RECIPES TO LIVE FOR by Sally Andrew shortlisted for the 2024 Gourmand World Cookbook Awards

Sally Andrew’s mouth-watering cookbook, RECIPES TO DIE LIVE FOR, has been shortlisted for the prestigious 2024 Gourmand World Cookbook Awards in two categories – the Acknowledgements Award and Local Regions Award.

The Gourmand World Cookbook Awards were founded in 1995 by Edouard Cointreau. Every year, they honour the best food and wine books, printed or digital, as well as food-focused television. This year there are participants from 221 countries and regions, with 1250 nominations. The winners will be announced in an awards ceremony in June 2025 in Lisbon, Portugal.

The other titles that made the Acknowledgements Award shortlist are: DOOR73 by Eric Ivanidis and Marcelo Ballardin (Belgium); QUININE REMAINS by Townsend Middleton (India); LOS FERMENTOS DEL BOSQUE by Andrea Martin (Spain); NOODLES, RICE & EVERYTHING SPICE by Christina de Witte and Mallika Kruppinen (Thailand). The other titles nominated for the Local Regions Award are: DEL GARUM AL LIMONCELLO by Enzio Falcone (Italy); COMERES RAJANOS, COCINAS RAYANAS edited by Confraria Gastronómica do Alentejo (Portugal); LAGOM SVENSK by Louise Bondebjer (Sweden); EAT LOCAL: BUENGKAN by Suthipong Suriya (Thailand) and REGIONAL COOKING OF ENGLAND by Carol Wilson (UK).

RECIPES TO DIE LIVE FOR features recipes from Sally Andrew’s beloved Tannie Maria murder mystery series, as well as some tantalising new additions, all seasoned with beautiful photographs of the food and the South African landscape. Spiced with enjoyable sayings from the four bestselling novels, as well as letters written to ‘Tannie Maria’s Love Advice and Recipe Column’, RECIPES TO DIE LIVE FOR is as warm and witty as Tannie Maria herself, guaranteed to delight fans and newcomers to the series.

Many of the dishes are slow foods and traditional South African recipes, but there are also quick meals and new inventions, from nachos to spekboom ice cream. Whether you are craving a Karoo lamb pie or sweet melktert or a syrupy koeksister, you’ll find something to discover and savour among Tannie Maria’s culinary delights.

The Tannie Maria murder mystery series was recently adapted into an acclaimed television series, RECIPES FOR LOVE AND MURDER. Season Two will be released in 2025.  Amongst other accolades, it was shortlisted in the Comedy Drama and Sitcom category at the Rose d’Or Awards and is now available to watch on terrestrial television in the UK.

Sally is currently working on the next novel in the Tannie Maria series.

 

About Sally Andrew

Sally Andrew divides her time between Muizenberg on the Cape Town coast and a nature reserve near Ladismith in the Klein Karoo, South Africa, where she lives with her artist partner and various wildlife (including a giant eland and a secretive leopard). Sally has published a number of non-fiction books on adult and environmental education.

Her first novel, RECIPES FOR LOVE & MURDER: A Tannie Maria Mystery was a Kirkus Best Book of 2015, A Wall Street Journal Best Mystery Book 2015, The Bookseller Fiction editor’s Choice 2015 and A Good Housekeeping Book of the Month. She is now writing the fifth book in the bestselling series.

 

Praise for Sally Andrew’s Tannie Maria mystery series

‘If you want a vivid, amusing and immensely enjoyable read about detection (and cooking) in an intriguing part of southern Africa, then this is the book for you. A triumph.’ – Alexander McCall Smith

‘Utterly delicious, to the very last morsel.’ – Deon Meyer

‘Chock full of good food and interesting characters.’ – Kerry Greenwood, author of the PHRYNE FISHER and CORINNA CHAPMAN series

‘Murder mysteries, good food, and South African anecdotes make the perfect recipe for a murder mystery series. These books follow Tannie Maria, a recipe writer turned true crime fighter, as she solves mysteries. With an average of 4/5 stars on Goodreads, you can bet that these funny and charming books are well worth adding to your TBR.’ – Jade McGee, Woman & Home

 

 Visit Sally’s website.

 Follow Sally on X (previously Twitter) and Instagram.

Headline acquires two new Ann Granger novels

Headline Books has signed two new novels by beloved crime writer Ann Granger. Editor Clare Foss acquired World English Language volume rights from Isobel Dixon at Blake Friedmann Literary Agency.

The first, DEATH ON THE PROWL, which was published on  5th  December, is the eighth Cotswold village mystery featuring detective duo Campbell and Carter, and the second novel will be the next instalment in Ann’s Victorian crime series, featuring Scotland Yard’s Inspector Ben Ross and his wife Lizzie. The latter is set to be published in December 2025.

Having been published by Headline for nearly thirty-five years, Ann is one of their longest-standing crime writers and they have sold well over a million copies of her novels. Headline are also releasing ebook editions of the Mitchell and Markby series and Fran Varady series for the first time in the USA.

Ann Granger says ‘I am very fortunate to have been a client of a first-class agency in Blake Friedmann for so many years, and I’m delighted that my long and happy association with Headline will continue.’

Clare Foss says: ‘We are absolutely delighted to continue our long and happy association with one of our best-loved crime writers. As well as seeing both these series flourish, we are delighted to be releasing the ebooks of Ann’s ever-popular Mitchell and Markby series and Fran Varady series for the first time in the USA with exciting brand-new covers designed to appeal to the digital market.’

Isobel Dixon said: ‘I’m thrilled that, as we head towards Ann’s 35th year being published by Headline, we have a new two-book deal. Ann is a marvel, and a joy to work with, and I know her fans will be as delighted as we are that there are more books to come – and now American readers can also catch up with her other beloved characters – Fran Varady, and Mitchell and Markby.’

 

About Ann Granger

Ann Granger lives near Oxford. Over decades she has created a wonderful range of series characters, all featuring insightful characterisation and satisfying plotting. Ann has written over thirty murder mysteries, including the Mitchell & Markby Mysteries, the Fran Varady Mysteries, the Victorian Inspector Ben Ross and Lizzie Martin Mysteries and the Campbell and Carter Mysteries. Published in 10 languages, her German editions have sold millions of copies and have made more than 30 appearances in the Top 5 bestseller lists.

 

Praise for Ann Granger

‘Deft plotting, elegant descriptive prose, delicate comic touch, endearing eccentric characters.’ –Publishers Weekly

‘Granger writes in the best tradition of Agatha Christie and classic crime stories’ – Woman Space

‘Granger’s deft touch raises her above the competition and her finely drawn characters are affecting and believable… Something quite special.’ – Crime Time

‘Anyone who enjoys crime stories featuring credible characters in action in a recognizable real world… will lap up the work of Ann Granger.’ – Oxford Mail

‘Classic… a good feel for understated humour, a nice ear for dialogue.’ – The Times

Bridget Walsh triumphs at 2024 HWA Crown Awards

THE TUMBLING GIRL, the first title in Bridget Walsh’s sharp and witty Variety Palace Mystery series, has triumphed at this year’s HWA Crown Awards, winning the prestigious HWA Debut Crown Award.

The HWA Awards celebrate the best historical writing, fiction and non-fiction, and its ability to engage, illuminate, entertain and inform legions of readers. To be considered, the bulk of the work must take place at least thirty-five years prior to publication.

The winners of all the 2024 HWA Crown Awards were revealed at an awards party at St Ethelburga’s Centre in Bishopsgate on Wednesday 20th November – with DISOBEDIENT by Elizabeth Freemantle winning the Gold Crown Award and FOUR SHOTS IN THE NIGHT by Henry Hemming winning the Non-fiction Crown Award.

The judges for the 2024 Debut Crown Award were Ayo Onatade (chair), Dan Bassett and Susan Heads. On THE TUMBLING GIRL they said: ‘Recreates all the atmosphere of a Victorian music hall. Gripping plot and a clever insight into the world of the dark theatrical underworld.’

HWA Chair Imogen Robertson commented: ‘We were delighted that so many publishers submitted books to the Crown Awards this year and are very grateful for their support. It’s wonderful to see the rich range of historical fiction being published in the UK… Every book that was long- and shortlisted is an excellent read, offering new insights about the past and compelling storytelling, be they fiction or non-fiction. I encourage all history and literature lovers to dive in. And huge, huge congratulations to the winners for taking the crowns in another highly competitive year.’

THE TUMBLING GIRL was first published by Gallic Books in May 2023, and prior to publication it won the UEA Little, Brown Award for Crime Fiction. It was also shortlisted for the 2024 Crime Writers’ Association (CWA) ILP John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger and reached No. 1 in the US Amazon Kindle New Historical Thriller Chart. It sees an unlikely duo – ex-actress Minnie Ward and private detective Albert Easterbrook – team up to solve a grisly spate of murders in Victorian London.

The hotly anticipated sequel, THE INNOCENTS, was published by Gallic Books earlier this year to great acclaim, and the next novel in the series, THE SPIRIT GUIDE, will be published by Pushkin Press in 2026. THE SPIRIT GUIDE sees Minnie and Albert uncovering the dark secrets behind a female-only spiritualist group that purports to help its members commune with deceased loved ones.

 

About Bridget Walsh

Bridget Walsh lives in Norwich. She has a PhD in ‘Murder in the Victorian Domestic Sphere’ and an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia.

 

Praise for THE TUMBLING GIRL

‘Bridget Walsh’s THE TUMBLING GIRL is the first in what promises to be an entertaining series of historical mysteries… a narrative that neatly weds historical detail and quiet wit.’ – Nick Rennison, The Sunday Times, ‘The best historical fiction books of May 2023’

‘Ms. Walsh does a splendid job depicting Minnie’s flea-bitten yet appealing theatrical world and Albert’s monied yet treacherous milieu.’ – Tom Nolan, Wall Street Journal

‘Walsh impresses in this series launch featuring an unlikely pair of investigators in 1876 London… diligent research pays off in spades here, and her rich and nuanced portrayal of the period will leave readers feeling like they’re on the soggy streets of London. Imogen Robertson readers will be eager for a sequel to this un-put-downable mystery.’ – Publishers Weekly, starred review and a ‘Books of the Week’ pick

‘Walsh resurrects the culture and crimes of Victoriana without cliché or condescension, but with warmth, wit, remarkable texture and rare authority.’ – Tom Benn

‘Smart, funny and expertly plotted, THE TUMBLING GIRL cartwheels off the page. I loved my time with these characters. A cracking start to a charismatic and distinctive series.’ – Emma Styles

 

Visit Bridget’s website.

Follow Bridget on X (previously Twitter) and Instagram.

Granta ‘Best of Young British Novelists’ author Graeme Armstrong’s RAVEHEART Pre-Empted by 4th Estate

Photo: Alice Zoo

RAVEHEART, a love letter to rave and thrilling ride of a novel by Graeme Armstrong, has been acquired in a hotly contested pre-empt by HarperCollins imprint 4th Estate. A high NRG, whip-smart look at the state of modern Britain through the eyes of a disparate band of rave rebels, RAVEHEART is George Orwell’s 1984 meets cult classic film HUMAN TRAFFIC.

The novel will be published in Spring 2026 after Michelle Kane, Publishing Director, bought UK and Commonwealth rights (excluding Canada) from Juliet Pickering. In a separate deal, multi-BAFTA winning production company Warp Films (THIS IS ENGLAND, FOUR LIONS, EVERYBODY’S TALKING ABOUT JAMIE) have optioned TV/Film rights from Conrad Williams.

‘I feel lucky to have both my dream imprint at 4th Estate and editor, Michelle Kane, at the helm on this fever dream of a novel which has taken the best bit of a decade to create,’ said Graeme. ‘While the majority of my work on the page, screen and community deals with hard-hitting social themes, RAVEHEART speaks to the pure joy of rave culture we experienced first-hand in its mid-2000s renaissance in Scotland, and to an ever more challenging world beyond. The incredible heritage of Scottish rave pioneers before us, combined with our generation’s bedroom bootlegging PCDJ craze made for years of endless energy (albeit some chemical) pure passion and mad memories. These are the nostalgic driving forces of RAVEHEART, and I can’t wait to share it with the rave and literary communities. Glowsticks at the ready, troops. We’re going in.’

‘Graeme Armstrong is a once in a generation writer – vivid, uncompromising, whip-smart and powerful – and this novel comes at the reader with the kind of force that challenges their world view,’ Michelle Kane added. ‘Terrifyingly prescient and uproariously funny, RAVEHEART is set to be a modern classic and to say that I am excited to be working with a writer like Graeme who is such a singular and original talent is to understate it – we have huge ambition for him at 4th Estate and we are extremely excited and honoured to have him on the list.’

Juliet Pickering says: ‘RAVEHEART is like nothing else – playing with form, politics, character, place – and it should be injected into our veins: a fizzing, witty, total high of a novel, brilliantly deconstructing the bigotry of modern politics, and one of the best novels on male friendship I’ve ever read. I can’t wait for everyone else to feel its heady, knockout punch to the brain.’

William Patterson – better known as DJ Turbo – is living a soulless existence after his glory days as resident spinner at a local Coatbridge ice rink, The Time Capsule, have been snatched from him. As a far-right UK regime sweeps to power, ‘The New Greatest Britishest Party’ cracks down on youth, culture, drugs and – the final straw – electronica. Incensed by a blanket ban of their beloved tunes, Turbo and his comrades launch a rave revolt – resurrecting the illegal warehouse parties of the past in this new darker, monolithic Greatest Britain, as a powerful act of resistance.

But, as the political situation escalates and secret police surveil every corner of society, Turbo and his troops fly ever closer to the sun in the dangerous world of the anti-rave abolitionist paramilitary. Mixing classic hardcore anthems, nu-gen euphoria enthusiasts and psychotropic chemical courtships, they will fight the war for the rave. Deciding who to trust… and who may betray the cause is everything. The future of the whole nation is on the line… can Turbo be the hero not just of rave, but of Scotland?

Hilarious, tragic and incredibly clever all at once, this unique, narcotic trip of a novel is a modern, meta, mayhem-filled cultural coup d'état and cult-classic in the making, written in an inimitable and energetic voice, from one of the most electrifying young writers in Britain today.

About Graeme Armstrong

Graeme Armstrong is a Scottish writer from Airdrie. His teenage years were spent within North Lanarkshire’s gang culture. Alongside overcoming his own struggles with drug addiction, alcohol abuse and violence, he defied expectation to read English as an undergraduate at the University of Stirling; where, after graduating with honours, he returned to study a Masters’ in Creative Writing. He is currently undertaking a PhD at the University of Strathclyde.

Graeme regularly works within the community visiting prisons and schools, giving talks on his experiences of gang-culture and substance abuse. He promotes a message of anti-violence and abstinence-based recovery.

His bestselling debut novel, THE YOUNG TEAM (Picador, 2020), is inspired by his experiences. It won a Betty Trask Award, a Somerset Maugham Award, and the Scots Book o the Year 2021.

In 2021, Graeme presented SCOTLAND THE RAVE, a documentary broadcast by the BBC that explored Scotland’s rave and PCDJ culture, subsequently nominated for a BAFTA Scotland and RTS Scotland Award 2022. His second documentary series, STREET GANGS, where Graeme reflects on his own past as an ex-gang member to try to understand life inside a modern gang, aired on the BBC in October 2023.

In 2023, Graeme was chosen as one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists, an accolade that is awarded once a decade.

Praise for Graeme Armstrong

‘Graeme Armstrong is the real deal.’ – Douglas Stuart

‘One of the most admired young voices in British fiction’ – Mike Wade, The Times

‘Has proved the novel form is still alive and kicking… a genuine literary phenomenon… Indeed, Armstrong is that rare thing, a writer whose work has become a tangible part of a social material, as has Armstrong himself.’ – James Taylor, Metal Magazine

‘Armstrong makes language slam-dance and pirouette, using an endless variety of relishable words and phrases.’ – The Guardian

‘His work is vivid, dynamic and sharp as a whip; his capacity to surprise the reader distinct and powerful.’ – Janice Galloway

Follow Graeme on X (previously Twitter) and Instagram.

Lyrical memoir by Costa Book of the Year winner Hannah Lowe won at auction by Scribner

Credit: Rii Schroer

Hannah Lowe’s THE WOMAN IN THE CHINESE COLLAR, winner of the 2023 Eccles Centre & Hay Festival Writer’s Award, has been acquired for publication in a heated five-way auction by Scribner, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. Deputy Publishing Director Kris Doyle acquired UK and Commonwealth rights (excluding Canada) rights from Isobel Dixon. The book will be published in Spring 2026 as Scribner’s lead non-fiction title for the season.

The book is a lyrical, investigative memoir that investigates the fascinating life of Hannah’s Chinese–Jamaican aunt Nelsa, touching on themes of race, immigration and the spectre of male violence.

Hannah Lowe said: ‘I’m delighted THE WOMAN IN THE CHINESE COLLAR has found a home with Scribner in the UK. The book is the culmination of years of research and investigation into the life of my aunt Nelsa Lowe in Jamaica, and I’m so pleased it will be in the caring hands of Kris Doyle and his team.’

‘Everyone here was blown away by the story of Hannah’s “legendary” aunt Nelsa,’ added Kris Doyle. ‘This is a book about universal themes of family, inheritance and belonging – don’t we all want to know where we truly come from? – but the specific socio-political context also broadens the reach and resonance. Page by enthralling page, Hannah’s deft and thoughtful prose made the unknowable knowable: the past is not just there for the taking, but this gorgeous act of reclamation, recovery and reconstruction is a vital work of literature that grips from the first moment. The book is too original to be easily compared with others, but readers who have enjoyed recent non-fiction by Hisham Matar, Laura Cumming and Lea Ypi would find much pleasure here.’

Isobel Dixon said: ‘Hannah’s lyrical and narrative skills, so beautifully interwoven in her poetry, combine powerfully in this fierce, tender and searching memoir. It was no surprise that many publishers loved this magnificent, multi-faceted work, but we’re so happy that Hannah’s special book has found such a great UK home with Kris Doyle and the excellent team at Scribner.’

Propelled by a single portrait photograph, THE WOMAN IN THE CHINESE COLLAR is a lyrical, investigative family memoir that sees poet Hannah Lowe embark on a search across time and space to recover a lost story of a woman making her way in a man’s world. Combing through history and memory, Lowe traces the journey of her Afro–Chinese aunt Nelsa, a herbalist and healer, and renowned restaurant and nightclub hostess in Kingston, Jamaica.

Politics, poverty, disability, sex work and crime combine in this narrative of diaspora and home, as Lowe deftly and tenderly interrogates the role of writing and research in tracing routes and roots, and how to excavate the life of a marginalised woman when the archives are empty.

About Hannah Lowe

Hannah Lowe was born in Ilford to an English mother and Jamaican-Chinese father. Her 2021 poetry collection, THE KIDS, won the Costa Book of the Year Award 2021. THE KIDS also won the Costa Poetry Award 2021, was shortlisted for the 2021 T.S. Eliot Prize, was a Poetry Book Society Choice for Autumn 2021 and an Irish Times and Guardian poetry book of the year.

Her first book-length collection, CHICK, won the 2015 Michael Murphy Memorial Prize and was selected for the Poetry Book Society’s Next Generation Poets 2014 promotion. Her second full-length collection, CHAN, was published by Bloodaxe in 2016, followed by a pamphlet, THE NEIGHBOURHOOD (Out-Spoken Press) in 2019. Her prose memoir, LONG TIME NO SEE, exploring her relationship with her half-Chinese, half-Jamaican immigrant father, was published by Periscope in 2014.

Praise for Hannah Lowe

‘We were enthralled by Hannah Lowe’s inventive approach to conjuring Nelsa, her Afro-Chinese Jamaican aunt. Remarkably, Lowe evokes Nelsa through a single portrait photo and along the way excavates other marginalised women whose lives are rarely noted in official archives.’ – Judges of the Eccles Centre & Hay Festival Writer’s Award

‘It’s joyous, it’s warm and it’s completely universal. It’s crafted and skilful but also accessible… the sort of book that you could hand to anybody because you would know that everyone would get something out of it.’ – Reeta Chakrabarti, chair of Costa Prize judges, on THE KIDS

‘When you finish this poetically told book, you know you have been gifted a treasure’ – Kerry Young on LONG TIME, NO SEE

‘A poet with a commanding style; her voice is entirely her own, both rich and laconic… springing from the page with vitality, rue and insight.’ – Penelope Shuttle