



Daggers Drawn
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- £9.99
Publisher Description
The first Crime Writers' Association Daggers Award retrospective, featuring 19 award-winning stories from bestselling authors Ian Rankin, Jeffery Deaver, John Connolly, Denise Mina, John Harvey and many more!
NINETEEN CWA DAGGER AWARD-WINNING SHORT STORIES FROM THE BEST OF THE BEST IN CRIME FICTION
Maxim Jakubowski has edited all the great names in crime fiction and stories from his anthologies have won the CWA Dagger six times. Now he has collected 19 Dagger award-winning stories in one volume, making it the first retrospective deep dive into the CWA's archive of Dagger Award winners. Bringing together the greatest crime fictions authors such as Ian Rankin, Jeffery Deaver, John Connolly, Denise Mina, John Harvey and many more. Edgy, twisted and disturbing, Daggers Drawn is a visceral and thrilling collection showcasing the very best modern crime fiction has to offer.
Contributors include:
Ian Rankin
Jeffery Deaver
John Connolly
John Harvey
Denise Mina
Julian Rathbone
Martin Edwards
Peter Lovesey
Lauren Henderson
Stella Duffy
Peter O'Donnell (writing as Madeleine Brent)
Danuta Reah
Cath Staincliffe
Margaret Murphy
L.C. Tyler
Phil Lovesey
Larry Beinhart
Richard Lange
Jerry Sykes
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Jakubowski (Venice Noir) has gathered some of the most notable winners of the Crime Writers' Association Short Story Dagger Award for this strong anthology. The best of the 19 selections come with a sting in the tail that undermines readers' expectations, as in Danuta Reah's "The Dummies' Guide to Serial Killing," which features a would-be murderer's step-by-step plan, including his search for a memorable nickname, to launch a career as a serial killer. Phil Lovesey's "Homework" presents the unexpected impact on a high school student of learning Shakespeare through viewing Mel Gibson's movie version of Hamlet, which spawns a devious plan for revenge. His father, Peter Lovesey, also impresses, with "Needle Match," focused on a baffling murder committed before thousands of witnesses during a 1981 tennis match at Wimbledon that claims the life of a participant. Martin Edwards, himself a prolific anthologist, weighs in with the memorable "The Bookbinder's Apprentice," in which a British tourist who comes to Venice is offered the opportunity to learn a real trade, instead of desperately scratching out a living doing puppet shows and posing as a living statue of Charlie Chaplin. Fans of literate crime fiction will hope for a follow-up volume.