Author: chanti

  • The LITTLE PEEPS 2017 Book Awards for Early Readers & Children’s Picture Books – Slush Pile Survivors

    The LITTLE PEEPS 2017 Book Awards for Early Readers & Children’s Picture Books – Slush Pile Survivors

    Early Readers and Picture booksThe LITTLE PEEPS Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works for Early Readers and Children’s Picture Books.

    The Little Peeps Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Writing Competitions.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2017 writing competition winners!

    The Little Peeps Book Awards for FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres are: Early Reader Chapter Books, Story Books, Picture Books, Activity Books, Educational Books.

    These Authors and their Works made it past the first rounds of the 2017 Little Peeps Early Reader Book Awards are:

    • Sandy Hill – Play Ball, Have Fun Read, Imagine, Draw
    • Kizzie Jones – A Tall Tale About a Dachshund and a Pelican: How a Friendship Came to Be
    • Deanna Edens – The Almost Cool Kids Club
    • Penelope Lagos – I Miss My Best Friend
    • Brian Estes – Flying Pigs & Dinosaurs & Things You’ve Never Seen Before
    • Sylva Fae – Rainbow Monsters
    • Lori Mullen – The Horrible, Nasty, Fire-Breathing Dragon Named Achoo!
    • Marshall Cobb – River Tree
    • Wanda Carter Roush – Angel on Assignment
    • Amy Mae Boreman – Maggie’s New Home
    • Lauren Mosback – Frightened in Friendship Grove
    • Stacie Sullivan Simon – I Am Me & You Are You
    • Laura Tritt – Big Hope
    • Shana Hollowell – Little Mouse’s Sweet Treat
    • Heather Pallotta – Wishes and Kisses
    • Rita Kaye Vetsch – The Many Colors of Friendship
    • Peggy Sullivan – Midnight and Moonlight
    • Peggy Sullivan – The Moon and Star

    These Little Peeps 2017 authors and their works  will compete for the Little Peeps Short-List Positions.

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at Info@ChantiReviews.com. 

    The Little Peeps Grand Prize Winner and First in Category Winners will be announced at the April 21st, 2018 Chanticleer International Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2018 Little Peeps Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for 2017 submissions was May 31st, 2017. We are now accepting submissions into the 2018 Little Peeps writing competition. Please click here for more information. 

    Pictured on the left are the 2016 Little Peeps Book Award winners: Sara Dahmen, Denise Ditto Satterfield, & Donna Washington with their blue ribbons on April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer Reviews awards banquet ceremony.

     

  • DANTE ROSSETTI 2017 Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction Slush Pile Survivors

    DANTE ROSSETTI 2017 Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction Slush Pile Survivors

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works of Young Adult Fiction. The Dante Rossetti Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Reviews International Book Awards.

    The following titles and their authors have made it past the initial “Slush-Pile Rounds” and will compete in the next rounds to see which titles will  be Short Listed for the 2017  Dante Rossetti  Book Awards.

    Good Luck to All! 

    • Susan Faw – Soul Sanctuary
    • Philip P. Carlisle – The Paradox of Jayne Le Faye
    • Brittany Evans – Unlocking Olympus
    • S.V. Mitchell – The Noble Noggin
    • JL Morin – Nature’s Confession
    • Alex E. Carey – Fire’s Love
    • Richard Mann – Wasted in Waldport
    • DJ Munro – Slave to Fortune
    • Jan Von Schleh – But Not Forever
    • Mario Loomis – Primordium
    • Elise K. Ackers – One for the Road
    • John Foley – One For The Team
    • Isaac Fozard – Coalheart
    • Tim Lee – High Heels and Horsepower
    • Jean Gill – Fortune Kookie
    • Laurel Anne Hill – The Engine Woman’s Light
    • Judith Sanders – Star Finder: The First Book in the Diamond Island Saga
    • Deen Ferrell – Cryptic Spaces: Dark Edge Rising
    • Gregory Saur – Panterror!: The Epic Babysitting Adventures of Rachel Pugsley 
    • Anne Donaghy – Raven, Tell A Story
    • John A. Vikara – My Lonely Room
    • Kathy L. Greenberg – The Bully Solution
    • Edward Stanton – Wide as the Wind
    • Rebekah N. Bryan – Track Two on Repeat 
    • PJ Devlin – Becoming Jonika
    • Taylor Caley – Ice Cold – Part One: The Dark Zone
    • J. L. Skirvin – Snow Now Sizzling in Soleil 
    • Lynn Yvonne Moon – The Tower
    • Zoe Kalo – Chameleon
    • Lynette Cabrera – Just For Now
    • Samantha Crouch – Onyx
    • Julian North – Age of Order
    • Brittany Evans – Unlocking Olympus
    • Alisse Lee Goldenberg – The City of Arches
    • Robert Wright Jr – Ruby Red and the Wolf
    • Dara Lyons – Twinlove
    • Robert D. Calkins – Digger
    • Michelle Rowe – Emma Beware

    These titles will compete to be SHORT LISTED in the next rounds.

    We are accepting entries into the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction.

    To compete in the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards or for more information, please click here.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C. retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews International Writing Competitions and Book Awards.

  • JOURNEY 2017 Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – The SHORT LIST

    JOURNEY 2017 Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – The SHORT LIST

    The JOURNEY Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Awards & International Writing Competitions.

    We are pleased to announce the JOURNEY Awards Official Short-List (Semi-Finalists)  for 2017 for Narrative Non-fiction. 

    This is the Official Short List as of Dec. 7, 2017.

    Congratulations to the JOURNEY AWARDS 2017 SHORT LISTERS  Semi-Finalists and Good Luck to them as they compete for the First Place Category Positions.

    The Official 2017 JOURNEY Awards SHORT – LISTERS:

    • Kari Rhyan – Standby for Broadcast
    • Marilynne Eichinger – Lives of Museum Junkies
    • Theresa Mathews – Fishing With Hyenas
    • Rachel Thompson – Broken Places
    • Patricia Walkow – The War Within, the Story of Josef
    • Deeann Callis Graham – Head-On, Stories of Alopecia
    • Alice Grant Binger – Some Steps Back In Time
    • Judith Works – Coins in the Fountain
    • Susan Marie Conrad – Inside: One Woman’s Journey Through the Inside Passage
    • Dennis P Freed – Love, Loss, and Awakening
    • Donna LeClair/Emma Baker – Immunity
    • Lou Lesko – The Ghost of Communism
    • Dr. Scot Hodkiewicz – Getting to Heaven By Going Through Hell
    • Bruce Rettig – Refraction
    • Kevin M Maher – No Couches in Korea 
    • Pattie Welek Hall – A Mother’s Dance
    • Karen Elizabeth Lee – The Full Catastrophe: A Memoir
    • Tommy Donovan – The Rail: What Was Really Doing in the 60’s Bronx

    Good luck to all the Journey Awards Semi- Finalists who made the Short List as they compete for the First Place Category Positions. First Place Category Positions will be announced on Saturday, April 21st, 2018 at the annual Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony.

    More than $30,000 dollars in cash and prizes are awarded to Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Winners annually.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2018 JOURNEY Awards. The deadline is February 28, 2018. Click here for more information or to enter.

    HOW TO, GUIDES, SELF HELP, and GUIDES works should be entered into the NON-FICTION BOOK AWARDS. Please click here for more information:

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2016 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Check out out fifteen genres to enter your works into to compete on an international level and distinguish your books from the two million new titles hitting the market this year.

  • DEAD SILENT: An ELIZA GORDON MYSTERY by Amy Beth Arkawy – Cozy Mystery, Amateur /Woman Sleuth

    DEAD SILENT: An ELIZA GORDON MYSTERY by Amy Beth Arkawy – Cozy Mystery, Amateur /Woman Sleuth

    Cleverly plotted and well-paced, Amy Beth Arkawy’s Dead Silent: An Eliza Gordon Mystery will satisfy the appetite of cozy mystery readers and gourmets alike, especially those who enjoy an occasional side of gossip with their novel.

    The story picks back up in the small town of Goodship, New York, where Eliza Gordon, former soap star, serves up the daily specials at her restaurant dutifully named “Soup Opera.” A popular eatery, she and her sidekick, Midge Sumner, can’t help but overhear the daily drama spilled by the town locals as they argue and bicker about the latest rumors posted on The Goodship Grapevine, the town’s toxic new gossip site.

    Eliza’s life outside work is on the up-and-up, as she and her boyfriend, Tom Santini, the town’s police chief, entertain the idea of moving in together. But things get put on hold when ill-received radio jockey Paul Hackett is found strangled to death with his headphone cord wrapped around his neck in the studio of WHSP. The only evidence police have to go on are the initials V.O.S. scrolled on the studio mirror in red lipstick.

    Was it Victoria Salinger, Hackett’s third ex-wife, who scrolled her initials at the scene of the crime? Or were they written with the same lipstick worn by his latest fling, the young and alluring studio assistant, Ashley Hoyns? From there the list of possible suspects only grows, and the table is set for a classic whodunit mystery, as Eliza and Midge get back into their usual swing of finding clues.

    Hackett’s murder isn’t the only mystery in the story, either. A secretive cult is going around releasing fliers that urge people to join “The Silent.” What’s more, Jonas, the mysterious playboy brother of Eliza’s late husband, is back in town and his motives seem to be beyond the scope of simply collecting the family estate – it doesn’t help that Eliza is beginning to grow feelings for her newly arrived brother-in-law.

    Dead Silent makes for a great cozy read, perfect for the beach or any occasion when you have a couple of hours of free time. The plotline and ongoing suspense will keep fans of the genre quickly turning the pages and leave them satisfyingly entertained.

    This is the second book in the Eliza Gordon Mystery series, between Killing Time and Murder, She Tweets. Arkawy is also the author of several plays, including Psychic Chicken Soup (McLaren Comedy Award nominee) and Listening to Insomnia: Rage Amongst Yourselves. Her work had been produced in New York City and featured in several anthologies.

    Arkawy’s skills as a playwright sit center stage as she effortlessly seams together fast, witty dialogue between the colorful characters who make up the town of Goodship. The culinary delights described throughout the novel are brilliantly provided in a recipe file at the end of the book. A smart move that is sure to leave readers’ mouths watering and clamoring for next book in the Eliza Gordon Mystery series.

    “If you’re hungry for a fast, fun and deadly cozy mystery, Amy Beth Arkawy’s Dead Silent, the second book in the Eliza Gordon Mystery series is what’s on the menu.” – Chanticleer Reviews

  • CYGNUS Book Awards Long Listers for 2017

    CYGNUS Book Awards Long Listers for 2017

    Cygnus Award for Science FictionThe Cygnus Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Science Fiction, Steampunk, Alternative History, and Speculative Fiction.  The Cygnus Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2017 Cygnus Book Awards LONG LIST. We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries are now in competition for 2017 Cygnus Semi-Finalists List known as the SHORT LIST. Short Listers will compete for the limited First  Place Category Positions of the 2017 Cygnus Book Awards in the last rounds of judging and will be announced at the Awards Gala on Saturday, April 21st, 2018. 

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring space, time travel, life on other planets, parallel universes, alternate reality, and all the science, technology, major social or environmental changes of the future that author imaginations can dream up. Hard Science Fiction, Soft Science Fiction, Apocalyptic Fiction, Cyberpunk, Time Travel, Genetic Modification, Aliens, Super Humans, Interplanetary Travel, and Settlers on the Galactic Frontier, Dystopian, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST  the 2017 Cygnus Book Awards novel competition for Science Fiction!

    • Pamela LePage – Virtuous  Souls
    • Lou Dischler – Meet Me Under the Comet
    • Elizabeth Crowens – A Pocketful of Lodestones, Book 2 of The Time Traveler Professor 
    • Sara Stamey – Wild Card Run
    • M. W. Anderson – Breaching The Parallel
    • John Yarrow – The Future’s Dark Past
    • Darrell Lee – The Gravitational Leap
    • David Neuner – Fear Factory
    • Chris Rasmussen – The Cat & The Fiddle
    • Rhett Bruno – From Ice to Ashes
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Magnus Victor – Oort Rising
    • Brian Cohn – The Last Detective
    • Julian North – Age of Order
    • Wende Dikec – Starr Valentine
    • Dayna Ingram – All Good Children
    • Sydney M. Cooper – Forsaken Lands Book II: Sacrifice
    • Michele Fogal – Root of the Spark
    • Michael Simon – First Command
    • Andrew Craven – Wintercity Crossing
    • Andrew Craven – Moshiah
    • Alexander Weinstein – Children of the New World
    • Darren D. Beyer – Casimir Bridge
    • KB Shaw – Neworld Papers: The Warrior’s Tale
    • Cathy Parker – The Power of Three: The Novel of a Whale a Woman, and an Alien Child
    • Jerry Amernic – The Last Witness
    • Matthew Buscemi – Schrodinger’s City
    • Michelle Bryan – Strain of Resistance
    • Andrew P. Blaber – Fallow
    • Jim Cronin – Hegira

    Good Luck to All as they compete for the 2017 Short List!

  • MYSTERY & MAYHEM Book Awards for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries 2017

    MYSTERY & MAYHEM Book Awards for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries 2017

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThe M&M Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries. The M&M Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Reviews International Book Awards.

    The following titles and their authors have made it past the initial “Slush-Pile Rounds” and will compete in the next rounds to see which titles will  be Short Listed for the 2017  M&M  Book Awards.

    Good Luck to All! 

    D. J. Adamson – Suppose

    M. K. Graff – The Golden Hour: A Nora Tierney English Mystery

    Kathleen Kaska – Run Dog Run

    Susan Breen – Maggie Dove’s Detective Agency

    Michelle Cox – A Ring of Truth

    Amy Boyles – Scared Witchless

    Debra Sue Brice – Danni Girl Mysteries: The Complete Series

    Jeanette Hubbard – Chasing Nathan

    Kara Lumbley – As the Ribbons Fall

    Susan Boles – Cherry Cake and a Cadaver

    Fred Shackelford – The Ticket

    Dennis M. Clausen – The Sins of Rachel Sims

    M. Louisa Locke – Deadly Proof: A Victorian San Francisco Mystery

    J. L. Skirvin – Jaguar Ravenz King

    Elizabeth Crowens – Memoirs of an American Butterfly (Or how I learned to stop worrying and love Alfred Hitchcock)

    Mollie Hunt – Cat’s Paw

    Catherine Bruns – Baked to Death

    Libi Astaire – The Moon Taker

    Cindy Sample – Dying for a Donut

    Valerie Tate – Scapegoat

    Valerie Tate – Frog Legs

    Susan Boles – Death of a Wolfman

    Betty Jean Craige – Fairfield’s Auction

    Nancy G. West – River City Dead

    Kim Hunt Harris – Unsightly Bulges, A Trailer Park Princess Cozy Mystery

    Jennifer Mueller – Never Turn Your Back on a Wolf

    Anna Castle – Moriarty Meets His Match

    Cherie O’Boyle – Missing Mom

    Sherrie Todd-Beshore – The Count Of Baldpate

    David Selcer – The Dream Catcher Murders

    Carol June Stover – Kenmore Square

    Vee Kumari – DHARMA

    Cody Schlegel – Junction

    Lonna Enox – Striking Blind

    Carl and Jane Bock – Coronado’s Trail:An Arizona Borderlands Mystery

    Jeanne Burrows-Johnson – Prospect for Murder: A Natalie Seachrist Mystery

    Suzette Hollingsworth – Sherlock Holmes and the Chocolate Menace

    Traci Andrighetti – Amaretto Amber

    Gary D Lewellyn – The Bluff

    Susan Boles – Death Of A Wolfman

    RD Vincent – Donbridge: The Ring, The Legend and The Midwife

    Diane Weiner – Murder is Collegiate

    Diane Weiner – A Deadly Course

    Lucinda Brant – Deadly Peril: A Georgian Historical Mystery

    Beth Wareham and Jason Davis – Hair Club Burning

    Amy S. Peele – CUT

    Richard T. Ryan – The Vatican Cameos: A Sherlock Holmes Adventure

    Lynn Bohart – Novel (No title given)

    Loretta Jackson and Vickie Britton – Murder and the Good Old Boys’ Club

    Betty Jean Craige – Dam Witherston

    J.L. Newton – Oink. A Food for Thought Mystery

    Elaine L. Orr – Demise of a Devious Neighbor

    J.G. Harlond – Local Resistance

    These titles will compete to be SHORT LISTED in the next rounds.

    We are accepting entries into the 2018 M&M Book Awards for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries.

    To compete in the 2018 M&M Book Awards or for more information, please click here.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C. retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews International Writing Competitions and Book Awards.

  • JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2017 Slush Pile Survivors

    JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2017 Slush Pile Survivors

    The JOURNEY Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding Narrative Non-fiction works. The JOURNEY Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Reviews International Book Awards.

    Chanticleer Reviews International Book Awards also offers Non-Fiction Book Awards focusing on Instruction and Insight, Guides, How-To, and Self-help. Click here for more information.

    The following titles and their authors have made it past the initial “Slush-Pile Rounds” and will compete in the next rounds to see which titles will  be Short Listed for the 2017 Journey Book Awards.

    Good Luck to All! 

    • Kari Rhyan – Standby for Broadcast
    • Patricia Walkow – The War Within, the Story of Josef
    • Marilynne Eucgubger – Lives of Museum Junkies
    • Roni McFadden – The Longest Trail
    • Theresa Mathews – Fishing With Hyenas
    • Bruce Rettig – Refraction
    • Karen Elizabeth Lee – The Full Catastrophe: A Memoir
    • Pattie Welek Hall – A Mother’s Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward, Full Circle
    • Alice Grant Bingner – Some Steps Back in Time
    • Dennis P Freed – Love Loss and Awakening
    • Donna LeClair/Emma Baker – Immunity
    • Susan Marie Conrad – Inside: One Woman’s Journey Through the Inside Passage
    • Judith Works – Coins in the Fountain
    • Valerie Gardener – Chapunza: Witch doctor, Ax-In-Head and Pink Baboons, Memoir of a Nurse in the African Bush
    • Lou Lesko – The Ghost of Communism
    • W. Hock Hochheim – Don’t Even Think About It
    • Dr. Scot Hodkiewicz – Getting to Heaven By Going Through Hell
    • Tommy Donovan – The Rail: What Was Really Doin’ in the 60’s Bronx
    • Deeann Callis Graham – Head-On, Stories of Alopecia
    • Kevin M Maher – No Couches in Korea
    • Rachel Thompson – Broken Places: a  Memoir
    • Frank Iszak – Freedom Flight
    • Joseph William Simmons – Dirty Motel Shenanigans

    These titles will compete to be SHORT LISTED in the next rounds.

    We are accepting entries into the 2018 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction works.

    To compete in the 2018 Journey Awards or for more information, please click here.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C. retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews International Writing Competitions and Book Awards.

  • A QUICK GUIDE to PUBLISHING LESSONS that YOU NEED NOW by Sharon Anderson & Kiffer Brown

    A QUICK GUIDE to PUBLISHING LESSONS that YOU NEED NOW by Sharon Anderson & Kiffer Brown

    Writing is not the same as publishing.

    That may seem obvious to most. However, imagine a new writer, a hopeful author, with a lot to say – this person writes and writes, day after day. The diligent writer amasses 283,472 words exactly. This person then believes that everyone will want to read her story. Why not? The story is sent off to a literary agent – maybe two. Okay, the manuscript is sent off to five dozen literary agencies with query letters and synopsis. Our dear writer is no sloth; she has done her due diligence!

    And then the wait commences. Six weeks, three months, six months, a year later… no replies. No responses. Nothing – not even a generic letter or automated email response. Not unreasonable—really— when one considers more than two million new works are created each year in the English language. We can tell you this: The slush pile takes no prisoners. Only the best of the best will be noticed.

    Our author is crushed, heartbroken. Vows to never write again….

    THERE IS  A BETTER WAY! Below is a Quick Guide that outlines the crucial steps involved in successful publishing (read book sales). These mimic, for the most part, the tried and true methods of traditional publishing houses that work for Indie and Small Press authors—especially when the advantages of today’s new world of publishing are added into the mix.

    Let’s back up a minute and examine what our aspiring author could have done to have a better chance at succeeding in today’s publishing market: 

    1. Manuscript Overview. You’ve spent many hours writing your manuscript – It’s time to invest in a Manuscript Overview (MOV). What’s that? It’s a process whereby you send your work off to a trusted, experienced editor. This editor will read your work and give you professional, genre-specific feedback: tell you what’s good, what needs work, if your manuscript is ready to publish. If you have a literary agent or work with an acquisitions editor at a publishing house, you would send if off to them for feedback. If you don’t have one of these (yes, it is like trying to get a loan from a bank, the bank will loan you the money if you don’t need it…), then you may want to consider our manuscript evaluation service. It can be painful, but every author who has used it says that it is the only way to go. Most of our authors consider it like taking graduate courses in storytelling. A MOV really helps to hone a work.
    2. Build Your Online Digital Presence. At the same time as the Manuscript Overview is going on, begin strengthening your on-line presence through interactive social media. These days, even Fiction authors need a platform. Facebook is still a good way to do this, as is Instagram. If your book is science fiction, maybe you should try Reddit. Whatever you do, invite your targeted readership community into a relationship on the platform where they can be found. The thing to understand is publishers are looking for authors who already have a following who can be motivated to purchase books.
    3. Line Edit. After you’ve incorporated the suggestions from your Manuscript Overview into your work, and have had several trusted brutally truthful beta readers to thumbs up the story line and characters, it’s time to send it off to a Line Editor. What? Yes, you heard me. Your work will require a LINE EDIT that insures that each and every sentence makes the story move forward. Line Editing is defined as a thorough and focused reading of the manuscript on a line-by-line basis with suggestions, comments, and remarks noted for the author to consider. Take the extra time and send your work off to a professional, experienced editor who will examine your work to make sure you’ve hit all of the plot points, your characters are believable, your story is solid, that it doesn’t sag anywhere, and that the opening is a grabber. Take the time. Do this step.
    4. What’s next? While your work is with the Line Editor, we hope that you are developing  the next work in your series or researching your next story idea. Every agent, every publisher will want to know what you are working on next. Series sell.
    5. Cover Concept. Begin developing cover concepts for your work in progress (WIP) by selecting key elements of it. Your cover should convey time period, location, genre, targeted audience, and story elements. These cover elements should be reflected in your marketing collateral (biz cards, website background, social media elements, etc.).
    6. Fresh Eyes. After incorporating the LINE EDITS that were suggested, we advise that you have another set of fresh eyes read the work. Perhaps, a second independent manuscript overview. This can also fall under the responsibility of your literary agent or publishing house’s acquisitions editor. If you don’t have either of these, then use an independent consultant. See Item 1 above. Professional Fresh Eyes are the Traditional Publishing Houses secret weapon.
    7. Copy Edit. Now that the story is solid, it is time for a COPY EDIT. Copyediting is a very technical read of a work for flaws in grammar, punctuation, syntax, consistency in spelling, numerals, hyphenation, etc.; flagging any inconsistencies that have made it past the Copy Edit such as eye color, name spelling, location, timing from point A to point B. Copy editing also tracks any internal inconsistencies in the story (conflicting abilities or inabilities, location inconsistencies), etc. This is where the story is held accountable to the publisher’s style guide and to the story’s individual world building construct.
    8. Cover Design. If you are indie-publishing or even hybrid publishing, you will need to seriously consider investing in your cover design. Your book has less than 3 seconds – that’s THREE seconds to attract a potential buyer. If you have the chops to do this yourself, that’s awesome. But most authors don’t. Think about it. You have an awesome book. You’ve spent time and money making certain of it. Why wouldn’t you want to put as much time and attention into a cover that will work for you instead of against you? A good cover doesn’t have to cost thousands of dollars, but you do need to hire a professional cover designer who understands your genre. The cover will sell your first book. Your content will sell the second the book.
    9. Author Brand. Create your bio’s. You will need a 100-word, a 200-word, and a 500-word biography to send to agents and publishers, to slap on your sell sheets, to place on the back of your book. The three bio’s will work for different applications. Have these ready to go. You will need professional head shots that reflect your author brand. Get it done.
    10. Proofing. Proofreading is the final step of the writing process. It looks for purely grammatical errors, typos, and spelling errors only.
    11. ISBN Designation. BISAC CODES. Meta Data. The “alphabet soup’ part is extremely important in getting your books into the hands of booksellers and into libraries — more on this in a later post.
    12. Professional Formatting. This is a mystical process that takes your manuscript and transforms it into a book, digital and print. Lack of professional formatting is the reason booksellers can spot a self-published book (besides the cover). They can spot it at a hundred paces. It is best left to professionals—in our not-so-humble-opinion.
    13. ARCs. Advanced Reader Copies for Publishing Industry Professionals and for your Beta Readers. These are needed for launch reviews and for regional independent bookseller trade shows (SIBA, PNBA, NCBA, MPIPA, GLIBA, —more alphabet soup). Use your ARCs to start lining up book-signings, author events, promotional tours, and to create book buzz.
    14. Advance Reviews – make sure that you have professional publishing industry reviews ready to go for the launch (press releases, industry news, etc.) and for the cover blurbs (front and back!).
      Before you hit the publish button, send your work off for a professional, unbiased review. Traditional publishing houses know that advance professional reviews set the tone for consumer reviews. Reviews are considered to be the cornerstone of any book’s marketing strategy.
    15. Trade Shows & Distribution – Do you want your book to be available to independent book stores across the nation? Then it must be available in traditional distribution channels and on display at the regional independent bookseller tradeshows.  This cannot wait until the last minute. Shelf space is hard to come by and shows are not inexpensive.
    16. Proof and Edit again! Formatting issues discovered in the ARCs taken care of?
    17. Publish and Launch- Digital and Print! Do you have your promotional events on the calendar? Your social media postings calendar ready to go? See item 13.  How is that website looking? That is the first place any publishing professional (read literary agents, acquisition editors, etc.) will check if you garner their interest. What will they find when they google your name and the title of the book? Will they find a flurry of posts or will your info be on the eighth page down on a Google search?

    Imagine the polish that following these tried and true methods of traditional publishing will bring to your published work!

    The Secret to Successful Publishing

    Honestly, there are even more things an author can do to ensure that her book has the best chances for publishing success. Enter a writing contest, go to book events for other authors, arrange a signing at some place other than a bookstore, talk to people, take workshops, participate. It may feel overwhelming when you start, but when the connections and preparations start compounding and spreading, it can be life—and career—changing! You will be thankful that you took the extra effort. And your work will be ready for whatever may come its way!

    ***************************************************************************************

    Chanticleer Editorial Services (CES) is proud to have some of the best line editors, copy editors, proof readers, world construct editors, indexers, book formatting professionals, and others in the publishing business on our team. We have secured some of the best from the Big 5. All CES editorial work must start with a manuscript overview. It is the only way that our professional editors will proceed to edit a manuscript (that is how important they believe manuscript overviews are to a work’s commercial and literary success).

    Sharon E. Anderson is an award-winning author and Chief Reviews Editor for Chanticleer Reviews and International Book Awards. Creating and editing content – as well as editing/writing reviews – and outreach are just a few skills she brings to the table. She writes dark comedy, horror, short stories, articles, and essays whenever she gets the chance. She lives in Skagit Valley with her husband, two children, two dogs, a couple of cats, and a sketchy Guinea pig. We are so fortunate to have someone with her talent and experience on the Chanticleer Team! Contact: editor@chantireviews.com

    Kiffer Brown, founder of Chanticleer Reviews, is also founding partner in SillanPaceBrown Publishing + Production + Agency, LLC. SPB uses these tried and true traditional publishing methods to prepare intellectual properties to become fully actualized in the extremely competitive entertainment industry.

  • CYGNUS BOOK AWARDS for Science Fiction 2017 – Slush Pile Survivors

    CYGNUS BOOK AWARDS for Science Fiction 2017 – Slush Pile Survivors

    Cygnus Award for Science FictionThe Cygnus Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Science Fiction, Steampunk, and Speculative Fiction.  The Cygnus Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

     

    The following titles and their authors have made it past the initial “Slush-Pile Rounds” and will compete in the next rounds to see which titles will make it to  the 2017 CYGNUS Book Awards Short-List.

    • Lou Dischler – Meet Me Under the Comet
    • Jim Cronin – Hegira
    • Elizabeth Crowens – A Pocketful of Lodestones
    • Michelle Bryan – Strain of Resistance
    • Sara Stamey – Wild Card Run
    • Andrew P. Blaber – Fallow
    • MWAnderson – Breaching The Parallel
    • John Yarrow – The Future’s Dark Past
    • Pamela LePage – Virtuous Souls
    • Darrell Lee – The Gravitational Leap
    • Victoria Vass – Eleven: 1
    • David Neuner – Fear Factory
    • Chris Rasmussen – The Cat & The Fiddle
    • Rhett Bruno – From Ice to Ashes
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Magnus Victor – Oort Rising
    • Brian Cohn – The Last Detective
    • Julian North – Age of Order
    • Wende Dikec – Starr Valentine
    • Jerry Amernic – The Last Witness
    • Candace Sams – Galaxy Man
    • Leonard S. Tate – Journey to Nirvana
    • Cathy Parker – The Power of Three: The Novel of a Whale a Woman, and an Alien Child
    • Matthew Buscemi – Schrodinger’s City
    • Darren D. Beyer – Casimir Bridge
    • Marcus Julian Carbo – The Path to Arcadia: The Great Crisis
    • KB Shaw – Neworld Papers: The Warrior’s Tale
    • Andrew Craven – Moshiah 
    • Alexander Weinstein – Children of the New World
    • Carl S. Plumer – Demon Days 
    • Sencer Turun- Requiem for Ignorance
    • Andrew Craven – Wintercity Crossing
    • Michael Simon – First Command
    • Michele Fogal – Root of the Spark
    • Sydney M. Cooper – Forsaken Lands Book II: Sacrifice
    • Dayna Ingram – All Good Children

    Good Luck to each of these Science Fiction writers! 

    We are accepting entries into the 2018 Cygnus Awards Novel Competition for Science Fiction Works.

    To compete in the 2018 CYGNUS Awards or for more information, please click here.

    THE DEADLINE TO ENTER THE 2017 CYGNUS Novel Writing Competitions was April 30, 2017.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C. retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews International Writing Competitions.

  • KATHY MURPHY the PULPWOOD QUEEN is Coming to Bellingham, Wash!

    KATHY MURPHY the PULPWOOD QUEEN is Coming to Bellingham, Wash!

    It will be Kathy L. Murphy, the Pulpwood Queen herself, all the time — at least in Bellingham, Wash. from Thursday, July 13th through July 15th, 2017.

    Kathy is headlining the following three events, along with some surprise ones, when she visits the Pacific Northwest this summer for a long weekend sponsored by Chanticleer Book Reviews.

     

     

    1. The TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of The Pulpwood Queens International Book Club will meet on Thursday, July 13th. Check out the chapter’s Facebook event page 
    2. An Evening with Kathy L. Murphy at Village Books, Saturday, July 15th at 7 p.m. All Book Groups and Clubs are welcome!
    3. A Very Special WORKSHOP Creating Book Buzz and Building Your Author Brand – Saturday, July 15th, Kathy will present a three hour workshop and share her secrets of success from 9:30 in the morning until 12:30 in the afternoon. $55 per seat. Reservations required. Click here for more info and to register.

    TimberRose Queens and Timber Guys Chapter of the Pulpwood Queens Book Club

    We are pleased as punch to announce The TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of Kathy Murphy’s The Pulpwood Queen’s Tiara-Wearing, Book-Sharing Guide to Life Book Club is welcoming the Queen, herself, to the club’s first-ever meeting to discuss the books of the month and other important news on Thursday, July 13, 2017.

    The Pulpwood Queen Book Club began when Kathy Murphy wanted a seat in a local book club, but alas, there was no room. And apparently, there would not be one available for some time….

    Did that stop her?

    No way, no how! Kathy L. Murphy created her own book club – a fun, tiara wearing, book loving, festival of reading called The Pulpwood Queens, which now spans the continental United States plus Alaska and 15 foreign countries!

    Meet the Queen and become a member of the TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of the Pulpwood Queens at Nikki’s Bella Marina Bar & Restaurant from 7 – 8:30 pm.  Of course, there will be food and drink available for purchase. New members are always welcome!

    Seating is limited for the chapter meeting. Members who  have made reservations via the Facebook page will be given priority upon check-in. Reserve your seat today!