Author: chanti

  • Between Heaven and Hell by Jacqui Nelson – Western Romance Drama

    Between Heaven and Hell by Jacqui Nelson – Western Romance Drama

    The year is 1841 when nine-year old Hannah watches the murder of her family by drunk white renegade men. She was found by native Americans and taken in. Thrust into a new and unfamiliar life that will challenge and change her forever. But over a decade later, a tragic event has left her on the run from the tribe she grew accustomed to and now she must find a way to make a living on her own.

    She and her trusted horse travel to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas – in other words, Hell – where she hopes to find a job. With the skills she learned from living with the tribe and her dead eye skills with a gun, she’s hoping to land a scouting job. There, she meets Paden Callahan, a seasoned traveler and military man who is looking for a replacement for his current scout, Dawson.

    After being taken at such a young age, Hannah finds it better to be strong and live independently than take up a typical woman’s profession. Hannah has honed her shooting skills and has an aim better than most men, which astonishes everyone and angers those she bests. But, despite her skill and strength, Callahan still isn’t too sure a woman can handle the tough trail life and also isn’t too sure he can control himself around a woman this beautiful.

    With little options to choose from, Callahan reluctantly allows her to come, but they both discover there are more dangers following Hannah than anyone realized.

    Between Heaven and Hell is an alluring romance that captivates readers in a time period where Pioneers fought for land and Native Americans retaliated in order to keep what was their home. Jacqui Nelson’s characters are multi-dimensional and drift between bridging the gap between the two groups.

    Hannah is an inspiring strong woman whose path represents the bridge between Natives and Settlers, and who spends most of the novel struggling to reconcile her two very different identities. Her life with the tribe has helped make her the woman she is, yet many of the settlers she must find a life with are those who do not understand, nor wish to understand, where she came from. Despite her personal battle and the difficulties she faces as a woman on her own, Hannah proves herself to be tough and resilient.

    Callahan is also haunted by his past, though it differs greatly from Hannah’s and he fights to understand her and how to help her. The connection that develops between them despite their differences makes their relationship worth rooting for.

    Nelson delivers a perfect, steady-paced book with poetic descriptions of romance and easy-to-follow fluidity of Callahan and Hannah’s journeys. Those who love romance and hot sensual scenes, along with the Western historical fiction, will find themselves enamored with this novel.

  • Contest Rankings for the Chanticleer Book Awards – The Latest 411

    Contest Rankings for the Chanticleer Book Awards – The Latest 411

    Genre Grand Prize Winners

    Authors and writers from around the world (from more than 35 countries) submit their latest works to the Chanticleer International Writing Competitions. The winners of these novel writing contests are recognized at the annual Chanticleer Book Awards Ceremony and Banquet that takes place at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and 3 Day Book Fair.

    We have recognized each of the 14 genres that are represented  First Place category winners along with announcing the genre GRAND PRIZE Award Winners and then top the evening by announcing the Overall Grand Prize Winner for the year’s Best Book Award. At this year’s ceremony, we will also recognize a new level of award winners, the Short Listed award winners.

    Books that have reached the Short List or the Semi-Finalist rounds have been read completely. These are books that we love and that we want to give extra recognition. However, only a handful will go on to achieve First Place Category Positions and only one of these will be awarded the genre’s grand prize.

    The Short Listed Award Winners (aka Semi-Finalists) will compete for the 5 coveted First Place Category Position within each of the offered genre novel competitions. Conference and Banquet Attendees who have been awarded a Short List position will be recognized on stage at the awards ceremony and their books will have the opportunity to be available in the 3 Day Book Fair managed by Village Books. 

    Short Listed titles may use the digital badges below for website, digital, and social media promotion. “Short Listed by Chanticleer Reviews” stickers are available to Short Listers.  Authors may use “Short Listed by Chanticleer Reviews on their Short Listed titles.

    Chanticleer Short List

     

     

    For more information about the Chanticleer International Book Awards, please click here.

    We are grateful for our contests judges — for theirs is truly a labor of love! 

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

     

     

     

  • MYSTERY & MAYHEM SHORT-LIST for 2016 (2016 M&M Semi-Finalists)

    MYSTERY & MAYHEM SHORT-LIST for 2016 (2016 M&M Semi-Finalists)

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThese titles are in the running for the 5 First Place Book Awards for the 2016 Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards competition!

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2016 M&M Finalists to the Short List. The novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to FINALISTS LIST  and now has moved forward to the SHORT LIST of the 2016 M&M  Book Awards. They are now 2016 M&M Semi-Finalists as they compete for the limited First in Category Positions of the 2016 M&M Book Awards in the last rounds of judging.

    Each of the titles below have earned the M&M AWARDS SHORT LIST Semi-Finalists bragging rights!

    The Mystery & Mayhem Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Cozy Mysteries and Classic Mysteries. The M&M Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 writing competition winners!

    The M&M Book Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Amateur Sleuth, Romance, Animals, Cooking/Knitting/Hobbies, Blended Genre, Medical/Lab, Travel, Humorous, Historical, Classic British, Y/A, and Senior Sleuth.

    The following titles will compete for the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions and Book Awards Packages.

    NOTE: This is the Official List of the M&M 2016 SHORT LIST.

    Chanticleer Short List

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the Short-list (aka The Semi-Finalists) of the M&M 2016 Novel Writing Contest are:

    Under English Heaven  by Alice K. Boatwright

    Secrets Revealed by Kate Vale

    The Body Next Door by Gay Yellen

    A Scone To Die For  – H.Y. Hanna

    Death Runs on Time by A. B. Michaels

    Secrets, Lies, and Champagne Highs  by Jeanette Hubbard

    Killer Transaction  by Catherine Bruns

    Twelve for Twelve  by Dawn Rasmussen

    The Prosecution of Mr. Darcy’s Cousin by Regina Jeffries

    The Secret Life of Anna Blanc by Jennifer Kincheloe

    A Girl Like You by Michelle Cox

    Engaged in Danger: A Jamie Quinn Mystery by Barbara Venkataraman

    Death Unscripted by M.K. Graff

    Deadly Dye and a Soy Chai by Traci Andrighetti

    Sherlock Holmes and the Dance of the Tiger -Suzette Hollingsworth 

    Skyrizer # 7 by Phillip Buchanon

    The Erotica Book Club for Nice Ladies by  Connie Spittler

    Smart, but Dead by Nancy G. West

    Hot Scheming Mess by Lucy Carol

    The M&M Semi-Finalists will compete for the M&M First In Category Positions, which consists of Seven Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the M&M GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize purse of $200.  The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.

    All Short Listers will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.

     

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

    Congratulations to the Finalists in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the M&M  Awards  First Class Category Positions. 

    Good Luck to all of the M&M Semi-Finalists as they compete for the coveted First Place Category  positions.

    First In Category announcements will be made in our social media postings as the results come in. The 2016 First In Category Winners and Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the 2017 Chanticleer Annual Awards Gala and Banquet.

    The M&M Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer 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 2017 M&M Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is March 31st, 2017. Please click here for more information. 

  • Spotlight on: Diane Garland, Continuity Editor and CAC17 Speaker

    Have you even written a story and halfway through your protagonists eye change from green to brown? Unless you are writing a fantasy with metamorphic characters, that is generally not supposed to happen. But how do you keep track of all those niggly details, especially in a multiple book series?

    Meet Diane Garland, continuity editor. She has mastered the art of keeping track of every single changeable detail in a book series through her keen eye and her crackerjack proficiency with spreadsheets.

    And you can find her at the upcoming Chanticleer Author ConferenceCAC17March 31st to April 2nd where she will be teaching A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World: Building a Foundation for your Characters & Plot.

    As part of our spotlight series, we asked Diane our five questions to get her perspective on professional success.

    1. When did you know what you really wanted to be?

    I think I discovered myself and what I wanted to be back in 2012 when an off comment by Ann Charles had me delving into the uncharted waters of continuity in books and series.  With much refinement and encouragement I turned my ideas into a business, Your WorldKeeper.  Right now I am very happy with how my business has progressed, but it is constantly evolving which keeps things interesting.

    2. What was the biggest challenge you faced?

    Probably my biggest challenge I faced was building my author base.  Determining who would most benefit from my work and how to advertise and reach those authors was daunting at first.  I’m still adding authors to my client list and each one adds another dimension to my work.  Having authors of different genres with different wants and needs in their worlds is fun and challenging.

    3. How do you define success?

    Success for me is doing something I enjoy. I love my work and knowing I make things easier for my clients to write their next book is a part of what makes me successful. When detailing their worlds and helping them maintain continuity and fluidity in them I am helping to create a product for all to enjoy. That is my success.

    4. How long did it take to achieve your success?

    It only took a couple of months to determine Your WorldKeeper a success. Finishing the detailing of the first couple of books in the Deadwood series and having it be an useful tool for Ann Charles as she wrote her next one, showed me that what I offer is needed. Working with various authors and helping them to create their next book is very rewarding.

    5. What is the best advice you have ever received?

    The best advice I ever received was two fold. Don’t give up and embrace the small successes. It takes hard work to create a business, to be successful, to be fulfilled. If you believe in what you are doing, don’t give up. Take those small things that work, things that go right, and hug them to you. A successful business is built of many small details that perform as needed. If you keep adding in the little details, you’ll soon have a business that works.

    If you have not registered for CAC17 yet, what are you waiting for? Diane Garland and more fantastic speakers (including yourself possibly, if you register before the schedule is full) will be sharing their experience and knowledge about writing books, selling books, and everything to do with being a successful author.


    About Diane

     Diane specializes in the world of continuity editing, a systematic way of cataloging all the little known facts in a book series. USA Today bestselling author, Ann Charles, amongst others, count on her attention to detail and her organizational skills to keep their series on track and their fans coming back.

    Diane works with many authors to keep their story continuity on track. Story continuity is a small but very important part of a book series. It allows the author to provide consistency to their story world and makes for a smooth transition for the reader from book to book.

    Visit her website at www.YourWorldKeeper.com where she can help you to organize and track changes and details within their series.

    Diane’s class:

    A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World: Building a Foundation for your Characters & Plot- Worldbuilding and WorldKeeping. What’s the difference? Do you need them? Learn how to organize your world to weave an intriguing and compelling tapestry that will hold up throughout a long series. Tools will be provided to help you maintain continuity and interest throughout your series.

    Check out all the classes and sessions we have scheduled!

    Register for CAC17 NOW!

  • Cherie O’Boyle, mystery author

    “A local independent bookstore asked last fall if they could carry all three of my books…. You’d think they would sell more of the first book in the series, Fire at Will’s…. But instead, they are selling way more of the middle book, Iced Tee. I had to take more books in this morning because they had sold out again. I asked [the store] why they thought they were selling so many more of Iced Tee. [Their answer:] It’s the shiny gold Chanticleer sticker, of course!

    So naturally, I have now entered the most recent book, Missing Mom, in the Mystery & Mayhem contest for 2018.”

    Cherie O’Boyle

  • CYGNUS BOOK AWARDS – Short List 2016

    CYGNUS BOOK AWARDS – Short List 2016

    Cygnus Award for Science FictionThese titles are in the running for the 5 First Place Book Awards for the 2016 CYGNUS Science Fiction Novel Writing competition!

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2016 CYGNUS Finalists to the Short List. The novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to FINALISTS LIST of 28 titles, and now has moved forward to the SHORT LIST of 15 titles for the 2016 CYGNUS Book Awards. They are now 2016 Cygnus Semi-Finalists as they compete for the limited First in Category Positions of the 2016 CYGNUS Book Awards in the last rounds of judging.

    Each of the titles below have earned the CYGNUS AWARDS SHORT LIST bragging rights!

    • Jonathan Renshaw – Dawn of Wonder
    • Robert L. Slater – Straight Into Darkness
    • Sean P. Curley – Over
    • K.N. Salustro – Unbroken Light
    • Greg McLeod – King of Dreams
    • Nikki McCormack – Dissident (Forbidden Things Book One)
    • Gary Grossman – OLD EARTH
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian: The Transparency of Time
    • Ryan London – Prophecy of the Immortals
    • Cyril Adams – The Peace Proxy
    • L. Woodswalker – Tesla’s Signal
    • Jesikah Sundin – ELEMENTS (The Biodome Chronicles #2)
    • Jim Musgrave – Life in 2050
    • Dennis M. Clausen – The Accountant’s Apprentice
    • Sara Stamey – The Ariadne Connection
    • Stephanie R. Sorensen – Toru: Wayfarer Returns
    • Tiffany Pitts – Wizzy Wig
    • Rhett C Bruno – Titanborn

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the CYGNUS Awards  First Class Category Positions. 

    We hope to see you at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet on April 1, 2017.

  • The OZMA AWARDS for Fantasy, Magic, Steampunk, Fairytale, Swords & Sorcery Fiction Book Awards 2016 Official Finalist List

    The OZMA AWARDS for Fantasy, Magic, Steampunk, Fairytale, Swords & Sorcery Fiction Book Awards 2016 Official Finalist List

    Ozma Awards for Fantasy FictionThe OZMA Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Fantasy, Magic, Steampunk, Fairytale, Swords & Sorcery Fiction. The OZMA Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Awards & International Writing Competitions.

     

     

    We are pleased to announce the OZMA  Awards Official Finalists List for 2016. They will now compete with each other for coveted spots on the “Finalist List” from all the 2016 entries received. The Official Finalists Listing is comprised of works that have passed the first three rounds of judging from the entire field of entrants. To pass the first three rounds of judging, more than sixty pages of the works below have been read and been deemed worthy by the CBR judges of continuing in competition for the Short List  and then compete for the 2016 OZMA Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY positions and their prize packages.

    Congratulations to the OZMA AWARDS 2016 FINALISTS and Good Luck as they compete for the Short List Positions:

    NOTE: This IS the  OFFICIAL LISTING of 2016 OZMA FINALISTS as of January 24, 2017.  Please check back as we add to the list.

    • April Holthaus – Legend of the Fae
    • Jennifer Morse – Fairy Godmothers of The Four Directions
    • Rebecca Lochlann – The Sixth Labyrinth
    • Murray Lee Eiland Jr – The Emperor of Babylon
    • Brad Farley – A Pallid Moon
    • Luke Taylor – Vault of Dreams
    • Alec Hutson – The Crimson Queen
    • Katherine Leannan – Fantasy
    • Tyrean Martinson – Champion’s Destiny
    • Sydney M. Cooper – Forsaken Lands Book 1: Tragedy
    • James Malone – Rainbow Gardens
    • Wayne D. Penney – VALHALLA: The Saga of Leif the Lucky
    • Susan Buffum – Black King Takes White Queen
    • Elizabetta Holcomb – Category Jeremy
    • Maighread MacKay – Stone Cottage
    • Kristen and Daniel Sheridan – Elementals
    • Zakary J Bennett – The Archmage Trials: Trial by Deception
    • Allie Mendelsohn – The Stone Keepers
    • Gary J. Hurtubise – Darksea
    • Keith W. Willis – Traitor Knight
    • Murray Lee Eiland Jr – The Sword of Telemon
    • Sam J. Charlton – Journey of Shadows
    • David H. Luz – TALLOK
    • V. Lakshman – Mythborn 2
    • Nicole Evelina – Camelot’s Queen
    • Woody Carter – Narada’s Children: A Visionary Tale of Two Cities
    • Alan Sproles – Billy Bedivere in the Quest for the Dragon Queen
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian 
    • Elisabeth Hamill – Song Magick
    • Michael Joseph Murano – Epic of Ahiram: Age of the Seer (Book One)
    • Phillip Buchanon – Aquatic Bourne #4
    • Bruce Graham – Visitor from the Reich 
    • Christopher Leibig – Almost Mortal
    • Andrew Craven – The Curse on Long Autumn Valley
    • Raven Oak – Amaskan’s Blood

    Good luck to all the OZMA Awards Finalists who made the Finalist Listing as they compete for the Short List and then the First In Category Positions !

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

    cac16The OZMA First Place Category book award winners will compete for the OZMA Grand Prize Award for the 2016 Best Fantasy Fiction. Grand Prize winners, blue ribbons, and prizes will be announced and awarded on April 1, 2017 at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash.

    The First In Category award winners will receive an book award package including a complimentary book review, digital book award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2017 OZMA Awards. The deadline is October  31st, 2017. Click here for more information or to enter. We have split CYGNUS Awards in to two separate competitions: Cygnus for Science Fiction and the OZMA awards for Fantasy. Visit our Contest Page for more information.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2016 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Fifteen genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

  • Spotlight on: Nicole Evelina, CAC17 Speaker, Author & 2015 Overall Grand Prize Winner

    Meet Nicole Evelina, author and historian. At last year’s conference she was awarded the 2015 Overall Grand Prize at last years authors conference.

    And you can find her at the upcoming Chanticleer Author ConferenceCAC17March 31st to April 2nd where she will be teaching How to Use Pinterest to Develop Your Story and Career.

    As part of our spotlight series, we asked Nicole our five questions to get her perspective on professional success.

    1. When did you know what you really wanted to be?

    I finally started taking my writing seriously in 2008, so when I was 29. Before then, it was just a hobby, something I did to entertain myself when I was bored. I always had a drive to tell stories, but I didn’t think that being a writer was something real people actually did. That is until I read Twilight. (Go ahead and laugh if you want.) Stephanie Meyer was the first average person I’d ever seen “make it” as a writer. I thought to myself “well, if she can do it, there is a chance for me.” At the time, I was about ¾ of the way into the first draft of what would become Daughter of Destiny, my debut novel, so I decided it was time to act like a professional writer. It took another eight years for the book to be published, but I did it! 

    2. What was the biggest challenge you faced?

    My biggest challenge was getting my book into the hands of readers. It took me two years to get an agent, and then we were on submission for two years. We got sooooo close to an offer three times, but every time the publishing houses said the same thing: she’s new and we don’t know how to market Arthurian legend. My agent and I ended up parting ways and I didn’t have any luck getting another one, so I decided to go independent. After so many years of hoping and waiting, Daughter of Destiny was published just four months after I opened my own publishing company.

    3. How do you define success?

    I don’t think there is one single definition of success. On one hand, I’m successful just because my books are out there and readers like them, which is so important. I’m also successful in that I’m creatively fulfilled – I know I’m doing what I’m meant to be doing. That may even be more important. I’ve won a lot of awards, so I know I’m doing something right!
    I’m making money on my books, which is also a definition of success. However, I’m not a full-time writer or the critically-acclaimed, bestselling author I want to be, so in that regard, I still have a ways to go. But that’s okay; it gives me something to strive for.

    4. How long did it take to achieve your success?

    All told, around six years. Only the gods know how long it will take to fulfill my loftier dreams!

    5. What is the best advice you have ever received?

    One of my mantras is “dreams don’t work unless you do.” I think I probably got that off the Internet, but it is so true. If you want to be successful, you have to put in the effort. It may be hard at the time, you may even think it’s going to kill you – I did – but it is so worth it when you begin to see it pay off. Writing is a business no matter if you are traditionally or indie published, so you have to treat it like one, put in the hours and do the work, even when it’s not fun and you are exhausted. No one is going to hand you anything just because you are you. There really is no such thing as overnight success. (There are rare exceptions but, more than likely, you are not one of those.) As the author, you are the best advocate for your work, so get out there and tell everyone how wonderful it is, and eventually, they will catch on. That’s how you build a fan base – one reader at a time. 

    If you have not registered for CAC17 yet, what are you waiting for? Nicole Evelina and more fantastic speakers (including yourself possibly, if you register before the schedule is full) will be sharing their experience and knowledge about writing books, selling books, and everything to do with being a successful author.


    About Nicole

     

    Nicole Evelina’s writing has appeared in The Huffington Post, The Philadelphia Inquirer, The Independent Journal, Curve Magazine and numerous historical publications. She is one of only six authors who completed a week-long writing intensive taught by #1 New York Times bestselling author Deborah Harkness. As an armchair historian, Nicole researches her books extensively, consulting with biographers, historical societies and traveling to locations when possible. She has consulted with internationally acclaimed author and historian Geoffrey Ashe, as well as Arthurian/Glastonbury expert Jaime George, the man who helped Marion Zimmer Bradley research The Mists of Avalon.

    Daughter of Destiny by Nicole EvelinaChanticleer Reviews 2015 Book of the Year – 

    You may think you know the story of Guinevere, but you’ve never heard it like this: in her own words. Listen and you will hear the true story of Camelot and its queen.

    Fans of Arthurian legend and the Mists of Avalon will love Daughter of Destiny, the first book in a historical fantasy trilogy that gives Guinevere back her voice and traces her life from an uncertain eleven year old girl to a wise queen in her fifth decade of life.


    Nicole’s classes:

    How to Use Pinterest to Develop Your Story and Career – As an author, you can use Pinterest for far more than collecting recipes and craft ideas you probably won’t ever get around to trying. Nicole Evelina will provide tips for and share personal examples of how to: Create boards for your stories, settings and characters, How to use those boards in marketing and fan activities, Use the images you find to brainstorm character attributes, Collect imagines for future inspiration, Provide a “human face” behind your author brand, Advertise and hold contests on Pinterest to attract and retain readers.

    Check out all the classes and sessions we have scheduled!

    Register for CAC17 NOW!

  • The LITTLE PEEPS 2016 Book Awards for Early Readers & Children’s Picture Books –Official Finalist List

    The LITTLE PEEPS 2016 Book Awards for Early Readers & Children’s Picture Books –Official Finalist List

    Middle Grade and Children's Fiction AwardsThe 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 2016 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.

    The following titles will compete for the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions and Book Awards Packages.

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works of the Little Peeps Early Reader Book Awards 2016 Writing Contest are:

    • Simon Calcavecchia – The Adventures of Frank and Mustard: Stuck in the Mud
    • Kneko Burney – Rikki & the Rocket Twins Adventure 1: Discovering the Solar System
    • Barbara Layman – Day Dreamer and the Sleeping Giants
    • Becky Thaldorf Latka – My Grandma Makes Lefse
    • Pam Atherstone – The Dog in Wolf’s Clothing: Anya Faces Her Fears and Finds a Friend
    • Cris Harding – Wee Scarlet
    • Denise Ditto – The Tooth Collector Fairies, Batina’s Best First Day
    • Donna Washington – The Mouse, The Mole, and the Magnificient, Moss-Covered House
    • Sara Dahmen – The Blue Beetle
    • Phillip Buchanon – Little Phil’s New Money Friends #2
    • Phillip Buchanon – Jenny Meets Penny #9
    • Doretta Elaine Wilson – Chocolate Gravy on Dragon Creek

    The Little Peeps 2016 Finalists will compete for the Little Peeps Short List.

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

    Good Luck to all of the 2016 Little Peeps Finalists as they compete for the coveted Short List positions.

     

    The Little Peeps Grand Prize Winner and First in Category Winners will be announced at the April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer 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 2017 Little Peeps Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for 2016 submissions was May 31st, 2016. We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 Little Peeps writing competition. Please click here for more information. 

  • Chanticleer Author Marketing Primer: Hashtag How-To

    Chanticleer Author Marketing Primer: Hashtag How-To

    Authors marketing their books on social media need know how to use hashtags. Hashtags are a fairly simple concept, an effort to index categories among posts, but for the newcomer to social media they can be intimidating. Even those who know about hashtags may not be aware of the intricate ways to maximize their benefits.

    Hashtag Types:

    • Organic/Topics
    • Promotion (brands, products, people, events, etc.)
    • Discussions/Issues
    • Activities (Day-of-the-Week/Themes)
    • Asides (humor, reflection of emotions, feelings, states of minds related to the post)

    Why do we use hashtags?

    There are many reasons to use hashtags, but keep in mind that our most important reason for using a hashtag is to enhance our exposure among people who don’t follow us. Even if you have one Twitter follower, using #amwriting has the effect of increasing your followers for that one post by showing it to anyone who is searching on that topic.

    If you are using a hashtag that is unique or has very little exposure–which you might do to create a branding effect, or spawn a new social activity (like #YouMightBeAWriterIf)–you would pair it with a hashtag with higher exposure to give your post better support.

    Basic Hashtag etiquette:

    • Don’t go overboard. Use two, maybe three. More than that will communicate “this is spam” to people.
    • Use clear and concise hashtags, generally. Long hashtags are not easy to read. So keep them to a minimum and know that if you do use one some eyes will slip past without comprehension.
    • Use hashtags that are relevant to your post and help people find the posts they want to find. Think of it like creating an index at the back of a cook book. If cream puffs were listed under #shrimp that would confuse and possibly upset a lot of people.

    Where to Place Hashtags

    Hashtags may be used on any social media, and are typically found within a post in an #organic fashion, or at the end of the post like an index word. Twitter is a platform where the hashtag is so endemic that it often becomes like punctuation, performing its function while remaining nearly invisible to readers, as long as it’s not overdone.

    Using a hashtag as part of a sentence is understood and accepted on Twitter, probably due to the character limit. But on Google+ and Facebook the hashtags are used less and can be intrusive in the middle of sentences. When in doubt on Facebook and Google+, add your hashtags to the end of your post, even on a separate ending line.

    If your hashtags sticks out like a sore thumb, it may communicate “this is spam”, especially on some platforms, and that may create a negative reaction to the post.

    How to vet a Hashtag

    Always run a search of the hashtag on Twitter or the platform you will be using, to make sure the other posts using it will be good company for your posts. You don’t want to accidentally use a hashtag that has a lot of inappropriate content under it–or worse, co-op a hashtag meant to promote an important social issue for your own self-promotion.

    Next use https://ritetag.com/hashtag-search to look up your hashtags to see how well they will serve as promotional tools. RiteTag will give ratings to guide you.

    These results will change over time, but here are a few examples of the different ratings that RiteTag uses to vet hashtags:

    #Free shows up as red with a “!” and a message “Don’t use this hashtag or you will get lost in the crowd”. The statistics show that people are tweeting over 5000 times an hour under that hashtag–lost in the crowd is right!

    #Writing shows up as green with a lightning bolt and the message “Use this hashtag to get seen now”. The statistics show it’s being used nearly 300 times an hour, but over 3.5 million people are seeing those posts. But keep in mind whats hot today could be gone tomorrow.

    #Pubtips shows up as blue with an hourglass and the message “use this to be seen over time”. The current stats don’t look very impressive, but the history shows that it has regular and consistent surges in activity.

    #Pubtip (I intentionally used this one to demonstrate how one little letter can make a difference) shows up grey with a crossed circle and the message “don’t use this, very few people are following it”. The stats are almost empty and the history shows very low usage.

    Enjoying these tips? Learn how to market and sell more books at our upcoming Chanticleer Authors Conference. #SeriousAuthors register for #CAC17