The Edgar Awards

Dell Magazine ad in program

I've only been to the Edgar Awards in person once before, many years ago when I had just begun writing and friends suggested it would be fun to attend since I was already going to be on the East Coast. It was fun to see what the biggest gala in the U.S. mystery world was all about, but I never imagined I'd be back as an Edgar Award nominee!

After Malice Domestic, I rode the train with Laurie R. King from Washington, DC, to New York City for the Edgars. And I got to celebrate with Laurie at the Edgars as well—she was honored with the Grand Master Award for lifetime achievement. (photos by Aslan Chalom)

With Laurie King

With Laurie King (photo by Aslan Chalom)

Many friends from Crime Writer of Color were also nominees this year, so we took a photo together: V.M. (Valerie) Burns, Tracy Clark, Naomi Hirahara, Vera Kurian, and S.A. (Shawn) Cosby. (Thanks to Shelly Dickson Carr for taking this photo)

V.M. (Valerie) Burns, Tracy Clark, Naomi Hirahara, Vera Kurian, and S.A. (Shawn) Cosby. (Thanks to Shelly Dickson Carr for taking this photo)

And our official photo of Edgar Best Short Story nominees: Michael Bracken, James A. Hearn, Tracy Clark, me, V.M. Burns, and R.T. Lawton (photo by Aslan Chalom)

Michael Bracken, James A. Hearn, Tracy Clark, Gigi Pandian, V.M. Burns, and R.T. Lawton (photo by Aslan Chalom)
Edgars Program

Edgar Best Short Story nominees:

  • “Blindsided” by Michael Bracken & James A. Hearn

  • “The Vermeer Conspiracy" by V.M. Burns

  • “Lucky Thirteen” by Tracy Clark

  • “The Road to Hana” by R.T. Lawton (the winner of this year's Edgar)

  • “The Locked Room Library” by Gigi Pandian

  • “The Dark Oblivion” by Cornell Woolrich (this was a previously unpublished story by the classic mystery novelist only recently discovered!)

Meeting my publishing team in person!

It was so wonderful to meet my amazing publishing team for the first time while I was in New York City for the Edgar Awards.

Under Lock & Skeleton Key is published by Minotaur Books, the mystery imprint of St. Martin’s Press, both of which are housed under Macmillan publishing. I got to tour their NYC building and meet with my fabulous editor, publicist, and marketing coordinator, shown here.

With my publicist, marketing coordinator, and editor


And they have a gorgeous view from their office—including gargoyles! Can you spot them? The office also has a secret meeting room through a bookcase—how perfect is that for my Secret Staircase Mysteries!? Sadly, the room was in use while I was there. Definitely a good excuse to go back to visit.

view from the MacMillian office

View from the Macmillan building (I spy gargoyles!)

with my editor

With my editor

I had a little time to play tourist as well, visiting friends, museums, and of course the iconic New York Public Library. Not enough time, but I'm glad I was able to visit.

Lion at NYC Public Library

Detour to the New York Public Library

view from hotel room

View from my hotel room

Malice Domestic, the traditional mystery convention back after 2 years off

Agatha Best short story nominees

With Agatha Award short story nominees

Malice Domestic is where I got my start as a mystery writer. Fifteen years ago, I was awarded the Malice Domestic Grant for my unpublished manuscript, Artifact. I didn't know any writers at the time, but the fact that people in the traditional mystery world saw promise in my work is what gave me the confidence to keep writing—and the fact that I found kindred spirits there was what made it a fun journey.

This year, it was wonderful to reconnect with my fellow traditional mystery lovers. I was up for an Agatha Award for my short story "The Locked Room Library" as well, which was icing on the cake.

For the first time, Kellye Garrett and Walter Mosley (my fellow co-founders of Crime Writers of Color) and I were in the same place all together in person.

With Kellye Garrett and Walter Mosley

With Kellye Garrett and Walter Mosley

Other photos:

With writer pals Lisa Q. Mathews, Ellen Byron, and Diane Vallere

With writer pals Lisa Q. Mathews, Ellen Byron, and Diane Vallere

With Shelly Dickson Carr.

With Shelly Dickson Carr.

Southwest Travels

Seeing people in person after so long has been wonderful. I hit the road with plenty of good masks!

In Albuquerque, in addition to seeing readers and writers at Left Coast Crime, I also got to spend time hiking and eating at great restaurants with my aunt who lives in New Mexico. Though I was sad to see that my favorite restaurant in Old Town Albuquerque had closed—the one that inspired Blue Sky Teas in my Accidental Alchemist mysteries, with a living tree in the center! But we still had a great time.

tree on Albuquerque hike
a door in Albuquerque

with Kellye Garrett and Mia Manansala

With Kellye Garrett and Mia Manansala.

With Naomi Hirahara, Mia Manansala, and Tori Eldridge.

With Naomi Hirahara, Mia Manansala, and Tori Eldridge.

With Catriona McPherson, Terri Bischoff, Ellen Byron, and Lisa Mathews.

With Catriona McPherson, Terri Bischoff (my editor who championed my Accidental Alchemist novels!), Ellen Byron, and Lisa Mathews.

5 Fun Facts About UNDER LOCK & SKELETON KEY

I can hardly believe publication day is here! Under Lock & Skeleton Key, my first Secret Staircase Mystery, is out in the world! It took me years to figure out how to tell Tempest Raj's story, so I'm thrilled that you can read it (or listen to it) today!

Fun fact #1: It's a locked-room mystery, aka an impossible crime. It's a puzzle mystery like those classic mysteries that posed a challenge to the reader. Can you figure out how Tempest's stage double ended up inside a wall sealed for a century?

Fun fact #2: The origin of the family business that builds sliding bookcases & more: "What happens when a carpenter and a stage magician fall in love? They form a Secret Staircase Construction business to bring magic to people through their homes."

Fun fact #3: Sanjay (The Hindi Houdini) from my Jaya Jones Treasure Hunt Mysteries, is one of the main characters in the new series!

Fun fact #4: The library in the novel first appeared in my story "The Locked Room Library" published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine (and now nominated for both an Agatha and an Edgar Award!). The setting of a library devoted to classic mystery novels was so much fun to create, and I wish it really existed!

Fun fact #5 about Under Lock & Skeleton Key: It shares a publication day with the wonderful Alex Segura. I'm happy to call him a friend and I'm also a fan. His novel Secret Identity is out today as well. I got an advance reader copy and it's seriously so good! I hope you'll have fun with both of our books!

I Love Librarians

LibraryReads highlights public librarians’ favorite new books. Public library staff vote for their favorite books each month, and their top 10 picks serve as a national “library staff picks list” for new books each month. I was thrilled to learn that Under Lock & Skeleton Key is a LibraryReads pick for March! This isn’t just mysteries, but all adult fiction. 

Library Journal, the monthly trade publication for librarians, also gave it a fantastic review!

“Excellent…This “Secret Staircase” series starter is a fresh and magical locked-room mystery filled with fascinating and likable characters, incredible settings, and Tempest’s grandfather’s homecooked Indian meals.”

Library Journal

A Edgar Award Nomination

Today is Edgar Allan Poe’s birthday, so it’s the day Mystery Writers of America announces this year’s Edgar Award nominees. I usually stay offline in the morning until I’ve completed a solid chunk of writing for the day. This morning, my phone started lighting up with text messages from friends congratulating me. 

Congratulating me? What was going on? One text mentioned the Edgar Award, but… that couldn’t possibly be right. Could it? I broke my rule of staying offline to investigate. It turned it’s true! I’m an Edgar Award nominee!

I’ve been short-listed for an Edgar Award for my locked-room mystery short story "The Locked Room Library," published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine last year! Wow. Simply, wow. 

2022 Edgar Award nominees for Best Short Story

I'm a huge fan of locked room mysteries, aka impossible crime stories, and I love writing them. That particular style of puzzle plot mystery fell out of fashion decades ago, but I've been so happy to see it gaining popularity once more, so I'm thrilled to get this recognition for one of my impossible crime stories. 

Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine "The Locked Room Library" by Gigi Pandian

The other nominees are Michael Bracken & James A. Hearn, V.M. Burns, Tracy Clark, R.T. Lawton, and a previously undiscovered story by by Cornell Woolrich. What a great group! I’ve read most of the stories, and it’s truly an honor to be a finalist alongside them. 

The Edgars are given out by the Mystery Writers of America, and this year’s Edgar Awards banquet is April 28 in New York City. I had hoped to attend two years ago, when I was nominated for a Sue Grafton Memorial Award, but the event was canceled due to the pandemic. This year, I’ll be there! 

The Best Short Story Nominees

  • “Blindsided,” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by Michael Bracken & James A. Hearn (Dell Magazines)

  • 
“The Vermeer Conspiracy,” Midnight Hour by V.M. Burns (Crooked Lane Books)
“Lucky Thirteen,” Midnight Hour by Tracy Clark (Crooked Lane Books)

  • 
“The Road to Hana,” Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine by R.T. Lawton (Dell Magazines)


  • “The Locked Room Library,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Gigi Pandian (Dell Magazines)


  • “The Dark Oblivion,” Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine by Cornell Woolrich (Dell Magazines)

 

The full list of nominees in all the categories can be found at: https://mysterywriters.org/mwa-announce-the-2022-edgar-award-nominations/

Congratulations to all the nominees! I look forward to seeing folks at the Edgars in April. 

"The Diamond Vanishes" in Midnight Hour

Midnight Hour, a collection of short mystery fiction by authors of color, is out today!

Edited by Abby L. Vandiver and published by Crooked Lane Books, here's the list of authors who contributed stories: 

Jennifer J. Chow, Tracy Clark, H. C. Chan, Christopher Chambers, Richie Narvaez, Frankie Y. Bailey, E. A. Aymar, Faye Snowden, Tina Kashian, Rhonda Crowder, V. M. Burns, Raquel V. Reyes, Callie Browning, Elizabeth Wilkerson, David Heska Wanbli Weiden, Stella Oni, Gigi Pandian, Delia C. Pitts, Marla Bradeen. Yes, what a list! 

The book features my locked-room mystery story “The Diamond Vanishes,” a Jaya and Sanjay story: 

A cursed diamond, a midnight séance, and an impossible crime... Stage magician Sanjay Rai, aka The Hindi Houdini, reluctantly agrees to perform a fake séance as part of his act. But when one of the participants vanishes from a locked room, he and Jaya Jones must unravel a dark deception connected to India’s legendary Koh-i-Noor Diamond.

In The Alchemist of Fire and Fortune, Dorian the Gargoyle Gets His Own Point-of-View Chapters

The The Alchemist of Fire and Fortune, the 5th Accidental Alchemist mystery, is out in the world today!

Here’s what’s in store this time for Zoe and Dorian: 

The Goonies meets Charade in the 5th novel in the Anthony Award-winning Accidental Alchemist cozy mystery series. A blackmailer obsessed with gold, a boyfriend who’s more than he seems, and a treasure hidden on the Oregon coast lead Zoe Faust and Dorian Robert-Houdin on an adventure that could leave their found family changed forever. 

I’ve been a fan of the movie The Goonies since I was a kid. Set on the Oregon coast in Astoria, it’s why I gave Max Liu a backstory of growing up in Astoria, and in this book I get to fully explore that sense of adventure of pirate treasure on the Oregon coast. 

Le Penseur (The Thinker) is one of my favorite gargoyles at Notre Dame in Paris. He’s the gargoyle who inspired Dorian's character in my Accidental Alchemist Mysteries. I truly don’t think I would have created a living gargoyle character if I hadn't been writing only for myself as therapy while going through chemotherapy a decade ago, but now I cannot imagine my life without him!

There’s no stopping Dorian’s personality, so he gets his own point of view chapters in The Alchemist of Fire and Fortune. He gets his own chapters in the next book in the series I’m working on now. 

Original artwork of “The Locked Room Library”

I loved the original artwork that accompanied my short story “The Locked Room Library” that appeared in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine’s July/August 2021 issue, and I’m so pleased that the artist, Laurie Harden, was open to selling it to me. Now I need to find a good spot for it!

That’s Sanjay and Tamarind on the right, next to a bricked-up door to nowhere, an important part of the story. “The Locked Room Library” is an impossible story that pays homage to John Dickson Carr and Ellery Queen. 

Here’s the story set-up Laurie was illustrating: The owner of San Francisco’s Locked Room Library—a new private library established to celebrate classic mysteries—has discovered a secret about John Dickson Carr’s controversial novel The Burning Court. When a newly discovered letter Carr wrote to Frederic Dannay disappears under circumstances identical to one of the eerie impossible crimes in The Burning Court, it’s up to librarian Tamarind Ortega and stage magician Sanjay Rai (aka The Hindi Houdini) to prove the letter wasn’t stolen by a ghost who vanished through a bricked-up door.

All the characters are shown in library, along with the brick door to nowhere that holds the key to the mystery. 

Advance Reader Copies of Under Lock & Skeleton Key

Remember that book I sold in 2020? My agent pitched it with the title The Vanishing Act of Tempest Raj. Well, now it’s got an even more amazing final title: Under Lock & Skeleton Key!

Advance Reader Copies with this gorgeous cover have arrived, so it’s beginning to feel real. I’m so pleased that some of my favorite mystery authors read an early copy of the book and loved it enough to give it an endorsement. 

With advance praise from Deanna Raybourn, Sujata Massey, Naomi Hirahara, Jenn McKinlay, Paige Shelton, and Ellie Alexander, I'm pinching myself! 

  • “With dazzling sleight of hand, Gigi Pandian launches an enchanting new series . . . a must-read.” ―Deanna Raybourn



  • “A stand out mystery. The fast-reading, suspenseful tale delights, with dashes of international spice and a powerful new heroine.” ―Sujata Massey



  • “An absolute sparkling gem of a book! With masterful misdirection and literary slight of hand, Pandian has penned a delectable tale that kept me guessing.” ―Jenn McKinlay



  • A perfect blend of adventure and mystery.” ―Paige Shelton


  • A love letter to golden age mysteries . . . will keep readers guessing whodunit until the very end.” ―Ellie Alexander

  • 

“Pandian is this generation’s queen of the locked-room mystery!” ―Naomi Hirahara

Here's a bit more about the book from the Minotaur Books description of Under Lock & Skeleton Key

An impossible crime. A family legacy. The intrigue of hidden rooms and secret staircases. 

After a disastrous stage accident derails Tempest Raj’s career, and life, she heads back to her childhood home in California to comfort herself with her grandfather’s Indian home cooked meals. Though she resists, every day brings her closer to the inevitable: working for her father’s company. Secret Staircase Construction specializes in bringing the magic of childhood to all by transforming clients’ homes with sliding bookcases, intricate locks, backyard treehouses, and hidden reading nooks.

When Tempest visits her dad’s latest renovation project, her former stage double is discovered dead inside a wall that’s supposedly been sealed for more than a century. Fearing she was the intended victim, it’s up to Tempest to solve this seemingly impossible crime. But as she delves further into the mystery, Tempest can’t help but wonder if the Raj family curse that’s plagued her family for generations―something she used to swear didn’t exist―has finally come for her.

Gigi Pandian introduces her newest heroine, Tempest Raj, in a series debut that layers stunning architecture with mouthwatering food and is an ode to classic locked-room mysteries.

My Cancerversary: Diagnosed with Breast Cancer 10 Years Ago Today

Ten years ago today, on June 30, 2011, I was diagnosed with breast cancer. I had just turned 36. My life was thrown upside down, my plans changed forever. I had a full year of treatments ahead of me, including surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation.

But along with the bad, there was so much unexpected good. I figured out how to live life to the fullest in ways I had never previously thought possible. I learned who my good friends were. And I realized my dream of becoming a published novelist—it was my fabulous writers group who bought me my favorite chemo wig! When I recovered, I rented out a big flat in Edinburgh and invited my writers group to join me on a writing retreat. No agenda, just living life to the fullest. 

I hadn’t realized the rut I’d been in, until this anniversary crept up on me. 

Initially, that cancer diagnosis was the kick I needed to think about what I really wanted to do with my life. What did living life to the fullest mean? Stop worrying about trivial problems, spend more time with friends and family, slow down, savor, travel, cook, throw myself into writing.

I confess that as the years go by and I'm further from cancer, it's more difficult to remember to not sweat the small stuff. I've achieved so many of my dreams from 2011, and my writing career has exceeded those dreams. Yet... unimportant worries push their way into daily life.

I'm healthy and thriving today.

So on this big 10 year anniversary, I'm taking a step back and assessing my life, just like I did 10 years ago during cancer. What will that mean? I'm not sure yet, but I’m doing the work this month, leading up to that fateful June 30 anniversary when my life turned upside down.

And next year, I get to celebrate 10 years cancer free! I wonder what I’ll do…

“The Locked Room Library” Published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

“The Locked Room Library” is my first short story to be published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine! I was thrilled to discover it leads the July/August issue, and also has this super-cool original illustration by artist Laurie Harden accompanying it.

Ellery Queen Cover

 “The Locked Room Library” is an impossible story that pays homage to John Dickson Carr and Ellery Queen. 

The magazine is out now, and is filled with a lot of great stories: “Fox's Wedding" by Awasaka Tsumao (a Japanese mystery translated into English for the first time), "The Body in the Bee Library" by Jon L. Breen, stories by G.M. Malliet and Joyce Carol Oates, and the always-terrific Blog Bytes column by Kristopher Zgorski.

Ellery Queen Intro

Intro from Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine

Here's a teaser for “The Locked Room Library”:

The owner of San Francisco’s Locked Room Library—a new private library established to celebrate classic mysteries—has discovered a secret about John Dickson Carr’s controversial novel The Burning Court. When a newly discovered letter Carr wrote to Frederic Dannay disappears under circumstances identical to one of the eerie impossible crimes in The Burning Court, it’s up to librarian Tamarind Ortega and stage magician Sanjay Rai (aka The Hindi Houdini) to prove the letter wasn’t stolen by a ghost who vanished through a bricked-up door. 

Mystery Writers of America’s How To Write a Mystery

How to Write a Mystery: A Handbook by Mystery Writers of America, edited by Lee Child with Laurie R. King, is out in the world today. 

I contributed a small tip to this collection of inspirational essays, so I got a sneak peek at the book, and it’s a fabulous resource for mystery writers at any stage of their writing career. 

Here’s the book jacket copy: 

Seventy of the most successful mystery writers in the business answering the question: What writing advice do you wish you’d had at the beginning of your career?

How to Write a Mystery continues the Mystery Writers of America tradition of helping authors tell—and sell!—their stories, from the rank beginner to the established bestseller. This all-new MWA handbook helps writers not only create timeless and compelling stories, but also navigate an ever-shifting publishing landscape. From pacing and dialogue to creating diverse characters and building reader outreach, How to Write a Mystery is a complete guide for a new generation of mystery writers. Because: “Crime doesn’t pay… enough!”

Kirkus Reviews says of the book: "Everything you wanted to know about how to plan, draft, write, revise, publish, and market a mystery, courtesy of the cheerleaders from the Mystery Writers of America. . . . A chorus of encouraging voices that mix do-this instruction with companionable inspiration.”

 

Mia P. Manansala’s Debut Mystery, Arsenic and Adobo

I received a wonderful package in the mail today: the special hardback edition of Mia P. Manansala's Arsenic and Adobo from Book of the Month! 

Sujata Massey, Kellye Garrett, Gigi, Mia P. Manansala

From left: Sujata Massey, Kellye Garrett, Gigi, Mia P. Manansala

I got to read an ARC of this terrific debut cozy mystery, and was honored to get to blurb it for BOTM. Here’s what I wrote about the novel for Book of the Month: 

“I adore the cozier side of mystery fiction. I seek out that sweet spot where you can be completely swept up in a book, but also know that the story won’t take too dark a turn. I want a terrific mystery with characters I enjoy spending time with and a happy ending. When there’s a multicultural cast and good food thrown into the mix, even better. So I was thrilled to get an early look at Mia P. Manansala’s debut, Arsenic and Adobo, a stand-out cozy mystery full of heart, the importance of home, and tons of good food.” —Gigi Pandian

I met Mia when she was awarded the Malice Domestic Grant for her work in progress. That’s how I got my start as a writer as well, and I’m so pleased we’ve gotten to be friends. 

10 Tips for Surviving and Thriving at Writing While Stuck at Home, from Cancer to Covid

When Covid began to spread earlier this year, we were all shaken by our distressing new reality. For most of us, lockdown was a new experience to navigate. For me, I’d gone through something similar a decade ago, so I had a jump-start on figuring out how to keep writing—both emotionally (writing through incredibly stressful circumstances) and physically (writing at home in a small house I share with my husband). 

Nearly 10 years ago, when I was just beginning my writing career, I was diagnosed with aggressive breast cancer. I was 36. I was not prepared for this news, nor the year of cancer treatments that would follow and knock out my immune system. I was forced to stay home, isolated from the world, for much of the year. 

A dramatic life event, like cancer or Covid, can help put priorities in perspective. I knew I needed to focus on my health and my loved ones—and also my dream of being a writer. But how? 

Before cancer, I was not someone who could write at home. By trial and error, I learned many things that year that have served me well these past few months. 

Below are 10 tips that helped me successfully complete a novel during my year of isolated illness during cancer treatments and write a novel during lock-down. That cancer year novel was the one that propelled my career to the next level, and one of this year’s novels sold at auction (see the last blog post), which was a first for me. 

1. STAY OFFLINE. Install an app on your computer that saves you from yourself by turning off the internet. I cannot be trusted to do this myself. I think I’ll look something up for book research or to check the news “for just a minute.” It inevitably turns into 30 minutes—or longer. To save me from myself, I use an app that turns off the internet for a specified amount of time, such as a 45 minute work block, or even for the whole morning. If I forget and try to view a browser, my app shows me an inspirational quote instead, such as A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. (I use Focus on a Mac, and many writers I know enjoy Freedom. There are others, too.)  

2. PUT YOUR PHONE IN THE OTHER ROOM. This was difficult for me at first. Very difficult. But I promise the world will not end if you don’t look at your phone for an hour.* Especially if you have any notifications set that will pop up and distract you, leave your phone in the other room, or at the very least far enough away you cannot reach it from your chair. (*If you really do have a reason you need your phone, such as awaiting a call from a doctor or elderly parents, change your settings so your phone will ring for preset priority callers even if your sound is off for everything else.)

3. CREATE YOUR OWN BACKGROUND NOISE. Listen to café sounds, rain sounds, or instrumental music. While experiencing stressful circumstances, it’s especially easy to get distracted by small noises around you. It helps if you control the noise. iTunes and other apps have background sounds of all kinds, including café sounds (I found one that reminds me of my favorite café where I used to write). Some days you might feel like visiting a café, and other days a rainstorm will do the trick. Thunder on the speakers can give you creative brain a boost, whereas hearing the laundry cycle stop will throw you out of the story. Maybe you like classical music or some other type of music that serves as relaxing background music. 

4. JOIN AN ONLINE WRITING MEET-UP. It’s amazing how much you can get done in 30 minutes to an hour, and it’s so much easier to get started if you know there are online friends waiting for you. There are lots of public write-ins organized online, many through writing organizations, or you can form one yourself with writer friends at a time that works well for you. My favorite is one I organized with a few writer friends, because we agree to chat about life for 15 minutes before starting writing—it’s a good balance of having support for life’s stresses and being productive.

5. FIND AN ACCOUNTABILITY PARTNER. Beyond online meet-ups, tell someone your goals. It’s much easier to keep them if you’ve said them aloud to someone else. See if you can find a writer friend to check in with weekly to report back to each other about your progress. Or perhaps you want to tell your spouse or post your goal publicly on social media. 

6. PICK UP A PAPER NOTEBOOK. The brain works differently on paper than on a computer, so if the words aren’t flowing on screen, try a putting a pen to paper. If you’re having trouble writing the first word on that blank notebook page, because the stresses of the world around you are vying for attention, my personal trick is to write the word “perhaps.” That way, your brain knows this doesn’t have to be the way the story goes, but “perhaps” this happens. On paper, you might be able to write wild ideas that you were too afraid to write as “real” words on the computer. 

7. TAKE A BREAK AND GO OUTSIDE. Stretch. Step into your backyard or balcony. Even when you can’t go far, a little bit of fresh air does wonders. When I was going through cancer treatments, I didn’t always have the energy to go far, but even looking up at the trees (in my small, semi-urban backyard) did wonders for my mental state. 

8. SHIFT YOUR VIEW INSIDE THE HOUSE. This is for those of you who don’t have a dedicated writing room. I have a desk in a room that needs to serve multiple purposes. I sit at one side for non-creative work, then switch to the other side of the desk, with a different view out the window, for my writing. The small physical change can lead to a big mental shift.

9. RITUAL. Find something that signals your brain you’re writing fiction now. My ritual is that I plug a typewriter keyboard into my laptop when I’m going to write fiction. The clacking of the keys tells my brain it’s time to be creative. Maybe you light a candle with a particular scent, or drink coffee from a special mug with an inspirational quote. Whatever it is, give yourself that signal that it’s time to push aside the real world for a dedicated amount of time, however small. This is your writing time. 

10. GO EASY ON YOURSELF IF YOU’VE HAD A BAD DAY. This is the most important tip. Even with all of the lessons I learned in 2011 and 2020, I’ve had some lost days. A lot of them. I didn’t stick to the beautiful schedule I planned in my calendar, but I still got books written. I didn’t make my goal yesterday, or even come close, but that’s okay. Life happens. I’ll still get back to writing.

An Anthony Award for The Alchemist's Illusion!

Anthony Award

At Bouchercon’s virtual awards ceremony, I was awarded the Anthony Award for Best Paperback Original for my latest Accidental Alchemist mystery, The Alchemist’s Illusion

It was such an honor to be nominated alongside terrific authors Ed Aymar, Susie Calkins, Laurie Chandlar, Catriona McPherson, Wendall Thomas & Gabriel Valjan. With this group, I was NOT expecting this!

But in these strange times, it also feels strangely appropriate to be recognized for one of my Accidental Alchemist novels while we’re sheltering in place—because I began writing the Accidental Alchemist mysteries while away from the world for nearly a year while my immune system was wiped out from chemotherapy.

I was writing fiction as therapy to get through that year, not as something I thought anyone else would enjoy. I’ve been happily surprised to be proven wrong. THANK YOU, readers! 

And thanks to my agent Jill Marsal, editors Terri Bischoff and Amy Glaser, critique partners, the independent bookstores that hand-sell mysteries, the Bouchercon volunteers who made today possible.

One nice bonus of the virtual format was that the Anthony Award winners were included in the program books. 

The Alchemist’s Illusion is the fourth Accidental Alchemist mystery. A centuries-old painting filled with secrets, art forgery, and a poisoned artist… When alchemist Zoe Faust and living gargoyle Dorian Robert-Houdin uncover secrets in present-day Portland, they solve a mystery from sixteenth century Prague that could lead Zoe to her mentor Nicolas Flamel. 

Gigi with cover

The Vanishing Act of Tempest Raj

I can finally share the exciting news I hinted at earlier this summer: I sold my novel The Vanishing Act of Tempest Raj, at auction, to an editor and publisher that I'm so incredibly happy to be working with!

Here’s announcement from Publishers Marketplace: 

“Agatha Award winner Gigi Pandian’s The Vanishing Act of Tempest Raj, a locked-room mystery and first in a new Secret Staircase Construction series, in which a woman returns to her childhood home to help her family's business but instead wonders if the Raj family curse has followed her home, to Madeline Houpt at Minotaur, at auction, in a two-book deal, by Jill Marsal at Marsal Lyon Literary Agency.”

This is the book I began writing on my 40th birthday writing retreat, but it took me a while to figure out how to tell Tempest’s story.  

Minotaur Books is a mystery imprint of St. Martin’s Press. They publish so many of my favorite mysteries, and my editor really gets me and my style of mystery fiction. I’m excited for this next step!