Author: chanti

  • The 2021 LARAMIE Book Awards for Americana Fiction Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

    The 2021 LARAMIE Book Awards for Americana Fiction Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

    Laramie Americana, Western Pioneer, Civil War Fiction Award

    The Laramie Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Americana and Westerns fiction genre. The Laramie Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring Americana themes, First Nation stories, early North American History, cowboys & cowgirls in the Wild West, pioneering, and Civil War, and we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2021 Laramie Americana Short List to the 2021 Laramie Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTS. FINALISTS will be selected from the Semi-Finalists. All FINALISTS will be announced and then recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person. 

    These titles are in the running for the FINALISTS of the 2021 Laramie Book Awards novel competition for Americana Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works!

    • Chase Pletts – The Loving Wrath of Eldon Quint
    • E.E. Burke – Tom Sawyer Returns
    • Kimberly Burns – The Mrs. Tabor
    • Leah Angstman – The Only Way to Cheat a Hangman
    • E. Alan Fleischauer – Tommies
    • Catherine M. O’Connor – Dust Covered Lies
    • Michael Eisenhut – Brothers of War, The Iron Brigade at Gettysburg
    • Forest B. Dunning – Death at Lame Deer
    • Samantha Specks – Dovetails in Tall Grass
    • Kenneth Arbogast – Sorrow Ledge
    • E. Alan Fleischauer – Kidnapped
    • Deborah Swenson – Till My Last Breath, Book One in the Desert Hills Trilogy
    • Pamela Nowak – Never Let Go
    • T.K. Conklin – Outlaw’s Redemption
    • Betty Willis – Texas Quest
    • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
    • David Fitz-Gerald – The Curse of Conchobar: A Prequel to the Adirondack Spirit Series
    • George T. Arnold – Wyandotte Bound
    • Michael R. Frontani – Dante’s Forge
    • Chris Bennett – Road to the Breaking
    • Michael L. Ross – Across the Great Divide: Book 2 The Search
    • Daniel Greene – Northern Hunt (Northern Wolf Series Book 2)
    • Bryan Ney – Absaroka War Chief

        Good luck to all as your works move on to compete for the Finalist positions!

        Laramie Book Awards

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        The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2020 LARAMIE Awards is

        Rebecca Dwight Bruff for Trouble the Water, a Novel

        Cover of Trouble The Water by Rebecca Dwight BruffA blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Laramie Westerns for Trouble the Water, a novel by Rebecca Dwight BruffClick here to see the 2020 Laramie Book Award Winners for Americana Fiction.

        We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Laramie Book Awards for Americana and Western Fiction.

        Please click here for more information.

        For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

        Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

        VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

        FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

        Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

        Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

        Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

      • April is for Aliens! Spring into the Spotlight for the Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction

        April is for Aliens! Spring into the Spotlight for the Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction

        Beam me up, Scotty!

        April is the Spotlight Month for the Cygnus Science Fiction Book Awards!

        Michael Burnham, Captain of the USS Discovery in the big chair
        Our favorite newest Star Trek Captain, Michael Burnham. Her catchphrase is “Let’s Fly.”

        The Cygnus Awards are one of our original Book Awards here at Chanticleer,

        **Don’t miss the ship!**

        Beam your work to us by April 30th to enter the 2022 CIBAs!

        Cygnus Award for Science Fiction
        Science Fiction April 30

        Science Fiction often asks the question: What Could Be? At Chanticleer, we seek to discover those strange new worlds, from Space Opera to Alternate History, and Cli-Fi to YA Sci-Fi. Wherever your book lands on the Speculative Fiction spectrum, there’s a good chance that it will fit in here with us!

        Let’s take a look at the Hall of Fame for Grand Prize Winners of the Cygnus Awards

        The Luna Missile Crisis by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle.

        Luna Missile Crisis Cover

        Will a knockoff weapons salesman end peace between Humans and Vulbathi? Alien tech and a spectacular cast of characters drive The Luna Missile Crisis into high gear and will have readers screaming for more! Highly recommended!

        Jaime Castle and Rhett C. Bruno  are the Audible #1 bestselling authors of The Buried Goddess Saga (Aethon Books, Audible Studios), and The Luna Missile Crisis, amongst other works. Rhett C. Bruno is also a USA Today Bestselling & Nebula Award nominated Sci-Fi/Fantasy Author.

        A cowboy with glowing blue eyes

        Don’t miss out on the duo’s next work! You can preorder Cold as Hell, the first book in their new Black Badge Series today.

        Insynium by Tim Cole

        Appropriate to a novel about time travel, there is considerable time-shifting from chapter to chapter that will require readers to stay on their toes as they work through this 500-page novel. And like any skilled author who plants clues neatly in the text – clues that are keys to resolving the overarching mysteries in the book – Cole does the same. What can we say? Here’s an impressive novel by a major new talent, and one we highly recommend keeping an eye on.

        Insynium is Tim Cole’s Debut novel. We are shivering with anticipation and hope at the prospect of something new from him!

        The Korpes File by J.I Rogers

        An award-winning space opera that’s sure to gather a dedicated audience. One of our favorites! Recommended!

        When not writing Award Winning novels, J.I. Rogers writes Award Winning Shorts, having recently won two six-word story challenges. The most recent of which being “Inherited ruin. Forged a new Empire.” Visit Rogers’ website here for even more excellent Sci-Fi! The second book in the series, The Korpes Agenda, is out now, and we’re excitedly waiting for the next book to finish revisions!

        The Future’s Dark Past by John Yarrow

        “The catastrophic Purge War at the end of the twenty-first century destroys planet Earth, jeopardizing the future for the remnants of humanity. Horrific repercussions roll across the ages until, generations later, a scientific group called the Time Forward Project harnesses a deep-space wormhole in which they can travel through time. They find the portal unstable and shrinking, but they have little choice but to take desperate, drastic measures and journey back to prevent the war.”

        Straight from John Yarrow’s website! The Story Plant Publishing company will publish the full trilogy starting with Future’s Dark Past! You can preorder The Future’s Dark Past today, and the sequel, Time Unfolded, is expected to come out in the Summer of 2023!

        Over by Sean P. Curley

        In a world where the rich obtain immortality, a forbidden love can either bridge the gap of unimaginable inequity or drive the disparaging classes even farther apart. A science-fiction novel with an earthly conscious.

        Sean Curley‘s new book, Anika’s Gift is making good progress through the cover design process, and ARCs are being sent out now. Sean is a renaissance man who loves new experiences, diversity, and challenges (though more intellectual than physical). He is also the author of the the 2014 Chaucer Grand Prize for Early Historical Fiction with his book PropositumSean will also be at the Chanticleer Authors Conference June 23-26, 2022!


        Now that you’re set on your next five reads, what are you waiting for? The only way to join this amazing list of Cygnus Winners is to submit today! 

        Those who submit and advance will have the chance to win the Overall Grand Prize of the CIBAs and $1000!

        Are you a Chanticleer Author who has some good news to share? Let us know! We’re always looking for a reason to crow about Chanticleerians! Here are some recent achievements from our authors:

        Reach out with your news to info@ChantiReviews.com

        VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

        FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

        Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

        Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

        Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

      • The DEVIL’S BOOKKEEPERS: The Noose Closes, Book 3 by Mark H. Newhouse – Jewish Historical Fiction, WWII Historical Fiction, Jewish Literary Fiction

        The DEVIL’S BOOKKEEPERS: The Noose Closes, Book 3 by Mark H. Newhouse – Jewish Historical Fiction, WWII Historical Fiction, Jewish Literary Fiction

         Blue and Gold Badge for the 2020 Series Grand Prize for Genre Fiction The Devil's Bookkeepers by Mark Newhouse

        In The Noose Closes, book three of the award-winning series, The Devil’s Bookkeepers, author Mark H. Newhouse continues the story of his compelling characters and their difficult predicaments in the closing months of World War II in occupied Lodz, Poland.

        Newhouse is a gifted writer and educator, born in Germany to Holocaust survivors. His series is a fictionalized account of what happened in the Lodz ghetto, a barbed-wire enclosed slum in Poland during the Nazi occupation. As he deftly utilizes the first-hand accounts of those who were there, we witness the ribbon of humanity and compassion woven through each book. This raises the series to premiere status – an exceptional if sobering examination of the immutable human spirit. His series should encourage all who read it that hope is a gift and kindness is the answer.

        Jewish engineer Bernard Ostrowski records the daily events for the ghetto chairperson, whom many call the Devil. Bennie and his small team find the information more terrifying with each passing hour. They compose their reports in a manner that will mollify the infamous ghetto boss, Chairman Rumkowski. Rumkowski and his embattled assistant, Neftalin, must please their Nazi handlers. Rumkowski oversees every aspect of the city and forces its residents into BECOMING factory workers for the German military. He hopes to keep the Nazis from taking control of Lodz by doing so.

        Even Ostrowski and his educated co-workers struggle to comprehend the desperation and death in the place they once called home. The sight of bony children fighting in garbage heaps for anything edible is unfathomable. How can this be happening in their city? Surely Rumkowski will help them.

        Ostrowski doesn’t quite know what to make of the masses of used shoes and other clothing that arrive via trucks, while Lodz Jews are shipped out of the ghetto almost daily. Are the Germans shepherding the Jews out of Lodz to safety from the war, as they and Rumkowski say?

        Rumors begin to slip in. The Jews are being taken to camps where only death awaits.

        The novel continues to weave in the story of Ostrowski’s love for his wife. Nearly defeated by the shocking events in book 2, Ostrowski longs for any news about his wife Miriam and his daughter Regina. The couple had become estranged when Bennie suspected Miriam of having an affair with the young and reckless Singer before the man disappeared.

        When Singer returns, now a resistance fighter, he attempts to enlist Ostrowski into an underground Jewish resistance movement. What follows are acts of bravery and sacrifice readers will remember long after the book is put down.

        Newhouse’s parents were among the 5,000 Jews of more than 200,000 trapped in the Lodz ghetto who survived the Nazi occupation. Will any of the novel’s characters survive as The Noose Closes around them?

        Newhouse utilizes the shocking events described in The Chronicle of The Lodz Ghetto (Yale University Press, 1984), placing sobering quotes from the historical account at the beginning of each chapter. Readers will feel as if they are on the streets of Lodz due to the vividly depicted sights, sounds, and smells during this bleak and desolate time. The Nazis’ wanted to annihilate an entire race of human beings. The incontestable proof became all too clear only as WWII came to a close.

        In The Noose Closes and the other books in The Devil’s Bookkeepers series, Newhouse interjects the ironic humor that brings the epic tale to life, gallows humor, if you like. These people are real – and readers feel it. Newhouse skillfully weaves into the story the profound depth of faith and belief that enabled desperate people to cling to hope, despite their dire circumstances.

        In fact, this bold human spirit enables the residents to find courage in the face of danger that rests at the heart of the series. His characters believe that relying on faith overcomes fear, and above all else, love will always be triumphant. This powerful series reminds us that the more we learn about the Holocaust, the more we remember this time of terror, the more likely it is that we can genuinely say, “Never again – to anyone!”

        The Devil’s Bookkeepers series won Grand Prize in the 2020 CIBA Fiction Series Awards and is a series that is not only timely, but one we highly recommend.

        Please read our reviews of the first two books in The Devil’s Bookkeepers by clicking on their titles, The Noose and The Noose Tightens.

         

         

         

        5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

         

         

      • MOOD – the Soundtrack of Fiction Works from Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk – A Chanticleer Writers Toolbox Post

        MOOD – the Soundtrack of Fiction Works from Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk – A Chanticleer Writers Toolbox Post

        Just as every dark and stormy night, dinner party, holiday gathering, or bustling office on payday are infused with mood, so are scenes in the best fiction.

        Mood affects, resonates, and reinforces the reader’s emotions, aids in understanding key moments, and enhances his or her immersion into the story events.

        Mood is the feel or atmosphere or ambience of a story or scene.

        ALL writing should evoke a mood.

        A tense mood is in the room as Miranda makes a toast to her soon-to-be cheating husband in Station 11
        Miranda at “that” dinner party that takes place in the STATION ELEVEN series. The tension is palpable.

        Mood is the Soundtrack of Fiction aka Mood as Backdrop

        Mood is omnipresent in the best books much like the soundtracks of notable films. As with movies without a soundtrack, fiction is not complete and captivating without having moods as a backdrop. Mood makes readers worry about heroines stranded in lonely castles and fog-bound moors. It feeds suspense and tension, and is in fact inseparable from them. It is essential to genres like horror, thrillers, and action, but is necessary to every moment in every story where you want a reader to feel a certain way. You can stage your characters in dramatic events but without setting up the proper mood, the characters’ actions will fall short.

        Mood is What Readers Feel While Reading Your Story.

        Mood is what the reader feels while reading a scene or story. It’s not the reader’s emotions, (though mood is designed to influence them) but the atmosphere (the vibe) of a scene or story. It’s the tornado heading for Dorothy Gale’s Kansas farm. In the film, once the viewers spot that towering tunnel and witness winds lashing the countryside, fear sets in. Will Dorothy make it to cellar in time?

        It’s what the reader notices, what gets under his or her skin. Not all readers will experience/perceive the same mood from a scene, although the writer tries to achieve a particular feel common to every reader.

        A quick example from everyday life–candlelight is soothing and soft; overhead fluorescent lights are harsh and even irritating.

        Tip: Mood should change and vary as the story moves forward. Moods in subplots should vary from the main storyline.

        Why Mood?

        • Deepens the reader’s experience.
        • Creates cohesion.
        • Enhances tension and suspense.
        • Evokes emotions, creates emotional connections to the characters and their situations.
        • Works with reader’s nervous system.
        • Underlines themes.
        • Mood helps fiction become more immersive, alive, lifelike and creates a backdrop for drama.

        Mood is Created by a Range of Literary Devices:

        • Setting
        • Conflict
        • Imagery
        • Sensory Details
        • Characters Reacting and Responding in Scenes.

        Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series is an exemplary example of infusing mood into scenes: joy, fear, longing, betrayal, expectation, disappointment, and so on.

        Evoking mood in fiction – Outlander by Diana Gabaldon

        Use Descriptive Language to Induce Moods

        While setting is most commonly used to induce moods, descriptive language is a potent tool and that decreases or amps up tension. In Dean Koontz’s psychological thriller The Face, a horrific storm lashes Los Angeles a few days before Christmas adding a delicious shiver of danger and tension. The weather is referred to in each scene, causes things to happen and creates an ominous, the ‘world-is-askew’ mood. For example, he writes, “In the witches’ cauldron of the sky, late-morning light brewed into a thick gloom more suitable to winter dusk.”

        • Mood is created on a word-by-word basis by choosing sensory details that stir emotions, but also by orchestrating pacing. Slow down for important moments, places readers need to savor. Pacing naturally speeds up when excitement is high, conflict is intense, action is nonstop. Short sentences and paragraphs communicate excitement, urgency, panic, anger, shock, and violence. Short sentences land a gut punch and demand readers keep zipping through the text.
        • While most stories, especially short stories,  have an overarching atmosphere, the ambience or vibe of a story will change over time and change in intensity.
        • Examples of mood: spooky, light-hearted, gothic, sexy, peaceful, ominous, brooding, funny, suspenseful.
        • Mood is linked to tension and suspense and getting under your reader’s skin.
        • Use mood to foreshadow.

        Remember that a  vague or pallid setting will create vague and pallid emotions/reactions in your readers. – Jessica Morrell

        Example as Mood as Backdrop

        Peter Heller’s brilliant novel The Dog Stars takes place in a future where the world has been ravaged by a pandemic that’s killed off most of the population. If that wasn’t bad enough, the natural world is dying off too. He wrote it in 2012. I’m a sucker for a post-apocalyptic novel, even when they’re shockingly prescient. I cannot recommend enough this beautiful, compelling, heart-wrenching story that invaded my thoughts for days while reading it. This backdrop to the state of affairs the protagonist Hig exists in, is dropped in on page 6.

        “In the beginning there was Fear. Not so much the flu by then, by then I walked, I talked. Not so much talked, but of sound body—and of mind, you be the judge. Two straight weeks of fever, three days 104 to105, I know it cooked my brains. Encephalitis or something else. Hot. Thoughts that once belonged, that felt at home with each other, were now discomfited, unsure. Depressed, like those shaggy Norwegian ponies that Russian professor moved to the Siberian Arctic I read about before. He was trying to recreate the Ice Age, a lot of grass and fauna and few people. Had he known what was coming he would have pursued another hobby. Half the ponies died, I think from heartbreak for their Scandinavian forests, half hung out at the research station and were fed grain and still died. That’s how my thoughts are sometimes. When I’m stressed. When something’s bothering me and won’t let go. They’re pretty good, I mean they function, but a lot of times they feel out of place, kinda sad, sometimes wondering if maybe they are supposed to be ten thousand miles from here in a place with a million square miles of cold Norwegian spruce. Sometimes I don’t trust my thoughts not to bolt for the brush. Probably not my brain, probably normal for where we’re at.”

        “I don’t want to be confused: we are nine years out. The flu killed almost everybody, then the blood disease killed more. The ones who are left are mostly Not Nice, that is why we live here on the plain, why I patrol every day.”

        Example of Mood Setting  the Stage

        “Stop that you’ll fall.”

        A week’s worth of snow has compressed into ice, each day’s danger hidden beneath a nighttime dusting of powder. Every few yards my boots travel farther than my boots intended, and my stomach pitches, braced for a fall. Our progress is slow, and I wished I’d thought to bring Sophia on a sled instead.

        Reluctantly, she opens her eyes, swivels her head owllike, away from the shops, to hide her face in her sleeve. I squeeze her gloved hand. She hates the birds that hang in the butcher’s window, their neck iridescent feathers cruelly at odds with the lifeless eyes they embellish.

        I hate the birds too.

        Adam says I’ve given the phobia to her, like a cold or a piece of unwanted jewelry.

        “Where did she get it from them?” he said when I protested turning to an invisible crowd, as if the absence of answer proved his point. “Not me.”

        Of course not. Adam doesn’t have weaknesses.

        This is the opening salvo for Hostage written by Clare Mackintosh, a ‘locked room’ thriller. The locked room in this story is a London to Sydney flight. It feels like a thriller doesn’t it? Those creepy dead birds, dangerous snow, and the husband-wife conflict signal something bad is going to happen.

         

        Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart. Jessica


         

        Jessica Page Morrell
        Jessica Page Morrell

        Jessica Morrell is a top-tier developmental editor and a contributor to Chanticleer Reviews Media and to the Writer’s Digest magazine. She teaches Master Writing Craft Classes along with sessions at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that is held annually along with teaching at Chanticleer writing workshops that are held throughout the year. 

         

         

         

        Jessica Morrell’s Classes and Workshops at CAC22

        June 23 – 26, 2022 at the Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.  In Real Life and Virtual!

        • Using Film Techniques for Fiction Writers – Camera angles, method acting for getting into a character’s pov, and creating subtext and tight dialogue
        • Your Brain on Writing
        • Captivating Co-Stars that add depth to your work-in-progress
        • Word Nerd Kaffeeklatsch with Kiffer Brown 
        • And more TBD!

        Don’t Delay! Register Today!

      • WISHES, SINS, and the WISSAHICKON CREEK by PJ Devlin – Contemporary Fiction, Americana, Short Stories

        WISHES, SINS, and the WISSAHICKON CREEK by PJ Devlin – Contemporary Fiction, Americana, Short Stories

        Blue and Gold Somerset First Place Winner Badge for Best in Category

        Wishes, Sins, and the Wissahickon Creek by PJ Devlin emulates the lives of fictional characters brimming with hope and promise yet living a truthful life of existence in the gorgeous setting of Pennsylvania’s Wissahickon Creek.

        The book encompasses ten short stories making it a complete work of fiction. Devlin creates characters which are rich in both experience and struggle. Not only do they live in a real world created by Devlin, but her characters, a mix of children and adults, both struggle with daily, real-world issues most Americans deal with. The stories are all relatable in this sense, which makes the text come alive, page after page.

        The first story, I Wish It Every Day, exists in the premise of a lasting, pseudo friendship between two women, Mary and Julia. The two past high school friends reminisce at a coffee shop one fine day, yet the meeting exists only because of a chance. The reader learns of the ladies’ lack of real friendship since the time regrettably passes without daily correspondence. Piece Man, the second in the group of short stories, creates a picture from an art piece in an art gallery. A child and an adult realize the importance of time and the fleeting speed of life. Devlin’s third story, Original Sin, captures the lives of a family devastated by death and the sins of a priest. The irony of this story exists in the mother’s wish for her son.

        Wishes, Sins, and the Wissahickon Creek continues with beautiful settings and attention to detail in the depiction of every scene.

        Devlin’s attention to detail and superb storytelling acumen invites readers to live in these ten short stories, as if they are truly part of the text. Each story represents new characters and new dilemmas. The unique tie to the ten stories is the setting of Pennsylvania and the eastern United States. The strong and determined people of Wissahickon may suffer, yet they pick themselves up and move on, much like the determination and perseverance of middle-class Americans. Devlin skillfully captures the true spirit of twenty-first century middle Americana.

        Readers whose interests lie in middle America or Americana contemporary literature will enjoy this award-winning collection of short stories. Understanding the human dilemma as told by one who lives in the Wissahickon Creek area brings authenticity that readers will surely appreciate.

        Wishes, Sins, and the Wissahickon River by PJ Devlin won 1st Place in the 2018 CIBA Somerset Book Awards for Contemporary, Literary, and Satire Fiction.

         

         

        Somerset Literary and Contemporary Chanticleer International Book Awards 1st Place Winner oval Gold Foil sticker

        5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

         

      • The BEST WEEK THAT NEVER HAPPENED by Dallas Woodburn – Teen and YA Coming of Age Fantasy, Teen and Y/A Magical Realism Fiction, Y/A Contemporary Fantasy Fiction

        The BEST WEEK THAT NEVER HAPPENED by Dallas Woodburn – Teen and YA Coming of Age Fantasy, Teen and Y/A Magical Realism Fiction, Y/A Contemporary Fantasy Fiction

         

        Blue and Gold Grand Prize 2020 Winner Badge for the Dante Rossetti Awards for The best week that never happened by Dallas Woodburn

        Dallas Woodburn’s debut novel The Best Week that Never Happened is a roller-coaster ride through Hawaii and the mysterious depths of its briny deep, sparkling with unreal magic, a poignant romance, and incessant hope.

        Tegan Rossi, a freshly graduated eighteen-year-old, awakens in the secretive hideout she discovered with Kai Kapule as two eight-year-old children on her first trip to Hawaii Island. She needs to make amends with Kai as they had a major squabble over something very important that she now oddly forgets. When Tegan catches up with Kai in Hawaii, she enters her best week yet – the Best Week That Never Happened.

        The first-person narrative is a fusion of Tegan’s past three years ago and ten years ago, as well as a mystified chronicling of her present with Kai on the Big Island of Hawaii.

        Tegan and Kai run into each other for the second time in Hawaii ten years later. At Kai’s earnest request, they both meet at their childhood hideout The Lava Tubes. Reliving the nostalgia, they re-emerge as inseparable friends, sharing their lives over the phone 4,880 miles apart. Tegan’s reluctance to meet up with Kai’s graduation wish (a visit from Tegan) turns up in the two-months past narrative. With the present time leapfrog, Tegan arrives in Hawaii, fretting over her inability to remember how she turned up there.

        In the medical center of Kai’s aunt, Tegan discovers an hourglass tattoo on her body she never had.

        A series of incredible happenings follow. Tegan’s suitcase shows up out of nowhere with all she could ever wish for, her mom doesn’t seem to exist, at least she’s not answering her calls. Oh, yes, and the hourglass tattoo is losing sand. Most curious, Tegan discovers her Instagram photo in front of a train with a caption about her departure from Philadelphia to Washington DC. But the train crashed, killing 67 passengers.

        In her quest for an explanation, Tegan receives a message, “to trust enough to take the leap.” It is Tegan’s conforming to the message which will eventuate her best week, the week of confessing love, dealing with insecurities, and reliving the déjà-vu moments from the past with Kai into a reality.

        The Best Week That Never Happened ushers readers through alternating states of reflection and pessimism, until finally riding the waves of optimism and hope.

        Dallas Woodburn explores the complexity of a teenage psyche. Through Kai and Tegan, she reflects on our innate insecurities and the tendency to not embrace new ideas and opportunities out of fear. With the development of the two characters, the narrative tone gradually shifts from a tragic to an optimistic perspective, referencing their development as adults. This subtle shift brings about a symbiotic relationship between pessimism and optimism in which we all live.

        The aversion to change and embracing a better future is a predominant theme throughout the book.

        This underlying struggle is reflected in Tegan and Ross. Tegan struggles with the decision to confess her feelings for Kai, adamant to keep the relationship unchanged. By not confessing to her feelings, she risks making the best week of her life with Kai only an illusion of reality.  Kai dreams of becoming an artist and gets shortlisted to the prestigious CalArts College in Los Angeles. He adores his usual marine life with his family in Hawaii, his paradise, away from the suffocating fear of being stuck “at the bottom of the barrel” outside of Hawaii. Overcoming their fears and insecurities is what makes the debut novel, The Best Week That Never Happened, so very relatable.

        With a twist of magical realism and captivating storytelling, The Best Week That Never Happened revolves around the contemporary concerns of teenagers and adults alike. It’s an exciting read with a powerful message borrowed from Martin Luther King, Jr., “Take the first step in faith. You don’t need to see everything on the staircase, just the first step.”

        The Best Week That Never Happened by Dallas Woodburn won the CIBA 2020 Grand Prize in the Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult novels and is one book we highly recommend.

         

        Dante Rossetti Gold Foil Grand Prize Book Sticker

        5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

      • The 2021 MYSTERY & MAYHEM Finalist Book Awards for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries

        The 2021 MYSTERY & MAYHEM Finalist Book Awards for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries

        Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

        The M&M Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mystery & Mayhem fiction genre.  The M&M Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

        Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring “mystery and mayhem,” amateur sleuthing, light suspense, travel mystery, classic mystery, British cozy, not-so-cozy, hobby sleuths, senior sleuths, or historical mystery, perhaps with a touch of romance or humor, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. (For suspense, thriller, detective, crime fiction see our Clue Awards, and for international intrigue see our Global Thriller Awards)

        These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 M&M Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Semi-Finalists to the 2021 M&M Book Awards FINALISTS. FINALISTS will be announced and then recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

        The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

        We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

        These titles are in the running for the FIRST PLACE WINNERS of the 2021 M&M Book Awards novel competition for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries!

        Congratulations to the Mystery & Mayhem 2021 Finalists!

        Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works!

        • Michael Scott Garvin – Ophelia’s Room     
        • Codi Schneider – Cold Snap: A Viking Cat Mystery
        • Lori Roberts Herbst – Double Exposure  
        • Mally Becker – The Turncoat’s Widow    
        • Tina deBellegarde – Winter Witness    
        • Alexander Mukte – The Recruiter    
        • B.L. Smith – The Irritating Misadventures of Bert Mintenko    
        • Arlene McFarlane – Murder, Curlers & Kilts  
        • Eileen Charbonneau – Death at Little Mound  
        • Elizabeth Crowens – Babs and Basil, and the Hounds of the Hollywood Baskervilles    
        • Charlotte Stuart – Who Me? Fog Bows, Fraud and Aphrodite 
        • Jolie Tunnell – Loveda Brown Sings the Blues      
        • Lori Robbins – Murder In First Position     
        • Patricia C. Lee – First Gear : a Sadie Hawkins Mystery   
        • Cam Lang – The Concrete Vineyard   
        • Susan McCormick – The Fog Ladies: Family Matters   
        • Diane Weiner – An Ear for Murder   
        • Darryl Wimberley – A Star in her Crown   
        • Kelly Miller – Accusing Mr. Darcy   

          PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

          This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

          Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

          Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

          Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

          Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging for the Finalists! 

          Click here to see the 2020 M&M Book Award Winners for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries.

          The M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem

          for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries 2020

          Grand Prize Winner is

          Blue and gold Grand Prize Winner Badge for M & M Mystery and Mayhem The Discovery by Patrick M. Garry

          THE DISCOVERY by Patrick M. Garry

          Cover of The Discovery by Patrick M. Garry

          We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 M&M Awards writing competition.

          Please click here for more information.

          Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

          VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

          FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

          Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

          Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

          Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

        • The 2021 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – CIBAs Semi-Finalists

          The 2021 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – CIBAs Semi-Finalists

          Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

          The Dante Rossetti Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in Young Adult Fiction. The Dante Rossetti Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

          Named in honor of the British poet & painter Dante Gabriel Rossetti who founded the Pre-Ralphaelite Brotherhood in 1848.

          Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring stories of all shapes and sizes written to an audience between the ages of about twelve to eighteen (imaginary or real). Science Fiction, Fantasy, Dystopian, Mystery, Paranormal, Historical, Romance, Literary, we will put them to the test and choose the best Young Adult Books among them for the winners of the Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction. Looking for middle grade contests? Check out our Gertrude Warner Awards.

          These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Dante Rossetti Young Adult Fiction Short List to the 2021 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Semi-Finalists! Finalists will be chosen from the Semi-Finalists. All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

          The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

          We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

          Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

          • P.H.C. Marchesi – Florissant
          • Angela Yeh – A Phoenix Rises
          • Shadow Bleak – Riot Shield
          • M.J. Evans – The Sand Pounder: Love and Drama on Horseback in WWII
          • Dan Rice – Dragons Walk Among Us
          • Blue Spruell – TARO: Legendary Boy Hero of Japan
          • E.A. Allen – Percy St. John and the Chronicle of Secrets
          • J.W. Zarek – The Devil Pulls the Strings
          • Mark Wakely – A Friend Like Filby
          • Glen Dahlgren – The Game of War: The Trials of Dantess, Warrior Priest
          • Strider K – Stone (former title: You Rock My Life)
          • Eileen Charbonneau – Death at Little Mound
          • Jon Robinson – Sunshine and the Full Moon
          • Rektok Ross – Ski Weekend
          • Nancy Thorne – The Somewhere I See You Again
          • Dennis D. Skirvin – The Treasure of Nonsense Woods
          • Kourtney Spadoni – In The Underwood
          • Susan Faw – Bone Dragon
          • Rebecca Danzenbaker – The Color of My Soul
          • L. A. Thompson – Isle of Dragons
          • Shay Siegel – Fractured

          These titles are in the running for the FINALISTS of the 2021 Dante Rossetti Book Awards novel competition for Young Adult Fiction!

          Good Luck to ALL! 

          PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

          This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

          Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

          Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

          Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

          Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.

          The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2020 DANTE ROSSETTI Awards is Dallas Woodburn for The Best Week That Never Happened

          Cover of The Best Week That Never Happened by Dallas Woodburn

          Blue and Gold Grand Prize 2020 Winner Badge for the Dante Rossetti Awards for The best week that never happened by Dallas Woodburn

          Click here to see the 2020 Dante Rossetti Book Award Winners for Young Adult Fiction.

          We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

          Please click here for more information.

          For our other Youth Reader Fiction Awards, please see the following:

          Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

          VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

          FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

          Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

          Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

          Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

           

        • The 2021 CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

          The 2021 CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

          Romance Fiction Chatelaine Award

          The Chatelaine Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in Romantic Fiction.  The Chatelaine Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

          Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best new books featuring romantic themes and adventures of the heart, historical love affairs, perhaps a little steamy romance, and stories that appeal especially to fans of affairs of the heart to compete in the Chatelaine Book Awards (the CIBAs). We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

          These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2021 Chatelaine Romantic Fiction Short List List to the 2021 Chatelaine Book Awards Semi-Finalist Positions. Finalists are selected from the Semi-Finalist titles. 

          The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA division Finalists. 

          We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25h, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

          Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

          • Jayne Castel – Highlander Deceived
          • Anna Gomez and Kristoffer Polaha – Moments Like This
          • Valerie Taylor – What’s Not Said — A Novel
          • Lindy Miller – Aloha With Love         
          • Alex Sirotkin – The Long Desert Road
          • Evie Alexander – Highland Games
          • M. C. Bunn – Where Your Treasure Is  
          • A.D. Brazeau – Love Between the Lines
          • Brooke Skipstone – Crystal’s House of Queers
          • Bobbi Groover – Inside the Grey 
          • Pierre G. Porter – 49 So Fine
          • Elizabeth St. Michel – Surrender the Storm
          • Susan Faw – Bone Dragon
          • Kana Wu – No Secrets Allowed
          • Chris Karlsen – The Ack Ack Girl
          • John W. Feist – The Color of Rain
          • Edie Cay – The Boxer and the Blacksmith
          • Emily A. Myers – The Truth About Unspeakable Things
          • Frannie James – The Sylvan Hotel, A Seattle Story     
          • Deborah Swenson – Till My Last Breath, Book One in the Desert Hills Trilogy
          • Adriana Girolami – The Zamindar’s Bride
          • Phillip Vega – Searching for Sarah
          • Emma Lombard – Discerning Grace
          • F. E. Greene – In the Sweet Midwinter

          These titles are in the running for the FINALISTS of the 2021 Chatelaine Book Awards novel competition for Romantic Fiction!

          Good Luck to All! 

          All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

            PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

            This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

            Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

            Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

            Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

            Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.

             

            The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2020 CHATELAINE Awards is Mary Ting for When the Wind Chimes

            Cover of When the Wind Chimes by Mary Ting

            Blue and Gold Grand Prize 2020 Chatelaine Badge for When the Wind Chimes by Mary Ting

            Click here to see the 2020 Chatelaine Book Award Winners for Romantic Fiction.

            We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Chatelaine Book Awards for Romance Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

            Please click here for more information.

            Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

            VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

            FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

            Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

            Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

            Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

          • The LUNA MISSILE CRISIS by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle – Alternate History Sci-fi, Action & Adventure, Alien Technology

            The LUNA MISSILE CRISIS by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle – Alternate History Sci-fi, Action & Adventure, Alien Technology

            Blue and gold Grand Prize Winner Badge for Cygnus Science Fiction The Luna Missile Crisis by Rhett C. Bruno & Jaime Castle

            Authors Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle come together to tell the tale of alien first contact gone awry in their epic science fiction release, The Luna Missile Crisis.

            The year is 1961, and cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin is set to become the first man in space. But when Yuri, snug inside the Vostok 1, is launched from the cosmodrome and into the coming night, he’s met with a collision that changes the course of history. The Vostok 1 crashes into an oncoming alien starship. Assuming the collision was actually a missile fired from Russia’s space race opponent, the United States, the soviet nation quickly launches an arsenal of nuclear warheads in response. But those warheads never make it to their target. Instead, they detonate against the hidden starship, sending a wave of nuclear destruction over eastern Europe.

            In the coming weeks after contact day, military troops from both sides of the cold war are sent into the ruins of eastern Europe – into an area now called the Dead Curtain – to search for useful alien technology. During a skirmish between the Russians, the Americans, and the Vulbathi (the toad-like alien race aboard the damaged starship), a combat medic name Kyle McCoy stumbles into the chaos and sparks a ceasefire. His actions create a domino effect, bringing about relative peace between all three parties. Three years pass, and in exchange for aid in repairing their damaged ship, the Vulbathi agree to offer some of their exceptional technology to mankind. And Kyle McCoy, once foot soldier turned head of the Department of Alien Relations, is given a desk job with a title that suits his place in history.

            But not everything is going as planned.

            Kyle’s twin brother, Conner McCoy, is a dead-beat with a past steeped in drugs and crime. His latest venture is selling knockoff alien weaponry to mob bosses and gangsters. Conner and his crew work the circuit, living under the radar as they travel from city to city, peddling their fake Vulbathi tech with enthusiasm to boot. And it’s all fun and games and a little extra cash until one of the knock offs isn’t a knock off at all and the gun in Connor’s hand turns a man into a pile of dust and goo. Kyle is called in to investigate the case, and when the two estranged brothers reunite, the stakes become higher than either of them could have ever foreseen. Stolen identity, sabotage, explosive battles, and a myriad of historical figures all spill across the pages as the story of humans and Vulbathi unravels.

            Bruno and Castle have expertly crafted an alternate history 1960’s that feels real enough to touch.

            The use of historical figures as supporting cast adds to the detailed world building, and even the Vulbathi tech, which is everywhere in The Luna Missile Crisis, is most believable when the reader sees it integrated into the everyday lives of working people. A prime example is Kyle’s holotube that he regards as a “faulty prototype” taking the place of his real television. All of these stunning details are brought to life by writing that is engaging, active, and perfectly descriptive. The dialogue is witty and sharp, well fitted to the cast and their gamut of personalities, and as the chapters alternate between the two McCoy brothers, the syntax shifts ever so slightly, giving the subtle notion of a true perspective change.

            Not only is the writing engaging, but Bruno and Castle have taken a well-worn Sci-fi plot – the pulpy notion of the Cold War era interrupted by an alien invasion – and breathed fresh life into it.

            The narrative is strong, propelling the reader forward through an increasingly wild ride. Many will recognize familiar character archetypes of the do-good FBI agent; the grifter counterfeiter; the over-the-top gangster; the misunderstood monster and will be pleasantly surprised to find themselves growing more and more entrenched in a plot that is everything but familiar.

            The Luna Missile Crisis is filled with action, adventure, and enough laser blasts to satisfy any science fiction fan, but its true strength lies in the cohesive world building and rock-solid storytelling that only two authors like Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle can provide. In other words, here’s one sci-fi we can happily recommend!

            The Luna Missile Crisis by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle won Grand Prize in the 2020 CIBA Cygnus Awards for Science & Speculative Fiction.