Here are this year’s winners:
Best Hardcover PI Novel
No Mercy: a mystery (M)
by Lori Armstrong
Armstrong, author of the popular Julie Collins private-eye series, has created a grittier character in Mercy Gunderson, a combat veteran who brings her unique skills into her private life. Fans of the Collins mysteries should embrace this new novel with open arms, but the author could pick up some new readers, too, on the strength of this new heroine.-” Booklist
Best First PI Novel
In Search of Mercy (M)
by Michael Ayoob
Whether describing the chaos of a hockey game, creating a backstory for Mercy, or detailing the film editing process, Ayoob shows a sure hand. Filled with vivid, violent images and characters who leap off the page into the reader’s imagination, this impressive novel builds to a startlingly ambiguous ending. ” – Publisher’s Weekly
Best Paperback Original PI Novel
Asia Hand: a Vincent Calvino crime novel (M)
by Christopher G. Moore
The author, who’s lived in Bangkok for more than two decades, fills the novel with authentic settings; on the other hand, his novels aren’t travelogues, and he never loses sight of his characters and their story. Fans of this long-running series (this is the eleventh installment) will completely enjoy this novel, and it should also be highly recommended to readers of hard-boiled detective fiction, including series set in Bangkok (especially John Burdett’s Sonchai Jitplecheep novels) as well as the classic American tough-guy authors (Raymond Chandler or, more recently, Robert B. Parker)” – Booklist
Source: http://www.thereader.ca/2011/12/private-eye-writers-of-america-2011.html