. There are hints at conversion therapy, and a willingness of the Church to transfer people to other regions rather than admit one of their own have committed crimes.

The reader has all the clues to formulate a theory about the crime, and all is coming to a neat conclusion when, as with all good murder mysteries, things start to get murky and then hurtling in a new direction – with suggestions of modern criminal profiling techniques, and the need for them. A Divine Fury is an engaging murder mystery and ends with Cesare Aldo making a significant decision about his future. I can’t wait to read of his further exploits!

Alyson Baker is a crime-loving former librarian in Nelson. This review first appeared on her blog, which you can check out here

Friday, January 3, 2025

Review: TUGGA'S MOB

TUGGA'S MOB by Stephen Johnson (Clan Destine Press, 2019)

Reviewed by Karen Chisholm

What happens on tour stays on tour was the mantra for the southern hemisphere backpackers who swarmed Europe in the 1980s. Foreign countries had to be explored and devoured in every way possible. Waikato-born Judy Williams worked hard for her big OE: London, Paris, Rome, Gallipoli; and her adventures were dutifully recorded in her diary.

A diary that also recorded how the obsessive Tugga Tancred and his Kiwi mates turned Judy's trip of a lifetime into a nightmare of sly sexual harassment. Their bad behaviour went unnoticed, or was ignored by fellow passengers like Australian Andrew Hackett who chose to party hard with Tugga's Mob. After all, they were in Europe for a good time, not a long time.

And what a time it was, until Tugga's fixation ultimately led to murder: a crime that went unpunished for 30 years. But few things remain hidden forever. The rediscovery of Judy's hand-written diary sparks a trail of revenge that the original perpetrators never see coming..

Set across two timelines, this is a story that starts out in the 1980's, on one of those young people, mad house type tours of foreign climes that were particularly popular back then. Many of us will remember tales of people (or were those people) who went on the slightly madcap charge around Europe, normally in a bus, camping out at various locations or in the cheapest possible accommodation, with a heap of other young people around the same age. There were stories of tour romances, much fun, huge drinking sessions, and less well known maybe, some seriously appalling behaviour.

In TUGGA'S MOB we have the story of Waikato-born Judy Williams, a quiet, hard-working young woman who saved for her trip of a lifetime, and ended up on one of these tours. Unfortunately on the same tour as Tugga Tancred and a bunch of his yobbo Kiwi mates. Tugga developed quite an obsession with Judy, and he and his friends turned her trip of a lifetime into a nightmare, with sexual harassment and controlling and abusive behaviour. Which everyone else on the tour appeared happy to ignore, even when obsession turned to murder.

Thirty years later and Tugga's last trip down the Great Ocean Road could have something to do with those events all those years ago. Does the same fate await Andrew Hackett, an Australian on the same tour, happy to party hard with Tugga's Mob, now a hatchet man in the news business? One of his own news rooms might be about to find out.

The investigative aspects of TUGGA'S MOB are set within the world of news gathering - a cutthroat, time-pressured, manic environment well portrayed in this novel, with journo Curly Rogers in a clear cut search for the truth contrasted sharply with the self-serving nature of party boy turned boss Hackett. The discovery of Judy's hand-written diary provides the spark for revenge, and the full story of what happened back then. There are plenty of red herrings along the way to keep the reader working hard, and the ending, whilst predictable is apt, and nicely closed off, although there is a bit of a tendency to over explain when things start to get complicated.

The use of the investigative journalist as the central protagonist is a nice touch, and TUGGA'S MOB overall is an entertaining romp styled novel.


Karen Chisholm is one of Australia's leading crime reviewers. She created Aust Crime Fiction in 2006, a terrific resource - please check it out. Karen also reviews for Newtown Review of Books, and has been a regular judge of the Ned Kelly Awards and Ngaio Marsh Awards. This review was first published on Karen's website; she kindly shares some of her reviews of crime and thriller novels written by New Zealanders and Australians on Crime Watch as well as on Aust Crime Fiction

Tuesday, September 10, 2024

"Captivating, full of texture" - review of Ngaios winner RITUAL OF FIRE

RITUAL OF FIRE by DV Bishop (Macmillan, 2023)

Reviewed by Craig Sisterson

Florence. Summer, 1538. A night patrol finds a wealthy merchant hanged and set ablaze in the city’s main square. More than mere murder, this killing is intended to put the fear of God into Florence. Forty years earlier, puritanical monk Girolamo Savonarola was executed the same way. Does this new killing mean his fanatical disciples are reviving the monk’s regime of holy terror?

Cesare Aldo is busy hunting thieves in the Tuscan countryside, leaving Constable Carlo Strocchi to investigate the killing. When another merchant is burned alive in public, the rich start fleeing to their country estates. But the Tuscan hills can also be dangerous.

Growing religious fervour and a scorching heatwave drives the city ever closer to madness. Meanwhile, someone is stalking those powerful men who forged lifelong bonds in the dark days of Savonarola. Unless Aldo and Strocchi work together, all of Florence will be consumed by an inferno of death and destruction . . .

While After decades of crafting a diverse array of stories from Judge Dredd and 2000 AD comics to BBC radio plays to official Doctor Who and Warhammer novels, Scotland-based New Zealander DV Bishop announced himself on the historical mystery scene in 2021 with a sumptuous first novel, City of Vengeance, starring Cesare Aldo, a fascinating investigator serving the feared Otto Di Guardia e Balia criminal court in Renaissance Florence. A thrilling page-turner that vividly evoked time and place, Bishop’s crime debut soaked readers in the grandeur and grime of the sixteenth century city. A place and time where a modern tourist spot like Ponte Vecchio was then awash with blood and offal every evening, and many rulers terms were cut short thanks to the machinations of those closest to them.

That first novel demanded an ongoing series, and Bishop has delivered, with quality. Last year’s sequel, The Darkest Sin, won the CWA Historical Dagger as well as being longlisted for the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel in Bishop’s homeland, adding to an array of several awards listings and wins for the Cesare Aldo series already. The latest instalment, Ritual of Fire, has already been longlisted for the McIlvanney Prize in Scotland, and offers readers another rip-snorting story.

It's summer 1538, and the city of Florence is sweltering. Then a night patrol finds a rich merchant hanged and set ablaze in the city’s main piazza, evoking memories of the execution of popular puritanical monk Girolamo Savonarola forty years earlier. Cesare Aldo is now hunting thieves in the Tuscan countryside, far outside the city walls, following a falling out with his former protégé Constable Carlo Strocchi. So it’s up to Strocchi to investigate the ritualistic killing. When another rich merchant is burned alive in public, the pressure rises from the city’s leaders. Are Savonarola’s followers making a new play for power, or long-marinated revenge? Or is something else going on? Aldo and Strocchi must set aside their differences to unmask dangerous killers as religious fervour and a scorching heatwave drives the city-state towards riots and self-destruction. 

Bishops delivers another captivating, action-packed mystery that’s full of flavour and texture. He finely balances history and mystery, offering readers plenty of insight into the era without ever overwhelming the intrigue and forward momentum. Aldo is a fascinating protagonist; a man of the law who is breaking the law (of the times). A man giving all of himself to a regime and superiors that could see him imprisoned or worse if his secret came to light. His sexuality is a Sword of Damocles. 

In a strange way, I think there's a bit of Harry Bosch in Cesare Aldo - in that Aldo is an honourable man that is full of some contradictions, who loves his city and is determined to protect its people, even as he stands apart, a lone sentinel fully aware of all the flaws in the place he loves and protects.

A great read in a great series that will hopefully have many more instalments to come. 

This review was first published in the August 2023 issue of Deadly Pleasures magazine, and is republished here following Ritual of Fire winning the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel. 

Craig Sisterson is a lawyer turned writer, editor, podcast host, awards judge, and event chair. He's the founder of the Ngaio Marsh Awards, co-founder of Rotorua Noir, author of Macavity and HRF Keating Award-shortlisted non-fiction work SOUTHERN CROSS CRIME, editor of the DARK DEEDS DOWN UNDER anthology series, and writes about books for magazines and newspapers in several countries.

Monday, September 2, 2024

The Bookshop Detectives reflect on 2024 Ngaios

Last Wednesday, the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards winners were announced as part of a fantastic event celebrating all this year's finalists, across three categories (Best Kids/YA, Best First Novel, Best Novel) at the WORD Christchurch Festival. It was a prime setting for a crime and mystery denouement: a full house of witnesses and suspects (finalists) gathered in the library (Turanga), to listen as our sleuthing duo The Bookshop Detectives sifted the clues, avoided the red herrings, and interrogated some of the prime suspects who were there in person, before unmasking the culprits (winners). 

Now in the first of a series of chats for a new podcast on books and bookselling, Gareth and Louise Ward aka The Bookshop Detectives dissect their experience as MCs of this year's Ngaio Marsh Awards, held during WORD Christchurch. As they say, "Spoiler - it was bloody awesome! Do please spend almost 10 of your earth minutes listening to our erudite conversation about the crime fiction taking Aotearoa by storm. Thanks!#yeahnoir"

Bookshop Detectives Louise and Gareth Ward (right) interrogate Claire Baylis, a prime
suspect for both Best First Novel and Best Novel for her devastating courtroom debut DICE


Wednesday, August 28, 2024

The Verdict Is In: 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award winners


The Verdict Is In: 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award winners explore societal prejudices and characters under fire

A trio of superb Kiwi writers were honoured at WORD Christchurch Festival last night as they scooped the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards for novels offering readers insights into people and place alongside cracking crime tales

In the fifteenth instalment of Aotearoa’s annual awards celebrating excellence in crime, mystery, thriller, and suspense writing, Rotorua author Claire Baylis won Best First Novel for her harrowing examination of jury beliefs and biases in Dice (Allen & Unwin), while Scotland-based DV Bishop scooped Best Novel for his Renaissance Florence-set mystery Ritual of Fire (Macmillan), and Wellington writer Jennifer Lane joined rare company by winning Best Kids/YA for smalltown mystery Miracle (Cloud Ink Press). 

“I’m stoked we have a special award this year recognising writers of crime, mystery, and thriller tales for younger readers,” says Ngaios founder Craig Sisterson. “Many of us owe any lifelong passion for books, and all the good that come along with that, to the children’s authors we read when we were youngsters ourselves. Aotearoa has amazing kids authors, across many genres. In future we plan to award our Best Kids/YA Book prize biennially, alternating with our Best Non-Fiction prize that returns in 2025.”

Last night, ‘Bookshop Detectives’ Gareth and Louise Ward interrogated several of the prime suspects, aka 2024 Ngaios finalists, in person and by video before a large crowd of witnesses in Tūranga, before revealing whowunnit. “It’s the kind of denouement Dame Ngaio may have enjoyed,” says Sisterson.

First up, Lane was stunned to find herself onstage accepting the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Kids/YA, adding to the Best First Novel prize she won in 2018 for All Our Secrets. She joins Paul Cleave, Jacqueline Bublitz, and Michael Bennett as winners of multiple Ngaio Marsh Awards. The judges praised Miracle, which stars a teenager trying to deal with devastating events and clear her father’s name after he’s arrested for a brutal attack, as “poignant and funny, with a complex storyline and memorable, well-developed characters including a fascinating heroine with her authentic adolescent voice”. 

Lane’s fellow IIML graduate Claire Baylis was equally thrilled to win Best First Novel for Dice, a unique courtroom drama inspired by her research for the trans-Tasman Jury Project. Her debut gives readers insights into some harsh realities in our criminal justice system through the eyes and beliefs and biases of 12 jurors serving on a tricky sexual assault case. “Both timely and sensitively handled, there is so much that’s clever and surprising about Dice,” said the Ngaios judges. “Inventive, devastating, infuriating.”

The international judging panel for this year’s Ngaio Marsh Awards comprised leading crime fiction critics, editors, and authors from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, the UK, and the United States.

The Best Novel judges praised Bishop for crafting great characters and “vividly evoking the glorious but menacing Medici-era Florence with convincing historical details seamlessly woven” into Ritual of Fire’s terrific story of Cesare Aldo, a gay court officer at a time when that was punishable potentially by death, trying to uncover the murderers of rich merchants burned to death in disturbing echoes of a religious sect. 

“I’m delighted, and amazed frankly because the standard of the books on the longlist this year, let alone amongst the finalists, was incredible,” said Bishop over video from his home south of Edinburgh, when he was surprised with the news Ritual of Fire had won the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel. 

For more information on any of our 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards winners or finalists, or the Ngaios in general, please contact ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com, or founder Craig Sisterson.



Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Beyond whodunnit: 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists revealed

Beyond whodunnit: 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists offer page-turning tales and social critiques across time and place

From stem cell research to sexual assault juries, the dangers of a surveillance society to mental health and animal abuse, the finalists for the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards offer readers a diverse array of page-turning mysteries and thrills entwined with societal issues, set against a variety of locales and eras from Renaissance Florence and Nazi Germany to contemporary Aotearoa.

‘While crime and thriller fiction is often talked about in terms of its page-turning plotlines, or puzzling twists and surprising reveals, nowadays it’s also a fantastic vehicle for exploring character and society,’ says Ngaio Marsh Awards founder Craig Sisterson. ‘Our 2024 Ngaios finalists beautifully showcase that, with a kaleidoscopic range of tales full of engaging and memorable characters, exploring a wide variety of social issues in many different places.’

Now in their fifteenth season, the Ngaio Marsh Awards celebrate excellence in mystery, thriller, crime, and suspense writing from Aotearoa New Zealand storytellers. The 2024 finalists were announced today in Best First Novel, Best Novel, and Best Kids/YA categories.

“I’m absolutely delighted that we’re celebrating some of our terrific kids’ mystery and thriller writers as a separate category this year,” says Sisterson. “Many of us develop our love of reading, and all the benefits that brings us throughout our lives, thanks to children’s authors. In Aotearoa we have amazing kids’ authors, across various forms and genres.”

The finalists for the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Kids/YA are:

  • CAGED by Susan Brocker (Scholastic)
  • KATIPO JOE: WOLF’S LAIR by Brian Falkner (Scholastic)
  • MIRACLE by Jennifer Lane (Cloud Ink Press)
  • NIKOLAI’S QUEST by Diane Robinson (Rose & Fern Publishing)
  • NOR’EAST SWELL by Aaron Topp (One Tree House)

Falkner, an Auckland storyteller now living in Queensland, won the first-ever special award for Best Kids/YA in 2021. Wellington author Jennifer Lane has previously won the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best First Novel, while Bay of Plenty writer Susan Brocker, Auckland author Diane Robinson, and Hawke’s Bay author Aaron Topp are all first-time Ngaios finalists.

“Moving forward, we hope to award a Best Kids/YA prize biennially,” says Sisterson, “alternating it with our Best Non-Fiction category that has been running since 2017.”

This year’s finalists for the Ngaio Marsh Award for Best First Novel, a prize that in recent years has gone to authors including Jacqueline Bublitz and Michael Bennett, are:

  • DICE by Claire Baylis (Allen & Unwin)
  • EL FLAMINGO by Nick Davies (YBK Publishers)
  • DEVIL’S BREATH by Jill Johnson (Black & White/Bonnier)
  • A BETTER CLASS OF CRIMINAL by Cristian Kelly
  • MAMI SUZUKI: PRIVATE EYE by Simon Rowe (Penguin SEA)

“It’s really heartening each year to see the range of new voices infusing fresh perspectives into the crime and thriller backstreets of our local literary landscape,” says Sisterson. 

“Our 2024 finalists are Kiwi storytellers based on four continents, each offering something new and exciting, from madcap capers in Latin America to an unusual Japanese sleuth or a neurodivergent professor of toxic botanicals, to former police detective Cristian Kelly and legal researcher Claire Baylis harnessing their real-life expertise in captivating fictional tales.”

Lastly, the finalists for this year’s Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel are:

  • DICE by Claire Baylis (Allen & Unwin)
  • THE CARETAKER by Gabriel Bergmoser (HarperCollins)
  • RITUAL OF FIRE by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
  • PET by Catherine Chidgey (Te Herenga Waka University Press)
  • DEVIL’S BREATH by Jill Johnson (Black & White/Bonnier)
  • GOING ZERO by Anthony McCarten (Macmillan)
  • EXPECTANT by Vanda Symon (Orenda Books)

“It’s a strong group of finalists to emerge from a dazzlingly varied field,” says Sisterson. “This year’s Ngaio Marsh Awards entrants gave our international judging panels lots to chew over, and plenty of books judges enjoyed and admired didn’t become finalists. ‘Yeahnoir’, our local spin on some of the world’s most popular storytelling forms, is certainly in fine health.”  

Crime writing is a broad church nowadays, notes Sisterson, including but going beyond traditional murder mysteries and whodunnits in the style of Dames Ngaio and Agatha Christie, to deliver insights about society and humanity alongside rollicking reads.

“As the likes of Val McDermid have said, if you want to better understand a place, read its crime fiction,” says Sisterson. “Many of our finalists hold up a mirror to society, taking readers into varied lives through their stories, alongside page-turning entertainment.”

The 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists will be celebrated and this year’s winners announced at a special event held at the WORD Christchurch Festival on Wednesday, 28 August.

For more information on any or all of our 2024 Ngaio Marsh Awards finalists, or the Ngaios in general, please contact ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com, or founder Craig Sisterson, directly.    

Friday, July 12, 2024

Poisons, pandemic, and a pregnant detective: 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award longlist revealed

Poisons, pandemic, and a pregnant detective: 

2024 Ngaio Marsh Award longlist revealed

A neurodivergent expert on toxic botanicals, a harrowing exploration of jury deliberations, a high-tech thriller from an Oscar-nominated screenwriter, a desperate mother searching for her son as lockdown kicks in, a gay sleuth in Renaissance Florence, and the return of a beloved fictional detective are among the diverse books named today on the longlist for the 2024 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel

“Fifteen years ago we launched the Ngaio Marsh Awards, in association with our friends at what’s now WORD Christchurch, to celebrate Kiwi excellence in one of the world’s most popular storytelling forms,” says Ngaio Marsh Awards founder Craig Sisterson.

“Over the years we’ve celebrated some world-class storytelling, and seen our local take on crime writing, aka #yeahnoir, really flourish. There were many books our judges really loved this year, beyond those that have made the longlist, and the strength and variety of this year’s longlist is going to make it another tough decision for our international panel.”

The Ngaios are named for Dame Ngaio Marsh, a contemporary of Agatha Christie and one of the Queens of Crime of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, who penned bestselling mysteries that entertained millions of global readers from her home in the Cashmere Hills. 

The 2024 longlist includes a mix of past winners and finalists, some first-time entrants and new voices, and several authors who’ve won a variety of other major awards including CWA Daggers, the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction, NZ Booklovers Award for Adult Fiction, Sir Peter Ustinov Television Scriptwriting Award, and the Booker Prize.

The longlist for this year’s Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel prize is:

•     DICE by Claire Baylis (Allen & Unwin)
•     THE CARETAKER by Gabriel Bergmoser (HarperCollins)
•     RITUAL OF FIRE by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
•     BIRNAM WOOD by Eleanor Catton (Te Herenga Waka University Press)
•     PET by Catherine Chidgey (Te Herenga Waka University Press)
•     EL FLAMINGO by Nick Davies (YBK Publishers)
•     DOUBLE JEOPARDY by Stef Harris (Quentin Wilson Publishing)
•     THE QUARRY by Kim Hunt (Spiral Collectives)
•     DEVIL’S BREATH by Jill Johnson (Black & White/Bonnier)
•     GOING ZERO by Anthony McCarten (Macmillan)
•     HOME BEFORE NIGHT by JP Pomare (Hachette)
•     EXPECTANT by Vanda Symon (Orenda Books)

The longlist is currently being considered by an international panel of crime and thriller writing experts from the USA, United Kingdom, Australia, South Africa, and New Zealand. Finalists for Best Novel, Best First Novel, and Best Kids/YA will be announced in early August, with the finalists celebrated and winners announced as part of a special event held in association with WORD Christchurch in late August.

For more information on this year’s Best Novel longlist, or the Ngaio Marsh Awards in general, please contact ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com.

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Murakami sleuths and Parisian film watching: an interview with Tom Baragwanath

Kia ora and haere mai, welcome to the 233rd instalment of our long-running author interview series, 9mm - but the first in around a year, and only the second in the past two and a half years. After more than 230 author interviews between 2010-2021, the series largely went into hiatus, for a variety of personal reasons.

After averaging more than 200 posts per year the first 12 years of Crime Watch, it has languished somewhat during the pandemic, so I do appreciate all of you who still check in now and then, reading some of the many author interviews, reviews, and other pieces on here (2,500+ posts) and occasional new pieces. 

Looking ahead, I plan to be more regularly posting on Crime Watch once more, at least in terms of reviews and author interviews and awards news etc. The website needs a revamp and reorganisation, but regardless of 'look', it will continue to shine a light on cool crime and thriller authors and books from all over the world, including back home 'Down Under' in New Zealand and Australia. 

Thanks for reading and sharing the 9mm series, and Crime Watch in general (and my work elsewhere) over the years. I've had a lot of fun talking to some amazing crime writers and bringing their thoughts and stories to you. You can check out the full list of of past 9mm interviewees here. What a line-up. 

With lots more fun to come. Thanks everyone. 

If you've got a favourite crime writer who hasn't yet been part of the 9mm series, please do let me know in the comments or by message, and now I'm back on deck more fully, I'll look to make that happen for you. We've got some more interviews with cool writers 'already in the can' that will be published soon, so lots to look forward to over the coming weeks and months. 

Tom Baragwanath at his UK launch at Waterstones Covent Garden
Today I'm very pleased to welcome a fantastic fresh new voice in Antipodean crime fiction, Tom Baragwanath, in a new 9mm interview that is being co-published on Murder is Everywhere. I had the pleasure of meeting Tom for the first time last year at the Theakston Old Peculier Crime Writing festival in Harrogate - he was over to meet his British publishers etc. We caught up again earlier this year at a well-attended London launch of the UK hardback of PAPER CAGE, at Waterstones Covent Garden

Originally from Masterton, in the Wairarapa region of New Zealand's North Island, Tom currently lives in Paris. His debut PAPER CAGE won the 2021 Michael Gifkins prize for unpublished manuscripts, and was released in Australia and New Zealand by Text Publishing. It was a finalist for the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best First Novel, and longlisted for Best Novel. It was also shortlisted for the 2023 Ned Kelly Award for Best International Crime Fiction, and has now been published in hardcover in the UK and USA in 2024. Between pastries, Tom is working on his next novel.

But for now, Tom becomes the latest author (and first in a while) to stare down the barrel of 9mm.

9MM: AN INTERVIEW WITH TOM BARAGWANATH

Who is your favourite recurring crime fiction hero/detective?
It's not exactly classic crime fiction, but the unnamed narrator of Haruki Murakami's 'Trilogy of the Rat' series (Hear the Wind Sing, A Wild Sheep Chase, and Dance Dance Dance) is a personal favourite of mine. He's cool and detached in typical hard-boiled fashion, but slightly bungling and remote in that special Murakami kind of way – and just resourceful enough to get to the bottom of things (even the more existential or philosophical mysteries). 

What was the very first book you remember reading and really loving, and why?
The first book I remember truly loving was a book about space shuttles my grandmother used to read to me before I could read for myself. I loved that book so much it disintegrated. As for novels, a friend put a copy of Catch-22 in my hands when I was around thirteen, and I just couldn't believe what I was reading: the gallows humour, the bleak yet oddly uplifting tone, and the incredible inventiveness of the language. Just an incredible book for a teenager to discover.

Before your debut crime novel, what else had you written (if anything) unpublished manuscripts, short stories, articles?
I had a bunch of short stories published in my twenties and early thirties, mostly presenting thinly-veiled versions of myself in situations taken loosely from my own life. I still like some of them – but some of them I'm pretty happy to forget. 

Outside of writing and writing-related activities (book events, publicity), what do you really like to do, leisure and activity-wise?
I live in Paris, so I'm morally obligated to see a lot of films – it's pretty much part of the application for residency there. This habit has been curtailed a bit by the presence of a toddler in my life, but it's still my favourite thing. Besides that, I try to run in Buttes-Chaumont as much as I can. 

Castlepoint Scenic reserve on the Wairarapa coastline

What is one thing that visitors to your hometown should do, that isn't in the tourist brochures, or perhaps they wouldn’t initially consider?
Take a walk up Castle Rock at Castlepoint on the east coast past Masterton, and walk over to Christmas Bay for good measure. Bonus points if you manage to find the one day in a hundred when it isn't blowing a gale. 

If your life was a movie, which actor could you see playing you?
Mark Ruffalo. Looks nothing like me, but he's my guy. 

Of your writings, which is your favourite or a bit special to you for any particular reason, and why?
The final chapter in Paper Cage is probably my favourite. I won't say too much about why, but I was working on the version that ended up going to print when my wife and I were expecting our son, and I was reaching for a sense of care and protectiveness I couldn't quite describe at that moment – but I think I managed it. A big thanks to my publisher at Knopf, Caitlin Landuyt – she really pushed me to reflect on the kind of tone we wanted to end on in the final section of the book. 

What was your initial reaction, and how did you celebrate, when you were first accepted for publication? Or when you first saw your debut novel in book form on a bookseller’s shelf?
I had a call with Michael Heyward and Mandy Brett of Text Publishing to let me know I'd won the Gifkins Prize at about 9am one summer morning in Paris. I was exploding with excitement, but I had to wait until I finished work to go out and celebrate.

What is the strangest or most unusual experience you have had at a book signing, author event, or literary festival?
On the train from London to Harrogate for the crime festival in 2023, I was having a delightful chat with the writer SA Cosby about Don Delillo, Cormac McCarthy, and all the rest, when some chap's laptop bag fell off the rack and beaned me in the head. He was so apologetic he pre-ordered Paper Cage right then and there. A few more head injuries and I'll be a best-seller.

Thanks, Tom, we appreciate you having a chat with us. 

Tom Baragwanath will be appearing on Thursday as part of the 'Whose Crime Is It Anyway?' event at Capital Crime, where two teams of crime writers battle game-show style. His debut novel PAPER CAGE is out now in the UK, United States Australia, and New Zealand. 


Monday, November 27, 2023

Character first: 2023 Ngaio Marsh Awards winners deep-dive into the personal and societal impact of violence and tragedy

2023 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel winner Charity Norman (right)
with New Zealand's modern 'queen of crime' Vanda Symon

A trio of superb New Zealand writers were honoured at a special WORD Christchurch event on Friday night as they scooped the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Awards for books delivering rich character studies alongside exquisite crime storytelling. 

In the fourteenth instalment of Aotearoa’s annual awards celebrating excellence in crime, mystery, thriller, and suspense writing, Hawke’s Bay author Charity Norman won Best Novel for Remember Me (Allen & Unwin), while renowned journalist Steve Braunias scooped Best Non-Fiction for Missing Persons (HarperCollins), and acclaimed filmmaker and author Michael Bennett (Ngāti Pikiao, Ngāti Whakaue) made Ngaios history when he was named the winner of Best First Novel for Better the Blood (Simon & Schuster).

“It was a superb night to cap an outstanding year for the Ngaio Marsh Awards, with our terrifically strong and varied group of finalists,” says founder Craig Sisterson. “This year’s winners are world-class writers, who collectively showcase how our local take on one of the world’s most popular forms of storytelling – and our Kiwi creative artists in general – can like our sportspeople match up against the best from anywhere.”

On Friday night, following a celebratory quiz held at Tūranga in association with WORD Christchurch, Kiwi crime queen and recent Traitors NZ star Vanda Symon announced Braunias as the winner of the biennial Best Non-Fiction prize for Missing Persons, his collection of 12 extraordinary tales of death and disappearance in Aotearoa. “A fascinating investigation of where people had become lost: to society, themselves, their families,” said the judges. “His writing is so informed and informative. Braunias has put in the legwork, knows his material, and because of that manages to make each piece something personal.”

Braunias accepts the non-fiction prize
The international judging panels for this year’s Ngaio Marsh Awards comprised leading crime fiction critics, editors, and authors from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, England, Scotland, and the United States.

Bennett became the first storyteller to collect fiction and non-fiction categories at the Ngaio Marsh Awards, having won the first-ever Best Non-Fiction prize in 2017 for In Dark Places: The Confessions of Teina Pora and an Ex-cop's Fight for Justice. Braunias was a finalist that year for The Scene of the Crime.

The judges praised Better the Blood, the tale of a Māori detective confronting her own heritage while hunting a serial killer, as an “audacious and powerful blend of history, polemic, and crime thriller” that upends the typical serial-killer sleuth dynamic while exploring the violence and legacy of colonisation.

Winning a Ngaio is the latest accolade for Bennett’s crime fiction debut, which has also been shortlisted for awards and named on ‘best of the year’ lists in the UK and US, translated into several European languages, and earlier this year became the first detective novel ever shortlisted for the Acorn Prize for Fiction.

Norman, a three-time Ngaios finalist, was “overwhelmed” when Symon announced she’d won Best Novel for Remember Me, a tale set in the Ruahine Ranges where a family and community are upturned by disturbing revelations about a young woman’s disappearance. “There’s an Olympian degree of difficulty in this novel,” said the judges. “To write about characters facing devastating, mind-altering health diagnoses and blend these everyday tragedies – all too familiar to some readers – into an elevated suspense novel, while steering clear of mawkishness and self-pity … Remember Me is an astounding piece of work.”

Norman receives $1,000 courtesy of WORD Christchurch, long-time partner of the Ngaio Marsh Awards.

Wednesday, September 20, 2023

Review: ANTIQUES AND ASSAULT

ANTIQUES AND ASSAULT by Rodney Strong (LoreQuinn, 2022)

Reviewed by Karen Chisholm

A new resident, a new murder, an old lesson. 98 year old Alice Atkinson is on the case once more when first an assault, then a murder rocks the Silvermoon Retirement Village. Some of her friends are rethinking living at Silvermoon so once again Alice dusts off her skills in a case that draws parallels to one involving her granddaughter Amanda when she was twelve years old.

More than one person is lying to Alice as she pieces things together, working with her apprentice Vanessa, to solve the crime and prove to her friends that Silvermoon is safe as long as she's around. If only she survives long enough to show she's right.

The fourth entry in the Silvermoon Retirement Village series, Antiques and Assault is part of what's overall a cozy, fun series, with 98 year old Alice Atkinson at the centre of a maelstrom of murder, vice and goings on that would do more than rock a retirement home - but Alice, and the retirement village she secretly owns, are made of much sterner stuff. Just.

As always with this series, it's all about Alice, although this outing is also about her granddaughter Amanda. When Amanda was 12 she was targetted by somebody at school for reasons that she can't work out. Right from the start though, Alice is not your run of the mill grandmother, dispensing tea, sympathy and maybe a visit to the school authorities. Nope, Alice chooses to use this as a teaching moment for Amanda, showing her how to sort out fact from fiction, and find the reasons behind something. 

Flash forward to many years later, and Alice is using current events at the nursing home as the same sort of teaching moment for her assistant, and friend Vanessa. There are echoes back to the earlier events with Amanda though, and the story switches timelines effortlessly, drawing the connections between the death of a new resident at Silvermoon, and the girl that tormented young Amanda all those years ago.

Strong is playing a bit with form in this outing, using connections between chapters, and timelines to pull the reader into this story. It works really well, creating an engaging reading experience for anyone who is looking for something on the cozier, but nonetheless, real feeling side. 

To be clear though, Alice might be somewhat physically restricted by her age now, but there's nothing wrong with the way she can think through a problem, and this is a woman who has a lot of life experience to call on - and not the sort of life most people would associate with an elderly grey-haired lady, ensconced in a retirement home. For that reason this is a series that really would work best read in order - there's a lot more to Alice than meets the eye, and there's quite a bit to the backstory of Silvermoon Retirement Village for that matter as well.

It is, however, definitely a series for readers who prefer the quirky, slightly tongue-in-cheek side of the crime fiction genre. If that's the direction your tastes veer in, then this would definitely be recommended as something that's developing into something nicely entertaining.

Karen Chisholm is one of Australia's leading crime reviewers. She created Aust Crime Fiction in 2006, a terrific resource - please check it out. Karen also reviews for Newtown Review of Books, and has been a judge of the Ned Kelly Awards and Ngaio Marsh Awards. This review was first published on Karen's website; she kindly shares some of her reviews of crime and thriller novels written by Australians and New Zealanders on Crime Watch as well as on Aust Crime Fiction

Friday, June 30, 2023

Poker, poverty, and the power of storytelling: 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award longlist revealed

Poker, poverty, and the power of storytelling: 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award longlist revealed

A poker-playing sleuth, a poet’s gritty take on life on Aotearoa’s poverty line, a rural mystery entwined with heart-wrenching exploration of dementia, and the long-awaited return of a master of neo-noir are among the diverse tales named today on the longlist for the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel.

Now in their fourteenth season, the Ngaio Marsh Awards celebrate excellence in New Zealand crime, mystery, and thriller writing. They are named for Dame Ngaio Marsh, one of the Queens of Crime of the Golden Age of Detective Fiction, who penned bestselling mysteries that entertained millions of global readers from her home in the Cashmere Hills.

“I’d like to think Dame Ngaio would be proud of how our modern Kiwi storytellers are continuing her literary legacy, bringing fresh perspectives and a cool mix of fascinating tales to one of the world’s most popular storytelling forms,” says awards founder Craig Sisterson. “In recent years we seem to be going through our own golden age, with our local writers offering a treasure trove of terrific stories for readers at home and all over the world.”

The longlist for the 2023 Ngaio Marsh Award for Best Novel includes a mix of past winners and finalists, several first-time entrants and new voices, and the long-awaited return of one of the leading lights of the early 2000s New Zealand literary scene. 

“In crime and thriller writing it’s natural for authors to make it really tough on their characters,” says Sisterson, “but our entrants made it tough on our judges too. This year’s longlist is a wonderful showcase of Kiwi creativity, with a great range of stories that explore some deep and very important issues in among the page-turning intrigue and thrills.”

The Ngaio Marsh Awards have celebrated the best New Zealand crime, mystery, thriller, and suspense writing since 2010. The longlist for this year’s Best Novel prize is: 
  • TOO FAR FROM ANTIBES by Bede Scott (Penguin SEA)
  • EXIT .45 by Ben Sanders (Allen & Unwin)
  • REMEMBER ME by Charity Norman (Allen & Unwin)
  • BLUE HOTEL by Chad Taylor (Brio Books)
  • POOR PEOPLE WITH MONEY by Dominic Hoey (Penguin)
  • THE DARKEST SIN by DV Bishop (Macmillan)
  • THE DOCTOR’S WIFE by Fiona Sussman (Bateman Books)
  • MIRACLE by Jennifer Lane (Cloud Ink Press)
  • BETTER THE BLOOD by Michael Bennett (Simon & Schuster)
  • IN HER BLOOD by Nikki Crutchley (HarperCollins)
  • THE PAIN TOURIST by Paul Cleave (Upstart Press)
  • BLOOD MATTERS by Renée (The Cuba Press)
  • THE SLOW ROLL by Simon Lendrum (Upstart Press)
  • PAPER CAGE by Tom Baragwanath (Text Publishing)

The longlist is currently being considered by an international judging panel of crime and thriller writing experts from the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. Finalists for Best Novel, Best First Novel, and Best Non-Fiction will be announced in August, with the finalists celebrated and the winners announced as part of a special event held in association with WORD Christchurch later in the year.

For more information on this year’s Best Novel longlist, or the Ngaio Marsh Awards in general, please contact ngaiomarshaward@gmail.com, or founder and judging convenor Craig Sisterson, craigsisterson@hotmail.com  

Friday, November 18, 2022

Review: THE PAIN TOURIST

THE PAIN TOURIST by Paul Cleave (Orenda Books, 2022)

Reviewed by Craig Sisterson

This dream doesn’t feel like a dream.
He tries to lift his head. Can’t do it.
There is a doorway to his left, and beyond it a brightly lit corridor. 
Somebody walks past – a nurse …

James Garrett was critically injured when he was shot following his parents’ murder, and no one expected him to waken from a deep, traumatic coma. When he does, nine years later, Detective Inspector Rebecca Kent is tasked with closing the case.

But between that, and hunting for a murderer on a spree, she’s going to need help … especially when they learn that James has lived out another life in his nine-year coma, and there are things he couldn’t possibly know.

More than fifteen years after its first publication, internationally bestselling Kiwi author Paul Cleave’s powerful debut THE CLEANER will hit screens around the world next year, having been adapted into a six-part screen drama Dark City - The Cleaner, which start filming in Canterbury soon. 

Before then, however, readers can soak into the brilliant darkness of Cleave’s world with this page-chewing new tale. One of many enticing aspects of THE PAIN TOURIST, the thirteenth novel from the Crown Prince of Antipodean Noir (who’s a three-time Ngaio Marsh Award winner who’s also been shortlisted for major prizes in the United States) is the much-awaited return of troubled investigator Theo Tate, last seen in 2014’s award-winning FIVE MINUTES ALONE. Though Tate, who’s now left the police, is really a co-star here to James Garrett, a young man who emerges from a coma nine years after he was shot the night his parents were killed in a botched home invasion. Tate investigated the original crime; the culprits never found. Now DI Rebecca Kent - familiar to readers from Cleave's excellent 2021 novel THE QUIET PEOPLE - is charged with closing the very cold case, while also hunting a dangerous killer, ‘Copy Joe’, mimicking the infamous Christchurch Carver. 

One of many things I love about Cleave's storytelling is the way his series and Christchurch-set standalone novels (ie 12 of his 13 novels so far, the exception being the excellent US-set small-town thriller WHATEVER IT TAKES) all overlap in time and place, even if the central characters change. He's created an entire, evocative word, a tainted version of his home city as seen through the eyes of characters trying to be good, or awfully bad, and many shades in between. 

In THE PAIN TOURIST, matters are further complicated by a recovering James’ eidetic recollection of an entire life he ‘lived out’ during his long coma, which seems to crossover with real events. Did he also overhear a real-life killer’s confession and blend it into his dream life? And what about the original crooks who put him in the coma in the first place - what will they do now he's woken up, years later?

Cleave delivers a superb tale, masterfully balancing multiple viewpoints, investigations, and ongoing threats – all building to a thrilling crescendo. While THE PAIN TOURIST has plenty of the Cleave trademarks – prose that crackles like a campfire, tension and twists aplenty, memorable characters pushed to their limits, and an evocative if stained version of Christchurch – it also has a few new flourishes. Shorter punchy chapters that crank the tension even higher (while still delivering in character depth and arcs), and third-person narration told from three viewpoints (Cleave usually writes in first-person, placing readers into narrator's heads, seeing the world directly through their eyes). 

An excellent read from a masterful storyteller.

Craig Sisterson is a lawyer turned writer, editor, podcast host, and event chair. He's the founder of the Ngaio Marsh Awards, author of Macavity Award-shortlisted non-fiction work SOUTHERN CROSS CRIME, series editor of the DARK DEEDS DOWN UNDER anthology, and writes about books for magazines and newspapers in several countries.