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1 楼:
匕首奖列表
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02年03月29日12点16分 |
The Crime Writers Association of Great Britain Dagger Awards, 1955-2000 英国侦探小说协会颁发。首次于1955年。
2000
Gold Dagger: Jonathan Lethem for Motherless Brooklyn. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Edward Bunker for Mr. Blue. Silver Dagger: Donna Leon for Friends in High Places. Ellis Peters Historical Dagger: Gillian Linscott for Absent Friends. John Creasey Award: Boston Teran for God Is a Bullet. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Denise Mina for Helena and the Babies, in Fresh Blood 3, 1999. Diamond Dagger: Peter Lovesey
1999
Gold Dagger: Robert Wilson for A Small Death in Lisbon. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Brian Cathcart for The Case of Stephen Lawrence. Silver Dagger: Adrian Matthews for Vienna Blood. Ellis Peters Historical Dagger: Lindsey Davis for Two for the Lions. John Creasey Award: Dan Fesperman for Lie in Darkness. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Antony Mann for Taking Care of Frank, in Crimewave 2. Diamond Dagger: Margaret Yorke
1998
Gold Dagger: James Lee Burke for Sunset Limited. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Gitta Sereny for Cries Unheard. Silver Dagger: Nicholas Blincoe for Manchester Slingback. John Creasey Award: Denise Mina for Garnethill. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Jerry Sykes for Roots, in Mean Times. New Writing Competition: Julie Denby for Stone Baby. Diamond Dagger: Ed McBain
1997
Gold Dagger: Ian Rankin for Black & Blue. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Paul Britton for The Jigsaw Man. Silver Dagger: Janet Evanovich for Three to Get Deadly. John Creasey Award: Paul Johnston for Body Politic. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Reginald Hill for On the Psychiatrist's Couch, in Whydunnit (1996). Diamond Dagger: Colin Dexter
1996
Gold Dagger: Ben Elton for Popcorn. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Antonia Fraser for The Gunpowder Plot. Silver Dagger: Peter Lovesey for Bloodhounds. John Creasey Award: no award Last Laugh Award: Janet Evanovich for Two for the Dough. Dagger in the Library/Golden Handcufffs: Marian Babson CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Ian Rankin for Herbert in Motion, in EQ, #673-#674, September-October, 1997. First Blood Award for Best First Crime Novel: Christopher Brookmyre for Quite Ugly One Morning. Rusty Dagger: Dorothy L. Sayers for The Nine Tailors (1930). Diamond Dagger: H. R. F. Keating
1995
Gold Dagger: Val McDermid for The Mermaids Singing. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Michael Harris for The Prodigal Husband. Silver Dagger: Peter Lovesey for The Summons. John Creasey Award: Janet Evanovich for One for the Money. Last Laugh Award: Laurence Shames for Sunburn. Dagger in the Library/Golden Handcufffs: Lindsey Davis CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Larry Beinhart for Funny Story, in No Alibi (1994). Diamond Dagger: Reginald Hill.
1994
Gold Dagger: Minette Walters for The Scold's Bride. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: David Canter for Criminal Shadows. Silver Dagger: John Creasey Award: Doug J. Swanson for Big Town. Last Laugh Award: Dagger in the Library/Golden Handcufffs: Robert Barnard CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Diamond Dagger: Michael Gilbert.
1993
Gold Dagger: Patricia D. Cornwell for Cruel and Unusual. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Alexandra Artley for Murder in the Heart. Silver Dagger: Susan Dunant for Fatlands. John Creasey Award: none Last Laugh Award: Michael Pearce for The Mamur Zapt & The Spoils of Egypt. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: Julian Rathbone for Some Sunny Day. Diamond Dagger: Edith Pargeter (aka Ellis Peters).
1992
Gold Dagger: Colin Dexter for The Way Through the Woods. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Charles Nicholl for The Reckoning. Silver Dagger: Liza Cody for Bucket Nut. John Creasey Award: Minette Walters for The Ice House (1991). Last Laugh Award: Carl Hiaasen for Native Tongue. CWA '92 Award: Timothy Williams for Black August. Diamond Dagger: Leslie Charteris.
1991
Gold Dagger: Barbara Vine (aka Ruth Rendell) for King Solomon's Carpet. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: John Bossy for Giordano Bruno and the Embassy Affair. Silver Dagger: Frances Fyfield for Deep Sleep. John Creasey Award: Walter Mosley for Devil in the Blue Dress (1990). Last Laugh Award: Mike Ripley for Angels in Arms. CWA '92 Award: Barbara Wilson for Gaudi Afternoon. Diamond Dagger: Ruth Rendell.
1990
Gold Dagger: Reginald Hill for Bones and Silence. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Jonathan Goodman for The Passing of Starr Faithfull. Silver Dagger: Mike Phillips for The Late Candidate. John Creasey Award: Patricia D. Cornwell for Postmortem. Last Laugh Award: Simon Shaw for Killer Cinderella. CWA '92 Award: Michael Dibdin for Vendetta. Diamond Dagger: Julian Symons.
1989
Gold Dagger: Colin Dexter for The Wench Is Dead. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Robert Lindsey for A Gathering of Saints. Silver Dagger: Desmond Lowden for The Shadow Run. John Creasey Award: Annette Roome for A Real Shot in the Arm. Last Laugh Award: Mike Ripley for Angel Touch. CWA/The Macallan Short Story Award: none Red Herring Special Awards: Glyn Hardwicke (constitution) and John Kennedy Melling (editing The Crime Writers' Practical Handbook). Diamond Dagger: Dick Francis.
1988
Gold Dagger: Michael Dibdin for Ratking. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Bernard Wasserstein for The Secret Lives of Trebitsch Lincoln. Silver Dagger: Sara Paretsky for Toxic Shock. (aka Blood Shot) John Creasey Award: Janet Neel for Death's Bright Angel. Punch Prize: Nancy Livingston for Death in a Distant Land. Diamond Dagger: John le Carré
1987
Gold Dagger: Barbara Vine (aka Ruth Rendell) for A Fatal Inversion. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Bernard Taylor and Stephen Knight for Perfect Murder. Silver Dagger: Scott Turow for Presumed Innocent. John Creasey Award: Dennis Kilcommons for Dark Apostle. Police Review Award: Roger Busby for Snowman. Diamond Dagger: P. D. James.
1986
Gold Dagger: Ruth Rendell for Live Flesh. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: John Bryson for Evil Angels. Silver Dagger: P. D. James for A Taste for Death. John Creasey Award: Neville Steed for Tinplate. Police Review Award: Bill Knox or The Crossfire Killings. Red Herring Special Award: Beatrice Taylor for years as Association's treasurer. Diamond Dagger: Eric Ambler. first award
1985
Gold Dagger: Paula Gosling for Monkey Puzzle. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Brian Masters for Killing for Company. Silver Dagger: Dorothy Simpson for Last Seen Alive. John Creasey Award: Robert Richardson for The Latimer Mercy. Red Herring Special Award: Marian Babson for magnificent secretaryship. Police Review Award: Andrew Arncliffe for After the Holiday.
1984
Gold Dagger: B. M. Gill for The Twelfth Juror. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: David Yallop for In God's Name. Silver Dagger: Ruth Rendell for The Tree of Hands. John Creasey Award: Elizabeth Ironside for A Very Private Enterprise.
1983
Gold Dagger: John Hutton for Accidental Crimes. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Peter Watson for Double Deale. Silver Dagger: William McIlvanney for The Papers of Tony Veitch. John Creasey Award: Carol Clemeau for The Ariadne Clue, and Eric Wright for The Night the Gods Smiled. Red Herring Special Award: F. E. Pardoe for serving on the fiction panel.
1982
Gold Dagger: Peter Lovesey for The False Inspector Dew. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: John Cornwell for Earth to Earth. Silver Dagger: S. T. Haymon for Ritual Murder. John Creasey Award: Andrew Taylor for Caroline Minuscule.
1981
Gold Dagger: Martin Cruz Smith for Gorky Park. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Jacobo Timerman for Prisoner Without a Name, Cell Without a Number. Silver Dagger: Colin Dexter for The Dead of Jericho. John Creasey Award: James Leigh for The Ludi Victor. Red Herring Special Award: Martin Russell for editing Red Herrings.
1980
Gold Dagger: H. R. F. Keating, for The Murder of the Maharajah. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Anthony Summers for Conspiracy. Silver Dagger: Ellis Peters for Monk's Hood. John Creasey Award: Liza Cody for Dupe. Special Silver Dagger: Elizabeth Ferrars
1979
Gold Dagger: Dick Francis for Whip Hand. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Shirley Green for Rachman. Silver Dagger: Colin Dexter for Service of All the Dead. Nonfiction Silver Dagger: Jon Connell and Douglas Sutherland for Fraud. John Creasey Award: David Serafin for Saturday of Glory. Red Herring Special Award: Madelaine Duke and Frank Arthur for services to CWA.
1978
Gold Dagger: Lionel Davidson for The Chelsea Murders. Nonfiction Gold Dagger: Audrey Williamson for The Mystery of the Princes. first such award Silver Dagger: Peter Lovesey for Waxwork. Nonfiction Silver Dagger: Harry Hawkes for The Capture of the Black Panther. John Creasey Award: Paula Gosling for A Running Duck. Red Herring Special Awards: Alberto Tedeschi of Mondadori Publishers, Italy, Frederic Dannay, and Nigel Morlan for services to crime fiction.
1977
Gold Dagger: John le Carré for The Honourable Schoolboy. Silver Dagger: William McIlvanney for Laidlaw. John Creasey Award: Jonathan Gash for The Judas Pair.
1976
Gold Dagger: Ruth Rendell for A Demon in My View. Silver Dagger: James McClure for Rogue Eagle. John Creasey Award: Patrick Alexander for Death of a Thin-Skinned Animal.
1975
Gold Dagger: Nicholas Meyer for The Seven Per Cent Solution. Silver Dagger: P. D. James for The Black Tower. John Creasey Award: Sara George for Acid Drop. Special Awards: Gladys Mitchell for fifty outstanding book, Anne Britton for editing Red Herrings, Jean Bosden and Penelope Wallace for service for the first Crime Writers' International Congress.
1974
Gold Dagger: Anthony Price for Other Paths to Glory. Silver Dagger: Francis Clifford for The Grosvenor Square Goodbye. John Creasey Award: Roger Simon for The Big Fix.
1973
Gold Dagger: Robert Littell for The Defection of A. J. Lewinter. Silver Dagger: Gwendoline Butler for A Coffin for Pandora. John Creasey Award: Kyril Bonfiglioli for Don't Point That Thing at Me.
1972
Gold Dagger: Eric Ambler for The Levanter. Silver Dagger: Victor Canning for The Rainbird Pattern.
1971
Gold Dagger: James McClure for The Steam Pig. Silver Dagger: P. D. James for Shroud for a Nightingale. Special Award: Alex Clark Smith for serving as treasurer.
1970
Gold Dagger: Joan Fleming for Young Man, I Think You're Dying. Silver Dagger: Anthony Price for The Labyrinth Makers. Special Award: Gavin Lyall for editing Crime Background pamphlets.
1969
Gold Dagger: Peter Dickson for A Pride of Heroes. Silver Dagger: Francis Clifford for Another Way of Dying. first such award Best Foreign: Rex Stout for The Father Hunt.
1968
Gold Dagger: Peter Dickinson for Skin Deep. Runner-Up: Nicholas Blake for The Private Wound. Best Foreign: Sebastien Japrisot for The Lady in the Car with Glasses and a Gun.
1967
Gold Dagger: Emma Lathen for Murder Against the Grain. Runner-Up: Colin Watson for Lonelyheart 4122. Best British: Eric Ambler for Dirty Story. Special Award: Charles Franklin for editing Crime Writer.
1966
Gold Dagger: Lionel Davidson for A Long Way to Shiloh. Runner-up: John Bingham for The Double Agent. Best Foreign: John Ball for In the Heat of the Night. Special Merit Award: Julian Symons for Crime and Detection: An Illustrated History from 1840.
1965
Gold Dagger: Ross Macdonald for The Far Side of the Dollar. Best British: Gavin Lyall for Midnight Plus One.
1964
Gold Dagger: H. R. F. Keating, for The Perfect Murder. Best Foreign: Patricia Highsmith for The Two Faces of January. Special Merit: Herbert Harris for editing Red Herrings.
1963
Gold Dagger: John le Carré for The Spy Who Came In from the Cold. Special Merit Award: Allan Prior for television crime screenplays.
1962
Gold Dagger: Joan Fleming for When I Grow Rich.
1961
Gold Dagger: Mary Kelly for The Spoilt Kill. Special Merit Award: Berkley Mather for television crime screenplays.
1960
Gold Dagger: Lionel Davidson for The Night of Wenceslas. Runners-Up: Mary Stewart and Julian Symons.
1959
Gold Dagger: Eric Ambler for Passage of Arms. Runners-Up: James Mitchell and Menna Gallie. Special Merit Awards: Roy Vickers for contributions to crime fiction and Janet Green for the script of Sapphire.
1958
Gold Dagger: Margot Bennett for Someone from the Past. Runners-Up: Margery Allingham, James Byrom, and John Sherwood.
1957
Gold Dagger: Julian Symons for The Colour of Murder. Runners-Up: Nagaio Marsh, George Milner, and Douglas Rutherford.
1956
Gold Dagger: Edward Grierson for The Second Man. Runners-Up: Sarah Gainham, Arthur Upfield, and J. J. Marric (aka John Creasey).
1955
Gold Dagger: Winston Graham for The Little Walls. Runners-Up: Leigh Howard, Ngaio Marsh, and Margot Bennett.
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