Best Psychological Thriller

The Circe Award

Named for the sorceress whose power lay not in force but in the ability to change how others see reality itself. Circe did not need weapons. She needed only the ability to make you question what was real. The psychological thriller does exactly the same thing.

The Circe Award is presented annually to the best psychological thriller of the year.

The book that got inside your head and won’t leave. Not the most frightening. Not the most violent. The one that made you question what you knew, who you trusted, and what was real — and kept you there long after the last page.

Presented at the Homer Awards gala ceremony, John & George Hotel, Tolo, Argolida, October 22, 2027.

Scoring criteria

The panel scores each longlisted title across four criteria, each scored 1 to 5, for a total of 20:

· Narrative tension: Does it compel you to keep reading?

· Originality: Does it do something the genre hasn’t seen before?

· Character: Do you believe in the people on the page?

· Reader impact: Will you think about this book a month from now?

Eligibility

Publication

Must be published in English between
October 1, 2025 and October 1, 2026.

Submission

Publisher submitted only.
Authors may not submit their own work for this award.

Publisher

Open to Big Five, independent, and small press publishers. No self-published titles in this category

How it works

  • Submit your title

Publishers submit directly through the Submit & Nominate page between October 1 and December 31, 2026. Submission fee applies at checkout.

  • Eligibility check

Our team checks all submissions against eligibility rules. Hard rules, no exceptions. Books that fail eligibility are removed, and fees are refunded.

  • Community votes for the longlist

Thriller Book Retreat members vote on all eligible titles. The 10 titles with the most votes become the longlist. Publishers of longlisted titles are formally notified by Imagine Press.

  • Panel reads and scores

Each juror reads the longlist of 10 and scores against four criteria. The panel meets once virtually. Results sealed immediately. Individual scores are never published.

  • Winner announced at the gala

The Circe Award is presented live at the Homer Awards gala ceremony, John & George Hotel, Tolo, Argolida, October 22, 2027.

Key dates

Submissions open October 1, 2026

Submissions close December 31, 2026

Longlist announced February 15, 2027

Shortlist announced
May 1, 2027

Gala ceremony October 22, 2027

Μια σημειωση για τους ελληνες εκδοτες

A note for Greek publishers

The Homer Awards welcome submissions from Greek publishing houses. If your catalog includes English-language titles — or Greek works translated into English — published between October 1, 2025, and October 1, 2026, we encourage you to submit.
For questions in Greek, write to us at info@homerawards.com, and we will respond accordingly.

Homer Awards — Publisher Submission

Homer Awards — Publisher Submission

I confirm payment will be made within 48 hours of submission
I confirm this title was published in English between October 1, 2025 – October 1, 2026
I confirm I am authorised to submit this title on behalf of the publisher
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About Circe

SHE DID NOT NEED WEAPONS. SHE NEEDED ONLY THE ABILITY TO MAKE YOU QUESTION WHAT WAS REAL.

Circe was a sorceress, daughter of Helios, god of the sun, and Perse, an oceanid. She lived alone on the island of Aeaea, and when Odysseus’s men landed there, she transformed them into pigs. Not through force. Through a potion slipped into their wine. They did not see it coming. They did not know anything had changed until it already had.

When Odysseus came to find them, she tried the same trick on him. It did not work. He was protected — but he still had to negotiate with her, live with her, trust her enough to take her directions home. Even knowing what she was capable of.

That is the psychological thriller. The reader knows something is wrong. They can feel it. But they cannot see it clearly enough to name it — and they cannot stop reading until they do. The book gets inside your head and rearranges things quietly, and you do not notice until you reach the last page and realize you never saw it coming.

The artwork

Jacob Jordaens (1593–1678)
Ulysses Threatening Circe · c.1630–1635
Oil on canvas · Kunstmuseum Basel · Public domain

Odysseus confronts Circe after she has failed to transform him. The power has shifted — but only just. She is still dangerous. The tension in the painting is exactly the tension of the best psychological thriller: you are never entirely sure who has the upper hand.

The Homer Awards use public-domain classical paintings from the Greek tradition to represent each award.