I'm a Derringer Finalist!
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What’s the Derringer? It’s an award given each year by the Short Mystery Fiction Society for the best short crime fiction. There are four length categories, and my story is a finalist in the longest category.
One of cool things about this award is the process. There are three distinct stages: nomination, judging, and voting for finalists.
The ability to nominate is very open – for example, each member of the SMFS may nominate two stories (including their own). Editors and publishers of anthologies or magazines are also afforded a certain number of nomination slots. Once nominations close, the judges read each entry blind – only the title and the story are known to the judge. They rate each story according to standard criteria. Each category has multiple judges. The final ratings for each story are averaged out from all the judges. The top five rated stories in each category become finalists for that category. Those finalists are then voted upon by the membership as a whole. Each member gets one vote per category.
My entry happens to be the first episode of the series I created and edit for Down and Out Books called A Grifter’s Song. The Concrete Smile begins the adventures of Sam and Rachel, a pair of grifters who love each other and the game…and the rest of the world can mostly go to hell. It was published in January 2019.
This is my fourth time being a finalist for this award, though it has been a decade since the last time. The three previous stories to be finalists for the award were “Good Shepherd” (2006), “The Worst Door” (2007), and “Dead Even” (2009). Small piece of trivia – all three stories take place in the River City setting. Fact regarding them being a Derringer finalist – none of those stories won the award.
Maybe the fourth time is the charm?
We’ll see on May 1, when the winners are announced.
Source: All The Madness In My Soul