Author: kbrown

  • And the Winners are…Chanticleerians take home the Tellables Holiday Box of Chocolates Stories Contest

    And the Winners are…Chanticleerians take home the Tellables Holiday Box of Chocolates Stories Contest

    You can say that I am as proud as a Mother Hen of these Chanticleerians* who won the Tellables Holiday Box of Chocolate Stories  Writing Contest!

    And these stories are available to listen to at your convenience and just in time for the Holidays. And they are FREE to enjoy! 

    Perfect to listen to while wrapping presents, baking cookies, and preparing for the Holidays!

    This Tellable Box of Chocolates writing contest challenged authors to write a “double chocolate” story for the Holidays using the Tellables voice app on Amazon Alexa.

    A double chocolate story is a bite-sized 2-part tale, with each part represented by a piece of delicious (virtual) chocolate.

    The authors were also asked to write in the voice of a virtual chocolatier and add “conversational elements” to their story. After all, the whole point of these chocolate stories is to engage listeners as they interact with an Amazon Alexa smart speaker (or other Alexa-enabled device). 

    They are pleased to announce the winning authors and their Holiday Box of Chocolate stories.

    Holiday Double Chocolate Stories

    It’s finally here! A delicious box of a dozen virtual candies with matching double chocolate stories! In case you missed the big news, here are the winners of our Holiday Writing Contest. All of their delicious 2-part stories are featured in this holiday assortment.

    Michelle Rene – First Prize for White Chocolate Peppermint Bark

    A young boy keeps returning to the chocolate shop in search of a treat for a very picky Santa. But what’s really going on?

    He said he didn’t think Santa liked the last candy either. Maybe he’s allergic.

    Michelle Rene is a multi-award-winning author of historical and speculative fiction. Her novel, Hour Glass, was named Chanticleer Review’s Overall Grand Prize for Best Book of the Year.

    Ellen Lyons – Second Prize  for Timely Mint Twist

    A last-minute holiday order, missing ingredients, and a roaming cat all combine to spell disaster for a frazzled chocolatier.

    “Haste makes waste is not just a rhyme, it’s a reality.”

    Ellen Lyons is a writer, poet, illustrator, and reader. She has previously published stories in the supernatural horror   False Key fantasy series She also writes in many different genres for both children and adults. [Editor’s Note: We don’t believe that Ellen Lyons is a Chanticleerian, but we welcome her.]*

    Kelly Abell – Third Prize  (Tied for 3rd Place) for  Peppermint Bonbon Miracle

    A candy maker faces a devastating loss of business one holiday season, all because two sisters are having a spat.

    “On Saturday, a week before Christmas, I stared out at the barren street.”

    Kelly Abell is the author of internationally best-selling romances and romantic suspense. Her characters are filled with passion, power, and purpose in predicaments that keep a reader turning the pages. Currently, her work The Gamble: Lost Treasures has been Shortlisted for the 2019 Laramie Book Awards for N.A. Western Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards.

    PJ Devlin – Third Prize  (Tied for 3rd Place) for Snow Chocolate

    A chocolatier receives a strange visit to her shop shortly before Christmas, but the visit turns out to be especially auspicious.

    “Once outside I was greeted by an entire row of unsightly smudges, three-feet high, lining my shop window.”

    P.J. Devlin is an award-winning novelist and short-story writer. She lives in Northern Virginia, but her heart and stories are rooted in Philadelphia. Follow her on Facebook at PJ Devlin Author. She has won several Chanticleer Blue Ribbons!

    Chris Rasmussen – Judge’s “Originality Award” for Jingle Bell Bonbon

    A young ambitious chocolatier runs afoul with a local judge, but she perseveres in her attempt to win a holiday sweet stakes challenge.

    “I circled the date, rolled up my sleeves, and did my Thanksgiving homework.”

    Chris says he is doomed to scribble and that his loose vowels are heard daily, in Sweden, where he keeps his pencils. His work has been Shortlisted for the CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction, a division of the CIBAs.

    Veronica Fisher – Honorable Mention for Snowball Delight

    Brandon steps out of his chocolate shop on a wintry night before Christmas and gets a surprise.

    “As I walked to the door to lock up for the holiday, I noticed a rustle in the small snowdrift outside my shop.”

    Veronica Fischer has a passion for telling stories. Living and working in Las Vegas in the world of fundraising, her storytelling skills are used to help spread the message about the importance of giving back to her community. In her spare time, she enjoys writing for younger audiences and published her debut children’s book, Oscar’s Christmas Wish, that took home a Chanticleer Blue Ribbon.

    How to Listen to these Stories on your Alex-enabled device?

    It’s easy peasy!

    To experience this box of conversational stories, make sure to enable the skill by saying “Alexa, enable My Box of Chocolates.

    After you enable the skill on your device, you can simply ask Alexa to “Open My Box of Chocolates” whenever you have time to relax and enjoy a bite-sized story.

    Any Alexa-enabled device will work, including Echo, Echo Dot, Echo Show, free Alexa App, Fire Tablet, and Fire TV. The stories are also great to share with friends and to listen to with the kids!

    What’s New at Tellables?

    In this assortment, Tellables is excited to present Alexa’s brand new storytelling voice. The team at Amazon has very recently released several new speaking “styles” for Alexa, and we’ve found the new “music / DJ” style to work very well for storytelling. Give the stories a listen and let us know what you think!  

    What’s New at Chanticleer? 

    Paul Cutsinger, Head of Amazon Alexa Code Labs, will present sessions and keynote at the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference. 

    • Why Voice Enabled Technology is Here to Stay 
    • The Publishing Industry and Voice Technology
    • StoryTelling and Voice Technology
    • Audiobooks and Voice

    Amazon Alexa and Voice Assistants – Why You May Want to Give It a Chance

    We often hear authors say they don’t have a smart speaker and they don’t trust them. We understand. But smart speakers and voice assistants are growing tremendously popular. Now’s the time to begin experimenting with the possibilities.
    You might have access to an Alexa-enabled device and not even know it. Alexa isn’t only available on an Echo, Echo Dot, or Echo Show. You can access the Alexa voice assistant from most newer model Kindle Fire tablets, from your Fire TV, and from the Amazon Alexa or Amazon Shopping mobile app. The common requirement is that you need to be logged in with an Amazon account.

    There are more than 100 million Alexa devices in use and that number is growing daily.

    The future of publishing is in Voice-Enabled Technology! Voice-driven content is the New Media Publishing World.

    And Tellables will be joining us at CAC20 and teach sessions on voice-driven content! 

    And, yes, I am a proud Mother Hen! – Kiffer, Head Hen at Chanticleer Reviews & Media.

    The next Tellables’ Writing Contest will be announced after New Year’s Day on Chanticleer’s website as soon as we know the deadline and topic. So, stay tuned!

    This is a great and fun way to experiment and learn about this leading-edge technology – and win some cash-ola too! 

    As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions or concerns or, more importantly, suggestions. We would love to hear from you!

     

  • The CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction – the SHORTLIST for the 2019 CIBAs

    book award for Romance Novels The Chatelaine AwardsThe CHATELAINE Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Romantic Fiction and Women’s Fiction. The Chatelaine  Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards ( The #CIBAs).

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

    These works have advanced to the 2019 Chatelaine Shortlist!

     

    • Karen Fitzpatrick – After the Rain  
    • J.P. Kenna – Toward a Terrible Freedom   
    • Jule Selbo – Find Me in Florence   
    • Gail Avery Halverson – The Skeptical Physick  
    • Carolyn Haley – Wild Heart   
    • Catherine Tinley – The Captain’s Disgraced Lady  
    • Catherine Tinley – The Earl’s Runaway Governess  
    • Kate Vale – No Dates for Elaine  
    • Christine Brae – The Year I Left   
    • Ellen Notbohm – The River by Starlight 
    • Anita Crocus – The Sicilian Love Song
    • Joanne Jaytanie – Salvaging Truth, Hunters & Seekers, Book 1
    • Barb Warner Deane – And Then There Was You  
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Bernie, I’m Glad You’re Dead
    • Pat Wahler – On a City Street   
    • Heather Novak – Headlights, Dipsticks, & My Ex’s Brother   
    • Heather Novak – Fire Trucks, Garter Belts, & My Perfect Ex  
    • Ernesto H Lee – Walk With Me, One Hundred Days of Crazy  
    • T.K. Conklin – Promise of Tomorrow  
    • T.K. Conklin – Threads of Passion  
    • Kari Bovee – Grace in the Wings   
    • Eileen Charbonneau – Seven Aprils   
    • Michelle Cox – A Veil Removed
    • Patricia Suprenant – Journey to the Isle of Devils  
    • Mike Owens – Daisy’s Choice   
    • Paullett Golden – The Earl and The Enchantress 
    • L.E. Rico – Mischief and Mayhem  

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2019 CHATELAINE Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries have now advanced to the  2019 CHATELAINE Shortlist.  The ShortListers’ works will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be announced and recognized at the CAC20 banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 16 CIBA divisions Semi-Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. 

    Which of these works will advance to the Semi-Finalists positions? The excitement continues to build! 

    The 16 divisions of the 2019 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners along with recognizing the Semi-Finalists will be announced at the April 18th, 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting entries into the 2020 Chatelaine Book Awards. Winners to be announced TBD April 2021.

  • Sell More Books During the Holiday Gift Shopping Season – a Checklist by Kiffer Brown  Part 1 – Online Selling Platforms

    Sell More Books During the Holiday Gift Shopping Season – a Checklist by Kiffer Brown Part 1 – Online Selling Platforms

    If you are like me, the Holidays have snuck up you!

    Here is a handy checklist to make sure that you are ready to maximize your Online Book Sales during the Holiday Season

    Perhaps you are thinking, “But Kiffer, it is December 8th! Isn’t it too late to do anything about this holiday season?”

    And, I would have to reply, “No, it isn’t dear Chanticleerian. It is is just in the nick of time because of GIFT CARDS!”

    GIFT CARDS and GIFT CERTIFICATES (some useful information)

    • More than 35 billion dollars (billion, not million!) are spent on GIFT CARDS each year for the Holiday Season.
    • The majority of recipients of these GIFT CARDS do not begin shopping with them until Dec. 26th.
    • Gift Cards have extended the Buying Season all the way through the month of January into February. 

    Make sure that some of those GIFT CARDS are used to purchase YOUR BOOKS! 

    INCREASING ONLINE BOOK SALES

    When was the last time that you checked out your Amazon, Kobo, B&N, Bookchain, Smashwords, etc. page(s)? 

    Visit your Selling Platform Pages and Tidy Them and Add some SPARKLE! 

    • Most importantly, do you have the latest cover of your title uploaded?
      • I see this all the time, the author sends me her latest cover (because as you know, I am all about the cover!) but then for some reason fails to upload the dazzling new cover to the title’s selling pages on the different platforms.
    • Update your selling pages with the latest tweaks to the title’s description. Is the description as compelling as it can possibly be? Amp it up! 
      • Make sure that every word of your book’s introduction/marketing blurb (that first paragraph that comes after the title and to the right of the cover) is effective—especially the first ten introductory words. These first ten words are “crawled” by the online sales platform’s search engine whenever a reader does “a search.” If it is a series or you are planning to make the work a series, then be sure to conclude the book’s marketing blurb with this information.
    • Have you listed the title’s latest awards and kudos near the end of the description to seal the deal?
    • Have you updated the reviews in the Editorial Reviews section? Add new ones and author blurbs (recommendations) in the Editorial Reviews section.
      • Sixty-one percent of customers read Editorial Reviews before making an online purchase (Harvard Business Review)
      • Editorial/Trade Reviews set the tone for Customer Reviews – which is (from what I hear) quantity is more important that than quality (number of stars). 100 customer reviews tend to be the magical number.
    • The Editorial Reviews section is where blurbs of reviews from Chanticleer, Kirkus, Publisher’s Weekly should be posted.
    • Or to that matter, do you have anything in the Editorial Reviews section? If not, you are missing some SEO goodness. 
    • If your books are available in other languages besides English, list the languages in this section.
    • Is it time to liven up your author bio? Does it reflect the latest YOU? Does it make the reader want to meet you (like at your next book event?) as someone who he/she would enjoy meeting at a cocktail party?
      • Make sure that your photo resonates with readers’ expectations. A great example of this is Diana Gabaldon’s Amazon photo; it is one of her standing in front of the Stonehenge monument with a timeless black shawl wrapped around her. The Stonehenge background hints at the historical/fantastical nature of her works and the opening of her series.

    Author Photos

      • Take a close look at your Author Central photo. If it doesn’t move your author brand forward, take a look through your photographs for one that does. It doesn’t have to be a photo taken by a professional photographer. It does have to have a layering effect and convey your author branding/personality. If you have a photograph that does convey elements of your author branding and is taken by a professional photographer, then that is even better. Here is an example of a professionally taken author photograph that exudes the author’s branding as a post-apocalyptic fiction writer. Notice that the setting and outfit exude the dystopian aspects of his Deserted Lands series:Robert Slater author of ALL IS SILENCE
    • In your Author Information section, list any other published works that are related to this particular selling page–especially if you have series or multiple titles in the related genre.
    • While you are on the title’s selling pages, double-check that all the different formats that your title is available on in any given platform are available and ready for sale!
      • Print? e-pub? combo — purchase a print book and receive the digital e-pub version for a discount or for free? (Amazon used to call this package “matchstick” )
    • Make sure that the links to purchase books from your website work and do not go off into cyberspace.
    • Test your “Look Inside” feature on Amazon and make sure that it works and that it isn’t just opening to the Table of Contents or the front matter of the book.
    • Double-check your pricing on each selling platform that the title is available for sale on. Really. 

    OVERALL

    Make sure that your information is up-to-date, fresh and relevant!

    Like a well-written book plot,  make sure that each piece of information on your title’s selling platform moves your book and author branding forward and into the hands and minds of eager book buyers? 

    Handy Amazon Links

    Holiday Book Buying Online

    Now make sure that some of 35 billion dollars on Holiday Gift Cards are used to purchase YOUR BOOKS! 

    Happy Holidays! from Kiffer Brown

    Speaking of Gift Certificates, did you know that we offer them for Chanticleer Reviews services? We do! Click here for more information about Gift Certificates

    Chanticleer Reviews gift certificates make great gifts for the writer in your life! And we are offering a 15% discount on all gift certificate purchases from now until December 31, 2019. And we can mail them out in fancy gift boxes anywhere in the U.S.A.

    If the recipient lives abroad, we will send out a fancy email with the gift certificate embedded in the email along with an access code.

    Gift Certificates may be used for any Chanticleer Service or Product. 

    Use this code upon checkout to receive the 15% discount     GCTGIANAT

    Click here for more info and to checkout.

  • CASH PRIZES $$$ for HOLIDAY 560 words MAX – WRITING CONTEST with TELLABLES on Amazon’s Alexa

    CASH PRIZES $$$ for HOLIDAY 560 words MAX – WRITING CONTEST with TELLABLES on Amazon’s Alexa

    Tellables is accepting stories with a HOLIDAY theme for any holiday occurring between November and January 1st in any country!

     

    The WINNING HOLIDAY DOUBLE CHOCOLATE STORIES will be published on Amazon’s ALEXA and will receive CASH prizes! There is NO entry fee.

    Tellables is seeking individual chocolate stories on their My Box of Chocolates voice app.

    My Box of Chocolates voice app pairs delicious virtual chocolates with bite-sized stories.

    The stories in the My Box of Chocolates voice experience run less than two minutes. Each one is narrated by an imaginary chocolatier, using a synthetic text-to-speech voice (not human recordings). The storylines generally revolve around interesting or humorous occurrences involving the customers in the chocolate shop.

    Conversational Stories – a new voice-driven platform in story telling.

    The stories Tellables publishes in their voice app are not “audio stories.” They are “conversational.” What’s special about these stories?

    Conversational Storytelling is made possible by platforms such as Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. The underlying technology allows a storyteller to pose questions to the listener and understand the listener’s spoken response. For us, conversational stories are spoken narratives where the narrator interacts directly with the listener. This interaction can take many forms, but it generally involves drawing the listener into a conversation by asking a question related to the story.

    See Tellables’ blog post on What’s a Conversational Story? for more details.

    Now, finally, on to the Holiday writing contest!

    We are excited to announce the Tellables Holiday writing contest. As with their Halloween Writing Contest, they are looking for stories they can publish on their “My Box of Chocolates” voice/audio experience on Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant’s Okay Google app.

    Here is a link to the Chanticleer authors who won the Halloween contest for micro-stories https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/10/30/tellables-voice-driven-stories-selects-4-chanticleerian-authors-for-spooky-halloween-micro-stories/

    And Tellables is offering CASH prizes. 

    The individual chocolate stories Tellables publishes in their voice app are “bite-sized,” with a maximum of 280 words. Sometimes, however, they publish stories in two parts. Part 1 and Part 2 are each represented in our virtual chocolate assortment by two pieces of the same type of candy. The listener needs to hear both candies in order to get the full story.

    For the Holiday Writing Contest, Tellables is looking for two-part stories. Each part (piece!) should have a maximum of 280 words. Visit the Tellables’ website for more information and to enter! http://tellables.com/blog/

    Voice technology offers new and exciting opportunities for storytellers and readers. Passive listening is no longer the only option. Now two-way communication between the storyteller and listener is possible. 

    This is a great opportunity to dip your toes into the emerging world of voice technology!

    A little bit more information about the Emerging Voice-Driven Devices and the Opportunities They Offer for Writers

    Voice assistants like Amazon Alexa are equipped with powerful speech recognition and language understanding. We leverage these technologies to help authors and storytellers engage audiences in new and exciting ways.

    While it’s still early days for voice technology, sales continue to grow for both the Amazon Echo and the Google Assistant line of smart speakers and smart displays. Consumers seem unfazed by media reports of privacy infringements, so it appears these devices are here to stay.

    Here is an article with 22 Takeaways for Authors from the Silicon Valley Annual Internet Trends Report – Kiffer Brown

    Voice technology offers new and exciting opportunities for storytellers and readers. Passive listening is no longer the only option. Now two-way communication between the storyteller and listener is possible. 

    Tellables has created a platform for “conversational storytelling,” where brief stories are followed by interactive questions. This two-way communication draws the listener more deeply into the story.

    I met Amy Stapleton, the CEO of Tellables, at the 2019 Digital Book World that took place in Nashville, Tenn. The Tellables’ exhibitor booth was adjacent to ours so we met and chatted. When she informed me about their contest for content, I knew that it would be a perfect opportunity for some Chanticleerians to experiment with Voice technology. So without further ado…

    VOICE-DRIVEN CONVERSATIONAL STORIES FOR TALKING DEVICES

    For those of you who are not familiar with the Digital Book World conference, it is mainly a business-to-business conference that specializes in content distribution and platforms that include books, ebooks, digital books, audiobooks, podcasts, audiovisual delivery, blockchain, voice, and other media delivery systems.

    And since Chanticleer prides itself on expanding the digital footprint of the authors who use our services, we’ve found DBW to be indispensable for keeping us updated on the latest in publishing technologies so we may inform you, dear writer and reader.

    “Publishing is at the epicenter of digital disruption.” Paul Michelman, MIT & MIT Sloan

    As always, please email us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions. Or leave a comment below.

  • VETERANS DAY – Honoring All Who Have Served – Books For, By, and Honoring Veterans

    VETERANS DAY – Honoring All Who Have Served – Books For, By, and Honoring Veterans

     

    Current statistics regarding U.S. Veterans*

    • 22 veterans, on average, commit suicide every day.
    • The suicide rate of veterans is double that of civilians
    • The suicide rate for younger veterans (18 -29) is 7 times higher than their civilian peers.
    • The rate of suicide among veterans is 21 percent higher than the rest of the country.
    • The suicide rate among female veterans is 140 percent higher than their civilian peers.
    • There are 1.6 million female veterans in the United States. (2017)
    • No one knows how many military spouses and families members commit suicide.
    • There are 18.2 million veterans living in the United States.
    • 3.8 million of these veterans are disabled (2014).
    • U.S. military is the world’s second-largest (China’s army is the largest) and troops are deployed across the globe.
    • It is believed that 45 percent of all veterans who served in the Middle East are disabled.

    *Sources:

    U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, American Community Survey 2017, United States Census Bureau, Stars and Stripes,  Census.gov. , and https://factfinder.census.gov/faces/tableservices/jsf/pages/productview.xhtml?src=bkmk

    Honoring those who are serving, have served, and those who have fallen while in military service is a tradition here at Chanticleer Reviews.

    With Appreciation and Gratitude to Veterans who are actively serving and have served. THANK YOU! 

    Writing is known to be a “transformative therapy’ for veterans haunted by their experiences. “The Red Badge Project encourages Wounded Warriors to rediscover their personal voice and realize the value of their experiences and emotions.”

    “RBP partners with Vet Centers and allows Veterans of all ages to take advantage of the Red Badge Project’s program while providing a link between veterans of multiple generations.”

    Here is a link to a Seattle Times article by Nicole Brodeur that was published on November 11, 2019, that is about the Red Badge Project.

    Using the creative process of storytelling, Wounded Warriors begin to rebuild their individual sense of purpose and unique individuality.

    For Wounded Warriors struggling to heal the invisible wounds of PTSD, Anxiety, and Depression, believing in the value of their story and finding the means to communicate it to family, friends, and community is a struggle of heroic proportions. Tom Skerritt is a founder and is part of the Red Badge Project faculty.

    We here at Chanticleer Reviews have had the honor of reviewing top novels and narrative non-fiction written by outstanding authors whose stories enlighten, remind,  empathize, and creates a better understanding with those who have served in the armed forces.

    Non-Fiction Works

    General in Command by Michael M. Van Ness

    Michael M. Van Ness, the grandson of “the general in command,” has created a remarkable biography chronicling the adventures of a farm boy who rose high rank in the US military and served with distinction in two world wars as a combatant, officer, and sage observer.

    Van Ness served in the Navy in a medical capacity and shares a deep understanding of his outstanding forebear in this well-organized life story, which offers a thorough, thoughtful exploration of the many issues that arose during his grandfather’s wartime service. 

    Hillbillies to Heroes: Journey from the Black Hills of Tennessee to the Battlefields of World War II – A True Story by S. L. Kelley

    World War II veteran Quinton Kelley recounted his life story to an avid biographer – his daughter, S. L. Kelley, a documentarian and award-winning video producer.  “…it took all of our personal sacrifices to go from war to peace.”  Quinton Kelley

    encounters on the front line by elaine harvey

    Encounters from the Front Line by Elaine Harvey 

    A Red Cross nurse finds herself in a refugee camp on Cambodia’s Thai border, in the midst of the war between the Vietnamese and Cambodia’s brutal Khmer Rouge. The courage and resilience of the Cambodians survivors who serve with her, their beauty in the midst of the horrendous conditions shine through, even as the camp itself becomes torn by war. Harvey draws a vivid picture of contrasts: the abysmal conditions of the camp with the green of the surrounding rice fields, the terrors of the Pol Pot regime with the loyal gentleness of the individual Cambodians who serve with her. 

    Merry Christmas and a Happy PTSD by Christopher Oelerich

    Merry Christmas and a Happy PTSD by Christopher Oelerich, author & Vietnam Veteran

    “A very personal, no-holds-barred yet ultimately empowering discussion of PTSD and its effects on those who suffer from it.” – CBR

    The book has been written in a ‘How To’ format for combat soldiers which is reflected in examples and language.

    “I went away to war one person and came back another, and in my wildest dreams would never have chosen to be the one who came back…I was a twenty-year-old Warrant Officer Helicopter Pilot fresh out of flight school when I arrived in South Vietnam in May of 1969 and was assigned to B Troop 7/17 Air Cav in Pleiku.  I joined the Scout Platoon and spent my entire tour as a Scout Pilot in the Central Highlands, and in that time saw my friends killed, captured, wounded and lose their minds.”

    Standby for Broadcast by Kari Rhyan     PTSD, Wartime nursing, Social Issues

    Rhyan served nearly twenty years in the US Navy as a nurse, her final deployment taking place in Afghanistan to a medical unit run by the British where Rhyan upheld her duties to aid others, while inwardly feeling unprotected and helpless. After witnessing the many tragedies of war, primary among them multiple amputations, she comes home scarred in mind. Her trauma becomes so obvious that she is sent to a special private unit.

    Rhyan’s memoir is frank, insightful, and a powerful reminder of the toll taken by those who wrestle with the fallout of the carnage of war. She also reminds us of the resiliency of the human spirit and the power of hope.

    Wounded Warrior, Wounded WifeWounded Warrior, Wounded Wife by Barbara McNally

    This ground-breaking initiative offers advice and hope to those who are trying to understand and cope with war’s many aftershocks.

    “The critical issues surrounding post-traumatic stress among America’s wounded warriors is expanded here to include the challenges and concerns of military wives and families.

    Barbara McNally was working as a physical therapist when she watched helplessly as a man jumped off a bridge to his death. Feeling involved in his tragedy, she learned he was a wounded veteran. The experience spurred her to find out more about PTS and its effects on those who have participated in war. Gradually her attention focused on the plight of the wives of these wounded military survivors.”

    If you have a moment, take time to watch this video that offers an intimate look into the chaotic and demanding lives of military spouses as they adjust to living with mentally and physically injured combat veterans. Please feel free to share.

    Fiction – Veterans Day Reads

    In honor of Veterans Day: A celebration to honor America’s veterans for their patriotism, love of country, and willingness to serve and sacrifice for the common good, we are suggesting these three titles from among authors who are Veterans.

    Dog Soldier Moon by McKendree Long

    Dog Soldier Moon by McKendree Long“Long goes far beyond the simplistic notion of the Civil War as told in American history texts to accurately portray the daily challenges faced by homesteading families, freed slaves, American Indians robbed of their ancestral lands, and ex-soldiers who face the disrespect of the Union army. Heart-warming and at times hilarious adventures are juxtaposed with gritty and emotionally wrenching moments such as Custer’s 1868 attack on Chief Black Kettle’s Cheyenne camp at Washita… Author McKendree Long displays a natural gift for storytelling.” Click here to read the full review.
    McKendree R. (Mike) Long III is a former soldier whose awards and decorations include the Parachutist’s Badge, the Combat Infantryman’s Badge, the Silver Star, and the Vietnamese Cross of Gallantry (Gold and Silver Stars).

    Tarnished Hero by Jim Gilliam

    Tarnished Hero by Jim GilliamIt is when Kelly accepts an open invitation to spend some time in Guzman’s drug palace in Northern Mexico that his code of “trusting friends first” will force him to face not only the dilemma of a loyalty to be divided between Guzman and Dave Holt, but also of being thrust into a senseless and bloody border war that has more than a few parallels to the Vietnam conflict. As such, Gilliam’s novel stands not only as a complex and intriguing “band of brothers” romp but also as a reflection on the evils of unquestioned authority and corruption.”  Click here to read the full review.

    Jim Gilliam served on active duty with the Coast Guard from January 1957 until June 1966. In June 1978 he joined the Army as an airborne combat physician assistant. May 2001 he joined the Navy’s Military Sealift Command as a civilian mariner physician assistant. He is a veteran of multiple deployments to the Persian Gulf in support of operations Iraqi and Enduring Freedom.

    Measure of Danger by Jay Klages

    “Measure of Danger,” Jay Klages’ debut novel is a page-turning techno-thriller written by a former military intelligence officer and a West Point graduate. Klages experience and expertise is revealed with his believable dialog, details, and operative descriptions. The work features military-trained Kade Sims, and his accountant sidekick, Alex Pace; we can’t wait to read what other dangerous puzzles this unlikely dynamic duo will be called on to solve.

    Jay Klages is a former military intelligence officer and West Point graduate. He attended the MBA program at Arizona State University, where he successfully deprogrammed himself for service in corporate America. He enjoys desert trail running and is particularly good at falling down.

    Three page-turning thriller novels with unlikely heroes that make for great reads –all authored by Veterans!


    More outstanding novels!

    We are honored of reviewing outstanding works by written by authors, many who are veterans, whose stories enlighten, remind, empathize, and create a better understanding with those who have served in the armed forces. We are honored to share these works with you.

    LIfe on Base: Quantico Cave review
    Life on Base: Quantico Cave by Tom and Nancy Wise – a riveting portrayal of the lives of children whose parents serve in the armed forces.
    This book not only does an admirable job of giving readers an insight on military base life for youth growing up, but it also gives an accurate portrayal of life as a kid today. Challenges exist, personalities will clash, and there will always be that one person that tends to resort to bullying to prove that he or she is king/queen of the hill.
    Authors Tom and Nancy Wise effectively use this book, while telling a suspenseful story, to show middle-grade readers that there are positive ways to handle these situations without sounding preachy or admonishing. 

    Love of Finished Year by Gregory Erich Phillips — World War 1

    From the riveting opening that takes place in NYC’s Lower East Side’s sweatshops until its gripping conclusion after World War I, this enthralling novel vividly portrays the desperate times of German immigrants landing at Ellis Island in search of a better life intertwined with the story of a young man and his heroic military service during WWI.

    Incorporating various themes into his absorbing plot, Phillips highlights the importance of workers’ rights (Triangle  Shirtwaist Factory) the Women’s Suffrage movement; and the plight of immigrants, especially during The Great War. Some examples include the use of propaganda against the American Germans (via Liberty Bonds); again, the use of propaganda to boost American support, and the immorality of war.


     Murder Beside the Salish Sea by Jennifer Mueller  WWII, Japanese Internment, PNW

    Brock Harker, World War II fighter pilot returns home to the Pacific Northwest on leave. He’s searching for a little peace once he finds his half Japanese wife who vanished while he was away. What he finds is Murder Beside The Salish Sea by author Jennifer Mueller, who artfully pulls Brock into an intriguing plot that hides the darkest of secrets.


    Wait For Me – Janet Shawgo      WWII and Historical Romance

    The often-unknown role of women in wartime as travel nurses and pilots, as well as the use of herbs for natural healing, add interesting and relative historical content to this engaging American saga.

    The WASP pilots and their active role in the war effort was particularly fascinating reflecting Shawgo’s vigilance with her medical and military history research. 


    A Crowded Heart by Andrea McKenzie Raine   PTS, Veterans, Military, Social Issues

    The wide ensnaring net of the aftershocks of war is poignantly portrayed here — powerful and deeply affecting!

    Raine wisely expands the narrative of the novel to reveal the wide net of war. Willis is not the only victim; the people in his life experience the after-shocks of fighting as well. 

    Not to give up on those who have already given up on themselves is the challenge. Raine reminds us that doing so requires a full heart, indeed, a crowded heart.


    Watch Over Me by Eileen Charbonneau   WWII, Espionage, Code Talkers, Thriller

    In a world of half-truths, crooked policemen, spies, and impersonators, the real question is who to trust. Watch Over Me shows a living portrayal of 1940s New York spinning wildly in the madness of espionage, where secrets and sacrifices threaten the bond of love and the hope of family.

    The Code Talker Chronicles – by Eileen Charbonneau


    Our Duty by Gerri Hilger

    While this book focuses on the nurses, the war is never out of the minds of our characters, as letters and news come in detailing the horrors and heartaches of life and death on the battlefields of war. In the end, Hilger has gifted us with a WWII historical fiction with a lighthearted side and an enjoyable sweet romance on the side.


    The Other Side of Life by Andy Kutler

    A captivating historical military story that blends genres-crosses through time & space – an intriguing story & well-orchestrated action sequences.


    Just a Note from  Kiffer Brown:

    On a personal note, many of my family members have served their country (many of whom have passed) and are serving their country: my father (Marine Corps, deceased), my brother (Army, with us but 100% disabled), my nephew Robert is currently serving in the Air Force,  my dear Aunt Ellen (WWII nurse – she passed away recently), my cousin Billy Wayne (first 100 to die in the USA – Vietnam Conflict), and many other cousins too numerous to mention here.

    This is my small way of honoring and recognizing my relatives along with other Veterans for their service to our country.

    Thank you for taking the time to read my annual Veterans Day blog post.

    Semper Fi – Kiffer 

    My dad, big brother and me.
  • The INCITING INCIDENT:  STORY, SETBACKS and SURPRISES for the PROTAGONIST – A Writer’s Toolbox Series from Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk

    The INCITING INCIDENT: STORY, SETBACKS and SURPRISES for the PROTAGONIST – A Writer’s Toolbox Series from Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk

    Fiction features a problem that needs solving and only the protagonist can solve it.

    In short stories, the problem is often introduced by the inciting incident–an event that triggers or launches what follows.

    In longer fiction, the inciting incident might lead to the problem. This event will disrupt the status quo, demand response, and set actions in motion. It’s a threat that unbalances the story world and creates dilemmas that must be dealt with.

    The Wizard of Oz – Inciting Incident

    A simple plot structure is a protagonist struggling to solve an intolerable problem and re-establish order. Jessica Morrell

    No matter when the problem begins (it’s always in Act One) the problem is weighty and vexing, perhaps insurmountable. If the problem is not immediately personal, it should become so that it will create a bond (connection) between the protagonist and antagonist. (A classic example is the connection between Sherlock Holmes and Jim Moriarty).

    Sherlock Holmes and Jim Moriarty

    As you know, in real-life problems are sometimes unsolvable and don’t fit neatly into a satisfying narrative arc. Across the globe, there are ‘forever’ problems of climate change, financial inequities, immigrants who need homes, corporate greed, and fascism. No shallow fixes will work, though incremental changes can chip away at underlying issues.

    Closer to home, you might be dealing with a job that drives you crazy, but you cannot leave; family members who refuse to reconcile; health or mental health issues that can only be coped with, not cured; or agonizing decisions about caring for elderly family members. In fact, studies have shown that depression can be linked to seemingly unsolvable problems.

    This is why some people turn to fiction. Where love wins in the end, crimes are solved and justice is served, and friends or families reconcile. But in well-told tales, success never comes easy and it always exacts a toll. Often success comes from the protagonist tapping into inner resources he or she hadn’t accessed before.

    Frodo and the Ring – LOTR

    A FEW STORY  TIPS and HANDY REMINDERS from Jessica Morrell

    • As the story progresses the protagonist forms a plan. Now the plan can be shaky, untested, or desperate, but readers need a  strategy at work.
    • Force your character to solve smaller problems along the way to resolving the major story problem. A detective can dig up a much-needed witness or help a vulnerable street kid.
    • Endow your protagonist with specific, interesting skills and personality attributes that won’t waver and make him or her suited to the task.
    • Create a protagonist who is somehow lacking in something he or she needs for happiness or fulfillment.
    • Burden him or her with emotional baggage and needs, personal demons or addictions, then toss in cast members and subplots that distract, undermine, or hinder.
    • Understand how the problem makes the protagonist feel in each scene: hesitant, unaware, outgunned, overwhelmed, weak, unqualified, terrified.
    • Setbacks and surprises should be baked into the plot.

    Oh, and the protagonist should fail, fall on his face at least a few times along the way to the climax. Because your job as the master manipulator (aka author) is to blindside, torment, and thwart your characters. Again and again, so the outcome is in question and your readers are compelled to keep turning the pages.

    Jessica Page Morrell
    Jessica Page Morrell

     

    Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart.  – Jessica 

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

     

    Chanticleer Editorial Services

    Did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, Macmillan, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service. Here are some handy links about this tried and true service:

    https://www.chantireviews.com/manuscript-reviews/

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox article.

  • What is Blockchain? And Why Authors and Publishers Should Care

    What is Blockchain? And Why Authors and Publishers Should Care

    Blockchain is the foundation of a New Era of the Internet —

    “Publishing is at the epicenter of digital disruption.” Paul Michelman, MIT & MIT Sloan.

    Why is blockchain important for commerce and business (and, lest we forget,  publishing is business)?

    Because

    It is a persistent, transparent, and its end goal is to cut down on middlemen, which is considered to be the new age of economicsCryptoeconomics.

    “Cryptoeconomics” is the practical science of building distributed systems, where properties of those systems are secured by financial incentives, and where the economic mechanisms are guaranteed by cryptography. It is the general term for the practice of designing and scaling blockchains like Ethereum and Bitcoin.

    Bookchain by Scenarex utilizes Ethereum for its digital bookselling platform. We will circle back around to Bookchain and Ethereum. But first, join me as I explore blockchain to try to understand this technology that is shaping the publishing industry.

    Blockchain is a type of internet network that runs on hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide. There are dozens of blockchain internet network platforms running 24/7 globally. And, yes, blockchain was invented to support bitcoin transactions. However, it is now being utilized for recording many different types of information.

     

    As for real-world applications, here is one that validates blockchain technology commercial use:

    Deloitte (a “Big Four” accounting organization) recently surveyed 1,000 companies across seven countries about integrating blockchain into their business operations. Their survey found that 34% already had a blockchain system in production today, while another 41% expected to deploy a blockchain application within the next 12 months. In addition, nearly 40% of the surveyed companies reported they would invest $5 million or more in blockchain in the coming year. – Investopedia

    Blockchain is a digital ledger on all platforms. Blockchain apps act as a third party and allow us to trade one-on-one but on a global scale.

    Arizona’s Electronic Transactions Act 2017

    “‘Blockchain technology means distributed ledger technology that uses a distributed, decentralized, shared and replicated ledger, which may be public or private, permissioned or permissionless, or driven by tokenized crypto economics or tokenless. The data on the ledger is protected with cryptography, is immutable and auditable and provides an uncensored truth.”

    It is decentralized. It isn’t controlled by any government or company.

    As we prepare to head into the third decade of blockchain, it’s no longer a question of “if” legacy companies will catch on to the technology — it’s a question of “when.”  – Investopedia

    [ Editor’s Note: In 2020, just a half a year away, Facebook is planning on launching its own cryptocurrency, Libra, on its own blockchain platform called Calibra. Whether are not that platform will be decentralized is a concern—a major concern. Google is also planning on launching BigQuery – with its own cryptocurrency. ]

    Reread: It is decentralized. It isn’t controlled by any government or company that is until Facebook and Google have their own platforms…Amazon can’t be far behind…

    Are you with me so far…? 

    Blockchain =  a block of digital information that is stored in a public database known as the chain.

    Illustration from Blockchain Simply Explained

    Each digital record is a “block.” Changes can only be made to the “block” by adding new information to the end that references previous transactions on that particular block. Each change is called a “hash.” Each block of information is added by a chain. 

    A “hash” is a unique fingerprint for each bit of added information to the chain of information (blocks)

    Rubygarage.org

    WHY, again,  am I reading this article? 

    The goal of blockchain is to allow digital information to be recorded and distributed, but not edited (or hacked or pirated). This is what makes blockchain a natural for ebook distribution.

    For our purposes, we are going to discuss Ethereum, the world’s leading programmable blockchain app.

    Now to circle back around to Bookchain by Scenarex and Ethereum. Bookchain uses Ethererum for its digital bookselling platform.

    COOL TIP > check out Eretheum just to see this new type of artwork called NFT (non-fungible token –NFTs also find potential use in digital art, by helping prove authenticity and ownership.) I don’t quite understand what it is, but the graphic is fun to watch as it morphs on the Ethereum.org site.  Blockchain has given rise to this new form of graphics and art. And allows the creators to benefit from their works.

    This logo joins together the artwork of five artists. You can see this artwork in motion at Eretheum.org @liliashka lead the art project.

    The Ethereum community is the largest and most active blockchain community in the world. It includes core protocol developers, cryptoeconomic researchers, cypherpunks, mining organizations, ETH holders, app developers, ordinary users, anarchists, fortune 500 companies, and individuals. 

    There is no company or centralized organization that controls Ethereum. Ethereum is maintained and improved over time by a diverse global community of contributors who work on everything from the core protocol to consumer applications. This website, just like the rest of Ethereum, was built – and continues to be built – by a collection of people working together.

    As of February 1, 2018, Ethereum was running on approximately 28,000 nodes (computers across the globe). That number has significantly increased in 2019.
    Ethereum is a global, open-source platform for decentralized applications. On Ethereum, you can write code that controls digital value, runs exactly as programmed, and is accessible anywhere in the world.

    Now, we can say that Ethereum is decentralized. It isn’t controlled by any government or company.

    Ethereum is a foundation for a new era of the internet that utilizes blockchain technologies:

    • An internet where money and payments are built in.
    • An internet where users can own their data, and your apps don’t spy and steal from you.
    • An internet where everyone has access to an open financial system.
    • An internet built on neutral, open-access infrastructure, controlled by no company or person.

    Are you still with me…? 

    “…attacks are further thwarted because the cost of changing the contents of old blocks is compounded by each new block that gets added to the chain. When a new block is made, it contains the hash of the one before it. Any changes in old blocks will result in invalid hashes for all subsequent blocks.  In that lock analogy, it’s as though the design for the lock at the end of the chain depends on all the locks that came before it. So changing one lock in the middle of the blockchain means having to find new keys for every lock after it.”  IEEE SPECTRUM

    “Ensuring irreversibility becomes necessary only when you invite anyone and everyone to take part in the curation of a ledger.” This is why blockchain technology platforms run on tens of thousands of nodes and computers. The information is decentralized, thereby making it almost impossible to steal, alter, or lose. 

    Blockchain

    Why authors and publishers should care about blockchain

    Any information (this includes books, novellas, short stories, graphics, photos, transactions…) that can be digitized can be recorded using blockchain technology. This digitized record can be referenced through a ledger entry on the intended blockchain platform which decentralizes it over its thousands of network nodes.  Any time the blockchain is accessed it is timestamped with another block of digitized information.

    As an author, the blockchain provides a way for you to securely publish your book and keep control of your digital rights. It allows your published book to be treated more like a physical book, allowing your readers to own the digital book forever (as opposed to being allowed to checkout via Kindle).

    How do I get my book published on a blockchain platform?

    There are a couple of different companies out there that provide the front end support to get your book published on the blockchain.

    Bookchain utilizes the Eretheum blockchain to create a brand-new platform bringing a refreshingly flexible way to publish and distribute ebooks, based on blockchain technology. Through smart contracts, the platform enables the configuration of the security, traceability, attribution, and distribution settings of an ebook. 

    The first four things to know and understand about the Bookchain platform are:

    1. You do NOT need cryptocurrency (aka Bitcoin, etc.) to sign up
    2. You will NOT be paid in cryptocurrency (unless you want to)
    3. It is endorsed and underwritten by the Canada Media Fund, NRC, and the Canada Ministry of Economie.
    4. It is secure!

    Why are we so into Bookchain?

    We became interested in Bookchain when one of OZMA Grand Prize winners, Susan Faw, informed us that she is now publishing on Bookchain because her books were pirated! Yes, pirated!

    Read about how and what happened to her and her published works here (from her blog posts on Chanticleer Reviews):

    PiracyNot Just on the High Seas  https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/06/14/piracy-not-just-on-the-high-seas-by-award-winning-author-susan-faw/

    CRYPTOCURRENCY – Protecting Your Coin from Pirates  https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/06/29/cryptocurrency-protecting-your-coin-from-pirates-by-award-winning-author-susan-faw-cryptocurrency-book-sales-book-marketing/

    Join us on the High SEAS to the New Territories of  DIGITAL BOOK PUBLISHING

    Sailing – making great time! Fair waves and following seas! All is good!

    What are your experiences? What are your thoughts?

    Do let us know!

    Links to Resources Used and Quoted in this Article:

    I have listed a few of the Youtube videos that I watched while trying to understand this new technology. They discuss what makes blockchain hard to hack and the concept of “consensus” that allows blockchain to exist. Stay tuned as we ride the waves of blockchain!

    Blockchain Simply Explained:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SSo_EIwHSd4

    Blockchain for Dummies by Edureka:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=daQZt_klZhA

    IEEE SPECTRUMmagazine – by Morgen E. Peck

    Blockchains: How they work and why they will change the world https://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/networks/blockchains-how-they-work-and-why-theyll-change-the-world

    How Blockchains Work  https://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/networks/how-blockchains-work

    What’s in a Blockchain? With New Tools, Anyone Can Find Out   https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/computing/networks/whats-in-a-blockchain-with-these-new-tools-anyone-can-find-out

    Ethereum  https://www.ethereum.org/

    The Verge https://www.theverge.com/2018/3/7/17091766/blockchain-bitcoin-ethereum-cryptocurrency-meaning

    WIRED https://www.wired.com/story/ambitious-plan-behind-facebooks-cryptocurrency-libra/?mbid=GuidesLearnMore

    https://www.wired.com/story/guide-blockchain/

    And our own, Argus Brown, CTO & COO of Chanticleer Reviews & Media.

  • 22 Takeaways for Authors from the Silicon Valley Annual Internet Trends Report – Kiffer Brown

    22 Takeaways for Authors from the Silicon Valley Annual Internet Trends Report – Kiffer Brown

    “…the most highly anticipated slide deck in Silicon Valley”

    • SOURCE:  byline Rani Molla for RECODE on Vox Media  @ranimolla

    This information that I am sharing with Chanticleerians has been gleaned from the annual Internet Trends Report, a  333-page slideshow delivered by Mary Meeker who is dubbed “Queen of the Internet.” Ms. Meeker was a renowned Wall Street analyst and is now a general partner in Bond Capital, a top echelon venture capital company that has invested in companies such as Facebook, Pinterest, Airbnb, Twitter, Stripe, Slack, Twitter, etc. Her report touches on every important internet trend that has recently taken place and what we may expect in the near future.

    Ms. Meeker gave her talk on June 11, 2019, at the Code Conference 2019 held in Silicon Valley. It is considered to be the world’s premier technology conference. RECODE has made this information available online with Rani Molla’s analysis via VOX Media if you want to dig down more into the report and to hear and see the presentation.

    WHY READ THIS BLOG POST?

    “Publishing is at the epicenter of digital disruption.”  Paul Michelman, MIT & MIT SLOAN

    “This explains why authors and publishers feel the shocks of technology almost immediately, making publishing content the bellwether for the Internet of Things and the Digital Age. 

    It behooves us in the publishing industry to pay heed and close attention to digital trends if we are concerned with increasing sales and understanding the content market. ” Kiffer Brown

    …Code is where the world’s most important leaders in tech are faced with hard-hitting questions and candid conversations about what’s next for their companies.

    The annual by invitation-only Code Conference brings together a global community of the biggest names in the business — executive leaders and startups with bright futures — for networking and in-depth conversations.

    Editor’s Note:  those presenting include: the VP of Original Content for Netflix, CEO of PBS, CEO of Amazon Web Services, Head of Instagram & Facebook, the New York Times publisher, Chairman of Goldman Sachs…

    Below are the Take-Aways that I thought would be of special interest to authors and publishers. Some are not surprising but it always good to have hunches confirmed- IMHO (in my humble opinion). And there is the need of being aware of what is the latest in the tech and publishing industries since they go hand in hand. Also, there is something about seeing things in black and white…

    Chanticleer’s Takeaways for Authors and Publishers from the 2019 Internet Trends Report

    For your consideration from Mary Meeker’s 333-page report: 

    1. 51 percent of the world’s population are internet users in 2018. (3.8 billion people).
    2. In 2009, 24 percent of the world’s population were internet users.
    3. China has the world’s largest market of internet users with 53 percent of its population (just shy of one billion).
    4. 89 percent of North America’s population are internet users.
    5. 78 percent of Europe’s population are internet users.
    6. 62 percent of Latin American & Caribbean’ population are internet users.
    7. Smartphones are the primary internet access point in 2018 rather than computers, laptops, or tablets.
    8. Americans spent 6.3 hours a day in 2018 with digital media. Up from 7 percent the year before.
      1. Leisure time spent on smartphones has increased while the leisure time spent on computers has decreased. 3.6 hours a day are spent on smartphones by Americans.
    9. In 2008, Americans spent 2.7 hours a day with digital media with most of this time on a desktop or laptop.
    10. The latest numbers for 2019 are finding Americans spending less time on TV and more time on smartphones. 20 minutes a day in 2009 were spent on smartphones while 2019 finds Americans at 226 minutes a day.
    11. Images have become a standard means to communicate. More than 50 percent of Twitter impressions have images, video. Remember, Twitter used to be text only when it started in 2006.
    12. Social Media Usage Global Trends:
      • Facebook usage has remained constant and in an overwhelming lead with 2.2 billion users
      • Youtube has had the most gain with 1.9 billion active users
      • Instagram follows Youtube’s growth closely with 1 billion active users
        • Instagram monthly active users have grown from zero in 2010 to more than 1 billion active users in 2018.
      • Pinterest has 250 million active users
      • Twitter has 326 million active users with 500 million tweets per day (6/18)
    13. Podcast listeners in the USA have increased from 22 million in 2008 to 70 million in 2018.
    14. Smart Speakers ( Amazon’s Echo, Okay Google, Siri) makers will sell about 94 million devices in 2019 increasing the installed base to 207.9 million by year-end 2019.
      The U.S. will continue to be the largest global market with sales growth at 46%.  (Voicebot.ai)
    15. Smart Speakers are driving audiobooks sales.
    16. Google’s smart speaker is “in effect evolving Google from an ad platform to a commerce platform.”
    17. Social Media is becoming the number one “discovery tool” for products. *Remember J.D. Barker’s reminders that books are products from CAC19.
    18. Social Media allows consumers to discover products 24/7 non-stop. Product discovery is increasingly social.
    19. YouTube has more than one billion views of daily how-to & learning videos.
    20. Lifelong learning content is one of the fastest growing areas.
    21. 2.4 billion people are interactive active computer gamers.
    22. Privacy, access, and distribution are major concerns. Encryption and blockchain are options for solutions online communications and content safe.
    This report along with 2018’s encompasses detailed information about China’s Economy & Growth Trends, global trends in Artificial Intelligence, along with global advances in data collection and sharing, household spending, costs of living, population densities,  job growth, consumer confidence, healthcare & insurance, new technologies, technology disruptions, transportation, cost of shelter, e-commerce, interactive gaming, data privacy, cyber attacks, online education, and much more.

    AGILE FOR AUTHORS

    STAY TUNED…

    PUBLISHING IS BUSINESS 

    The next articles will deal with interpreting this information and how authors and publishers can put it to use to increase book discovery, branding, increasing sales, and protecting your intellectual property.

    We will continue to drill down the proverbial rabbit holes to find out information to help authors and publishers determine the best ways to promote their books and brands. So, stay tuned!

    Below are related links from the Chanticleer website that may of interest:

    Piracy – Not Just on the High Seas by award-winning author Susan Faw

    A New Tool to Improve Performance on Amazon’s Product Ads – by Kiffer Brown

    Top 2019 London Book Fair and Take-Aways & Trends by Kiffer Brown

    Creating Audiobooks and Podcasts have never been simpler – Find out how here! 

    Five reasons to make your book available in the Audio Format – by Kiffer Brown

    Thank you for tuning in and reading or listening to our posts.

    Keep on creating! Kiffer Brown

     

    • Got GOETHE? by Kiffer Brown

      Got GOETHE? by Kiffer Brown

      I became familiar with him because of the attachment that I have for the following quote of his when I was in high school. I try to live my life by it. But I must confess, when I first saw it, even though it resonated with me, I really had no idea who Goethe was—besides someone’s name to remember on a history exam.

      Whatever you can do or dream you can, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it. Goethe

      Fast forward to 2015…as many of you know, we named the post-1750s historical fiction book awards division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards after Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

      Goethe is considered to be the last true polymath. 

      His collected works comprise of one hundred and forty-three volumes including Faust, Wilhelm Meister’s Apprenticeship, and The Sorrows of Young Werther. More than 10,000 letters and 3,000 drawings of his are extant.

      Goethe as a young man

      “Goethe’s company could be exhausting. One minute he would be reciting Scottish ballads, quoting long snatches from Voltaire, or declaiming a love poem he had just made up; the next, he would be smashing the crockery or climbing the Brocken mountain through the fog. ”  Super Goethe by Ferdinand Mount

      “His lifetime, spanning some of the most monumental disruptions in modern history, is referred to as a single whole, the Goethezeit, or Age of Goethe.” The New Yorker magazine, Adam Kirch Feb. 1, 2016

      Goethe (1828)

      Some events that occurred during  Goethe’s lifetime

      • 1750 – The Industrial Revolution began in England
      • 1756 – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg Austria
      • 1761 – The problem of calculating longitude while at sea  was solved by John Harrison
      • 1765 – James Watts perfects the steam engine
      • 1770 – Ludwig van Beethoven was born in Bonn, Germany
      • 1774 – Goethe’s romantic novel, The Sorrows of Young Werther, propels him into European fame
      • 1774 – Goethe’s play Gotz von Berlichingen, a definitive work of Sturm und Drang premiers in Berlin
      • 1776 –  America’s 13 Colonies declare independence from England. Battles ensue.
      • 1776 – Adam Smith publishes the Wealth of Nations (the foundation of the modern theory of economics)
      • 1776 –  The Boulton and Watt steam engines were put to use ushering in the Industrial Revolution
      • 1783 – The Hot Air Balloon was invented by the Montgolfier brothers in France.
      • 1786 – Le Nozze di Figaro by Mozart premiered in Vienna
      • 1789 – George Washington is elected the first president of the United States of America
      • 1780 – Antoine Lavoisier discovers the Law of Conservation of Mass
      • 1789 – The French Revolution started in Bastille
      • 1791 – Thomas Paine publishes The Rights of Man
      • 1792 – Napolean begins his march to conquer Europe
      • 1799 – Rosetta Stone discovered in Egypt
      • 1802 – Beethoven created and performed The Moonlight Sonata
      • 1802 – A child’s workday is limited to twelve hours per day by the British parliament when they pass their first Factory Act
      • 1804 – Napolean has himself proclaimed Emperor of France
      • 1808 – Atomic Theory paper published by John Dalton
      • 1811 –  Italian chemist Amedeo Avogadro publishes a hypothesis, about the number of molecules in gases, that becomes known as Avogadro’s Law
      • 1811 – Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility was published anonymously. It was critically well-received
      • 1814 – Steam driven printing press was invented which allowed newspapers to become more common
      • 1818 – Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein
      • 1832 – Goethe’s Faust, Parts 1 & 2 are published posthumously (March 22, 1832)
      Goethe Haus & Museum
      Frankfurt am Main

      Argus (my husband) and I had the fortunate opportunity to visit the house that Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born in at Frankfurt am Main. (Afterall, I am a Goethe fangirl.) He was born into a rich family that was a pillar in the middle-class world of one of the rare republics at the time that was virtually a self-governing city-state.* His family’s wealth allowed him to indulge in bourgeois pursuits such as writing plays and studying alchemy.

       

      The house where Goethe was born in Frankfurt am Main
      A photo of a few books from Goethe’s collection on display at the house where he grew up

      As to how to pronounce his name, well that is a conundrum. I’ve been told about thirty different ways of how to correctly pronounce Goethe and about twelve of these hail from a late night in a German stueble where the other patrons ( all Germans) conflicted adamantly with each other’s “correct pronunciation.” Nevertheless, here is a handy link about how to pronounce his name correctly—at least in one viewpoint.

      And why was he selected to represent the post-1750’s historical fiction writing competition of the Chanticleer International Book Awards? 

      Why, indeed! 

      Many historians consider 1750 to be a pivotal date in the history of humankind–in both Western and Eastern history. There are several movements that shaped this new era. Prior to 1750, monarchy was the prevailing form of government. “Citizenry” (as opposed to being a “subject”) was a radical new concept that was taking root due to the British Colonies in America revolting against the British monarchy. The concept that individuals were not just “subjects” of a monarchy, but humans with inalienable rights spread like wildfire throughout Europe leading, to the French Revolution.  The 1750s brought about a completely new way of thinking about governance. With this came the concept of the right to own private property rather than being “entrusted” with it by royalty and subjected to the whims of the monarch granting the property.

      Liberty Guiding the People by Eugene Delacroix

      Secondly, the Secular Revolution with its scientific enlightenment began to take hold in the mid-1700s as an accepted way to see and understand the Universe and our place within it. For the first time in recorded human history, the cultural concepts of religious dominance and doctrine were being challenged. The 1750s brought us the Age of Enlightenment.

      John Harrison’s Marine Timekeeper for Longitude Calculations

      Next, the first phase of the Industrial Revolution (1750 – 1914) was brought about by the harnessing of the energy of coal and steam rather than biomass energy (humans and animal muscle power). This lead to mass migrations of humans escaping famine, poverty, and intolerance to take place for the first time in history. Railroads and trains, and steamships, as well as sailing ships with more dependable navigational tools such as the marine chronometer that allowed for safer passage across the oceans,  made the migrations possible.

      “Goethe was a contemporary of thinkers—Kant, Herder, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Wilhelm and Alexander von Humboldt—who carried out an intellectual revolution that is at the basis of most modern thinking about religion, art, society, and thought itself. He knew most of these people well, furthered the careers of several of them, promoted many of their ideas, and expressed his reaction to them in his literary works.
      The age they helped to make was an age dominated by the idea of freedom, of individual self-determination, whether in the intellectual and moral sphere or in practical politics—the age both of German Idealism and of the American and French revolutions.
      If there is a single theme running through Goethe’s huge and varied literary output, it is his reflection on subjectivity—his showing how in ever-changing ways we make our own selves, the world we inhabit, and the meaning of our lives. Yet he also shows how, without leaving that self-made world, we collide all the time with the reality of things.” Written by Nicholas Boyle for Britannica (2016)

      And now back to the Goethe Book Awards for post-1750s Historical Fiction, a division of the CIBAs.

      We wish to congratulate 2018’s Goethe Book Awards Grand Prize Winner –

      The Lost Years of Billy Battles by Ronald E. Yates

      Billy Battles is as dear and fascinating a literary friend as I have ever encountered. I learned much about American and international history, and you will too if you read any or all of the books. Each is an independent work, but if read in relation to the others, the reader experiences that all too rare sense of complete transport to another world, one fully realized in these pages because the storytelling is so skillful and thoroughly captivating. Trust me; you’ll want to read all three volumes. Chanticleer Reviewer’s Note

      Please visit this link to read the entire Chanticleer Review of this Goethe Book Awards Grand Prize Winner that also earned the OVERALL BEST BOOK of the CIBAS! https://www.chantireviews.com/2018/07/13/the-lost-years-of-billy-battles-book-3-in-the-finding-billy-battles-trilogy-by-ronald-e-yates-historical-fiction-literary-action-adventure/

       

      To learn more about Ronald E. Yates, please click on this link: https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/04/11/ronald-e-yates-award-winning-author-professor-foreign-correspondent-panel-moderator-and-interviewer-at-cac19/

       

      Congratulations to the 2018 Goethe Book Awards First Place Category Winners! 

            • The Muse of Fire by Carol M. Cram
            • Mist-chi-mas: A Novel of Captivity by J.L. Oakley
            • The River by Starlight by Ellen Notbohm
            • Anna’s Home by Rosalind Spitzer
            • None of Us the Same by Jeffrey K. Walker
            • Behind the Scarlet Letter by Patricia Suprenant
            • The Pear Tree by K. M. Sandrick         

       

       

       

      Post 1750s Historical Fiction AwardThe deadline for entering manuscripts and recently published works into the 2019 Goethe Book Awards is JUNE 30, 2019. For more information, please click here:

      https://www.chantireviews.com/services/Late-Historical-Fiction-Writing-Contest-Chanticleer-Book-Reviews-p57936173

      To learn more about the 2019 CIBAs, please click here: https://www.chantireviews.com/contests/

      Resources 

      *Britannica Encyclopedia 

      ** Oxford Reference

      ***New Yorker Magazine

       

    • The Top 2019 London Book Fair Take-Aways & Trends by Kiffer Brown

      The Top 2019 London Book Fair Take-Aways & Trends by Kiffer Brown

      The London Book Fair is the global marketplace for rights negotiation and the sale and distribution of content across print, audio, TV, film, and digital channels.

      Authors, talent scouts, editors, designers, and digital gurus all walk the floor – meeting, talking, observing, discovering. The Fair welcomes over 25,000 professional visitors from more than 118 countries.

      And it was a hubbub of activity and buzz as promised!  I have attended several Book Expo of America shows, but have never experienced the palpable excitement that was in the air at LBF (more on that below).

      Orna Ross, the CEO of The Alliance of Independent Authors (ALLi) that is based out of London, Great Britain, invited Chanticleer Reviews to join them at their booth at LBF 2019 when we were both exhibiting at the Digital Book World conference last October 2018. Chanticleer Reviews is proud and honored to be a vetted Partner Member of ALLi.

      The Alliance of Indepedent Authors

      Since the Chanticleer International Book Awards receive many submissions from the United Kingdom and Australia, I thought that this would make a grand opportunity to meet some far away (from Bellingham) Chanticleerians in person and to make new Chanticleer friends. So Andy (my husband and CTO of Chanticleer) and I packed up a smidgen of our usual booth and headed to London on the 9 hours and 50 minutes non-stop flight from Seattle, Wash. London Book Fair here we come!

      My biggest takeaway from LBF

      IS that it seems to be much friendlier and supportive of Indie authors and especially so of small-to-middle presses and publishing houses. Yes, the BIG 5  were there along with all of the major players, but they did not completely overshadow the Indies. ALLi’s exhibit space was located in an area called “Writers Block” that was a subset of the Authors’ Headquarters. The area received a lot of foot traffic that was consistent and non-stop. It was established in 2016 is growing stronger with each year.

      And, yes, I was surprised to discover this even after Orna’s reassurances. But, there it is. 

      LBF’s experience was very unlike how my experiences were at Book Expo of America (NYC and Chicago) where I swear, the Indie presenter sessions were held under a staircase (Chicago). And at the NYC Book Expo of America, Indie’s are basically invisible or “sidelined” as IBPA stated in its Open Letter to IBPA Members (Sept. 25, 2017). I was there at the 2017 BEA and agree with IBPA’s decision. BEA granted me press passes to cover the event, and I was offered one, once again, for 2018  but did not attend. And while attending LBF, I was contacted about securing a BEA press pass for 2019. I will have to think long and hard about whether or not to go…

      Now for the rest of the Take-Aways and Trends from 2019 London Book Fair

      “Publishing is at the epicenter of digital disruption.”  Paul Michelman, MIT & MIT Sloan.

      This explains why authors and publishers feel the shocks of technology almost immediately, making publishing content the bellwether for the Internet of Things and the Digital Age. -kb

      The number one driver of book sales is still “word of mouth.”

      An author/publisher should do everything possible to create “word of mouth” traction – that includes book reviews, awards, social media, book signings, book festivals, cross-promotion with other authors,  creative marketing with a unique slant, publishing non-fiction (digitally and print) small pieces, along with finding niches that you and your works will standout. – kb

      Indie Booksellers continue to experience healthy growth at a rate of 5-7 percent for the past several years and this trend is expected to continue.

      This trend is happening at the same time that Barnes and Noble are experiencing a double-digit decline in book sales.  https://www.forbes.com/sites/andriacheng/2018/09/06/barnes-nobles-problem-is-no-longer-about-amazon/#11e2490f44d0 

       “People no longer want to just read a book, they want to immersive themselves in it.”

      Adipat Virdi,  Adipat is a writer/producer. He has worked on various films, TV series and plays, and designed and run the BBC Future of Content think tank across 50 BBC teams.

      Click here to read Chanticleer’s article on Immersive Fiction by Jessica Morrell and Kiffer Brown.

      LBF Trends according to Publisher’s Weekly London Book Fair Daily

      • True Crime novel sales are up
      • Non-fiction sales are busier than ever (keep in mind Michelle Obama’s Becoming and all of the politically related books such as Fire and Fury)
      • Penguin Random House (PRH) dominated U.S. Bestseller Lists selling 38% of the Adult Trade Novels and a major portion of children’s picture books
      • Scholastic sales accounted for the lion’s share of Children’s Fiction
      • HarperCollins sales accounted for 17% of Adult Trade Fiction making it PRH closest competitor

      “Worldwide English language fiction consumption has never been higher.” Amanda Ridout, publisher Boldwood Books (formerly with HarperCollins, and Phaidon).

       

      The best selling book for 2018 was the runaway top seller Michelle Obama’s Becoming (PRH) with 3.4 million in sales in 2018 despite its late November release date.

       

      There is currently a “…healthy coexistence between print and digital books…” – PRH CEO Markus Dohle

       

      Hollywood / Tinseltown News

      Rights and Licenses across all formats, including print, digital, audio, film, and television are up because of the impact of streaming services (think Netflix, Amazon, etc.) on Hollywood’s appetite for literary materials.

      A film consultant for literary agents, Georgina Capel Associates’ Simon Shaps, a panelist on Television and Film Adaptations from books suggested that authors should boil their books down to a simple slug or logline, and then produce a one-page that helps frame the story in a way that a potential filmmaker can visualize it. [London Show Daily – Publishers Weekly Wed. 13 March 2019] – We’ve been advising this approach since our first Chanticleer Authors Conference – kb

      Here is a Chanticleer article about “What Works in Hollywood – the Less than 33 Words Principle.” 

      And the biggest trend news of LBF is…

      Expect another year of double-digit growth in audiobooks.

      “Audio has gone from being a sub-rights format to being thought of very much as a primary publications format.”

      “Given the continued adaptation of smart speakers (Alexa, Okay Google, Siri, etc.)…and seeing our early sales so far this year, I feel optimistic apbout another year of double-digit growth.”

      Amanda D’Acierno, president of Audio Group Penguin Random House

      The Association of American Publishers (AAP) reports that audiobook sales are up a “robust 37.1 percent.”

      Here is a link to our article “Five Reasons to Make Your Book Available in the Audiobook Format” by Kathryn Brown

      In conclusion…

      The bottom line of our scoping-out trip to check out the 2019 London Book Fair was definitely worth the time and money. (London is NOT inexpensive even with the Brexit situation.) We are planning on returning for the 2020 LBF. And, I personally,  hope that the Book Expo of America will become more supportive of Indie Authors and Indie publishers. It is interesting to note that both fairs are organized by Reed Exhibitions, so maybe there is hope. Stay tuned…

      Thanks for reading or listening! – Kiffer  

      Look for our next articles on:

      • Creating an Audiobook – Best Practices
      • When do book buyers choose digital over print and when do they choose audiobooks instead of print or e-books?  Nielsen Book Research Deep Dive