The week of May 24 to May 28, I had the honor and priviledge to be a part of the Maple Leaf Mystery Conference! I'm happy to say it was all online because we had mystery writers not only from all over Canada, but from around the world! Panels that discussed True Crime, Cozy Mystery, Comedy in Mystery, Romance in Mystery, Thrillers, Short Mystery Stories... Sixteen sessions in all! WHEW!
AND everyone who registered got a great Murder She Tote bag. How cute is that?
We got to hear one on one
interviews with accomplished mystery writers Maureen Jennings, Ian Rankin, Rick
Mofina, Iona Whishaw, and Vicki Delaney. We were also introduced to new novels
by Mike Martin (one of the organizers) as well as Mary Jane Maffini. Each had excerpts read by friends of theirs Robert Way and Terri Tomchyshyn.
Here is the link from this past
conference should you want to take a peek! https://writers-first.com/maple-leaf-mystery-conference/
I was a part of the Cozy Corner
Panel and found it interesting when our moderator, Lynn McPherson, read a
definition of mysteries condensed from the Bookends Literary Agency blog https://bookendsliterary.com/cozy-mysteries-v-traditional-mysteries/ :
Cozy mysteries can be
defined by the word used to describe them. They are cozy and everything that
word conjures in your mind. Think of warm tea, comfy chairs, cuddly pets, a
soft newly knitted blanket and warm, freshly baked pasteries. That's a cozy.
When you read one, you feel like you're being embraced by a world you want to
be in. A cozy is almost always and amateur sleuth, but an amateur sleuth isn't
always cozy.
In an Amateur sleuth, a
regular citizen (non-professional detective) decides to find the real killer
(the hallmark of any good amateur sleuth.)
Traditional mysteries
probably have the broadest definition. They can be amateur sleuths or official
investigators, they can be a little darker or light and funny. What they aren't
is suspense or cozy. They tend to fall somewhere in between. Typically and
amateur sleuth who is not cozy will fall into the area of traditional mystery.
In traditional mystery, you'll also see a faster pace and maybe a little more
blood and guts, but nothing that would compare to what a suspense might offer.
By definition, my Wild
Blue Mysteries walk the line between cozies and more traditional
mystery. While there are detectives involved, it's usually the amateur detectives
(Katie and Lucy) who dig in to help solve the mysteries.
Crime
Writers of Canada (CWC) also announced the winners for the 2022 Crime Writers
of Canada Awards of Excellence in Canadian Crime Writing. Started in 1984, the
annual Crime Writers of Canada Awards of Excellence, then known as the Arthur
Ellis Awards, recognizes the best in mystery, crime, and suspense fiction, and
crime nonfiction by Canadian authors. The presentation of the
winners can be viewed on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fjSQew_DnnA