Showing posts with label edgar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label edgar. Show all posts

Sunday, June 22, 2014

Validation

I don’t know anyone who writes with the specific objective of winning an award. Nor do my author friends list best seller lists as their reason for creating.  It is still true that most of us long for those things, not so much for the sales and money those things bring but for their inner value.  Bestseller lists suggest love and respect from readers.  An Agatha award from Malice Domestic or a Lovey from Love is Murder is validation from fans of your genre.  An Edgar or Nebula award gives a writer validation from his or her peers.

I hadn’t thought about other possible sources of validation as a writer until I received an email from fellow mystery author Neil Plakcy.

I’ve known Neil for three years, since I reviewed his novel Mahu Blood for the International Thriller Writers’ newsletter The Big Thrill.  At the time it was the latest in his much-respected Mahu mystery series, set in Honolulu.  Neil also teaches at Broward College in Florida and recently contacted me because he was assembling materials for a new version of their mystery fiction course.

Neil had read my essay, “Black Ain’t Nothing But a Detective’s Color,” which was published in the summer 2007 issue of the Mystery Reader’s Journal.  In that piece I discuss how being Black makes a detective different.  I was pleasantly surprised when Neil asked permission to incorporate my essay in his mystery course. He explained that many of his students were coming from a multi-ethnic community and that my essay would be valuable to those students.  I could help them understand African-American characters in crime fiction. 

And more, it’s a Master Course which could be taught by multiple instructors over a period of years.  So going into the future it could be that hundreds of people who want to learn how to write mystery fiction will read my essay as part of their course of study.

Of course I still long for fan accolades, reader appreciation and peer endorsement.  But I never realized how much academic validation might mean to me.  It says something about my understanding of my genre that makes me glow with pride. 

And as I prepare to write the next Hannibal Jones novel I’m thinking that all I need to do now is live up to it.