Author: chanti

  • CYGNUS Awards for Science Fiction & Speculative Fiction FIRST PLACE Category Winners 2015

    Cygnus1.pngChanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards 2015, the science fiction, speculative fiction, and steampunk fiction genre division of the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Award Writing Competitions.

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

    PlOzma Awards for Fantasy Fictionease note that Fantasy, Myth & Legend, & Magical Systems entries were moved to the newly offered OZMA Awards for Fantasy Fiction. This contest will be awarded for the first time in 2016.

    These First Place Category Winners will be recognized on stage at the Chanticleer Authors Conference on April 30, 2016 Awards Banquet. Good luck to them as they compete for the CYGNUS 2015 Grand Prize.

    First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards are:

    • John Yarrow for The Time Forward Project
    • James Wells for  The Great Symmetry
    • C. A. Knutsen for Janus Unfolding: Emergence
    • Janine A. Southard for  Cracked! A Magic iPhone Story
    • Jessica Schaub for Gateways 
    • L.S. Kilroy for The Vitruvian Heir
    • Tommy Partl for Mechanized
    • Timothy S. Johnston for The Furnace

    *This list is now complete 3/16/16

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the CYGNUS AWARDS 2015 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2015 CYGNUS category winners will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala on April 30, 2016. See the Grand Prize Winners from 2014.

    The submission deadline for the 2016 CYGNUS Awards is now closed. We are accepting entries into the 2017 Cygnus Awards Novel Competition.

    To compete in the 2017 CYGNUS Awards or for more information, please click here.

    THE DEADLINE TO ENTER THE 2016 CYGNUS Novel Writing Competitions was January 31st, 2016.

    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.

  • The PARANORMAL Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2015 – Finalist Listing

    The PARANORMAL Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2015 – Finalist Listing

    Paranormal Fiction AwardsThe Paranormal Awards Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Supernatural Fiction. The Paranormal 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 2015 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 30, 2016!

    The Paranormal Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:

    • Paranormal Romance
    • Urban/Edgy
    • Magical Beings & Creatures and Magical Systems
    • Supernatural Powers
    • Adventure/Mystery/Thriller
    • Paranormal

    OFFICIAL LISTING of the 2015 Paranormal Writing Competition’s Finalists

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

    • Andy Kutler – The Other Side of Life
    • Kayla Hampton – The Assassin
    • Ben A Sharpton – 2nd Sight
    • Sabina Khan – Realm of the Goddess
    • Karen Musser Nortman – The Time Travel Trailer
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian: The Transparency of Time
    • R.J. Lewis – Fire In The Mind
    • Diana Green – Dragon Wife
    • M.L. Crum – Irony of Time
    • Mart Sander – The Goddess Of The Devil
    • Shaila Patel – Soulmated
    • Alex E. Carey – Earth’s Embrace
    • Alex E. Carey – Water’s Reflection
    • Joanne Jaytanie – Willow’s Discovery, Book 3
    • Kim Hornsby – The Dream Jumper’s Pursuit
    • Penny Page – Coven Corners
    • Carolyn Haley – The Aurora Affair
    • Gail Siler, PhD – Decoding the Butterfly Promise
    • Dana Faletti – Whisper: Book One 
    • Harry Steven Ackley – Our Lady of West 74th Street
    • Aphrodite Anagnost & Robert P. Arthur – Passover
    • K.C. Finn – The Book Of Shade
    • K.J. McPike – XODUS
    • Paula Cappa – Greylock
    • Kathi Bjorkman – Third Eye Witness-Bearer of Truth
    • April Holthaus – Legend of the Fae
    • Robert Wright – Witch Way Home
    • Diana Green – Bronze Fox
    • Marti Melville – Onyx Rising Deja Vu
    • Marti Melville – Silver Moon Deja Vu
    • Tessa McFionn – Spirit Fall
    • Richard Southall – Haunted Plantations of the South
    • D.L. Koontz – Edging through the Darkness
    • Kacey Vanderkarr – Stepping Stones
    • Linda Watkins – Return to Mategias Island
    • J. Steven Young – Blue Screen of Death
    • Michael Schmicker – The Witch of Napoli
    • R.E. Steedman – The Phantasmagorical Theatre of Crespin Varlot

     

    AN ANNOUNCEMENT from Kiffer Brown, pres. of CBR.

    We have moved the Chanticleer Reviews Writing Competition Awards evening up from September 24, 2016 to April 30, 2016. Our last awards evening was Sept. 29, 2015 when we presented the 2014 awards.This move makes the 2015 awards more relevant and recent for the winning authors. However, the date change has given us only six months to judge all the entries instead of the usual twelve months.

    The reason why we scheduled CAC in September was because it was the only time available on the writer conferences’ schedule. When there was an opening in April, we grabbed it!

    However, after this April 30, 2016 awards ceremony for the 2015 winners, we will be back to having an entire year for the judging rounds for the 2016 contest submissions whose winners will be announced in April 2017 instead of September 2017.

    Moving the awards ceremony also means that we had to move the conference and the accompanying book fair also up from September to April, which means we only have six months between CAC15 and CAC16.

    My apologies for the contest announcement delays and we thank you for your patience and understanding as we are making big changes here at Chanticleer Reviews. Please do not hesitate to contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com if you have any questions or concerns.

    The Paranormal Finalists will compete for the Paranormal Awards First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Paranormal GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the Paranormal Awards Grand Prize Award for the $200 purse and the Paranormal Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review of the winning title valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

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

    Congratulations to the Finalists!  

    Good Luck to all of the Paranormal 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 PARANORMAL Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category winners will be announced and recognized at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 Paranormal Awards writing competitions for Western Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

     

  • AGILE PROJECT MANAGEMENT for AUTHORS by Tom Wise, Ph.D. and Nance Wise

    AGILE PROJECT MANAGEMENT for AUTHORS by Tom Wise, Ph.D. and Nance Wise

    Authoring Is A Business and this is why Tom Wise Ph.D., project management consultant, advises authors to implement AGILE PROJECT MANAGEMENT METHODS to meet their publishing goals.

    Recap of Three Steps to Using Your Writing Time More Effectively – Agile for Authors Article One

    In the previous article, we discussed how to build a network to create a team. This requires relationships and understanding the skills and abilities of these people. Part One was setting the stage to prepare to work within a strong network of supporters. In this article, we are going to cover how to apply most effectively your network in your business.

    Part 2. Authoring is a Business

    Knowns

    8,760 hours in a year.

    Timelines and schedules are precious commodities. Each of us is given only twenty-four hours in the day and one hundred sixty-eight hours in a week. We only receive fifty-two of those weeks in a year filled with eight thousand seven hundred and sixty hours. We spend almost two thousand nine hundred of those hours in sleep and another one thousand hours commuting, shopping, and general time with family duties.

    Agile for Authors

    Hours In A Day Breakdown Of Activities

    Note: Hours in the day are an estimate of an average person with a full-time job:

    1. Working/Living/Education:  8 hrs a day
    2. Sleeping: 8 hrs a day
    3. Commuting/Eating/Chores/Grooming/Exercising/Family Duties/Community Participation (clubs, volunteering, reading) 6 hours
    4. Writing???? 2 hours

    For the knowledge worker, that leaves a mere forty-five hundred hours to split between the remaining activities such as leisure and love, eating and playing, housework and writing. If we are lucky or good, and manage to split our time perfectly, that provides the author seven hundred fifty hours, or two potential hours of precious time to write in a twenty-four hour period. Now, I don’t know about you, but I rarely manage to focus for a full couple hours in a day, let alone seven hundred fifty hours straight.

     

    Rework in authoring a novel or book is very costly in time, money, and confidence. The problem is often not the writing or the mechanics, but rather a process. A life-cycle may not be clear to us, but it does exist. Getting published historically took years to complete, but that has changed.

    In the new millennium, some software experts developed a twelve-point manifesto for Agile principles to apply to writing novels. They discovered that a network of invested peers made their writing process more effective.

    Agile Principles for Authors

     

    Realize, there is a difference between content writers and authors. Content Writing tends to be paid position or contracted. Authors, and especially Indie Authors, invest their time and money up front hoping for a return on work at the other end of the process. Authors hunker down, close themselves away, and work until they complete the manuscript. Then polish the work, send it off, and hold their breath, cross their fingers, hoping for someone to send a love letter of acceptance.

    AGILE FOR AUTHORS

    Top companies in the world understand the necessity of a more streamlined process. Hired consultants make billions of dollars teaching companies how to create processes for efficiency and economic savings. Experts measure, refine and reduce their product processes into effective work segments to complete the product. These techniques can be employed in your authoring efforts.

    Some people have learned a family business, and others seem to instinctively know how to segment out their work and  organize others to get work done and goals met. For the rest of us, this can be a learned skill.

    Agile Manifesto’s Twelve Concepts

    Agile authors have the ability to use the flexible methods. The idea, the method of agile, developed during the 1990’s by software developers with the simple focus of targeting the desires of their customers before the work begins. It includes building a team focused on customer satisfaction, a team with shared mission and participation of quality experts, engineers, analysts, and business people. These software developers gathered at The Lodge at Snowbird Ski Resort in the Wasatch Mountains in Utah and developed what is now known as the Agile Manifesto.

    The Agile Manifesto expresses twelve concepts of a well working team that can be applied to the business of authoring.

    1. Customer satisfaction is priority
    2. Welcome changes
    3. Deliver working software frequently
    4. Business and Development work together daily
    5. Motivation, Environment, and trust are needed
    6. Face-to-face is best
    7. Working software is the measure
    8. Maintain a constant pace
    9. Technical excellence and good design
    10. Simplicity – maximize work not done
    11. Self-organizing teams
    12. Regular retrospection and adjustment

    A Shift in Paradigm –  A to Z no longer applies!

    In segmenting work – A to Z no longer applies. Now, working on A to D, R to Z, and then E to H, is possible, getting feedback and input along the way, improving as the work progresses, to a thoroughly edited, refined product.

    Agile for Authors

    Consider what can be grouped, or segmented into independent units of work, and the need to include people with these skills in your team:

    • Division of responsibilities to make your group a team
    • Division of tasks into short phases of work (Sprints) characterized by division of tasks
    • Publishers
    • Cover design
    • Marketing
    • Bloggers – who and when
    • Social media
    • Beta readers
    • Developmental and line Editors – who and when
    • Identify who needs to work on what
    • Who needs what information – focus on that info with those people
    • Conferences and author signings

    Teams and groups work differently. One of the key differences in the behaviors of teams is due to the separation of responsibilities. When an individual is assigned a unique task or given a goal, he/she can take on the leadership role when it comes to meeting the assigned objective.

    When work is segmented into small chunks, called sprints, with a short duration and a clear goal, the team can move quickly to completion of a quality product. Prioritize small sprints of two to three weeks on a specific goal, and with the team members that are needed to complete that small chunk of work.

    Agile for Authors

    Short Sprints Win the Race

    At the end of each sprint, take the time to discuss the past segment. Ask the team the hard questions. By continuous reassessment, your team will quickly become efficient at turning that crank and churning out quality work.

    • Frequent reassessment and adaptation
    • People – are they responsive to you and are you responsive to them, working well together.
    • Communication – are the tools and behaviors working?
    • Commitment – are you, and they dedicating the time and focus to getting work completed in the way and time agreed?
    • Time – are the estimates accurate? Is the time to meet convenient and sufficient to get the work done?

    When the opportunity to write presents itself, an author must have options ready and prioritized. This requires the author to have a routine that enables them to move into the zone, one zone or another, quickly.

    Creating that “zone” means understanding the priority, and what needs to be available that activates the muse. Identify the psychological triggers that engage your creative abilities.

    • Have a scent prepared that gets you in the mood to write (coffee? cinnamon? campfire smoke? brandy?)
    • Know the lighting that is needed to make you comfortable (candles? bright light? darkened writing cave?)
    • Identify the background sounds that move you (white noise? rain forest sounds? dance tunes? sultry Barry White?  Western music?)
    • Choose a setting (busy coffee shop? attic studio? kitchen table? favorite bookstore? local pub? closed office with the door closed?)
    • Choosing a time of day is ideal (first thing in the morning? late night after everyone goes to sleep? immediately after exercise?)
    • Have needed ideas listed. (Always jot down or record anything that you think might be useful for writing projects. Don’t let these muse tidbits dissipate into the air.)

    Choosing a specific time of day with no distractions is essential. If the author has a family, often this time is before the family awakens, or after the family retires for the night. Perhaps for you, it is after the children head out to school, or during your lunch break at work. Whatever time that is, set that time aside on your calendar and give it to yourself. Don’t allow excuses to infringe on the task. Perhaps you can arrive to work early, or stay late on a preset schedule. This provides the family, or significant other, the ability to support your time to write.

    • Stage your work area
    • Be organized and have everything together (prepared)
    • Know the psychologically stimulating triggers that jog your muse
      • Diane Gabaldon’s is lighting candles for her muse.
      • Robert Dugoni’s is reading the Green Mile by Stephen King — again!

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”]

    Jennifer Cook - coffee pic (1)
    “What my Coffee says to me” by Jennifer R. Cook

     

     

    Moving from one role to another, both physically and mentally takes planning, skill, practice, and agility. As an author, if we have a team of people with unique skills and responsibilities, then your team can take a leadership role when necessary. This gives the author more opportunity to shift roles from writing text to editing, scheduling, and organizing for subjects such as cover designs, reviewing publishers, and marketing.

    Parting Words

    Allow yourself to have every benefit possible to make the transition to your creative self to take advantage of that precious time when it is just you and your story. 

     

    NOTES from the Editor:

    The fun picture above titled “What My Coffee Says to Me” is by Jennifer R. Cook, a creative graphic design consultant and illustrator. Ms. Cook has been graciously given Chanticleer Reviews permission to use this picture with Tom and Nancy Wise’s AGILE for Authors series.  We absolutely love her artwork and graphic designs!

    “What my Coffee says to Me” is a daily, illustrated series which began January 1, 2012 by Jennifer R. Cook a strategic graphic designer and illustrator creating for mental health awareness, please visit www.catsinthebag.com

    For more information on building an environment for Agile success read Agile Readiness; Four Spheres Of Lean And Agile Readiness by Thomas P Wise and Reuben Daniel. Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Gower Publishing, and anywhere books are sold.

    Tom holds a Ph.D. in Organizational Management and teaches courses in project management and quality at Villanova University and DeSales University. He is currently developing curriculum at Eastern University based on his books: Agile Readiness and Trust In Virtual Teams.

    Tom and Nancy are award winning authors. Their book, The Borealis Genome is the 2013 Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Winner and a 2014 Cygnus Award First In Category winner. Their books have won multiple awards including Finalist with the USA Best Book Awards and The International Book Awards.

     

     

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  • The Laramie Awards for Western Fiction 2015 – Official Finalists Listing

    The Laramie Awards for Western Fiction 2015 – Official Finalists Listing

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardThe LARAMIE Awards Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genres of  Western Fiction. The Laramie 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 2015 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 30, 2016!

    The Laramie Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:

    • Western Romance
    • Adventure/Caper
    • Classic
    • Civil War/Prairie/Pioneer
    • Contemporary Western
    • Western Young Adult

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

    The OFFICIAL LIST of Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the Short-list of the Laramie 2015 Novel Writing Contest.

    • Sara Dahmen – Doctor Kinney’s Housekeeper
    • Martha Conway – Thieving Forest
    • Ken Farmer & Buck Stienke for Across the Red
    • Andy Kutler for The Other Side of Life
    • Linell Jeppsen for Second Chance
    • Allen Russell for Crow Feather
    • Quinn Kayser-Cochran for  Silver State
    • Robert Morgan Fisher for The Long Trample
    • David M. Jessup for Mariano’s Choice
    • S. Thomas Bailey for Blood Lines-The Gauntlet Runner 
    • Cheri Kay Clifton for Destiny’s Journey
    • Kevin Horgan for The March of the Orphans And the Battle of Stones River
    • Lori Crane for  Okatibbee Creek
    • D W Tarman for A Soldier’s Covenant
    • Christi Corbett for  Tainted Dreams
    • Laura McMennamin for Winter Shadows
    • Driskell Horton for Pleasant Hill
    • JvL Bell for  Colorado Gold
    • C.J. Fosdick for The Accidental Wife
    • Alethea Williams for Walls for the Wind
    • Kristy McCaffrey for The Blackbird
    • Lynda J Cox for The Devil’s Own Desperado
    • Caroline Clemmons for Winter Bride
    • Jenna Hestekin for Zeke’s Fate
    • Miantae Metcalf McConnell for Mary Fields, First African American Woman U.S. Star Route Mail Carrier
    • Louise Lenahan Wallace for Children of the Day
    • Ransom Wilcox/Karl Beckstrand for To Swallow the Earth
    • McKendree Long for Higher Ground
    • Rebecca S. Nieminen for The White Hart
    • Christi Corbett for Tainted Dreams
    • Kevin Horgan for  The March of the 18th, A Story of Crippled Heroes in the Civil War
    • Buck Stienke for  Devil’s Canyon

    LIST TO CONTINUE — Thank you for your patience. We are working through the 2015 LARAMIE  entries.  

    The Laramie Finalists will compete for the Laramie Awards First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Laramie GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the Laramie Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the Laramie Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    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 all of the Laramie 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 Laramie Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category winners will be announced and recognized at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 Laramie Awards writing competitions for Western Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

     

  • Ann Charles author of “An Ex to Grind in Deadwood” and the Best Selling Deadwood Series

    Ann Charles author of “An Ex to Grind in Deadwood” and the Best Selling Deadwood Series

    Ann Charles Author of An Ex to Grind in Deadwood“For those of you who are authors or thinking about becoming an author [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][Chanticleer Book Reviews] has some marvelous tips… If you haven’t heard of Chanticleer, check out their website. Kiffer Brown and her crew have some great articles, career-boosting contests, and other wonderful opportunities for authors.

    Many thanks to Chanticleer for the help they’ve given my career as a fiction author!”

    Ann Charles, author of “An Ex to Grind in Deadwood” and Chanticleer’s 2014 Paranormal Grand Prize Winner.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • The Chatelaine Awards for Romantic Fiction 2015 Official Finalists Listing

    The Chatelaine Awards for Romantic Fiction 2015 Official Finalists Listing

    Romance Fiction AwardThe CHATELAINE Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genres of  Romantic Fiction and Women’s Fiction. The Chatelaine 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 2015 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 30, 2016!

    The Chatelaine Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:

    • Contemporary Romance
    • Romantic Adventure/Suspense
    • Historical Romance
    • Inspirational/Restorative Romance
    • Romantic Steamy/Sensual (not erotica)

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

    This is the OFFICIAL FINALIST POSTING  of the 2015 CHATELAINE Novel Writing Competition.

    • Natasha Boyd for Deep Blue Eternity
    • Katharine Giles for The Mystery of the Jeweled Box
    • Nicole Evelina for Daughter of Destiny
    • Ellen Butler for Poplar Place and Planning for Love
    • Dana Faletti for Beautiful Secret
    • John Herman for My Father’s S0n
    • Cynthia Osborne Hoskin for The Tides of Fall
    • Frances Howard-Snyder for  A Difficult Woman
    • Jacquelynn Price for  Higher Learning
    • John Herman for The Counting of the Coup
    • Kaylin McFarren for Banished Threads
    • Terri Lyndie for Wolf Eye Alibi
    • MK McClintock for Blackwood Crossing
    • Susan Örnbratt for The Particular Appeal of Gilliane Pugsley
    • Belangela G. Tarazona for Hiatus
    • Mary Ann Henry for Ladies in Low Places
    • Linda J. Cox for Smolder on a Slow Burn
    • Andrea Downing for Dances of the Heart
    • Cynthia Ripley Miller for On the Edge of Sunrise
    • Nicola Italia for Love In the Valley
    • Nicola Italia for The Tea Plantation
    • Regan Walker for To Tame the Wind
    • Kate Vale for Crossing Paths
    • Diana Green for Bronze Fox
    • Kayce Stevens Hughlett for Blue
    • CG Fewston for  A Time to Love in Tehran
    • Nancy LaPonzina for Yellow Pansies in a Blue Cobalt Jar
    • Jennifer Kohout for  Master Of Tides
    • Elle G. Mraz for Love Me Back to Life
    • Natasha Boyd for Deep Blue Eternity
    • Carolyn Haley for Into the Sunrise
    • Eleanor Webster for  No Conventional Miss
    • Andrea Simonne for  Year of Living Blonde
    • Joanne Guidoccio for  A Season for Killing Blondes
    • Ellen Butler for  Planning for Love
    • Rebecca Hunter for Stockholm Diaries, Caroline
    • Andrea Weir for  A Foolish Consistency
    • Catherine A Wilson and Catherine T Wilson for The Gilded Crown
    • Miriam Polli for  In the Vertigo of Silence 
    • Eleanor Tatum for Gray Lace
    • Jennifer Snow for Falling for Leigh
    • Jennifer Snow for The Mistletoe Melody
    • J.L Oakley for Mist-shi-mus: A Novel of Captivity
    • Danica Winters for Smoke and Ashes
    • Julie LeMense for  Once Upon A Scandal

    This list is the Official Posting of the 2015 Chatelaine Finalists. We will begin announcing the 2015 Chatelaine First Place Category Winners on March 1, 2016. Good luck to all in one of our most competitive novel competitions!

    Note from Kiffer Brown, president of Chanticleer Book Reviews:

    We have moved the Chanticleer Reviews Writing Competition Awards evening up from September to April. Our last awards evening was Sept. 29, 2015 when we presented the 2014 awards. We have moved our awards evening up from Sept. 24, 2016 to April 30, 2016 to announce the 2015 awards winners. This move makes the 2015 awards more relevant and recent for the winning authors. However, the date change has given us only six months to judge all the entries instead of the usual twelve months.  But, after this April 30, 2016 awards ceremony, we will be back to having an entire year for the judging rounds for the 2016 contest submissions whose winners will be announced in April 2017 instead of September 2017. 

    Moving the awards ceremony also means that we had to move the conference and the accompanying book fair also up from September to April, which means we only have six months between CAC15 and CAC16. The reason why we scheduled CAC in September was because it was the only time available on the writer conferences’ schedule. When there was an opening in April, we grabbed it!

    Thank you, again, for your patience and understanding! It is much appreciated.  Please do not hesitate to contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com if you have any questions or concerns. 

    The Chatelaine  Finalists will compete for the Chatelaine Awards First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Chatelaine GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the Chatelaine Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the Chaucer Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    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 all of the Chatelaine 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 Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 Chatelaine Awards writing competitions for Romantic Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

     

  • The CHAUCER Awards for Historical Fiction 2015 Official Finalists Listing

    The CHAUCER Awards for Historical Fiction 2015 Official Finalists Listing

    Pre 1750 Historical Fiction AwardThe CHAUCER Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Historical Fiction. The Chaucer 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 2015 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 30, 2016!

    We received an unprecedented amount of entries for the 2015 Chaucer Awards. Due to demand, we will divide the Chaucer Awards into two separate contests for 2016: The CHAUCER Awards for historical fiction prior to 1750 and the GOETHE Awards for Historical Fiction after 1750 until the 1970s.

    This is the Official Finalists List of the Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the Short-list of the Chaucer 2015 Novel Writing Contest.

    The Chaucer Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Pre-Historical Fiction, Ancient Historical Fiction, World/International History (non-western culture historical fiction), Dark Ages, Medieval, Renaissance, Elizabethan/Tudor 1600’s, Historical Young Adult.

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

    • Marc Graham for Song of Songs: A Novel of the Queen of Sheba
    • Daniel K Gilbert for The Eternal Dream
    • Martha Conway for Thieving Forest
    • O.W. Shumaker for  Anna’s Bear -5 Days of Moral Conflict and Fierce Pursuit – In Nazi Germany, 1939 
    • Nicki Chen for Tiger Tail Soup, A Novel of China at War
    • Jim Fuxa for Zizka, The One-eyed
    • Russell Hill & Jeffrey Smith for Mesabi Pioneers
    • Robert Wright for Valhalla Revealed 
    • David E. Huntley – Death Watch Beetle
    • Paul B McNulty for  Spellbound by Sibella
    • Steve Doherty for Operation King Cobra
    • S. Thomas Bailey for Blood Lines-The Gauntlet Runner Book 4
    • Larry K. & Lorna Collins for The Memory Keeper
    • Michael Scheffel for St. Louis Affair: The Adventures of Herbert Falken
    • Andy Kutler for The Other Side of Life
    • Richard Carl Roth for Endangered Eagle
    • T. M. Carter for The Lion of the Cross: Tales of a Templar Knight
    • CG Fewston for A Time to Love in Tehran
    • Joyce DiPastena for The Lady and the Minstrel
    • Catherine A Wilson and Catherine T Wilson for The Order of the Lily
    • Troy B. Kechely for Stranger’s Dance
    • Glen Craney for The Yanks Are Starving: A Novel of the Bonus Army
    • Glen Craney for The Spider and the Stone: A Novel of Scotland’s Black Douglas
    • Leif Gregersen for  Those Who Dare To Dream
    • Kelly-Lynne Reimer for  Broken Glass
    • Amanda Frost for Provenance
    • Deborah Fleming for Without Leave
    • Marina Osipova for The Cruel Romance
    • Brigitte Goldstein for Death of a Diva-From Berlin to Broadway
    • Leon J. Radomile for  The Spear of Lepanto
    • Patrick Gabridge for Steering to Freedom
    • Jocelyn Cullity for The Red Year
    • James Conroyd Martin for  The Warsaw Conspiracy
    • Nancy Foshee for  O’er the Ramparts
    • Susan Örnbratt  for The Particular Appeal of Gillian Pugsley
    • E.A. Haltom for  Gwendolyn’s Sword
    • K.S. Jones for Shadow Of The Hawk
    • Anjali Mitter Duva for Faint Promise of Rain
    • Joan Fallon for The Shining City
    • Joan Fallon for The Only Blue Door
    • Meredith Pechta for The Prejudice that Divides Us
    • Eleanor Tatum for Gray Lace
    • John Hallman for Punic Wars
    • Edmond G. Addeo for A Tale of the Yosemite
    • Bruce Macbain for Odin’s Child
    • Gregory Warwick Hansen  for Pelsaert’s Nightmare
    • Jerrie Brock for Pawn to King’s Right
    • Nicole Evelina  for Madame Presidentess
    • JD Slade for  Last Children of the Valley
    • Jess Curry for  Nixon And Dovey
    • Jayme Mansfield for Chasing the Butterfly
    • Ethel Morgan Smith for Out of Bone
    • Mary Kay Thill for The Uncrowned King: A Story of Lorenzo Medici 
    • E.A. Haltom for Gwendolyn’s Sword
    • Sara Dahmen  for Doctor Kinney’s Housekeeper
    • Joan Fallon for The Shining City
    • Anna Castle for Death by Disputation
    • James B. McPike for The Lost Prophet
    • Paula Butterfield for La Luministe
    • Diana Wilder for  The City of Refuge
    • Glen Alan Burke for Jesse
    • Rose Seiler Scott for Threaten to Undo Us
    • McKendree Long for Higher Ground
    • Helena P. Schrader for  Defender of Jerusalem & Knight of Jerusalem
    • Christian Kachel for Spoils of Olympus: By the Sword

    This is the complete listing of the 2015 Chaucer Finalists. 

    The Chaucer Finalists will compete for the Chaucer Awards First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Chaucer GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the Chaucer Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the Chaucer Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    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 all of the Chaucer 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 Chaucer Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 Chaucer Awards and the Goethe Awards writing competitions for Historical Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

     

  • The Dante Rossetti Awards Finalist Official Listing for 2015

    The Dante Rossetti Awards Finalist Official Listing for 2015

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Young Adult Fiction. The Dante Rossetti 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 2015 writing competition winners!

    The Dante Rossetti Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Contemporary Young Adult, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Paranormal, Dystopian/Edgy/Urban, Mystery/Thriller/Suspense, Historical Young Adult, YA Adventure, and Romance.

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

    This is the OFFICIAL Finalists List for the 2015 Shortlist of the Dante Rossetti 2015 Novel Writing Contest for Young Adult Fiction.

    • Sally Hughes for Bridget Casey: Revelation
    • Philip Carlisle for Time’s Will: Eyes of Phire
    • Robert Joseph for  Long Ago and Far Away
    • Jo Swanson for The Last Rodeo In Kingdom Come
    • Michael Burnam for The Last Stop
    • Kelley J. P. Lindberg for  True Love Never
    • Laurisa White Reyes for Memorable
    • Tristan R.B. for Written in Action
    • Kyle R. Zeller for Knights of the Withering Flame
    • Christopher Allan Poe for Dark Sight
    • Helena Loveland for Ylsnavan
    • E.E. Holmes for Spirit Prophecy: Book 2
    • Maggie Bolitho for Lockdown
    • Tanya Fyfe for Lost and Found
    • Gail Selvig for O.W.L.S. and Other Creatures of the Night
    • Luke Evans for Hex
    • Jo Swanson for The Last Rodeo in Kingdom Come
    • Lis Anna-Langston for Tupelo Honey
    • KB Shaw for Neworld Series
    • Alix Nichols for What If It’s Love
    • Glen Alan Burke for Jesse
    • Ben Hutchins for Lackawanna
    • Jesse Atkin for  The Flying Man
    • Pamela Woods-Jackson for Genius Summer
    • Verity Croker for May Day Mine
    • Robert Joseph for Long Ago and Far Away
    • Aiden Riley for The Red
    • Jamie Zerndt for The Cloud Seeders
    • Pamela Beason for Race with Danger
    • Melissa A. Craven for  Emerge: The Awakening
    • Nikki McCormack for The Girl and the Clockwork Cat
    • Patrick Hodges for Joshua’s Island
    • Michael Burnam, MD for The Last Stop
    • Kathe Maguire for The Harriet Club
    • Suzanne de Montigny for The Shadow of the Unicorn II: The Deception
    • Laurisa White Reyes for Memorable
    • Laurence Sullivan for Rosewall Academy Valentine’s Day
    • Mike Hartner for I, Mary: Book 3 in the Crofter Saga
    • Olivia Wildenstein for Ghostboy, Chameleon & the Duke of Graffiti
    • Suzanne de Montigny for The Shadow of the Unicorn II: The Deception
    • Stephanie DeLuca for Pilgrims 
    • Rikki Leigh Carson for The Princess and the Locket
    • Aiden Riley for The Red
    • Pat Johnson for The Virgin and Marilyn Monroe
    • Danielle Burnette for The Spanish Club
    • Cody Wagner for Camp NO Where – A Healing Home for Gay Kids
    • Michael Beyer for Magical Miss Morgan
    • Michael Sarrow for Mistress of Marrowglen

    This is the Official List of Finalists for the 2015 Dante Rossetti Awards

    The Dante Rossetti Finalists will compete for the Dante Rossetti First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Dante Rossetti GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the Dante Rossetti Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the Dante Rossetti  Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    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 all of the Dante Rossetti 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 Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 Dante Rossetti Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is May 30th, 2016. Please click here for more information or to enter the contest.

     

  • Win a Manuscript Overview for Your RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 Manuscript!

    Win a Manuscript Overview for Your RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 Manuscript!

    NaNoWriMo CertificateThis is the probably one of the few times that an author should not polish a work before submitting it to a contest. Judges are looking for raw storytelling ability and/or originality of story concept. CBR has been contacted by publishers and literary agents to hold a RAW NaNoWriMo contest to search for that next  Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen or Wool by Hugh Howey.
    Does your RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 work have a compelling story? Is it original? Does it have an irresistible plot arc? Will your work’s characters resonate with readers?

    Here is your chance to find out!

    Enter your official 2015 NaNoWriMo manuscript into the RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 contest.

    • Keep in mind that this contest is for UNEDITED works. Judges, editors, and literary agents are looking for RAW writing talent.
    • The number of entries is limited to insure that each work will be seen by the panel of NaNoWriMo 2015 judges. Don’t delay, enter today!
    • Each work submitted will be seen by NaNoWriMo 2015 CBR judges.
    • Minimum word count: 50,000.
    • You must be able to supply your 2015 NaNoWriMo Winner’s Certificate upon request.
    • Authors/Publishers maintain all rights to their works submitted to the RAW NaNoWriMo contest. Simple.

    RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 Prize Package: 

    The Best NaNoWriMo 2015 entry will receive a CBR Manuscript Overview Evaluation ($395).*terms & conditions

    The RAW NaNoWriMo Winner will be announced before May 1st, 2015.

    Enter the RAW NaNoWriMo 2015 contest now!

    Images courtesy of NaNoWriMo. Please click here for more information about how to participate in NaNoWriMo!  By clicking this link, you will be taken directly to the Official NaNoWriMo organization’s website.

    NaNoWriMo Facts and Stats

    National Novel Writing Month was established in 1999. It is also a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that believes stories matter.

  • The Mystery & Mayhem Writing Contest Official Finalist List for 2015

    The Mystery & Mayhem Writing Contest Official Finalist List for 2015

    Mystery Writing Contest 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 2015 writing competition winners!

    The M&M 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 Awards Packages.

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the Short-list of the M&M 2015 Novel Writing Contest are:

    The Long December by Mark Vilela

    The Returner by Mark Vilela

    The Prince Charming Killer by R. Johnson

    St. Jude Without by E.M. Graham

    A Stitch in Time by Ann Yost

    The Bleak by Keith Dixon

    Iced Tee by Cherie O’Boyle

     Blood Relations by Lonnie Enox

    There is Something About Marty by Wendy Delaney

    Not with My Brain You Don’t by Richard Tenney

    Terror in Taffeta by  Maria Cooper

    Community Affairs by Michele Lynn Seigfried

    Prosecco Pink and Limoncello Yellow by Traci Andrighetti

     The Hut in the Woods by VLZ

    Murder Off the Beaten Path by M.L. Rowland

    Ghostly Paws by Leighann Dobbs

    A Stitch in Time  by Ann Yost

    Stabbing in the Senate by Colleen Shogan

    Brain Matters by JR Scott

    Double Duplicity  by Paty Jager

    Murder Beside the Salish Sea by Jennifer Mueller

     Time to Love in Tehran by C. J. Fewston

    St. Louis Affair by Michael Scheffel

    Sherlock Holmes and The Case of the Sword Princess by Suzette Hollingsworth

    Endangered Eagle  by Richard Carl Roth

    Crossing Paths by Kate Vale

    Organized for Murder by Ritter Ames

    Fit to be Dead and Dang Near Dead  by Nancy G. West

    The M&M Finalists will compete for the M&M First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the M&M GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $250 or $500 dollars in editorial services. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the M&M Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the M&M  Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $345 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order as to posting.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    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 all of the M&M 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 M&M Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 30th, 2016 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 2016 M&M Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is March 30th, 2016. Please click here for more information.