close
Showing posts with label Derringer Awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Derringer Awards. Show all posts

Friday, May 1, 2026

SMFS Official Announcement: 2026 Derringer Award Winners

BERJAYA
Photo by Art Taylor
The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a community of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories. Since 1998, the SMFS has awarded the annual Derringers to outstanding published stories and people who have greatly advanced or supported the form. The Best Anthology Derringer was presented for the first time in 2025.

The 2026 Derringer Award winners are


Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer
David Dean

David Dean is an Army veteran, a retired Chief of Police, and an accomplished novelist, in addition to being one of the most popular and prolific short story writers working in the crime genre today. His stories have appeared regularly in ELLERY QUEEN MYSTERY MAGAZINE, as well as a number of anthologies, including BEST AMERICAN MYSTERY STORIES, since 1990. He has won a Derringer Award and an impressive four EQMM Readers Awards. His stories have also been nominated for the Shamus and Barry Awards and been finalists for an Edgar and multiple Derringer Awards.

Best Flash Story
(Up to 1,000 words)

"The Man Under the Bridge" by Bern Sy Moss (Spillwords, 6/1/2025)

Best Short Story
(1,001 to 4,000 words)

"Blind Pig" by Michael Bracken (Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2025)

Best Long Story
(4,001 to 8,000 words)

"Whatever Kills the Pain" by C.W. Blackwell (Whatever Kills the Pain, Rock and a Hard Place Press)

Best Novelette
(8,001 to 20,000 words)

"The Temporary Murder of Thomas Monroe" by Tia Tashiro (Clarkesworld, January 2025) (audio version)

Best Anthology (tie)

Hollywood Kills: An Anthology edited by Adam Meyer & Alan Orloff (Level Best Books - Level Short)

On Fire and Under Water: A Climate Change Crime Fiction Anthology edited by Curtis Ippolito (Rock and a Hard Place Press)


The complete list of 2026 finalists may be found here.

Related links:

Sunday, April 12, 2026

Announcing HOT SHOTS: CELEBRATING THIRTY YEARS OF THE SHORT MYSTERY FICTION SOCIETY

This month marks the thirtieth anniversary of the founding of the Short Mystery Fiction Society, the free-to-join community of writers, readers, editors, publishers and others dedicated to the celebration and promotion of short stories in the mystery genre. In addition to providing discussion and resources related to all aspects of the genre, the Society also presents the annual Derringer Awards, recognizing the best stories published in the field.
BERJAYA


In recognition of the first three decades of SMFS, Level Best Books has published HOT SHOTS: CELEBRATING THIRTY YEARS OF THE SHORT MYSTERY FICTION SOCIETY, edited by Josh Pachter, himself a recipient of the Golden Derringer for Lifetime Achievement in Short Mystery Fiction. The anthology includes one Derringer-winning story for every year from 1998, when the Awards were first presented, through 2025. It also includes a complete list of all Derringer winners, along with an introduction by Pachter and a foreword by current SMFS President Joseph S. Walker providing more information about the Society and the history of the Derringers.

This outstanding collection is a celebration not just of the Society, but of short mystery fiction itself. Mystery has its roots in the short story (think of Edgar Allan Poe and Arthur Conan Doyle), and this book provides ample evidence that the form continues not just to thrive, but to grow and innovate. Readers will find here stories from widely acknowledged masters of the field such as Art Taylor, Earl Staggs, Doug Allyn, Melissa Yi, and John Floyd, as well as many stories from writers like Sandy Balzo, Ruth McCarty, and Michael J. Solender whose names may be less recognizable but whose stories are highly deserving of the awards they garnered.

The stories (some of which have been unavailable for decades) range from cozy to hardboiled, offering any fan of mystery fiction a wealth of treasures and new favorite authors to be discovered. And if you'd like to have a vote in deciding future Derringer winners and finding even more fiction to love, all while rubbing shoulders with some of the best writers in the genre today, join the Society yourself. It's free, and there's always room for more!

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

SMFS Official Announcement: 2026 Derringer Award Finalists

BERJAYA
Image by Bethany Maines

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories. Since 1998, the SMFS has awarded the annual Derringers to outstanding published stories and people who've greatly advanced or supported the form. The inaugural Best Anthology Derringer was presented in 2025.

Our volunteer judges evaluated 495 story submissions to determine the finalists. The winners will be determined by member vote in April and announced May 1.

The 2026 Derringer Award finalists are

Best Flash Story
(Up to 1,000 words)

"Bradycardia" by Elizabeth Dearborn (Punk Noir Magazine, 2/4/2025)

"Check Rear Seat" by Carl Tait (Exquisite Death, 5/1/2025)

"It All Comes Out in the Wash" by James Patrick Focarile (Gumshoe Review, 10/31/2025)

"Just Like Old Times" by Shari Held (Yellow Mama, 2/15/2025)

"The Man Under the Bridge" by Bern Sy Moss (Spillwords, 6/1/2025)


Best Short Story
(1,001 to 4,000 words)

"Blind Pig" by Michael Bracken (Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, September/October 2025)

"Chains" by Frank Vatel (All Due Respect, 9/1/25)

"Hollywood Prometheus" by Christa Faust (Crime Ink: Iconic: An Anthology of Crime Fiction Inspired by Queer Icons, Bywater Books)

"The Artist" by Linda Ann Bennett (Midnight Schemers & Daydream Believers: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense, Superior Shores Press)

"Wax On, Wax Off" by Nina Mansfield (Donna Andrews Presents Malice Domestic: Mystery Most Humorous, Wildside Press)


Best Long Story
(4,001 to 8,000 words)

"A Sign of the Times" by Tom Milani (Sleuths Just Wanna Have Fun: Private Eyes in the Materialistic Eighties, Down & Out Books)

"Masterpiece" by Mark Thielman (Black Cat Mystery Magazine 16, September 2025)

"Six-Armed Robbery" by Ashley-Ruth M. Bernier (Donna Andrews Presents Malice Domestic: Mystery Most Humorous, Wildside Press)

"Whatever Kills the Pain" by C.W. Blackwell (Whatever Kills the Pain, Rock and a Hard Place Press)

"Zebra Finch" by donalee Moulton (The Most Dangerous Games, Level Best Books - Level Short)

Best Novelette
(8,001 to 20,000 words)

"Aswarby Hall" by David Dean (Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, March/April 2025)

"Loose Change from a Mini Cooper" by Frank Zafiro (Chop Shop Episode 10, Down & Out Books)

"Saint Bullethead" by Nick Kolakowski (Fighting Words: Bruisers, Brawlers, & Bad Intentions, Leonardo Audio)

"The High Priest of Low Men" by C.W. Blackwell (Myopic Duplicity: Do the Ends Ever Justify the Means?, Leonardo Audio)

"The Temporary Murder of Thomas Monroe" by Tia Tashiro (Clarkesworld, January 2025) (audio version)

Best Anthology

Crimeucopia - The Not So Frail Detective Agency edited by John Connor (Murderous Ink Press)

Gone Fishin': Crime Takes a Holiday, The Eighth Guppy Anthology edited by James M. Jackson (Wolf's Echo Press)

Hollywood Kills: An Anthology edited by Adam Meyer & Alan Orloff (Level Best Books - Level Short)

Midnight Schemers & Daydream Believers: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense edited by Judy Penz Sheluk (Superior Shores Press)

On Fire and Under Water: A Climate Change Crime Fiction Anthology edited by Curtis Ippolito (Rock and a Hard Place Press)

SoWest: Danger Awaits! A Desert Sleuths Anthology edited by Claire A. Murray, Eva Eldridge, Suzanne E. Flaig, Denise Galley, and Sarah Smith (DS Publishing)


The SMFS Official Announcement: 2026 Derringer Award Winners post is available here.

Sunday, February 1, 2026

Derringer Award Announcement: 2026 Best Anthology Finalists

BERJAYA
Image by Bethany Maines

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories. Since 1998, the SMFS has awarded the annual Derringers to outstanding published stories and people who've greatly advanced or supported the form. The inaugural Best Anthology Derringer was presented in 2025.

Society members were allowed two submissions. The anthologies that received the most submissions are the finalists. The winning anthology will be determined via member vote in April and announced May 1. Derringer Award medals will be presented in October at Bouchercon in Calgary, Alberta.

The finalists for the 2026 Best Anthology Derringer Award are

BERJAYA
Crimeucopia - The Not So Frail Detective Agency
Edited by John Connor

Historically, it would be tricky to define exactly when the concept of the Female Private Investigator first appeared in fiction. But The Female Detective and Revelations of a Lady Detective —both published in 1864, independent of each other—proves that it was a genre whose time had come. And while Miss Gladden may be the first by all of 5 months, it’s Mrs. Paschal who is more the not-so-frail ground breaker —and it should be noted that Conan Doyle was only 5 when these ladies hit the streets.
So what better way to present the modern female investigator than by gathering 15 top class authors and letting them tell you all about the exploits of their creations.

BERJAYA
Gone Fishin': Crime Takes a Holiday, The Eighth Guppy Anthology
Prepare for twists, reversals, and surprises in Gone Fishin’: Crime Takes a Holiday, The Eighth Guppy Anthology from the 1,100-member Guppy Chapter of Sisters in Crime. The fun starts with the play-on-words subtitle. “Crime Takes a Holiday.” Crime doesn’t enjoy a bit of time off from skulduggery. Oh no. In these twenty-three stories, Crime Steals, Disrupts, Upends, Wrecks, Destroys and/or Shatters a Holiday.
Join the characters as they travel to pristine northern waters and festering southern bayous, rent a creepy house in Maine, take a Galapagos cruise, enjoy sandy beaches and mountain wildernesses, visit exotic locales across the world, or staycation. The stories feature a wide variety of crime fiction, including murder mysteries, psychological thrillers, and cozy capers.

BERJAYA
Hollywood Kills: An Anthology

Hollywood is a place full of dreamers—from the wide-eyed actor hoping to land the role of a lifetime to the hard-working writer trying to sell that breakout script. The lowly production assistant eager to finance their first movie to the craft services worker aspiring to be the next Spielberg.
Whoever they are, these people have one thing in common—they are desperate to bring their dreams to fruition, hustling for opportunity, and willing to do anything to get to the next rung on the ladder. Legal or not.
In Hollywood Kills, you'll find shocking short fiction about the dark underbelly of show business—written by those who know it firsthand.
They’ll take you deep inside their cutthroat world, with sixteen stories featuring a producer, sitcom writer, character actor, entertainment lawyer, sound mixer, background actor, aspiring actor, stuntman, casting director, soap opera star, true crime writer, editor, director, production assistant, set caterer, and screenwriting team.
It's a close-up look at the dark side of ambition with an all-star cast of schemers, dreamers, killers, and con artists…and their stories will stick with you long after the credits roll.

BERJAYA
Midnight Schemers & Daydream Believers: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense: A Superior Shores Anthology
Desire or desperation, revenge or retribution—how far would you go to realize a dream? The twenty-two authors in this collection explore the possibilities, with predictably unpredictable results.


BERJAYA
Edited by Curtis Ippolito

Our world is changing dramatically before our eyes.

Increased average global temperatures have wreaked havoc on ecosystems, economies, and people’s lives. Fires rage. Flood waters rise. Storms and heat waves are occurring out-of-season and are becoming increasingly more dangerous and more frequent.

Neighborhoods are being destroyed. People are losing their lives and livelihoods. Still, some politicians, some pundits, and some corporate oligarchs continue to deny reality and refuse to take responsibility and necessary action to mitigate this existential crisis.

Those who did the least to cause this crisis will suffer the most from its consequences.

In On Fire and Under Water, the new crime fiction anthology from Rock and a Hard Place Press, we explore the intersection of climate change and crime, through the lens of fifteen short stories from some of today’s best crime fiction writers. Edited by Anthony Award-winning author Curtis Ippolito and the editorial team at RHP Press, the stories contained within this anthology peel back the curtain on the ways in which climate change impacts real people in their most desperate hour.

Some say the world will end in fire. Some say flood. In On Fire and Under Water, you get both.

BERJAYA
SoWest: Danger Awaits! A Desert Sleuths Anthology

Fight or Flight ... what choices will these characters make? Contract killer, serial killer, killer for hire ... or are they everyday people in bad circumstances? Is the ghost in the house out to harm me ... or am I supposed to help them resolve their death?

These 25 stories are filled with everyday people, private investigators, police personnel, husbands and wives, and others who solve crimes and mysteries their own way. A blend of historical, contemporary, paranormal, serious, and humorous, where each story features an Arizona setting.

###

Also, our volunteer judges are currently evaluating 495 story submissions to determine the finalists in four categories. Finalist will be announced April 1. The winners will be determined via member vote in April and announced May 1. Derringer Award medals will be presented in October at Bouchercon in Calgary, Alberta.

The story categories are
  • Best Flash Story (Up to 1,000 words)
  • Best Short Story (1,001 to 4,000 words)
  • Best Long Story (4,001 to 8,000 words)
  • Best Novelette (8,001 to 20,000 words)

Related links:

Saturday, November 1, 2025

Derringer Award Submissions Are Being Accepted

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories.

Our Derringer Awards honor stories up to 20,000 words. Editors and our members may now submit stories for consideration. Members may also submit anthologies. The deadline is January 30, 2026.

More information is available here.

Not a member? Enter your email to join the society today.



More information about the Derringer Awards


BERJAYA
image by Claire Murray / original image by Thomas Wolter

Friday, July 18, 2025

Derringer Awards Policy

2027 Derringer Awards Coordinator: Mark Schuster
2027 Assistant Derringer Awards Coordinator: Mindy Kinnaman

ABOUT THE SHORT MYSTERY FICTION SOCIETY

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories. Membership is always free. You are welcome to join here.

ABOUT THE DERRINGERS

Since 1998, the Short Mystery Fiction Society has awarded the annual Derringers—named after the popular pocket pistol—to outstanding published stories and people who've greatly advanced or supported the form.

As of 2004, an annually-elected Coordinator administers the Derringer Awards process.

The current regular Derringer Awards are:

  • Best Flash Story (Up to 1,000 words)
  • Best Short Story (1,001 to 4,000 words)
  • Best Long Story (4,001 to 8,000 words)
  • Best Novelette (8,001 to 20,000 words)

The winning short stories are announced on May 1. Winners receive medals that are presented during Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention. To donate toward the cost of the medals, contact the Derringer Coordinator.

As of 2009, a committee of the sitting SMFS Officers, Derringer Awards Coordinator, Assistant Derringer Awards Coordinator, and two regular members selects a living writer whose outstanding body of short fiction merits the Society's Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer.


SUBMISSIONS (January 1 - January 30, 2027)

Who may submit?

With the exceptions of the Society President and Vice President, who have neither authority over the Derringer process nor Derringer eligibility, and the Awards Coordinator and Assistant Coordinator, who have authority over the Derringer process but no Derringer eligibility,

Members who joined the society no later than December 31, 2026 may submit eligible stories written by anyone, including themselves

and

Editors of venues featuring mystery or crime short stories may submit eligible stories published in those venues.

Story eligibility

To be considered for the 2027 Derringer Awards, a submission must be:

a) a mystery or crime story up to 20,000 words, and
b) originally published in 2026 in English,
c) published in a single publication, periodical, collection, or anthology, and
d)  available in print and/or electronic form.
e) The submission may originate from any country or location.

Publication Date:

A story’s eligibility is determined by the venue’s cover or front-page date, which must be no later than December 31, 2026.

In the case of self-published stories, a publishing platform, such as Amazon Kindle, must be used to establish story availability, and it must have a publication date stamp. Stories appearing on a website must have a visible first publication date to be considered.

Submission Limits

Any member who joins SMFS by December 31, 2026, may submit up to TWO (2) eligible stories in any combination of standard publication or self-publication. 

Editors may submit as follows:

THREE (3) editorial submissions from venues that published up to 25 eligible stories during the year;

FOUR (4) editorial submissions from venues that published 26–50 eligible stories during the year;

FIVE (5) editorial submissions from venues that published 51–75 eligible stories during the year;

SIX (6) editorial submissions from venues that published more than 75 stories during the year.

For multi-editor venues, the editors split the number of submissions determined above.

(e.g. 4 editorial submissions are allowed from a four-editor venue featuring 26 eligible stories. If one editor submits 4 stories, the other three editors may not submit any.)

Editors of multiple venues: 

THREE (3) editorial submissions are allowed if they edited a total up to 25 eligible stories;

FOUR (4) editorial submissions are allowed if they edited a total of 26–50 eligible stories;

FIVE (5) editorial submissions are allowed if they edited a total of 51–75 eligible stories;

SIX (6) editorial submissions are allowed if they edited a total of more than 75 stories.

The number of submissions allowed from any one venue is bound by the venue's total eligible stories.

(E.g. An editor who worked on 100 stories across 5 venues would be allowed 6 total submissions. If one of the venues featured only ten stories, the editor could submit 3 from it, but then would have only 3 submissions left to split among 90 stories and 4 venues.)

Editors who became members of the Society by December 31, 2026, may submit, in addition to their editorial submissions, two eligible stories from venues other than their own.

If an editor is responsible for a publication containing stories they wrote, that editor may submit only up to TWO (2) of their own stories.

An editor may decide not to submit their venue's stories. They cannot prevent other members of the Society from submitting them unless they acquired controlling rights over the stories.

Format and Address

Submissions that do not adhere to the rules will be rejected. Time permitting, an effort will be made by Derringer officials to notify submitters of the rejection and permit resubmission under the rules.  However, this is not guaranteed, particularly in the closing days of the submission period.

The Derringer competition uses William Shunn's industry-standard layout linked to below, except that the manuscript should:

a) use 12-point Times New Roman font,

b) be in .doc or .docx file type, and

c) the personal contact information normally included at top left of page one must be omitted.

William Shunn's short-story formatting page can be found here. Remember, the personal contact information at top left must not be included. If included, the manuscript will be rejected.

Please include the number of words in your submission as shown in the format.

You MUST remove all of your personal information from the manuscripts. This includes, for example, the information everywhere within the body of the document, in the header or footer, or in the document’s properties.

Removing the information about the author is the submitter’s responsibility and failure to do so, or to follow the other formatting guidelines outlined here, will result in the story being removed from consideration.

When submitting your stories, please include "[Derringers (+category)]" and the story’s title in the subject line. This will make it easy to spot your submission so that nothing is lost.  Example: [Derringers Flash] The Case of the Sample Title.

Submitters must include the following information as separate lines in the body of the submission email:

  • your name
  • the author’s contact information (email address preferred);
  • whether you are submitting as SMFS member, publication editor, or both;
  • the story title;
  • author's name or pseudonym used for the story;
  • the story’s 2026 publication date;
  • where the story was originally published;
  • the URL to the published story if applicable;
  • (optional) URL(s) to validate the story title, author, publication date, and venue.

The file name should match the title of the story.

Again, failure to include any of this information will result in the story being removed from consideration.

Send stories and questions to smfs.derringerawards@gmail.com.

Anyone submitting someone else's work must have and is presumed to have acquired the proper permissions from the author. By submitting someone else's work, a submitter assumes responsibility for having the proper permissions.

The Coordinator posts updates of the stories received throughout the January submission period. This avoids duplicate submissions and serves to check that stories submitted are received. If any story submitted does not appear in an update and has met the listed eligibility requirements, follow up with the Coordinator at smfs.derringerawards@gmail.com.

All submissions must be received by midnight (Eastern time) January 30, 2027. January 31 will be used to prep submissions to be sent to the judges.

JUDGING (January 1–March 30, 2027)

The Coordinator may begin the judging process as early as January 1 for any or all categories. To facilitate judging during the January submission window, the Coordinator may bundle accepted story submissions and make the bundles available to the judges. Judges will receive all assigned stories on or before February 1.

The Coordinator assigns eligible submissions to award categories by length: 

  • Best Flash Story (Up to 1,000 words)
  • Best Short Story (1,001 to 4,000 words)
  • Best Long Story (4,001 to 8,000 words)
  • Best Novelette (8,001 to 20,000 words)

Each category requires three primary and one alternate SMFS members to judge the category down to five finalists. To protect their identities and the privacy of the judging process, members sign up to judge by contacting the coordinator directly by December 31, 2026.

Volunteers may specify which category they wish to judge, subject to availability, but they cannot judge categories including stories they wrote or published as an editor. The Coordinator keeps this in mind when assigning judges, but any erroneously-assigned judges should inform the Coordinator, who decides how to rectify the error.

Before sending the Derringer submissions to the judges, the Coordinator ensures the manuscripts show neither the author's name nor the details of publication. This is not to mandate blind judging, but to encourage open-minded judging. Judges may recognize authors and publication details but are nevertheless expected to score all stories in their rightfully assigned categories regardless.

If the load of stories appears to be a problem, the Coordinator has the discretion to make adjustments (i.e. number of stories, number of judges, schedule, etc.) to make the competition work smoothly.

SCORING

The Scoring Guidelines below have been used for over a decade to provide a measure of commonality among different judges' approaches. They are not litmus tests to be applied in a cookie-cutter manner by all judges to all submissions, but are rather a source for general areas of consideration that can be used to the extent considered appropriate in conjunction with a judge's individual experience, acumen, and skills.

Using the Scoring Guidelines below as desired, each judge rates each of the four larger general areas of:

  1. OVERALL WRITING
  2. CHARACTERS
  3. PLOT
  4. OVERALL FEELING.

A judge assigns each of these areas a score of 1 to 10. The judge should note these individual scores but need not formally record them. The judge then adds the four individual areas' scores together to arrive at a cumulative score of 4 - 40. For each submission, each judge in the category reports this single, cumulative score on the scoring sheet provided by the Derringer Coordinator.

If, at any point during the reading of any entry, a judge concludes that the impression formed thus far is final and without reasonable expectation of change regardless of what remains to be read and evaluated, the judge is not bound to continue reading that entry.

SCORING GUIDELINES

1. OVERALL WRITING 

  • How well does the writing grab and hold your attention?
  • Do the prose style and dialogue serve the story well?
  • Does the story's setting or overall atmosphere draw you in?
  • Does the story rise above others in the category for the way it's written?

2. CHARACTERS 

  • Are they well developed and convincing?
  • Is there good interaction between characters?
  • How well does the writer handle viewpoints or inhabit each character?
  • Do the characters serve the story well?

3. PLOT 

  • How well are the story events structured from beginning to end?
  • Does the story rise above others in the category for its plot?
  • Does the story set up and then meet or cleverly subvert expectations?

4. OVERALL FEELING 

  • Did you have a good reaction to the story not described by the other elements?
  • How memorable was the story?

The alternate judge in a category is called if one of the primary judges is unable to serve to completion. The alternate will be asked to read and evaluate only the entries that the primary judge was unable to assess.

All stories must be scored and returned to the Coordinator by March 30, 2027.

March 31 is reserved for the Coordinator to verify the outcome of scoring. For each Derringer category, the five stories with the highest averages become the Finalists.

FINALISTS ANNOUNCED (April 1, 2027)

On April 1, the Coordinator announces the Finalists on the SMFS Groups.io discussion board and announces them publicly on SMFS’s blog.

VOTING (April 1–29, 2027)

On April 1, the Coordinator uploads the finalist manuscripts to Shortmystery's Files section and creates polls to conduct the vote. All members who join prior to January 1 of 2027 are eligible to vote. Members who join between January 1 and April 30 of 2027 cannot participate in the Derringer judging or voting process. During the month of April, these Members may read the finalist manuscripts, but will not be able to vote or post to the SMFS list.

April 30 is reserved for the Coordinator to verify the poll results and prepare the announcement of winners. The Coordinator then deletes the manuscripts from Shortmystery's Files section.

WINNERS ANNOUNCED (May 1, 2027)

On May 1, the Coordinator announces the Winners on the SMFS Groups.io discussion board and announces them publicly on SMFS’s blog.

MEDAL PRESENTATION AT BOUCHERCON (September 1, 2027)

When possible, the honorees receive their Derringer medals during Bouchercon, the World Mystery Convention. If you'd like to donate toward future medals, please contact the Current Derringer Coordinator. Any winners who are unable to attend will receive their medals by mail.

NEW: DERRINGER AWARD FOR BEST ANTHOLOGY

Beginning with the awards presented in 2025, the SMFS will also present a Derringer Award for Best Anthology.  This is being done on a two-year trial basis.  If there are no significant problems or objections from the membership, the award will become permanent with the awards presented in 2027.

Because this award is fundamentally different from those presented to individual stories, a different procedure is required, and is described below.  For the sake of simplicity and clarity, this description uses the dates which will apply for the initial presentation of the award (covering works published in 2024), but these specific dates should obviously be updated for each successive year.

Rationale

The four existing competitive Derringer Awards are presented for short stories, and the finalists in each category are determined by a group of volunteer judges.  This model is not practical for a Best Anthology award which evaluates full-length books, not stories under 20,000 words.  No small group of volunteers can be expected to read all of the eligible anthologies in a given year in order to determine a list of finalists or choose a winner.  It also will not be possible, as is done with the short story finalists, to make the finalist texts available to the entire membership of the SMFS for free.  A Best Anthology Derringer must therefore be governed by a different set of rules.  Those described here are closely modeled on the process by which the Anthony Awards are presented.

Eligibility

To be eligible, an anthology of mystery and crime short stories must have been published in English, in print and/or electronic form, during the calendar year in question.  It must contain stories, of any length up to 20,000 words, by at least five different authors.  Collections (that is, a selection of works by a single author) are not eligible.  A minimum of seventy-five percent of the anthology’s contents (calculated as a percentage of the number of stories, not number of words) must have been previously unpublished in English.  For the purposes of eligibility, new translations of stories originally published in languages other than English will be considered as previously unpublished.

Anthologies edited by currently serving officers of SMFS are not eligible.  Anthologies containing stories by serving SMFS officers retain eligibility, in fairness to the editors and other contributors.

Submissions

SMFS members who join the Society prior to January 1, 2027, may submit 2026 publications for the award.  Each member is permitted to make two submissions.  Submissions will be accepted from January 1, 2027, to January 30, 2027, following procedures as directed by the serving Derringer Coordinator.

The Derringer Coordinator will tabulate the submissions, and the five anthologies receiving the most submissions will be declared the finalists (in the event of a tie, and only in the event of a tie, there may be more than five finalists).

The Derringer Coordinator will announce the finalists on February 1, 2027, in order to permit SMFS members time to acquire and read the anthologies if they wish to do so.

Making Submissions

Include only one submission per email. Include "[Derringers Anthology]" and the anthology’s title in the subject line.

Submitters must include the following information as separate lines in the body of the submission email:

  • your name
  • anthology title
  • editor(s) name(s)
  • publisher
  • publication date
  • URL to validate eligibility (optional)

Send your submissions and questions to smfs.derringerawards@gmail.com.

Voting

Voting will be held from April 1, 2027, to April 29, 2027, at the same time as the voting for the other competitive Derringers.  As with those categories, voting will be via a poll on the SMFS groups.io site, with each member who joined prior to January 1, 2027, allowed one vote.

The Derringer coordinator will tabulate the votes and announce the winner on May 1, 2027, along with the winners of the other competitive Derringer categories.  The award will be presented to the editor(s) of the winning anthology, if possible at that fall’s Bouchercon.

Thursday, May 1, 2025

SMFS Official Announcement: 2025 The Silver Derringer For Editorial Excellence

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is pleased to announce the 2025 recipient of

THE SILVER DERRINGER FOR EDITORIAL EXCELLENCE

Janet Hutchings

On rare occasions, the SMFS Awards Committee presents a special lifetime award: The Silver Derringer for Editorial Excellence.  The award was most recently presented to Cathleen Jordan in 2002.  This year, the committee is delighted to present the award once more, to Janet Hutchings.  From 1991 until her retirement at the end of 2024, Janet served as just the third editor-in-chief of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, indisputably the most important publication in our genre.  To mention just a few of her accomplishments during this remarkable thirty-three year run, Janet introduced readers to a huge number of the best authors in the business, including Ian Rankin, Ann Cleeves, Jeffrey Deaver, Val McDermid, Marcia Muller, and many more; created the “Passport to Crime” department, which has presented the work of hundreds of international authors; and guided Queen into the twenty-first century with its first blog, podcasts, and digital editions.  It is safe to say that no living person has done as much for short mystery fiction, and we are honored to recognize Janet’s overwhelming contributions and influence.

BERJAYA
Photo by Melodie Campbell

SMFS Official Announcement: 2025 Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer For Lifetime Achievement

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is pleased to announce the 2025 recipient of the

EDWARD D. HOCH MEMORIAL GOLDEN DERRINGER FOR LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT

Art Taylor

This year’s recipient of the Edward D. Hoch Memorial Golden Derringer for Lifetime Achievement is Art Taylor.  Jon L. Breen has accurately described Art as “one of the finest short-story writers to come to prominence in the twenty-first century.”  His many awards include an Edgar, an Anthony, four Agathas, four Macavitys, and four Derringers.  Art brings to the mystery story an unusually rich sense of character and theme; his stories are not merely puzzles to be solved, but insightful and engaging meditations on the mystery of life itself.  He is also one of the finest scholars of the history of mystery fiction, particularly in its short form, and unfailingly generous in his support for other writers, including through his continuation of the “First Two Pages” blog series begun by B. K. Stevens.

Art Taylor's words on this honor:

"I’ll admit to being of two minds about receiving this year’s Golden Derringer Award. Thrilled by the honor, of course, but also stumbling over that phrase lifetime achievement—scrambling suddenly to take stock of where I’m at, what I’ve accomplished, what more I might have accomplished, and what possibilities still await (hopefully!) in the further lifetime ahead. To be honest, a lifetime achievement suggests I at least know what I’m doing, but—another admission—each blank page still leaves me scratching my head a-fresh: What now? What next? 

Whatever my struggles or status, however, I hope my work as a writer, an editor, and especially as a teacher have helped inspire and encourage other writers, at all stages, who have endeavored  to find their own way past that blank page and into a short story—both throughout our mystery community and especially in the Short Mystery Fiction Society, to whom I’m so overwhelmingly grateful for this award."

BERJAYA
Image by Bethany Maines

SMFS Official Announcement: 2025 Derringer Award Winners

  

BERJAYA


Since 1998, the Short Mystery Fiction Society has awarded the annual Derringers—named after the popular pocket pistol—to outstanding published stories. The Short Mystery Fiction Society is proud to announce the winners of the 2025 Derringer Awards for works published in 2024.

 As reported by Derringer Coordinator Paula Messina…


FLASH

"Kargin the Necromancer" by Mike McHone
(Mystery Tribune, December 15, 2024)

SHORT STORY

"The Wind Phone" by Josh Pachter
(Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, September/October 2024)

LONG STORY

"Heart of Darkness" by Tammy Euliano
(Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle House, Down & Out Books)

NOVELETTE

"The Cadillac Job" by Stacy Woodson
(Chop Shop Episode 1, Down & Out Books, January 1, 2024)

ANTHOLOGY

Murder, Neat: A SleuthSayers Anthology
Edited by Michael Bracken and Barb Goffman, Level Best Books


The complete list of 2025 finalists can be found here.

Tuesday, April 1, 2025

SMFS Official Announcement: 2025 Derringer Award Finalists

BERJAYA

Since 1998, the Short Mystery Fiction Society has awarded the annual Derringers—named after the popular pocket pistol—to outstanding published stories. The awards recognize outstanding stories published during 2024. Results of membership voting are scheduled to be posted on May 1, 2025.

The full listing of our nominees and the markets that published the finalist stories has been compiled and supplied by Derringer Coordinator Paula Messina.

 

FLASH

 

Sweet Red Cherries by C.W. Blackwell

(Punk Noir Magazine, November 28, 2024)

 

Mob Mentality by James Patrick Focarile

(Shotgun Honey, June 20, 2024)

 

La Petite Mort by Susan Hatters Friedman

(Bristol Noir, February 16, 2024)

 

Kargin the Necromancer by Mike McHone

(Mystery Tribune, December 15, 2024)

 

Lockerbie, 1988 by Mary Thorson

(Cotton Xenomorph, October 13, 2024)

 

SHORT STORY 

 

"Skeeter's Bar and Grill" by Julie Hastrup

(Larceny & Last Chances: 22 Stories of Mystery & SuspenseSuperior Shores Press)

 

"The Wind Phone" by Josh Pachter

(Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, September/October 2024)

 

"The Heist" by Bill Pronzini

(Shamus and Anthony Commit Capers: Ten Tales of Criminals, Crooks, and Culprits, Level Best Books)

 

"The Last Chance Coalition" by Judy Penz Sheluk

(Larceny & Last Chances: 22 Stories of Mystery & SuspenseSuperior Shores Press)

 

"The Kratz Gambit" by Mark Thielman

(Private Dicks and Disco Balls: Private Eyes in the Dyn-O-Mite Seventies, Down & Out Books)

 

LONG STORY

 

"How Mary’s Garden Grew" by Elizabeth Elwood

(Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine, January/February 2024)

 

"Heart of Darkness" by Tammy Euliano

(Scattered, Smothered, Covered & Chunked: Crime Fiction Inspired by Waffle HouseDown & Out Books)

 

"Putting Things Right" by Peter W. J. Hayes

(Thrill Ride - The Magazine, December 21, 2024)

 

"Motive Factor X" by Joseph Andre Thomas

(Howls from the Scene of the Crime: A Crime Horror Anthology, Howl Society Press)

 

"Cold Comfort" by Andrew Welsh-Huggins

(Private Dicks and Disco Balls: Private Eyes in the Dyn-O-Mite SeventiesDown & Out Books)

  

NOVELETTE

 

"A Band of Scheming Women" by Joslyn Chase

(Thrill Ride - The Magazine, March 21, 2024)

 

"Christmas Dinner" by Robert Lopresti

(Alfred Hitchcock’s Mystery Magazine, November/December 2024)

 

"Barracuda Backfire" by Tom Milani

(Chop Shop Episode 4, Down & Out Books, April 1, 2024)

 

"Her Dangerously Clever Hands" by Karen Odden

(Crimeucopia - Through the Past Darkly, Murderous Ink Press)

 

"The Cadillac Job" by Stacy Woodson

(Chop Shop Episode 1, Down & Out Books, January 1, 2024)



ANTHOLOGY

Devil's Snare: Best New England Crime Stories 2024
Edited by Susan Oleksiw, Ang Pompano, Leslie Wheeler, Crime Spell Books

Friend of the Devil: Crime Fiction Inspired by the Songs of the Grateful Dead
Edited by Josh Pachter, Down & Out Books

Larceny & Last Chances: 22 Stories of Mystery & Suspense
Edited by Judy Penz Sheluk, Superior Shores Press

Murder, Neat: A SleuthSayers Anthology
Edited by Michael Bracken and Barb Goffman, Level Best Books

New York State of Crime: Murder New York Style 6
Edited by D.M. Barr and Joseph R.G. De Marco, Down & Out Books

The 13th Letter
Edited by Donna Carrick, Carrick Publishing

BERJAYA

The list of 2025 winners can be found here.

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Join the Short Mystery Fiction Society

The Short Mystery Fiction Society is a group of writers, readers, editors, publishers, and others dedicated to the promotion and celebration of mystery and crime short stories.

Want to help honor excellence in short crime and mystery fiction? Join the Short Mystery Fiction Society to participate in our annual Derringer Award process. The award was established in 1998 and named after the palm-sized handgun to emphasize the short but deadly nature of the fiction honored.

Join before the end of the year to get involved.  Enter your email below.






BERJAYA
image by Claire Murray / original image by Thomas Wolter

Saturday, November 16, 2024

The 1998 SMFS Derringer Awards

BERJAYA

The winners of the first annual Derringer Awards were announced in May, 1998. They were voted on by the members of the Short Mystery Fiction Society. The Award was established in 1998 and named to emphasize the short but deadly nature of the mystery fiction honored. Winners receive a certificate depicting the eponymous weapon.

THE WINNERS

FLASH (under 1000 words)

Michael Mallory, "Curiosity Kills"
Murderous Intent, Vol. 3, No. 4, Fall 1997.

SHORT STORY (1000-3000 words)

Kate Grilley, "Guavaberry Christmas"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3, No 4 Fall 1997

SHORT (3,000-10,000 words) - TIE

Kris Neri, "L.A. Justice"
Murder by Thirteen (L.A. Sisters in Crime anthology) Crown Valley Press, ISBN 0-9647945-3-5, 1997

TIED WITH

Barbara White-Rayczek, "The Adventurers"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3, No 1, Winter 1997

NOVELLA (15,000 to 35,000 words)

Margo Power, "Image of Conspiracy"
Madison Publishing Company, ISBN 1-881699-02-7 (pb) 1997

BEST FIRST STORY (any length)

Eileen Brosnan "Back Stairs"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997


THE NOMINEES

FLASH (under 1000 words)

Vicki Cameron, "Zebra Mussels"
Cottage Country Killers (anthology), General Store Publishing House, ISBN 1-896182-53-4 1997

Kimberly Haugh, "Exceptions"
Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, November 1997

Robert L. Iles, "What the Sheriff Saw"
Whispering Willows Mysteries, Summer 1997, ISBN 0-9653990-3-6

Tom Kreitzberg, "A New Beginning"
Murderous Intent, Vol. 3, No. 4 Fall 1997

Michael Mallory, "Curiosity Kills"
Murderous Intent, Vol. 3, No. 4, Fall 1997

SHORT STORY (1000-3000 words)

Dan Crawford, "All's Fair"
Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Vol. 42, No. 11, November 1997

Elizabeth Dearl, "Same Old Henry"
The Case (www.thecase.com) June 9, 1997

Kate Grilley, "Guavaberry Christmas"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3, No 4 Fall 1997

Peter Lovesey, "Never a Cross Word"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, February 1997

Ralph McInerny, "Copy Dog"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, February 1997

Kris Neri, "Getting His"
Whispering Willow, Premier Edition, 1997

SHORT (3,000-10,000 words)

Colleen Mary Aminoff, "The Confession"
Red Herring Mystery Magazine, Vol. 4 No. 1 ISSN 1076-643X

Ann Bayer, "Gertrude"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, September/October 1997

Brendan DuBois, "Trade Wars"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, February 97

John M. Floyd, "King of the City"
Murderous Intent, Spring 97, V3 #2

Robert Gray, "The Word on the Street"
Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, December 1997

Robert l. Iles, "The Burning Woman"
Whispering Willows Mysteries, Fall 1997

Robert L. Iles, "A Hand in the Case"
Murderous Intent, Vol. 3 #2 Spring 1997

M.D. Lake, "Tea for Two"
Funny Bones, Signet Penguin Books ISBN 0-451-40720-2

Robert Lopresti "Uncle Victor on Watch"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997

Richard A. Lupoff, "Chinese Gunboats"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997

Michael Mallory "The Adventure of the Illustrious Patient"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #1 Winter 1997

Margaret Maron, "Shaggy Dog"
Funny Bones, Signet, Penguin Books ISBN 0-451-40720-2

Kris Neri, "L.A. Justice"
Murder by Thirteen (L.A. Sisters in Crime anthology) Crown Valley Press, ISBN 0-9647945-3-5, 1997

Anne Perry, "A Matter of Blackmail"
Mary Higgins Clark Mystery Magazine, Vol. 23, No. 3, Summer/Fall 1997.

Margo Power, "All There Is and More"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997

Polly Whitney, "Etiquette Lesson"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997

Jane Ann Tun, "Mea Culpa"
Cottage Country Killers (anthology) General Store Publishing House ISBN 1-896182-53-4

Barbara White-Rayczek, "The Adventurers"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #1 Winter 1997

NOVELLA (15,000 to 35,000 words)

Gillian Linscott "Poisoned with Politeness"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, September/October 1997 Double issue

Margo Power, "Image of Conspiracy"
Madison Publishing Company, ISBN 1-881699-02-7 (pb) 1997

BEST FIRST STORY (any length)

Eileen Brosnan "Back Stairs"
Murderous Intent, Vol 3 #4 Fall 1997

J.R. Chabot, "Quite Contrary"
Mary Higgins Clark Mystery Magazine, Vol. 23, No. 3, Summer/Fall 1997

K. R. MacLeish, "Neither Rhyme nor Riot"
Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, June '97

Nick Schinker, "Since My Last Confession"
Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine, September/October 1997

Congratulations to all the winners and nominees!

A complete list of all finalist and winning stories for every year may be found here.