Solving the
Mystery of My First Love
by Kim Fay
One morning in
January, I opened my email to find a message from the marketing manager assigned
to my novel at my publisher: I just heard
the Edgar news and wanted to send you my congratulations!
Edgar news?
Congratulations?
Although I
didn’t know what she meant, my heart still skipped a beat. I quickly Googled
“Kim Fay” and “Edgar.” There it was. My novel, The Map of Lost Memories, was nominated for an Edgar Award for Best
First Novel by an American Author. An Edgar! The mustachioed Oscar of the
mystery writing world! Incredible! Except for one thing …
My novel
wasn’t a mystery.
Was it?
Since its
publication in August of 2012, it had been marketed as a historical novel. As a
literary novel. As an adventure novel. And, unsurprisingly, a historical-literary-adventure
novel. Not once that I knew of had it been slotted into the mystery category. Yes,
it had been chosen for one of Poisoned Pen bookshop’s monthly book clubs, but
it was a Modern Firsts pick, not a First Mystery or Mystery of the Month or
Thriller pick. This would explain why it wasn’t just me who was caught unawares.
My editor, publicist and agent (none of whom had submitted the book for
nomination) were surprised too.
Then I
started to think about it. My mind wandered, all the way back to my childhood,
when I couldn’t get enough of Nancy Drew and Phyllis A. Whitney’s gothic stories
of suspense and Betty Cavanna’s mysteries set in Marrakech, the Spice Islands
and Thailand. My first first novel, written
at the age of ten, was The Mystery of the
Golden Galleon. I recalled my early forays into literary fiction and how
intensely I was drawn to Graham Greene. Then I reconsidered The Map of Lost Memories: its quest for
a lost Cambodian history, its suspicious murder (was it intentional or was it
an accident?) and its family mystery that slowly unfolds. I realized that,
without my knowing it, I had stayed true to my first fiction love: the mystery.
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Kim at the Edgar banquet. Photo by Steven Speliotis |
I have
worked for years in indie bookshops, I have made the literary rounds, but never
have I belonged to a literary world so welcoming and supportive. Since January
I have been surrounded by mystery writers—at Sisters in Crime and Mystery
Writers of America meetings, at the Tucson and L.A. festivals of books—and bar
the odd exception (aren’t there always odd exceptions!), they have opened their
arms and taken me in.
Along with
the above-mentioned Jeri Westerson, there is Patricia Smiley, the oh so
hospitable president of Sisters in Crime L.A. Naomi Hirahara, generous author
of the Mas Arai mystery series. Travis Richardson, equally generous editor of
the Sisters in Crime L.A. newsletter. Hilary Davidson, author of the Lily Moore
mystery series and terrific partner in margarita-drinking crime. Susan Elia
MacNeal, my fellow nominee and keeper of my foot-in-mouth secret after the
Edgar awards banquet. Hank Phillippi Ryan, the gracious and deserving winner of
the Mary Higgins Clark Award. Margery Flax, hand-holder extraordinaire and
Administrative Director of Mystery Writers of America. And, and, and … I could
go on and on. About how great these people are. About how much fun they are. About
how at home they’ve made me feel. About how inspired I am, to fully explore the
mystery in my next novel and even to pull out a series I’ve been secretly
plotting for the past few years.
As for the
Edgar Awards, when my category was called at the banquet at the Grand Hyatt New
York on May 2, I sat on the edge of my seat, surrounded by my husband, agent,
editor and dozens of new friends. I did not win. Did I feel a bit boo-hoo about
this? Of course. But even if I had won, that wouldn’t have been the best part
of the experience.
I didn’t
prepare a just-in-case speech for the awards, but if I’d had the honor of
standing up on the stage, I know how I would have finished it: If I was given the choice to belong to any
group of writers in the world, it would be this one. Thank you for inviting me
to your party.
Kim Fay is the author of The Map of Lost Memories,
published by Ballantine Books/Random House and available in paperback on June
18, 2013. www.kimfay.net