Author: chanti

  • The Chaucer Awards for Historical Fiction 2013, The Finalists

     

    Geoffrey-Chaucer-9245691-1-402It is our pleasure to post the official list of the FINALISTS Round of The Chaucer Awards for Historical Fiction, 2013.

    Finalists will compete for 1st Place Category positions. First Place Category winners will compete for Overall Best of Historical Fiction Genre Chaucer Award 2013.

    The Chaucer Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Historical Fiction. It is a division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    Finalists for the CHAUCER Awards 2013 are:

    • I, Walter  by Mike Hartner
    • Daughters of India by Kavita Jade
    • Crossing Purgatory  by Gary Schanbacher
    • The Jossing Affair by J. L. Oakley
    • Deal with the Devil by J. Gunnar Grey
    • The Romanovs Wish You Health in the New Year by Linda Gorelova
    • Divine Vengeanance  by David W. Koons
    • The Wren and The Eagle by Robert Nowak
    • Wait for Me by Janet K. Shawgo
    • Lick Creek by Deborah Lincoln
    • Strains of an Aeolian Harp by Emma Rose Millar
    • Poplar Hill by S. R. Glines
    • Ford at Valverde  by Anita Melillo
    • Painting Bridges by Patricia Averbach
    • Propositum by  Sean Curley
    • Fort Douglas by Nancy Foshee
    • The Spirit Room  by Marschel Paul
    • Traitors Gate by David Chacko & Alexander Kulcsar
    • Lady Blade  by C. J. Thrush

    Congratulations to the CHAUCER Awards for Historical Fiction Finalists!

    Good luck to all in the next two rounds!  1st Place Category winners will be announced before Dec. 30, 2013.

  • An Editorial Review of “Midsummer Magick” by Laura Navarre

    An Editorial Review of “Midsummer Magick” by Laura Navarre

    The Golden Age of England is threatened and the timeline of history as we know it will be changed forever if powerful forces of Heaven and Hell, Faerie and Mortal have their way.

    Laura Navarre has done it again. Midsummer Magick, the second book in her Magick Trilogy series is not your typical bodice-ripper novel. Navarre exquisitely interlaces the adventure of Arthurian legend, the timelessness of angelic lore, the intrigue of the English Tudor court, the magic of the Faerie realm, and deliciously passionate love scenes in this spellbinding novel.  The mesmerizing story line will sweep you into its world and may even have you wondering if this alternate reality that Navarre constructed for her Magick Trilogy series might just exist somewhere, in some time.

    Midsummer Magick finds country- bred Lady Linnet Norwood, a shy young scholar, as a lady in waiting at the coronation of the Queen Elizabeth Tudor.  Linnet’s mother, Lady Catriona Norwood, disappeared without a trace when Linnet was but five-years-old.  As the only living soul left in the Norwood line Linnet is, for the moment, the Countess of the troubled lands of Glencross, Scotland.

    For those who read Magick by Moonlight, they will know that Linnet was considered missing—if not dead— for two years by mortal time. The Tudor court thinks the worst of her—that she is a ruined woman who speaks madly about being kidnapped by fairies and whose father disowned her on his deathbed. And since Lady Linnet is a Papist in a decidedly Protestant court, there are those who consider her a threat and her loyalty to the Queen questionable.  The story begins with Linnet being led to a trap where her killers await.

    Enter Zamiel, the Angel of Death, son of Lucifer. Zamiel is unique in the Heavenly Host. Because his touch brings death, he leads a solitary existence that straddles the vast divide of the Heavenly Host and the Hell of fire and brimstone. However, the angel Zamiel has Lucifer’s infamous rebellious nature along with his devilish good looks and charm.

    Zamiel, on his way to deliver his touch of death, aids Linnet in fighting off her attackers instead of touching her. His good deed will be his un-doing. He is exiled from Heaven and made mortal for his transgression of intervention. Now it is his soul that hangs in the balance. Navarre excels at introducing the hierarchy of angels to her readers and almost has you feeling sympathy for the devil and his son.  Zamiel’s weariness of his eternal role of bringer of death is palpable.

    Navarre deftly counters and parries powerful entities against each other as all struggle to gain or maintain power within their own dominion. The Machiavellian maneuvering of usurpers of Queen Elizabeth’s reign is brilliantly reflected in the realms of the Fae and the dominions of the Heavenly Host.  The ante is raised when the realms plot to gain supreme power and control over the other realms. Zamiel and Linnet struggle to remain true to themselves as the sovereigns of these different realms scheme to use them as pawns for their own means.  They encounter magic and trickery, subterfuge and knavery, as they fight for their very lives and eternal souls.

    But wait a minute; this is supposed to be a steamy romance novel. It is. The lovemaking scenes are sumptuous, the flirting and foreplay arousing, Zamiel’s gallantry seducing.  Navarre artfully juxtaposes wanton sex with the celebration of true love manifested.  Zamiel and Linnet are both virgins, but they are not unexposed to the vagaries of mortals, which makes their love all the more enrapturing.

    Laura Navarre is a wonderful story teller who takes romance novels to a new level.  Those who enjoy sensuous heat with a measure of  Phillippa Gregory’s Tudor series intrigue, but who also take pleasure in the fantasy elements of magic and Arthurian legends a la Marion Zimmer Bradley will find the Magick Trilogy an enjoyable and engrossing read.  These are not Y/A novels. The next installment, Book Three, of Laura Navarre’s  Magick Trilogy is  ardently anticipated by this reviewer.

     

  • The M&M Awards 2013 – Finalists for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction

    The M&M Awards 2013 – Finalists for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction

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    Once again, the FINALISTS of the M&Ms Awards, 2013! 

    It is our pleasure to post the official list of the FINALISTS Round of The Mystery & Mayhem Awards (M&Ms)  2013.

    Finalists will compete for 1st Place Category positions. First Place Category winners will compete for Overall Best of M&M Genre 2013.

    The M&Ms Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Cozy Mystery Fiction. It is a division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    Finalists for the Mystery & Mayhem Awards 2013 are:

    • Murder in the Round by Patricia Rockwell
    • Blue Virgin by Marni Graff
    • Fatal Induction by Bernadette Pajer
    • Body in the Bus Barn by Judith Pettibone
    • Trudy, Madly, Deeply by Wendy Delaney
    • Rules of Lying by Stephie Smith
    • Mrs. Kaplan in the Soup by Mark Reutlinger
    • Murder Actually by Stephanie McCarthy
    • Tea Leafing by Weezie Macdonald
    • Murder Strikes a Pose by Tracy Weber
    • The Last Dance by Lonna Enox
    • Small Town Storm by Elise Ackers
    • Parchman Preacher by Michael Thompson
    •  Package Deal by Kate Vale
    • Bayview by Penny Page
    • Her Boyfriend’s Bones by Jeanne Matthews

    Now this is something to CROW about!

    Congratulations to the Mystery & Mayhem Awards Finalists!

    Good luck to all in the next two rounds!  1st Place Category winners will be announced before Oct. 15, 2013.

    Note from the Editor-in-Chief: We are re-announcing the Finalists for the Mystery & Mayhem Awards because the first time (July 2013) that we published the announcement our entire website system was down ( due to a  system-wide failure on Amazon’s server which had “multiple failures of the underlying hardware components and we (Amazon) we were unable to recover it….(which also caused) concurrent hardware failures of multiple components.”   

    Moral to the story:
    Always back-up your back-up and then do an in-house back-up even if you were promised redundant system wide back-ups. – Chanticleer

  • POE: Nevermore by Rachel M. Martens – Horror, Paranormal, Thriller, Mystery

    POE: Nevermore by Rachel M. Martens – Horror, Paranormal, Thriller, Mystery

    Poe: Nevermore, by Rachel M. Martens, is a contemporary suspense thriller with a nod to paranormal elements of the Romanticism Movement. This dark and dense novel that borders on horror is told in the first person by a young woman, Elenora Allison Poe, known simply as ‘Poe.’

    The story begins innocently enough; it seems that the characters and the plot are driven by mental illness (even Poe) until the impetus is revealed. That is the hook of Martens’ writing—just when you think you’ve got it figured out, the game changes. The plot twists and turns as it sinks its hook deeper into you. At first, as I read, I thought  that this novel might be another variation of Fight Club or the Dragon Tattoo series. It is not.

    For some, it may be too haunting a tale. The author skillfully builds tension and anticipation with complex characters that are not easily dismissed. The antagonists are evil incarnate. The scary part is that they could be someone you speak with every day, the next date that you are on, the person you work with….

    The beginning of the story manifests Poe’s awkwardness of Poe  in trying to make her way in the world alone, as many young adults do. The ordeals Poe has survived so far in her young life have reduced her to perilously low levels of self-worth and confidence. You think to yourself that Poe needs to get a grip on herself, to stop feeling sorry for herself. But soon enough the reasons for her self-defeatist attitude are divulged and you will wonder how she functions at all and why, … indeed, why she is still alive.

    Poe learns that her family has been accursed since Edgar Allan Poe’s foster father had a witch invoke it. The curse destroys the victim psychologically and emotionally. It will destroy everything and everyone to torture its victim, to make the victim’s life a living hell.

    Poe must unravel the details of the family curse in order to save the few loved ones she has left in this world. She pursues this with the help of a budding relationship with Frost, a homicide detective who sees something worth saving in her, and shares her interest in the writings of Edgar Allan Poe.  Edgar Poe himself aids her pursuit, explaining the curse, and presenting himself as her spirit guide.

    The 19th century Romantic Movement, a revolt against societal norms in art, was represented by deep emotional response to experience, including emphasis on terror, horror, and the supernatural. Edgar Allan Poe’s writings, known for their mystery, their macabre methods of death, and his delving into the human psyche, were part of this movement. The parallels between our heroine’s life and that of Edgar Allan Poe are brilliantly developed by the genre and style in which Poe: Nevermore has been written.

    Be warned; Poe: Nevermore is not a cozy mystery. Ms. Martens succeeds at painting dark, suspenseful, sometimes horrific pictures. It is the type of psychological horror that locking the doors and windows and reading with the lights on will not keep out.

    I highly recommend this book for my fellow edge-of-our-seat junkies—those of us who are constantly seeking the book we ever so briefly fear picking up, then can’t put down in the relentless pursuit of discovering whatever comes next! Martens’ Poe: Nevermore deliciously feeds these cravings along with satisfying those with classical literary interests. I anxiously look forward to reading  Marten’s next installment of Poe.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • BOOKS & BREWS Festival

    BOOKS & BREWS Festival

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    Join Chanticleer

    at the

    first annual

    Books & Brews Festival

    on Saturday, Sept. 14th

    noon to four o’clock

    Boundary Bay Brewery’s

    Beer Garden!

     

    FREE and FAMILY FRIENDLY ♦ BEERS, BRATS, & BOOKS ♣ AUTHORS ♥ DOOR PRIZES ♦ 

    • Rain or Shine – the Beer Garden is Covered
    • The event is directly across the street from Bellingham’s well attended Farmers’ Market
    • Drawings every 30 minutes for PRIZES
    • Meet other authors & writers
    • Chanticleer authors are welcome to sell and promote their books at CBR’s tables.
    • Boundary Bay Brewery is one of the largest brewpubs in North America and has won numerous awards for its beers. www.BBayBrewery.com   Boundary Bay Brewery is located at 1107 Railroad Ave, Bellingham, WA 98225

    If you are interested in  participating in the BOOKS & BREWS Festival, please email Kiffer Brown at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com to reserve your space. Space is limited and reservations are required.

    Upcoming Events

    • September 14:  BOOKS & BREWS at Boundary Bay Brewery;  Bellingham, Wash.
    • Sept, 19 – 22: BoucherCon2013 Mystery Convention; Alabany, N.Y.
    • Oct. 6 – 8: Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Trade Show; Portland, Oregon
    • Oct. 17 – 20: Emerald City Writers Conference; Bellevue, Wash.
    • Oct. 24 – 27: Surrey International Writers Conference; Surrey, British Columbia
    • Nov. 2 & 3: NorthWest Book Fest; Kirkland, Wash.
    • March 20 – 23, 2014: Left Coast Crime Scene; Monterey, Calif.

    Be sure to check Chanticleer’s calendar often to keep up with on-going promotional opportunities.

     

  • An Editorial Review of “Her Boyfriend’s Bones” by Jeanne Matthews

    An Editorial Review of “Her Boyfriend’s Bones” by Jeanne Matthews

    Dinah Pelerin, cultural anthropologist and world traveler, is ready for romance and relaxation. Her Norwegian police force boyfriend, Thor, has invited her to join him at a Greek villa that he rented for his sabbatical holiday.

    The villa is located on the island of Samos—famous for its sweet wine, birthplace of Pythagoras and Hera, queen of the Olympian gods. Dinah plans on joining an archaeological dig in Turkey at the end of summer after basking in the land of the Greek mythology. The perfect summer vacation awaits her. Or, so it seems.

    Idyllic as the setting is, Dinah’s dream vacation is startlingly interrupted on day one of it. She and Thor spotted a body as they were walking home from the village taverna—the same man who they just saw arguing with an old man—is now sprawled on the ground with a gaping hole in his chest. The murder was so recent that the body is still warm. Dinah starts to believe that trouble follows her wherever she goes. Thor goes back into “policeman mode full-throttle.”

    Dinah has also learned that their vacation villa was the home of the local movie star of the 60s, Marilita Stephan, who was accused of committing three murders on a remote beach on Samos: her boyfriend, his mother, and a powerful colonel in the military junta. Marilita was arrested and tried for the crime, and executed later by a firing squad in nineteen-seventy-three—several days before her fortieth birthday. Dinah is more than a little perturbed when she also discovers that Thor is fascinated by the circumstances of the event and that is why he chose this particular Greek island and this particular villa for their romantic holiday.

    To add to the complications, Dinah’s troubled and out-of-hand sixteen-year-old niece, K.D., turns up on their vacation villa’s doorsteps. K.D. adds her own lively dimension into the storyline as only a sixteen- year-old teenager could. The rosiness of Dinah’s romantic getaway is turning as blue as the Aegean.

    Enter the CIA and Interpol, false identification papers, the Norwegian Intelligence, terrorist guns, suspicious locals, and old grudges, secret letters, and “evil eyes” everywhere—all seemingly connecting  back to Marilita Stephan.

    Thor disappears, but his car is found plunged off a cliff. Contrary to what everyone tells her, Dinah believes that Thor is still alive and that she must find him before it is too late.  Dinah doesn’t know who to believe or trust—especially the local police. The suspense rapidly intensifies as she starts piecing the clues together, which place Dinah and her niece in peril as they frantically search for Thor.

    Ms. Matthews is adept at placing the reader into the hardships of the current Greek economic debt crisis as well as interjecting bits of history and mythology into her compelling story-line. By doing so, she captures the essence of the day-to-day life of modern Greeks who must eke out a living in exacerbating politico/economic circumstances as they live and work in the shadows of the temple ruins of the golden age of Greece.

    Feel the Mediterranean heat, the treacherous traverses of the island’s landscape, the scent of the wild thyme, and the ever changing colors of the Aegean Sea as Ms. Matthews’ evocative descriptions take you to Samos. She places you at the local village taverna where you hear the buzz of gossip and feel the rumble of the “Tourkos” F16s as they roar overhead.The colorful characters and intriguing plot twists make Her Boyfriend’s Bones a gratifying and diverting page-turner.

    Her Boyfriend’s Bones, is the fourth novel in the entertaining and marvelously researched Dinah Pelerin mystery series. Readers need not look any further to be transported to adventures faraway.

  • “I, Walter” by Mike Hartner

    “I, Walter” by Mike Hartner

    I, Walter  is a captivating story of valor and chivalry. This classic grand adventure takes you on the high seas and to exotic ports-of-call during the Elizabethan era when a boy acknowledges that he must change his stars and expand his horizons if he is to live the life that he wants to live–one that is quite different than the one into which he was born.

    The narrator is Walter, who at the age of 67 years and possibly dying of malaria – in sixteenth century England- begins his tale of how he, like other boys of that era  who lacked social standing, were “earning coin” as soon as they could be put to work to earn money for their family and find food, too.

    After his older brother suddenly leaves home without notice, Walter does his best to help his family. But in doing so, he learns the reality of what life has in store for him if he continues down the same path as his father, whom he considers lethargic. He has often felt as if he was born into the wrong family. He decides that he must leave his family (now living in a hovel near London) or succumb to a disappointing life.  He decides to take a chance to change his stars. He finds himself in Bristol, where he is commandeered into the Royal Merchant Marines as a lowly sailor. It was then and there that his adventures began.

    Young Walter learns how to use the stars to steer the way the ancient mariners did, but he also is taught how to work with the Davis Quadrant, the latest advancement in navigational technology at that time. Meanwhile, the crusty old salts taught him the survival skills that he would need to survive at sea; they took a special interest that the boy could hold his own if their ship was boarded. They teach the young boy to fight with knives, swords, muskets, and cannons. Trading merchant ships, like the one that Walter served on, were hunted by pirates who are always plying the waters in search of booty–making “sayling” a most dangerous endeavor.

    Walter narrates his encounters with the scoundrels in a way that makes us feel as if we need to dodge a cutlass or thrust a sword in the heat of a battle. Walter cannot seem to escape the threat of peril even on dry land. A mysterious thin man with a hat pulled down over one eye seems to be following him. And even more dangerous to Walter, he falls in love with the beautiful, but to his heart, unattainable Marie.

    Walter engages us with tales of his sea adventures that took him to strange lands and introduced him to new trading goods such as sugar and tobacco along with excellent new wines and exotic spices. As we read Walter’s memories, we smell the odors and aromas of foreign markets. We feel his strength and confidence building as he develops into a valiant, but humble, young man.

    However, all is not glory and honor. Hartner, the author, also shares the brutishness and indifference of the times in the telling of  I, Walter. The story nuances mature as Walter ages. We experience the travails of life at sea, the treacheries of traveling by land, the comforts of a familiar pub, and love’s longing.

    This action packed novel is a tale of noble innocence with a most refreshing, charming slant. Romance, adventures, mysteries, rescues, deceptions, along with vivid descriptions make this novel an enjoyable and inspirational read that will leave you wanting more. This reviewer is happy to know that I, Walter is the first of the series from Mike Hartner.

  • First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards for Sci-Fi, Fantasy, & Steampunk 2013

    First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards for Sci-Fi, Fantasy, & Steampunk 2013

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards 2013, a genre division of the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Award Writing Competitions.

    Sci-Fi Fantasy ContestsThe Cygnus Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Fantasy, Science Fiction, Paranormal, Mythological, and Steampunk fiction. The Cygnus Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    First Place Overall Genre Winner for the Cygnus Awards 2013 is:

    Bennett R. Coles, Virtues of War

    First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards are:

    Science Fiction: Citadel 7, Earth’s Secret by Yuan Jur

    Military Sci-fiction: Virtues of War by Bennett R. Coles

    Young Adult/Steampunk: The Lotus Effect by Bridget Ladd

    Paranormal: Celia’s Heaven by Nancy Canyon

    Mythological: Artemis Rising by Cheri Lasota

    Women’s Fantasy/SciFi: The Maiden Voyage of the Mary Ann by Linda Reed

    Fantasy: Ragnarok: Demon Seed by E. Bishop

    • All First Place Category winners of the Cygnus Awards 2013 competed for Overall 1st Place for the Cygnus Awards.
    • 1st Place Overall Genre winners went on to compete for the position of Chanticleer Book Reviews Grand Prize Blue Ribbon 2013.
    • The deadline for submitting entries to the Cygnus Awards 2013 was Jan. 31, 2013, midnight.
    • The deadline for The Cygnus Awards 2014 was Jan. 31, 2014.
    • The deadline for The Cygnus Awards 2015 is Jan. 31, 2015.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media 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 is important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews writing competitions.

  • Journey Awards First Place Category Winners for Narrative Non-fiction

    Journey Awards First Place Category Winners for Narrative Non-fiction

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    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category winners of the Journey Awards for Narrative Non-fiction.

     

    The Journey Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    The Overall First Place Genre Winner for the Journey Awards 2013 is:

    Christine Smith, More Faster Backwards

    First Place Category Winners for the Journey Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction are:

    • Era Memoir – Unforgiving, The Memoir of an Asperger Teen by Margaret Jean Adam
    • Travelogue Experiences – My Next Husband Will be Normal by Rae Ellen Lee
    • Enlightenment – My Aphasic Journey – by Carol Schultz
    • Experiences – Survivor Clift by Jessica Clift
    • Experiences – The Tutor by Debra Boyle
    • True Action/Adventure – More Faster Backwards by Christine Smith
    • Personal Journey – Leaving Early by Don Waitt

    First Place Category Winners competed for the Overall 1st Place Prize for The Journey Awards 2013.  

    The Overall 1st Place Prize received $250 U.S. cash prize plus promotion.  Overall 1st Place Award winners went on to compete for the Grand Prize Blue Ribbon purse of $1,000. For more information, please visit our Contest Details page at: https://www.chantireviews.com/contest-details

    The deadline for submitting entries for The Journey Awards 2013 was Jan. 31, 2013 midnight.

    The deadline to enter The Journey Awards 2014 was Feb. 28, 2014.

    The deadline to enter The Journey Awards 2015 is Feb. 28, 2015.