
I just got the news of Peter’s passing. This is a big loss to the mystery fiction community and to many of us that knew and loved him on a personal level. When we created the Barry Awards 28 years ago, Peter won the very first Barry Award for Best Mystery with his BLOODHOUNDS. A few years ago when Peter came to Salt Lake City for a signing I met him at the airport and we spent the day together — a cherished memory for me. At the Dallas Bouchercon where he was honored, I got the opportunity to interview him. I always described him as a class act in all respects. He has left a great literary legacy that should not be forgotten. We all can’t live forever, but if you are a writer of Peter’s calibre, your works certainly can — and should.
Here is what his American publisher Soho Crime says about this sad event:
It is with heavy hearts that we announce the passing of our dear friend and MWA Grand Master Peter Lovesey. Peter passed away peacefully at his home in Shrewsbury, England, on April 10, 2025, after a courageous battle against pancreatic cancer. He was with Jax, his wife of 65 years. He was 88 years old.
Peter Lovesey was born in 1936 in Middlesex, England, and counted as his earliest memory the 1944 Blitz bombing that destroyed his family’s house. In 1955, he entered Reading University, pursuing a degree in visual arts, but in December of his first year was persuaded to switch departments by an English professor who had been impressed by one of Peter’s essays. He graduated with honors in 1958 and the next year married his sweetheart, Jackie “Jax,” with whom he would have two children, Kathy and Phil. After a decade spent as a teacher, Peter got his start as crime fiction writer via a first novel contest sponsored by Macmillan/Panther.
In a writing career that spanned six decades, Peter published forty-three novels: five stand-alone crime novels, including the CWA Gold Dagger winner The False Inspector Dew,which was selected to be on the CWA’s list of the Top 100 Crime Novels of All Timeas well as The Times’Top 100 Crime Novels of the 20th Century; eight Victorian crime novels featuring Sergeant Cribb, which were developed for television starting in 1979; three featuring Bertie, Prince of Wales; two novels in the Hen Mallin series; three novels under the pen name Peter Lear, including the sports novel Goldengirl, adopted into a 1980 film; and twenty-two novels in his flagship Peter Diamond procedural series, starting with his Anthony Award–winning classic The Last Detective and concluding with his poignant final novel, Against the Grain,published in 2024, which he wrote after his diagnosis. He was a prolific short story writer, and published seven collections during his lifetime. He was also the author of four works of sports nonfiction; it was his expertise in the history of track and field that gave birth to his prizewinning debut, Wobble to Death,a murder mystery set over the course of a Victorian speed-walking race.
Peter Lovesey was the recipient of numerous honors and awards. He was one of the very few writers to have been awarded both the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Special Edgar and the Crime Writers’ Association’s Cartier Diamond Dagger for Lifetime Achievement; the short list of other such double honorees includes Sue Grafton, John le Carré, Walter Mosley, and Sara Paretsky. In addition to his Gold Dagger for The False Inspector Dew,he thrice received the Silver Dagger (for Waxwork, The Summons,and Bloodhounds); multiple Macavity (Bloodhounds, The House Sitter), Barry (Bloodhounds), and Anthony Awards (The Last Detective); and nominations for the Edgar Award for Best Novel (The Summons) and Los Angeles Times Book Prize (The House Sitter). He received the 2014 Strand Lifetime Achievement Award, the 2010 Grand Master Award from the Swedish Academy of Detection, and the 2008 Malice Domestic Lifetime Achievement Award. His short stories garnered many prizes, including the CWA Short Story Award and Veuve Clicquot Award, the Ellery Queen Readers Award, and the MWA Golden Mystery Prize. In French translation, his novels received the Grand Prix de Littérature Policière and the Prix du Roman d’Aventures.
In addition to the scope of his unparalleled crime fiction career, Peter Lovesey will be remembered by his many grieving friends as the paragon of decency, compassion, loyalty, self-discipline, and pride in good work—in short, a human example of what it means to live a good life. We at Soho Press have been privileged and honored to be Peter’s American publisher for over thirty years, beginning with his now-classic The Last Detective. Fifty years after the publication of his own prize-winning debut, Wobble to Death, Peter collaborated with Soho Crime to sponsor his own first novel contest, launching the career of Edgar-winner Eli Cranor with the publication of Don’t Know Tough. A lifelong member of the Detection Club, Peter was respected as a scholar and advocate of the genre as well as a mentee and supporter of new writers.
His absence will be deeply felt but the legacy of his remarkable life and work will live on.