Annal:2008 Macavity Award for Best Mystery Novel
From AwardAnnals
Results of the Macavity Award in the year 2008. For a ranked list of books, try an honor roll:
- <–2007
- Macavity Award
- –end–
- 2008 Anthony-Paperback nominee
- 2008 Edgar-Paperback nominee
- 2008 Macavity-Novel nominee
- 2008 Shamus-Paperback nominee
- Score: 24.58
El Salvador: America’s great Cold War success story and the model for Iraq’s fledgling democracy–if one ignores the grinding poverty, the corruption, the spiraling crime, and a murder rate ranked near the top in the hemisphere. This is where Jude McManus works as an executive protection specialist
Ten years before, at age seventeen, he saw his father and two Chicago cop colleagues arrested for robbing street dealer. Now the past returns when one of his father’s old pals asks a favor–not for himself, but for the third member of his dad’s old crew.
Even though it’s ill-considered, Jude agrees, thinking he can oblige the request and walk away, unlike his father. But he underestimates the players and the stakes and he stumbles into a web of Third World corruption and personal betrayal where everything he values–and everyone he loves–is threatened. And only the greatest of sacrifices will save them.
Soul Patch: A Moe Prager Mystery
- 2008 Barry-Novel nominee
- 2008 Edgar–Novel nominee
- 2008 Macavity-Novel nominee
- 2008 Shamus-Novel nominee
- Score: 24.58
In this darkly intriguing follow-up to the Shamus and Barry winning The James Deans, ex-NYPD cop turned P.I. and entrepreneur, Moe Prager is faced with a gut-wrenching case. The apparent suicide of his old friend and NYPD Chief of Detectives, Larry McDonald, forces Moe back onto the decaying Coney Island streets he patrolled when he was in uniform. But now, beneath the boardwalk and behind the rusted and crumbling rides of the midway, he finds a trail of death, betrayal, and corruption reaching back to 1972. As Faulkner once said, “The past is never dead. It isn’t even past.” So it goes for Moe Prager in Soul Patch.
The Unquiet: A Thriller
- 2008 Barry-Novel nominee
- 2008 Macavity-Novel nominee
- Score: 12.58
Daniel Clay, a once-respected psychiatrist, has gone missing. His daughter insists that he killed himself after allegations surfaced that he had betrayed his patients to foul and evil men—but when a killer obsessed with uncovering the truth behind his own daughter’s disappearance comes seeking revenge, long-forgotten secrets begin to emerge. Hired by Dr. Clay’s daughter to protect her from the predator on the loose, tortured and ingenious private detective Charlie Parker finds himself trapped between those who want the truth to be revealed and those who will go to any length to keep it hidden.
Water Like a Stone: A Kincaid and James Mystery
- 2008 Macavity-Novel nominee
- Score: 6.58
Detective Superintendent Duncan Kincaid and his partner, Sergeant Gemma James, take their sons to picturesque Cheshire for their first family Christmas with Duncan’s parents—a holiday both dreaded and anticipated. But not even the charming town of Nantwich and the dreaming canals can mask the tensions in Duncan’s family, which are tragically heightened by the discovery of an infant’s body hidden in the wall of an old dairy.
As Duncan and Gemma help the police investigate the infant’s death, another murder strikes closer to home, revealing that far from being idyllic, Duncan’s childhood paradise holds dark and deadly secrets…secrets that threaten everything and everyone Duncan and Gemma hold most dear.
What the Dead Know: A Novel
- 2008 Anthony-Novel nominee
- 2008 Barry-Novel nominee
- 2008 Dagger shortlist
- 2008 Macavity-Novel nominee
- Score: 24.58
Thirty years ago, the two Bethany sisters, ages 11 and 15, disappeared from a Baltimore shopping mall. They never returned, their bodies were never found, and only painful questions remain. How do you kidnap two girls from a busy mall on a Saturday afternoon without leaving behind a single clue or witness? Now, decades later, in the aftermath of a rush-hour hit-and-run accident, a clearly disoriented woman is claiming to be Heather, the younger Bethany sister. Not a shred of evidence supports her story, and every lead she reluctantly offers takes the police to another dead end—a dying, incoherent man; a razed house; a missing grave. But there is something she knows about that terrible day…and about a family that disintegrated long ago, torn apart by an unthinkable tragedy and the fissures it revealed in a seemingly perfect household.
- <–2007
- Macavity Award
- –end–
