Sunday, April 28, 2024

Lucky Number Seven? By Annette Dashofy

By the time you read this, I’ll either be packing or on my way home from Malice Domestic, but as I write this, it hasn’t happened yet. 

It will be my tenth Malice. The first was as an unpublished observer so long ago, I can’t remember the year, but I’m thinking 2005 or 2006. 

My very first panel with our own
Jim Jackson

My next—and first Malice as a published author—was in 2014. I’ve attended every year since—keeping in mind there was no Malice Domestic in 2020 or 2021.

2015: The Agatha Awards Banquet with my
Pittsburgh SinC crew: Joyce Tremel, Jeff Boarts, & Martha Reed

In 2015, I was an Agatha nominee for Best First Novel. It was akin to being Cinderella. I didn’t win, but the nomination gave me a sense of legitimacy. I didn’t suck! Readers liked my book!

2016: With Hank Phillippi Ryan, Margaret Maron, 
and Catriona McPherson

In 2016, I was nominated again, this time for Best Contemporary Novel. I got a second chance to dress up and be Cinderella! I knew I wasn’t going to win (I was up against powerhouses like Louise Penny, Margaret Maron, Hank Phillippi Ryan, and Catriona McPherson), so it was the most relaxed I’ve ever been at an award ceremony.  But I got to sit on a panel with the other nominees and breathe the rarified air.


 In 2017, I was just an attendee and fan girl, cheering on my friends. And I was assigned to a panel with Anne Hillerman! Did I mention being a fan girl? She’s one of my favorites!

2018: Me wondering what the heck I'm doing
there with these amazing authors!

Along came 2018 and yet another Best Contemporary Novel nomination. This third one had me in shock. Okay, I was in shock each time I received the phone call, but this one made me cry tears of joy and gratitude. I mean, how amazing is it to sit on a panel with Louise Penny, Margaret Maron, Ellen Byron, and Marilyn Levinson?!

Trying to look glamorous while feeling
totally silly

By 2019, you would think I’d quit being blindsided, yet I was completely gobsmacked by another nomination. I was running into a wardrobe issue though. I’d been posting my dress searches on social media each year trying to one-up the dress I’d worn the year before. If I couldn’t win, at least I could look like I deserved to be in the room, right? This year’s entry will forever be my favorite. It was so snazzy that I felt silly. I’m a country gal used to jeans and cowboy boots after all! 

For what it’s worth, I still didn’t win.

2020: Watching the Agatha Award 
announcements from home


I was again nominated in 2020, when Covid shut down the world. No dressing up this time. Anne Cleeves won. No surprise.

2022: Writers Who Kill at Malice

In 2021, there was still no Malice and no nomination for me. Nor was there a nomination in 2022 when the world had opened up and Malice Domestic returned. We were all ecstatic to see each other in person! I had so much fun with old friends and new.

2023: Having way too much fun

Last year, I was shocked senseless when I was again nominated. Being Cinderella never gets old. NEVER. On the other hand, two years of sitting around on Zoom wearing yoga pants definitely affected my sensibilities about glitzy dress-up clothes. I’ve switched to blingy but comfortable mother-of-the-bride pants suits. In 2023, it was navy blue lace. Apparently, it was a letdown to those who were used to my party dresses because I don’t have a single photo of the outfit! If any of you reading this do, please email me a copy! 

Here we are in 2024. For the seventh time, I’m a nominee. It truly is an honor, one for which I am deeply grateful. I never take these nominations for granted. I never expect I will ever travel this road again. So, the fact that enough readers have written down my name on the nomination ballot to make me a finalist indeed humbles me. 

This year's Agatha nominees

(This time, I’m nominated alongside my good friends, Tara Laskowski, Ellen Byron, Gigi Pandian, and fellow Writer Who Kills, Korina Moss). 

By the time you read this, as I said earlier, I’ll be homeward bound. The Agatha Awards will have been handed out. Do I think I stand a chance? There’s always hope. But there’s also Alfred Einstein’s quote: The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results. 

Have you ever been to Malice or any mystery convention? If so, please share your experiences.

  

13 comments:

  1. I went to Malice in 2016 and 2017. I really want to go back. Some day, I'll have a job that lets me take more time off to attention conventions. At the moment, not seeing any new conventions in my future. Glad I got to meet you at Bouchercon in September.

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    1. Mark, I'm so glad we got to chat at Bouchercon, too!

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  2. Good morning, from Malice where, alas, seven was NOT any luckier than one through six.

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    1. Annette -- you need to check out the records to learn if you hold the record for most nominations without the fans having the good sense to choose you as the winner. Safe travels home.

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    2. Made it home safely. I've wondered the same thing, Jim. I know of several who've had as many or more nominations, but they've also won one or two along the way.

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  3. Safe trip home, Annette. I don't think you need an award to know that thousands of people, including me, have read your books and loved them. Glen Close was nominated eight times for an Oscar and never has won. She's an amazing actress. The proof is between the pages of your books and the comments readers make on Amazon and Goodreads. Keep the faith.

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  4. Sorry to have missed it this year. I'm hoping to make it next time.

    Annette, you don't need any awards to prove to all of us that your books are wonderful.

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  5. Safe home, Annette. I'll echo what Susan said. The proof is definitely between the pages of your book.

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  6. Whether taking home a teapot or repeatedly being acknowledged for a solid and well-received body of work (think Susan Lucci and even Meryl Streep), you are our winner! Hoping you had a great time at Malice and that our paths cross there again in the future.

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    1. You were missed, Debra! Hope to see you next year! And thank you.

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