CWC member Helen C. Escott will launch We Will Meet Again on Saturday, July 6th from 1-3 pm at Chapters, Kenmount Road, St. John’s.
CWC member and bestselling author Helen C. Escott’s five-book Operation Series has been optioned by Rink Rat Productions for film and television.
Due to a number of circumstances, we are rescheduling the AGM from May 30th to June 20, 2024
Crime Writers of Canada members will be reading at the MOTIVE Festival in Toronto on June 8 and 9.
Crime Writers of Canada (CWC) is pleased to announce the Shortlists for the 2024 Crime Writers of Canada Awards of Excellence in Canadian Crime Writing.
Left Coast Crime is an annual mystery convention sponsored by mystery fans, both readers and authors. This year, BC-Yukon rep, Winona Kent and CWC member AJ Devlin, co-hosted a Bloody Caesar event in the hotel's bar.
CWC member Dianne Scott’s first mystery Final Look has been nominated for the Kobo Emerging Writers Award in the Mystery category.
May 17, 2024
donalee Moulton’s story, Troubled Water, has been nominated for an Award of Excellence in The Best Crime Short Story category. Donalee has been writing professionally for over 25 years. She has been...Whether you're a professional or aspiring writer, or just want to connect with people who write and read crime, you'll find inspiration and support here.
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CWC's weekly podcast for mystery and crime writers in Canada by Erik D'Souza.
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July 2023 interview / novelist, Shetland (UK)
Marsali Taylor is the author of the Shetland Sailing Mysteries starring quick-witted live-aboard sailor Cass Lynch and her partner DI Gavin Macrae who join forces to investigate crime in Scotland’s northern isles. Readers praise the...May 17, 2024
donalee Moulton’s story, Troubled Water, has been nominated for an Award of Excellence in The Best Crime Short Story category. Donalee has been writing professionally for over 25 years. She has been published in The Globe and Mail,...
We would like to acknowledge that we are in Mi’kma’ki, the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq People. This territory is covered by the Treaties of Peace and Friendship. This series of treaties did not surrender Indigenous land, resources or sovereignty but instead established rules for an ongoing relationship between nations. We recognize the significance of these treaties and the need for continual learning and engagement in the work of the truth, reconciliation and equity. We are all treaty people.
We also recognize that African Nova Scotians are a distinct people whose histories, legacies and contributions have enriched that part of Mi’kma’ki known as Nova Scotia for over 400 years.