27 October 2024

Is That a New Derringer in Your Pocket?


The Short Mystery Fiction Society was formed in 1996, and presented the first Derringer Awards, recognizing excellence in short mystery fiction, in 1998.  Not surprisingly, the awards have changed in many ways over almost thirty years, and they're about to do so again.  

Taking a look at Derringer history is illuminating.  Over the last few months, the Society's current Assistant Derringer Coordinator, Mark Schuster, has put together something long overdue: a database of all the nominees and winners over the lifetime of the awards.  Thanks to his outstanding work, we've been reminded of some awards presented in the early years--Best First Short Story and Best Puzzle Story, for example--that have fallen by the wayside.


  

There have also been shifts in the categories which have stuck around.  The initial definition of flash stories was 200-400 words.  For several years the three main categories were flash (up to 1,200 words), short (1,201-10,000 words) and novella (10,001-25,000 words).  By 2004, there were categories with the awkward labels short short, mid-length short, and long short.  

It seems to have been about 2010 when the categories settled into the four competitive Derringer categories used today: flash (up to 1,000 words), short story (1,001-4,000), long story (4,001-8,000), and novelette (8,000-20,000 [the upper limit has changed a few times]).  In addition, the society presents an annual Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer Award for Lifetime Achievement in Short Mystery Fiction, and selects one deceased writer to enter the short mystery Hall of Fame.

Earlier this year, the Society voted to add a new Derringer award for the first time in many years: Best Anthology.  This idea originated with Josh Pachter, himself a Golden Derringer recipient, one of the best writers in the field today, and, not incidentally, the editor of many a fine anthology (including an upcoming anthology of Derringer-winning stories celebrating the 30th year of the Society).


Making changes to an institution like the Derringers shouldn't be done lightly, but the time is ripe for an award recognizing that anthologies have become more and more important in recent years.  I've heard more than a few writers suggesting that we're living in a golden age for the form, in fact.  

In part this may be, unfortunately, due to a decline in the number of magazine markets open to short crime fiction.  To be sure, there are still some fantastic traditional magazine markets out there, and there's an undeniable thrill to selling a story to Ellery Queen or Alfred Hitchcock.  There are also great online periodicals, like Tough.  The recent demise of Mystery Magazine (formerly Mystery Weekly), though, was only the most recent of many such losses.  Even if a magazine still exists, finding it can be a challenge.  I live in a fairly large town with a big university, but when I recently had a story published in The Saturday Evening Post, I couldn't locate a single store in my community that actually carries it.

For writers in our field looking to get their work in front of readers, then, anthologies have become increasingly important.  Many of them come from smaller publishers, run by people passionate about fiction: Down & Out Books, Misti Media, Level Best Books, others I'm sure I'm not thinking of right now.


About two thirds of my own stories have been published in anthologies.  For writers, these markets have a lot to offer.  They usually have entertaining, inventive themes, encouraging experimentation.  They offer the chance to work with highly skilled and engaged editors (I know my own work has benefitted tremendously from working with anthology editors like Josh, Barb Goffman, and Michael Bracken).  They have the potential to reach new readers who might otherwise never encounter our work.  They're likely to remain available for several years, long after a magazine publication has faded away.  

Most of all, they're just plain fun, as much for writers as for readers.  I sometimes feel I should be writing more for magazine markets, but at any given time there are anthologies open for submission on topics I just can't resist.  This year alone, I've published stories in anthologies themed around sports, one-hit wonders, fairy tales, the solar eclipse, sex and classical music, 21st century noir, and the songs of Aerosmith and the Grateful Dead.  Could one of those books take home the first Derringer for Best Anthology?  Stay tuned!

If you'd like to nominate an anthology, or stories for the other Derringer categories, you must be a member of the Society by the end of this calendar year.  Membership is free, and offers you the chance to rub virtual elbows with many of the leading writers in the field, along with readers, editors, publishers, and various others invested in short mystery stories.  In the interest of full disclosure, I am the current President of the Society--but I'd be telling you to join even if that wasn't the case.

So what are some of your favorite recent anthologies?  

As a writer, what draws you to certain anthology calls?  

As a reader, what are you looking for in an anthology?  Familiar authors?  The editor?  The topic?

     

14 comments:

  1. Thanks for the shoutout, Joe! This is an exciting year to be inaugurating a Best Anthology Derringer, with a wealth of excellent books either already out or coming within the next two months, including (but not limited to) former SMFS president Rob Lopresti's Crimes Against Nature, former SMFS president Michael Bracken and Stacy Woodson's Wish Upon a Crime: Crime Fiction Inspired by Fairy Tales, Jay Hartman's (I Just) Died in Your Arms: Crime Fiction Inspired by One-Hit Wonders, Andrew McAleer and Gay Toltl Kinman's Agatha and Derringer Get Cozy, Level Best's Mystery Most International, Malice Domestic's Mystery Most Devious, Bouchercon's Tales of Murder Music & Mayhem, various Sisters in Crime anthologies, and (ahem) my own Friend of the Devil: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of the Grateful Dead.

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    1. All worthy of mention, Josh, and they'd all look great on a shelf together. I think everyone reading this should go order copies of all of them immediately!

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  2. Anthologies are becoming more and more important to writers these days, as short-story markets dwindle. I join in whenever I can, except when I receive a deadline that's so short that I KNOW I can't make it. (If I commit, I'm going to write the story and get it in on time.)

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    1. Likewise, Eve. I'm always so flattered to be invited to submit to an anthology that I couldn't bring myself to say no even if the time was short!

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  3. Great column, Joseph, and yes, anthologies seem to be more and more the way to go. Nearly a third of my published stories appear in them, especially as other markets disappear. Most anthologies have a theme that works as a writing prompt, whether it's a song, a situation, or something else, and that helps, too.
    Josh lists most of the recent ones, but let me add Michael Bracken's Janie's Got a Gun: Crime Stories Inspired by the Songs of Aerosmith, coming out next month. You and I both have stories in it.
    Like Eve, I write for those whenever I see a call that gives me several weeks. I'm slow and getting slower as I get older.

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    1. Yes, the Aerosmith book looks great, Steve--and of course Michael also has a fifth volume of Mickey Finn coming out before the end of the year. I have no idea where he gets the energy!

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  4. Anthologies are the most fun part of writing, I find! I love themed anthologies, like Murder, Neat, where bars were a theme - I love seeing how the other writers in the anthology use the theme. It's like an extra surprise, as well as the ending. Money is not important to me, as in payment. I more want to share pages with other writers who have become friends and whom I admire.

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    1. I absolutely agree, Melodie. Of course, short mystery stories aren't exactly the most direct route to wealth to begin with, but the social awards of being in the "club" with a bunch of other writers are terrific.

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  5. Joe, thanks for all you're doing, as the current prez. Well done!

    I too find myself writing less for magazines over the past couple of years, and more for anthologies--especially when an invitation comes in for one, and steers my thinking in that direction. And, like Steve, I want to add to Josh's list of upcoming anthologies: I think Shamus and Anthony Commit Capers, also by Andrew McAleer and Gay Kinman, is scheduled for Nov. 5. (Isn't something else happening that day, too??) For those of you who don't know already, Andy and Gay are super editors, and have done a great job recently with these awards-based anthos.

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    1. I'll definitely be checking that one out, John. I assume you have a story in it!

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  6. Joe,

    Thanks for the kind words.

    As a reader I like anthologies that take me places I've never been. Dark Deeds Down Under 2 edited by Craig Sisterson which came out in June features tales from Aussie and Kiwi crime writers. I also seek anthologies featuring favorite writers and themes of interest.

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    1. I'll have to check out that Aussie book, Mark. And I really am incredibly grateful for everything you've been doing for SMFS!

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  7. One of the great anthologies this year was the “Motel” one published by Cowboy Jamboree, the stories were superb - and I discovered new exciting authors that I now read intensively, like Cole Beauchamp, plain amazing!

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  8. Such a great column idea, Joseph! I’ve gotten to read a lot of fantastic anthologies this year: Three Strikes, You’re Dead (and your story in that anthology was awesome!), Larceny and Last Chances, Mystery Most Devious, Ill Winds and Wild Weather, Festive Mayhem 4, and, of course, Murder Neat, which featured work from the writers at this site. Anthologies are one of the best ways to see how top level authors and editors make magic happen, for sure!
    —Ashley-Ruth Bernier

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