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  • SPOTLIGHT on LARAMIE Book Awards — American Western Fiction

    SPOTLIGHT on LARAMIE Book Awards — American Western Fiction

    Image result for laramie wy
    Downtown Laramie, Wyoming

    What’s a Laramie?

    We thought you’d never ask!

    We titled the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs) division for Western American Fiction and all things that gather around the campfire singing a lonesome tune, the Laramie Awards, after the county and city in Wyoming. You know the one, tucked into the lower right-hand corner of the state…

    Yes, but why Laramie?

    There are several reasons we chose Laramie for our iconically American Book Awards. For us, and those in the know, Laramie, Wyoming immediately calls to mind the image of a Wild West town filled with rough-and-tumble cowboys. At one point, the only law in Laramie was “lawlessness. Wild Bill Hickok was even known to visit from time to time.

    Here’s a picture of the man, himself, on the left with his friends, Texas Jack Omohundro (center), and Buffalo Bill Cody on the right.

    But that’s not the only reason we chose Laramie.

    And, yes, there is yet one more reason we love Laramie! 

    The WOMEN!

    Calamity Jane hails from Laramie, Wyoming – a skilled sharpshooter who was born to a gambler and a prostitute. She cared for her five younger siblings in Utah before traveling on to Wyoming in search of a better life. There she found work as a dance hall girl and then as a prostitute at Fort Laramie. It was there that she reinvented herself by wearing buckskins and dressing like a man. She was also known for her swearing and hard-drinking ways, but Calamity Jane was also known even more for her kind heart and helping folks out of calamities–thus her nickname.

    Calamity Jane

    While the men were wrestling in the streets and shooting up the place, it was really the women who brought civilization to Laramie and Wyoming Territory. They established the first school in 1869, served on a formal jury in the Spring of 1870,  and were the first to gain the vote; which is exactly what Louisa Swain and 92 of her friends did on September 6, 1870 – 150 years ago!

    Louisa Swain – she was made of stern stuff!

    Early in the morning on September 6, 1870 in Laramie, Wyoming Louisa Swain became the first woman in the world to cast a ballot under democratically enacted laws granting women equal political rights with men. In the fall of 2008, 138 years later, the U.S. Congress passes a resolution proclaiming September 6th as “Louisa Swain Day” in recognition of this historic event. The Loiusa Swain Foundation

    In 1870, Esther Hobart Morris (59 years old) became the first female Justice of the Peace. She served in South Pass City, Wyoming, which is to the northwest of Laramie.

    Esther Morris "to pettifoggers she showed no mercy." Wyoming Tribune
    Esther Morris “to pettifoggers she showed no mercy.” Wyoming Tribune

    The Union’s first all-female jury was assembled in Wyoming in 1870.

    Later, in 1894, Estelle Reel Meyer became Superintendent of Public Instruction, the country’s first female statewide elected official.

    And the grand coup d’etat was when in 1889 when Wyoming vied for statehood—and refused to join the Union if the laws giving equality to women were not upheld, telling Congress (which wanted the suffrage law rescinded) via telegram,

    “We will remain out of the Union 100 years rather than come in without the women.”

    Wyoming is also the first state in the USA to allow women to own property and sign legal documents.

    Quotes are from the Smithsonian Magazine
    Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/women-voting-wyoming-150-years-here-how-state-celebrating-180971263/#6UKzMfMeCQsmbIIQ.99
    Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
    Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

    {https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/brief-history-laramie-wyoming}

    That, Chanticleerians, is why we love Laramie and have championed the name for our most iconic American awards group, The LARAMIE AWARDS. There is nothing better than the Wild West, Women’s Suffragette Success stories, Cowboys and Indians, History and Adventure all coming together with a true sense of the American West! 

    So, it is with pride we sponsor  the LARAMIE Book Awards for American Western Fiction

     

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award
    Painting by C.M. Russell

    Charles M. Russell painted the cowboy seen on Chanticleer’s very own Laramie contest badge. It is one of many such paintings he did that encompassed the Old American Wild West. An advocate for the Native Americans, Charles M. Russell also helped establish a reservation in Montana for the Chippewa people.

    The Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction Hall of Fame First Place and Grand Prize winners!


    2018 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Living Where the Rabbits Dance by Jr. R. Collins
    • Promise of Tomorrow  by TK Conklin
    • Chasing Demons   by John Hansen
    • A Female Doctor in the Civil War  Richard Alan
    • Splintered by Curt Locklear   

    The 2018 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale by Ruth Hull Chatlien

     


    2017 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Grasshoppers at Dusk by Kiki Watkins
    • Mist-chi-mus: A Novel of Captivity by J.L. Oakley
    • Sacrificial Lions by John Simons/David Simons
    • The Hour Glass by Michelle Rene
    • Away at War: A Civil War Story of the Family Left Behind by Nick K. Adams
    • Threads of Passion by T.K. Conklin
    • Desertion by Michael Aloysius O’Reilly
    • Death in the Black Patch by Bruce Wilson     

    The 2017 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    HOUR GLASS by Michelle Rene


    2016 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Western Romance: Seize the Flame by Lynda J Cox
    • Prairie/First Nation: Big Horse Woman by Barbara Salvatore
    • Classic Western (Manuscript): Clevenger Gold: The True Story of Murder and Unfound Treasure by Scott Eldon Swapp
    • Contemporary Westerns: Improbable Fortunes by Jeffrey Price
    • Civil War: Lincoln’s Hat by David Selcer
    • Adventure/Caper: Hot Work in Fry Pan Gulch (Honey Beaulieu – Man Hunter) by Jacquie Rogers

    The 2016 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Hot Work in Fry Pan Gulch: Honey Beaulieu – Man Hunter #1 by Jacquie Rogers

     

     

     


    2015 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Adventure/Drama: Martha Conway – Thieving Forest
    • Classic: McKendree Long – Higher Ground
    • Prairie: Alethea Williams – Walls for the Wind
    • Debut: Lynda J. Cox – The Devil’s Own Desperado
    • Romance: Kristy McCaffrey – The Blackbird
    • Mystery: Linell Jeppsen – Second Chance

    The 2015 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Doctor Kinneys Housekeeper - Sara Dahmen

    Doctor Kinney’s Housekeeper by Sara Dahmen

     


    2014 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Historical: Rebecca Rockwell for The Last Desperado 
    • Romance/Dramatic: Jacqui Nelson for Between Heaven and Hell 
    • Romance/Comedy: Jacquie Rogers for Much Ado About Miners
    • Contemporary Western: Jared McVay for Not on My Mountain
    • Adventure: Lorrie Farrelly  for Terms of Surrender
    • Classic: Ken Farmer and Buck Stienke for Nations
    • Debut Novel: Juliette Douglas for Freckled Venom Copperhead
    • Civil War: Christi Corbett for Along the Way Home
    • YA: Elisabeth Ward for Wolf Eye’s Silence
    • Blended Genre: Peggy L. Henderson for Come Home to Me
    • Drama: Michael J. Rouche for A River Divides: Book Two of Beyond the Wood
    • Literary Western: Theo Czuk for Heart-Scarred

    The 2014 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Not on My Mountain Jared McVay

    Not On My Mountain by Jared McVay

     


    Congratulations to the Laramie Awards 2013 1st Place Category Winners:

    • Mystery:  Double or Nothing by Meg Mims
    • Action/Adventure:  Haunted Falls by Ken Farmer & Buck Stienke
    • Historical Fiction:  Because of the Camels by Brenda Blair
    • Civil War:  Ford at Valverde by Anita Melillo
    • Prairie Pioneer:  They Rode Good Horses by Dale B. Jackson
    • Literary Western:  Unbroke Horses by Dale B. Jackson
    • First Novel:  Confessions of  a Gunfighter by Tell Cotten
    • Best Manuscript: “Lick Creek” by Deborah Lincoln

    The 2013 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Unbroke Horses clean

    Unbroken Horses by Dale B. Jackson

     

     

     


    HOW DO YOU HAVE YOUR BOOKS COMPETE? Submit them to the Chanticleer International Book Awards – Click here for more information about The CIBAs! 

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    Want to be a winner next year? The deadline to submit your book for the 2019 Laramie awards is July 31, 2019. Enter here!

    Grand Prize and First Place Winners for 2019 will be announced on April 18, 2020.

    Any entries received on or after July 31, 2019, will be entered into the 2020 Laramie Book Awards. The Grand Prize and First Place for 2020 CIBA winners will be held on April 17, 2021.

     As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your American Western readers deserve!  Enter today!

    The LARAMIE Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards – the CIBAs.

    The 2019 winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony on April 18, 2020,  that will take place during the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Semi-Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the first place winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of dinner, networking, and celebrations! 

    Don’t delay! Enter today!  

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

    [20] McDougall, Walt, “Pictures in the Papers,” American Mercury, 6:21 (September 1925), 72.

  • The 2019 M & M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem Novels – The Long List

    The 2019 M & M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem Novels – The Long List

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThe M & M Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mystery & Mayhem fiction genre.  The M & M Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

     

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring “mystery and mayhem”, amateur sleuthing, light suspense, travel mystery, classic mystery, British cozy, hobby sleuths, senior sleuths, or historical mystery, perhaps with a touch of romance or humor, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. (For suspense, thriller, detective, crime fiction see our Clue Awards)

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2019 M&M Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2019 M&M Shortlist. The Short Listers 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.

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2019 M&M Book Awards novel competition for Mystery & Mayhem Novels!

    Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.

    • Lesley A. Diehl – Scream Muddy Murder
    • Susan Z. Ritz – A Dream to Die For
    • B. K. Stubblefield – Beneath The Surface
    • Michelle Cox – A Veil Removed
    • Chief John J. Mandeville – Sherlockito vs. The Trio From Hell
    • Chief John J. Mandeville – Sherlockito and the LIE Mystery
    • Alan Chaput – Savannah Secrets
    • Lucy Carol – Hit That, Madison Cruz –  Mystery 4
    • Mary Hatakka/Mary Ragwag – Tips for Teachers
    • B. L. Smith – Bert Mintenko and the Serious Business
    • Mollie Hunt – Cat Cafe
    • MJ O’Neill – The Corpse Wore Stilettos
    • JL Oakley – Hilo Bay Mystery Collection
    • Kate Vale – Fateful Days
    • Cindy Sample – Dying for a Diamond
    • Henry G. Brinton – City of Peace
    • Kaylin McFarren – High Flying
    • Virginia V. Kidd – Artifacts of Murder
    • Janet K. Shawgo – Legacy of Lies
    • Kari Bovee – Peccadillo at the Palace
    • Kari Bovee – Girl with a Gun – An Annie Oakley Mystery
    • M. J. Simms-Maddox – Mystery in Harare
    • Carolyn Haley – Killer Heart
    • Wally Duff – bada-BOOM!
    • Sallie Barr Palmer – A Dinner to Die For
    • Arlene McFarlane – Murder, Curlers & Cruises
    • Kirk Millson – Serpents of Old
    • Mary Seifert – Titanic Cocktail
    • JG Murphy – Flipping Rich Bastard
    • M. K. Graff – Death at the Dakota: A Trudy Genova Manhattan Mystery
    • Sofie Couch – Flippin’ the Bird
    • Lo Monaco – Poison butterfly
    • Toni Kief – Mildred In Disguise With Diamonds
    • Vee Kumari – DHARMA, A Rekha Rao Mystery
    • Lori Roberts Herbst – An Instant Out of Time
    • Alexandrea Weis with Lucas Astor – BLACKWELL
    • Stephen Kaminski – An Au Pair to Remember
    • Mollie Hunt – Cat Call
    • Mary Ann Cherry – Death at Crooked Creek
    • D. J. Adamson – Let Her Go
    • Jean Rover – Ready or Not
    • Robert Chudnow – Brews and Stilettos
    • Linda Hughes – Secrets of the Island
    • Jane Willan – The Hour of Death
    • Holly Spofford – A Letter for Hoot
    • Dr. Sandra Tanner – Sacks of Murder
    • Gerard Shirar – When the Rules Don’t Apply
    • Susan Lynn Solomon – Writing is Murder

    Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2019 M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem?

    Which author will take home the 2019 M&M Grand Prize Ribbon? 

    Which one will have the chance at the $1,000 Chanticleer Overall Grand Prize? 

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

    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 submissions into the 2020 M&M Awards Book Awards. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2020. The winners will be announced in April 2021.

    Please click here for more information.

    Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

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

  • FEAST of SORROW by Crystal King – Ancient Rome, Biographical, Family Saga

    FEAST of SORROW by Crystal King – Ancient Rome, Biographical, Family Saga

     

    In the twenty-sixth year of Augustus Caesar’s reign, Marcus Gavius Apicius purchased nineteen-year-old Thrasius for twenty thousand denarii, enough money to buy more than sixty normal slaves, but Thrasius is more than the typical slave. Born to a slave woman who died in childbirth and whose name he never knew, Thrasius has trained for seven years as a cook in the kitchens of Flavius Maximus, a man known for his unforgettable dinners, and Apicius hopes the young coquus will lead him to the ultimate culinary fame, gastronomic advisor to Caesar himself.

    Grateful to be saved from the cruelty of the slave trader, Thrasius throws himself headlong into the new role and proves tremendously successful, but an ominous prophecy given to Apicius on the day he purchased Thrasius looms over every achievement. As Apicius climbs higher and higher in the Roman political world, Thrasius becomes an ever-growing asset eventually becoming more advisor than cook and feels the pressure of helping Apicius accomplish his fame at any cost, even his family and friends. His chase for fame becomes both consuming and destructive. Though Apicius refuses to see the price of his obsession, Thrasius knows a reckoning is coming and prays the gods can save him from the man who controls his life.

    This masterful thirty-year tale rejuvenates life in ancient Rome, a place where favors become life-changing, where people are bought and sold, and where death could reside in a glass of wine or in a snake-filled box. The complex, rich storyline, entwines real Romans with endearing fictional characters. Readers will recognize historical figures like Pliny and Ovid, who burst to life on the pages of this novel. Though perhaps not as well-known as some of the other characters, Marcus Gavius Apicius, an overly ambitious man who bankrupted his vast fortunes with his sumptuous cenas and expensive gifts, is credited with the first cookbook and a cooking school. Readers will see the rise and fall of this man who desired fame over everything. His single-minded ambition is contrasted with Thrasius, his fictional foil in many respects. Where Apicius wants his recipes in every Roman kitchen and his name spoken in jealous whispers, Thrasius seeks only to create good food and safe life for his love, Passia.

    Fate plays a major role in the lives of the characters and poses important philosophical questions throughout the novel. From the opening pages, the importance Romans placed on omens, fortunes, and premonitions is evident. Apicius, a man who refuses to acknowledge the undesirable part of his sinister fortune, often with acts with dire consequences, begging the question is fate fixed, or do men create their own? In taking charge of his destiny, does he, in essence, destroy himself?

    Even when he is told that he will have “as much sadness as there is success,” he continues to connive and conspire until he loses everything. He finally gains his coveted position but at the expense of a man’s life and a debt which will take everyone he loves.

    In his blindness to everything but fame, he turns this prophecy into truth, bringing about the “greater failures [clustered] to the sides” of each success. Even the wholesome Thrasius isn’t immune to the question of fate versus free will when he curses Sejanus, a cruel, unscrupulous man. Though his curse takes twenty-five years to come to fruition, Thrasius wonders how much blood is on his hands when the culmination of the curse also results in the death of people Thrasius loves. Has he doomed himself by fiddling with fate? In taking fate into their own hands, both Apicius and Thrasius pay enormous costs.

    Obscene wealth and devastating poverty. The height of fame and the desolation of obscurity. On the backs of many, one man builds his legacy while another prays for freedom. Feast of Sorrow creates a world where curses are feared, blessings hinge on blood sacrifice, and history becomes real.

    Feast of Sorrow by Crystal King won 1st Place in the CIBA 2017 Chaucer Awards for Early Historical Fiction.

     

     

     

     

  • BREACHING the PARALLEL by MWAnderson – Military Sci-Fi, Alternate History, Time Travel

    BREACHING the PARALLEL by MWAnderson – Military Sci-Fi, Alternate History, Time Travel

    A one-way trip from the near future to the distant past forces one army unit to adapt to a life they could never have dreamt. Their flight into history will forever change the future that they know. Once there, they discover they are not the first to make the journey, and history as they knew it, has gone far, far off course.

    As the story opens, the U.S. 4th Armored Cavalry Regiment is conducting an incursion into North Korea during the Second Korean War – an event that seems all too plausible based on 21st-century tensions between North Korea and the rest of the world. But their journey is interrupted by an explosion that interacts with time and space, instantly transporting the 500 men and women from the 21st century A.D. to sometime between 1,000 and 500 B.C.E. Their world is gone – and there’s no way back.

    Their initial contact with a nearby village is peaceful until they are forced to decide whether to attempt to preserve the future, a future they are familiar with, or whether they should integrate themselves into their current circumstances and let future history take care of itself.

    A local warlord has been regularly raiding their village and conscripting young men for soldiers. None have ever returned. This time it’s the warlord’s men who don’t make it back to camp. They are wiped out by 21st-century weaponry in a matter of seconds. It comes as no surprise, then, when a more substantial unit arrives on the scene to investigate.

    Just as the soldiers begin to settle in, building homesteads, relationships, and new lives for themselves, they discover that they are not the first people to travel back in time. Those who have come before are enemies – old enemies.

    As the story begins, the circumstances in which the 4th Armored Cavalry finds themselves in are reminiscent of two classic works of alternate history/time travel science fiction, Island in the Sea of Time by S.M. Stirling and 1632 by Eric Flint. In both of those series openers, an unexplained event transports a location, leaving the time travelers to adapt to their changed circumstances and figure out a way to thrive in the past.

    The setup is a good basis for a Sci-fi. What makes Breaching the Parallel stand out from the rest is the interesting approach MWAnderson takes, by revealing that our protagonists are not the first to arrive and that people who traveled to the past before them, have become the dominant power in their brave new/old world. Breaching the Parallel sets the characters up for renewed conflict in a future book in this prospective series – a pretty interesting set of characters at that.

    Breaching the Parallel is a military sci-fi with a clever twist that both thrills and intrigues. MWAnderson shows his knowledge in detailing how an explicitly military mission would conduct itself in a situation where the mission has changed out of all recognition. Those who love a good military sci-fi need look no further – MWAnderson delivers in spades.

    Breaching the Parallel by MWAnderson won 1st Place in the CIBA 2017 Cygnus Awards for Science Fiction.

     

     

     

     

  • MINOR CHARACTERS – the SPICE of FICTION – Part 2 From Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk – Writers Toolbox Series

    MINOR CHARACTERS – the SPICE of FICTION – Part 2 From Jessica Morrell’s Editor’s Desk – Writers Toolbox Series

    “If you’re going to have a character appear in a story long enough to sell a newspaper, he’d better be real enough that you can smell his breath.” ~ Ford Madox Ford

    Newspaper Boys – New Jersey

    Minor characters are too often faceless walk-ons in fiction. But that means the writer has missed a chance to create reality and complexity. ~Jessica Morrell

    Here’s how it’s done in Paulette Jiles dystopian novel Lighthouse Island that takes place in the Pacific Northwest. This scene features two minor characters her protagonist Nadia Stepan is about to meet. Problem is, she’s on the lam in a hideous, nightmare society and the authorities are searching for her. And she’s an outlaw in a desiccated, chaotic world where danger lurks everywhere and the underclass people are perishing from thirst and deprivation. The government is a diabolical network of agencies that inflict senseless cruelty on most of its citizens while the one percent live in luxury.

    The first character Nadia will meet for only a few minutes, the second one actually saves her and she spends maybe 5 minutes with him. Nadia’s trying to bluff her way out of capture–something she’s good at. At least so far.

    Notice how Jiles instills them with just enough realism to underline their purpose. Notice how she manages this trick with only a few economical words.

    Okay. The officer had tissue-engineered jaws square as a brick and eyes of two different colors and a scorpion tattoo on his neck. She saw him hesitate and so she turned and walked away down the narrow street and the biscuit-colored buildings of concrete whose dim and broken windows stared at each other across the pavement.

    A hand shut on her elbow and shoved her forward. Nadia turned. A stout Forensics officer stared straight ahead and pushed her on. His gray hair shone short and clean under an old-fashioned watch cap with a bill and his body smelled of sweat and hot uniform cloth. She started to say something, to invent an objection and a story but he said Shut up. He was not much taller than she was but there was something about him of that proctor in high school so long ago but more unwavering and quiet.

    Here are some tips for making minor characters count:

    •  Anchor them to a time and place–a street cop, a waitress, a lounge singer, a Wall Street executive.
    •  Give them at least one memorable characteristic. Mismatched eyes. Purple hair. A synthetic smile. Nasty yellow teeth. Vomit breath.
    •  Create an interaction, however brief–a taxi ride, an insult or accusation, asking for directions, buying a coffee.

    Nadia sneaks into the Ritz Carlton and makes it to the elevator. A guard came up. His uniform was sweaty and the hem of his pants legs were leaking threads like a fringe. He smiled at her.

    All right, all right, he said. What floor?

    •  Don’t worry about introducing them–they can simply appear.

    Emergency workers in orange coveralls came running through the dust scrim and shouted at her to go back but she walked on toward them. The telephone poles were down and electrical wires curled in the rubble.

    • Imbue them with meaning to your protagonist. In Nadia’s world—guards, troops, cops are the enemy. And they’re everywhere.
    • Give them a voice if possible.

    In a crowd of people who had lined up for something she saw a woman with a toddler in one arm.

    Cute kid! Nadia said and slipped the badge into the toddler’s baggy pants.

    The woman glared at her. Get one of your own, she said.

    Jessica suggests:

    • Pretend that you’re walking into a room and seeing your character for the first time.
    • What are your first impressions? 
    •  Can you feel the force of his or her personality? Does he or she remind you of a celebrity? Or someone you know?
    • It’s not all about the specifics of appearances—some people arrive on the scene full of confidence, some are hesitant or nervous. Why? Some people stand erect, some slouch. Some have lovely voice qualities, some people bray. Some wear too much cologne, some smell of fresh air or machine oil.  Use clothes, setting, and possessions, including large possessions such as cars to reveal characters.

    What to AVOID! 

    Avoid thumbnail sketches or police blotter descriptions whenever a new character steps into your book.

    (The suspect was a Latino male, 6 feet, medium build, scar on the left cheek, a tattoo of a snake on the right shoulder,  wearing a black jacket, jeans, and sneakers).

    This technique tends to feel contrived especially if used too often. 

    Also, a character doesn’t need to be described all at once, you can layer his or her appearance into the story in increments.

    Avoid heavy-handed effects and characterizations. You want enough nuance to make the reader pay close attention and to enjoy discerning subtle clues. Find ways to insert subtext—the unspoken, between-the-lines innuendo.

    Avoid piling it on. Here is an example of what not to do:

    “Allison, a 30-something, 5 foot 8 redhead, with heavily-mascaraed blue eyes and legs for days strolled into the restaurant her green eyes flashing. Her hair was shoulder-length, her figure striking, her fingernails painted a garish purple. She wore what looked like a real mink jacket over a tight, black dress and teetered on dangerously high heels.”

    Kate Pierson of the B52s

    A character doesn’t need to be described all at once. Instead, try to layer details in throughout the story in increments—as one might adjust the seasonings while cooking. It is better to err on the side of less than too much. You can always add a little more “spice” if needed…

    Here is the link to Part One of MINOR CHARACTERS – the SPICE of FICTION

    https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/06/24/minor-characters-the-spice-of-fiction-part-one-from-jessica-morrells-editors-desk-writers-toolbox-series/

    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. 

     

     

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

    And that 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, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, etc.). If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com.

    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!

  • The 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction Long List – The CIBAs

    The 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction Long List – The CIBAs

    The Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).

     

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. We will put books about true and inspiring stories to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2019 JOURNEY Shortlist. The Short Listers will for the  Quarter-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be selected from the Quarter-Finalists. The SemiFinalists will compete for the limited First Place Category Winners in the final rounds of judging. The Semi-Finalists and the First Place Category Winners, along with the division grand prize winners, will be announced at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction

    Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.

    • Susan Murphy – Toppled World
    • Barbara Clarke – The Opposite of Hate: A Memoir
    • Charles C McCormack – Hatching Charlie: A Quest for Happiness and Meaning
    • Eva Doherty Gremmert – Our Time To Dance
    • Charles C McCormack – Hatching Charlie: A Quest for Happiness and Meaning
    • Rod Baker – I Need My Yacht by Friday – True Tales from the Boat Repair Yard
    • Lisa Dailey – Square Up
    • Tracee Dunblazier – Heal Your Soul History- Activate the True Power of Your Shadow
    • Juliet Cutler – Among the Maasai
    • Tyler R Grindstaff – Room To Roam
    • Chris Register – Conversations With US – Great Lakes States
    • Rebecca Faye Smith Galli – Rethinking Possible: A Memoir of Resilience
    • Kate Kaufmann – Do You Have Kids? Life When the Answer is No
    • Linda Gartz – Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
    • Anna Carner – Blossom ~ The Wild Ambassador of Tewksbury
    • Anthony Delauney – Owning the Dash
    • Maya Castro – The Bubble: Everything I Learned as a Target of the Political, and Often Corrupt, World of Youth Sports
    • J. Bronson Haley – The Depth of Grace: Finding Hope at Rock Bottom
    • Ted Sheppard/T.S. Lewis – The Why of War: An Unorthodox Soldier’s Memoirs
    • Nikki West – The Odyssey of the Chameleon
    • Jean-Philippe Soul? – Dancing With Death: An Epic and Inspiring Travel Adventure
    • Julie MacNeil – The 50-Year Secret
    • David A. Bossert – Kem Weber: Mid-Century Furniture Designs for The Disney Studios
    • Nina Norstrom – Not a Blueprint It’s the Shoe Prints that Matter / A Journey Through Toxic Relationships
    • Gordon Cross, Robert Fowler, Ted Neill – Finding St. Lo: A Memoir of War & Family
    • Ted Neill – Two Years of Wonder
    • Anthony Suarez – Politically Indicted: The Real Story Behind the Jersey Sting
    • Julie L. Seely – Skinny House -A Memoir of Family
    • Francisco Silva – The Crossroads of Europe: Home Beneath our Feet
    • Dena Moes – The Buddha Sat Right Here: A Family Odyssey Through India and Nepal
    • Ryan M. Chukuske – Bigfoot 200: Because, You Know, Why the #@&% Not?
    • Laureen Pittman – The Lies That Bind: An Adoptee’s Journey Through Rejection, Redirection, DNA, and Discovery
    • Nancy Canyon – STRUCK: A Memoir
    • Carol E. Anderson – You Can’t Buy Love Like That: Growing Up Gay in the Sixties
    • Patrick Hogan – Silent Spring – Deadly Autumn of the Vietnam War
    • Donna Hill – Yes, The World Is Round
    • Andy Chaleff – The Last Letter
    • Christie Musso Bruce – Hope Knows Your Name
    • John Egenes – Man & Horse: The Long Ride Across America
    • Whitney Ellenby – Autism Uncensored: Pulling Back the Curtain
    • Paula Forget – Guided to the Higher Realms: a Personal Journey of Ascension through Meditation
    • Lance Brewer – Back Story Alaska
    • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
    • David Wienir – Amsterdam Exposed

    Congratulations to Janice S. Ellis, Ph.d. whose work From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream took home the Grand Prize for the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards

    Journey Award Winners from Left to Right, Dennis Clausen, Sean Dwyer, Grand Prize winner Janice Ellis, Cheryl Hughes Musick, Kayce Stevens Hughlett

    Here is the link to the 2018 Journey Book Award Winners: https://www.chantireviews.com/2019/04/30/journey-book-awards-for-narrative-non-fiction-the-grand-prize-winner-and-first-place-category-winners-2018-cibas/

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    We are now accepting entries into the 2020 Journey Book Awards, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

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

  • HARD CIDER by Barbara Stark-Nemon – Women’s Literature, Literary, Women’s Fiction

    HARD CIDER by Barbara Stark-Nemon – Women’s Literature, Literary, Women’s Fiction

     

    Somerset Grand Prize Winner Badge for Hard Cider by Barbara A Stark-Nemon

    Abbie Rose Stone is a woman determined to follow her newly discovered dream of producing her own craft hard apple cider while navigating the ups and downs of family life with her grown sons and husband.

    Abbie Rose knows how to deal with adversity, and dives headfirst into this new chapter of her life with energy and passion. She describes her early adulthood years of infertility struggles and the hardscrabble way she built her young family through invasive medical procedures, a surrogate attempt, and adoption barriers.

    After finishing a successful career in education and raising her three sons, Abbie Rose now sees an opportunity to create a new segment of her life’s work in a blossoming business venture. She’s set to take on this new venture by herself, determined to succeed, with or without her husband’s support. Yet, while she lays out her meticulous plans for her cider business, life keeps happening around her, attempting to derail Abbie Rose at every turn.

    Hard Cider is a well-researched second novel for Stark-Nemon, providing intricate details on everything from orchard planning and cider creation to knitted handicrafts. Stark-Nemon leaves no stone unturned and is meticulous with her descriptions of the lands and seasons of Michigan. So much so, that readers may leave this story ready to travel to this Midwest region and will find familiarity in the real-life scenes based on her elaborate imagery.

    The story builds slowly, relying upon richly descriptive settings to create the Stone family and the world in which they live. The tidbits of information presented about infertility, a shocking house-fire, parenting a troubled child, and marital woes are intriguing, and some may find, too brief, leaving the reader wanting more. Which isn’t altogether a bad thing. In fact, the strength of this work is that the reader is left wanting more, imagining what might happen next for this cast of characters we’re not quite ready to leave behind.

    A central theme of this down-to-earth story is the word new. New business ventures, new life changes, new family mixed with old, and new lives for the Stone family. Abbie Rose handles each of these life-altering adaptions with courage and a reflecting thoughtfulness. She teaches those around her what it means to manage life with a grace we can all hope to emulate.

    All in all, Hard Cider is a thoughtful literary novel of one woman and her ambitions to rise above what life has handed her to create an experience of beauty, one that is formed not void of hardship, but despite it. Recommended.

    Hard Cider won Grand Prize in the CIBA 2018 Somerset Awards for Literary Fiction.

     

  • The SINS of RACHEL SIMS by Dennis M. Clausen – Absurdist Fiction, Historical Fiction, Psychological

    The SINS of RACHEL SIMS by Dennis M. Clausen – Absurdist Fiction, Historical Fiction, Psychological

    With a nod to Nathaniel Hawthorne and the accused adulteress Hester Prynne in his renowned literary classic, The Scarlet Letter, Dennis Clausen sheds a familiar light on the central character in the multi-faceted psychological tale The Sins of Rachel Sims. In this intriguing two-fold drama, a desperate young woman searches for her own true identity while simultaneously unraveling the mystery behind a woman’s disappearance from decades in the past.

    In May of 1952, the dark-haired Midwestern beauty Rachel Sims mysteriously disappears from the haunting riverbanks of Hodges Island. While gossip mongers spout that the immoral young wife ran off with a well-dressed gentleman from Iowa, the local cemetery caretaker, “Crazy Charlie,” insists he sees Rachel, aka “The Lilac Lady,” walking the island on quiet spring evenings.

    Some twenty years later, Laura Fielding, a graduate student at the University of Minnesota, begins to question who she really is when she stumbles upon an incriminating letter that suggests the couple that raised her are not her biological parents, and the three have been living with stolen identities. The startling information gives Laura a pause and reasons to question her broken relationships and a diagnosed bonding disorder.

    The upheaval triggers her obsessive need to uncover the truth. With the help of eccentric psychiatrist Ned Finley and his friend Aurther Schlepler, a proven psychic who’d helped police with difficult cases – though now a patient in the Farmington Mental Hospital – Laura attempts to find answers about her past and explore the secrets of her childhood memory. Through a combination of regressive hypnosis, a psychic’s intuition, professional insight, and Laura’s own detective work, a winding journey leads her to the area of Point Tyson and reveals plausible a connection to the vanishing Rachel Sims.

    Far beyond a typical cloak-and-dagger rendering, Clausen weaves a more subtle, yet palpable essence of evil lurking in the shadows of this double-edged story. From threatening messages warning characters to “stay away” to the heated glow of a lit cigarette in the dark, Clausen expertly gives his readers nuances of suspense that serve to heighten the drama and keep us glued to the page.

    Through a detailed narrative, Clausen creates an artful balance of people and place. Here Laura’s investigation takes her on a circuitous path showcasing both beauty and danger, from the natural Hodges Island environment where fragrant lilacs bloom amidst an overgrowth covering hidden death traps.

    Legend maintains Hodges Island was inhabited by warrior spirits and “Heaven’s Outcasts” and Laura needs help to unravel this mystery along with the deep secrets of the puritanical church community and the self-righteous male-dominated religious enclave attempting to hide its own sins. To Laura’s benefit, an eclectic group of die-hard locals including – but not limited to – record clerks, diner patrons, and gravestone cutters offer bits of information to help her piece the puzzle together.

    The plot is moved at a steady pace, with action going back and forth between the past and present. A recurring dream from Laura’s childhood serves as an essential connector for these two timeframes. While she contemplates old photographs or finds hidden Bible inscriptions, the feelings of déjà vu are always with her and enhanced in the text with Laura’s italicized thoughts and feelings about her past and the meaning behind the newly found discoveries.

    Like the regressive therapy used to tap into Laura’s childhood, Clausen’s tale revisits a once-thriving rural community ensconced in a history shadowed by lies and deceit. Above all, it proves a well-crafted, compelling read for those drawn to intricate layers of mystery that confront long-buried secrets.

    The Sins of Rachel Sims by Dennis Clausen was Shortlisted in the 2017 CIBAs, in the M&M  Awards for Mystery Novels.

     

     

  • The 2019 CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Long List – the CIBAs

    The 2019 CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Long List – the CIBAs

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

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

    CYGNUS Book Awards Alumni – The Stakes Are Out of This World! 

    Bennett R. Coles, a CYGNUS Grand Prize award winner for VIRTUES OF WAR, his debut novel, landed a sweet 3 book deal from Titan UK and he has just landed another from Harper Collins Voyager for his science fiction works.

    Bennett Coles CYGNUS Grand Prize for VIRTUES of WAR (2013)

    We love having the CYGNUS awards and Chanticleer quotes on the covers! #justsaying

    Virtues of War

    CYGNUS 1st Place Winners CHILDREN of the FIFTH SUN and IT TAKES DEATH to REACH a STAR by Gareth Worthington and Stu Jones were picked up by VESUVIAN Media Group.

    Please email us about your work’s progress! We love to brag about CYGNUS Award-Winning Science Fiction

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2019 Cygnus Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2019 Cygnus Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Quarter-Finalist positions. The Quarter Finalist 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. 

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2019 Cygnus Book Awards novel competition for Science Fiction!

    Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.

    • Lawrence Brown – David: Savakerrva, Vol. 1
    • Mart Sander – The Goddess Of the Devil
    • Jim Cronin – Aeon Rises
    • William X. Adams – Intelligent Things
    • Erick Mars & Mike Wood – A Legacy of Wrath
    • Richard Mann – Purpose
    • Brett A. Lawrence – Shadow Seers
    • Callie Smith and Maura Smith – Fort Snow
    • Andrew Lucas McIlroy – Earthling
    • Charis Himeda – CRISPR Evolution
    • Paul Ian Cross – The Lights of Time
    • Jenn Lees – Stolen Time: Community Chronicles Book 2
    • Robert M. Kerns – It Ain’t Over…
    • J. I. Rogers – The Korpes Agenda
    • D. D. Wolf – Orchids Ablaze
    • Bryan K. Prosek – Paradoxal
    • William T. Kenny – The Conscious Whole
    • Alison Lyke – Forever People
    • Paul Werner – Mustang Bettie
    • V.L. Arias – The Expiration Date
    • Adam Boostrom – Athena’s Choice
    • Monica Harte – San Francisco
    • Jay Ashkinos – Hypergiant – Compendium One
    • Rey Clark – Titan Code: Dawn of Genesis
    • Trever Bierschbach – Embers of Liberty
    • Tim Cole – Insynnium
    • Sandra J. Jackson – Playing in the Rain
    • Samuel Winburn – Ten Directions
    • Grace Goodwin – Rogue Cyborg
    • J. Steven Young – Trumpery Resistance
    • Robert Sells – Revelations
    • Ken Hart – It was a Small Affair
    • Jacques St-Malo – Cognition
    • Timothy S. Johnston – The War Beneath
    • Thomas McDaniel – Rekindled
    • John Bowie – The Houses of the Curious
    • Shami Stovall – Star Marque Rising
    • D G Lamb – The Deepest Cut (Driven to the Hilt Book 1)
    • Terry Persun – BIOMASS Rewind
    • N. Matthias Moore – CLOUD 9
    • Darrell Lee – The Apotheosis
    • William X. Adams – Reluctant Android
    • David C. Crowther – City of Drowned Angels
    • Stephen Martino – The Final Reality
    • K.N. Salustro – Light Runner

    Congratulations to J. I. ROGERS for the KORPES FILE taking home the 2018 CYGNUS Book Awards Grand Prize Ribbon

    All Semi-Finalists will receive high visibility along with special ribbons to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.

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

    The CYGNUS Grand Prize Winner and the Five First Place Category Position award winners along with 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 submissions into the 2020 CYGNUS  Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2020. The winners will be announced in April 2021.

    Please click here for more information.  

     

     

  • Hot Marketing Tips are Shared in the 10 Question Author Interview with MICHELLE COX – Author Interviews, Marketing, Craft of Writing

    Hot Marketing Tips are Shared in the 10 Question Author Interview with MICHELLE COX – Author Interviews, Marketing, Craft of Writing

    Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards Grand Prize winner Michelle Cox graciously shares her writing life and knowledge with us along with some hot marketing tips and tools! Read on!

     “When I finally decided to try writing, the creativity within me, that divine essence, finally found its true home.  I’m happiest when I’m creating, and I hope I can keep writing for a long time.” – Michelle Cox

    Michelle Cox, award-winning author, at work in her writing lair

    Chanticleer: Thanks for coming by, Michelle. Tell us what genre best describes your work? And, what led you to write in this genre?

    Cox: Well, that’s a great question!  I usually at least place as a semi-finalist in three different categories at the Chanticleer awards, for example, so that should be a pretty good indication.

    Romance Fiction Award Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

    My series is set during the 1930s in Chicago, so that qualifies it to be historical fiction, but it’s also mystery and romance.  I guess “romantic-suspense” would be the best way to describe the series, but without the bare-chested guys on the cover.

    They always say to write what you would want to read, and this is it!  I set the series set in my favorite era; added a little bit of mystery, a little bit of romance; flavored it with the haves- and the have-nots of the era, as well as a touch of the English aristocracy; and then stocked it with lots of characters and subplots weaving in and out . . . sheer heaven!

    Chanticleer: And that’s why we love you and your books! What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Cox: I no longer have any! I used to have hobbies before writing took over my life. If I do have a few minutes here and there, I still love to garden and bake, but my real love, however, is board games.  I’m a fanatic and have become a sort of a collector now.

    Playing games with Michelle Cox! Did the butler do it?

    Chanti: That sounds like a lot of fun! So, how do you approach your writing day?

    Cox: As soon as my kids get on the bus at 6:50 am, I make my second cup of coffee and sit down at my desk.  I’m not allowed to do any social media, though I do always do a quick email check to see, you know, if I won the Pulitzer or something (it’s always no), and then I start working on whatever manuscript I’m currently on.  My brain is its crispest early in the morning, so I have to use that time for the work that takes the most concentration.  There’s something to be said about productivity when you know you only have a limited time to write.  There’s no room for writer’s block or procrastination.  When you know you only have so much time, you have a way of just sitting down and doing it.

     

    When I reach whatever my writing goal is for that day, I spend the next five to seven hours (until the kids come home) doing marketing and PR—anything from writing the blog or the newsletter or articles or interviews, taping podcasts, setting up events, answering email, attending to social media, etc.  It’s really a full-time job, though, sadly, the actual writing, the part I love, is the part I get to spend the least on.

     

    Chanti: Marketing pays off, right? Name five of your favorite authors and describe how they influence your work.

    Cox: My series is known for the plethora of rich characters scattered throughout and the big saga-like plots.  I was definitely influenced in this by my early favorites: Louisa May Alcott, Catherine Cookson, and Charles Dickens.  My other two favorites would be Anthony Trollope and Jane Austin for their subtlety in character and their overall ability to use language so beautifully.

    Chanti: I cannot argue with your choices. These are delicious authors – and novels!

    I know you gave us a snapshot of your work-day earlier, but could you give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Cox: Wow!  That’s a great question, but so hard to answer.  All marketing is pretty elusive, isn’t it?  It’s a constant process of throwing things at the wall and seeing what sticks.  It’s also important to remember that what works for one person, might not work for everyone.  It’s not an exact science.  If it were, we’d all be rich!

    But, in general, here are some good marketing tips that I have found to work:

    • Try to figure out where your readers are. Most of my readers, for example, are on Facebook, so that’s where I spend most of my social media time.
    • Think of yourself as a brand and try to match your posts accordingly. I post things about myself or the book or writing, but mostly old recipes, period drama news, or old stories from the past (which constitute my blog). Also, I’m very careful never to post anything religious or political.  This is a business, and the more you see yourself that way and follow basic business protocols, the more successful you’ll be.

    • Try to build your newsletter list by offering a freebie (such as free story, writing tips, a webinar, a prequel). Personally, I do it by running contests with really big prize packages. I make sure to state that the contest winner will be picked only from my newsletter subscribers.  I pay a designer to create a beautiful graphic of the prizes, post it on FB, and then boost the post.  Not only does this get me a lot of new subscribers (sometimes up to 1,000!), but it exposes the series to new readers as well!
    • Build your network. Join online author groups (I am part of a fabulous private FB group organized by my publisher, She Writes Press. We all share ideas, marketing tips, and offer support and advice, especially to the newer authors just coming on board.  It’s a collective wealth of information.) or real-world groups in your area.  Don’t be jealous of the success of others, but help each other as much as possible. As my publisher, Brooke Warner has said, “There’s room for everyone at the table.”
    • Show up at other authors events, write reviews, help promote whenever possible.  Go to conferences to meet not just readers, but other authors who can potentially help you.  Remember that you are a business, and you need to do work within your community to begin standing out.

    • For example, my publisher and I overprinted Book 2 of my series, so, as per my contract, when the first year of publication had passed, I was faced with having to pay a storage fee for these extra books (a couple of thousand), have them shipped to my garage, or have them destroyed.  I decided, instead, to send them to libraries and conference organizers.  It was a lot of work and expense, but it got my book into the hands of hundreds, if not thousands, of potential readers, and hopefully, they’ll come back for more and buy the rest of the series.  You have to be willing to take risks.

     

    • Also in this category would be to try to get a Bookbub deal, which, as we all know is really tough.  Again, for Book 2 of the series, we submitted four times, trying to get a deal with the book being priced at .99 cents.  I finally decided to offer it for free, and we cleverly put a buy link to book 3 at the end of Book 2.  Bookbub then offered me a deal, and I had over 55,000 downloads in one day!  Hopefully, a lot of those people will go on to buy Book 3 at full price.

    • Lastly, if the first book of your series is free, either permanently or occasionally, you can join Book Funnel, in which you “bundle” your book with others of a similar genre with each author promoting the bundle to their social network, which exposes your series to a whole new crop of readers.  Readers are able to download your free book in exchange for their email address.  So not only are you getting readers hooked on your series (hopefully!), but you’re building your subscriber/newsletter list.

     

    Chanti: You could teach a Master Class on this at CAC20! Let’s chat about this later.

    Chanti: What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Cox: Book 5 of the series is currently in production and scheduled to be released in Spring 2020.  I said I was going to take a break from the series after that, but I admit, I’ve already started sketching out Book 6 –  I can’t help it!

    But what’s really exciting is a new stand-alone novel, The Love You Take, that I wrote, also based partially on a true story and set in Chicago in the 1930s.  It’s a really fabulous book if I do say so, about a “backward” girl who has to go and live at a home for “bad girls” after she unwittingly becomes pregnant. I’m currently querying agents for it.

    Chanti: Sounds intriguing. Please keep us updated. Who’s the perfect reader for your book?

    Cox: Though some men enjoy my books, the primary audience is women. Anyone who loves Downton Abbey; Upstairs, Downstairs; Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries, the old black and white films, like The Thin Man . . . basically any period drama or old movie . . . will love my series.  I can’t tell you how many people have written to me to tell me that the series is so visual, that reading it was like watching a movie.  It’s delightful escapism; people tell me all the time they feel like they’ve been transported back in time after reading them.

    Chanti: I know that’s why we read your books #delightful! What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Cox: Tell a friend!  Research shows that the number one thing that influences people to buy books is word-of-mouth.  If you like a book, recommend it to friends or your book club.  The second best thing is to write a review!  People seem wary of doing this, telling me that they’re nervous about what to write.

    “Nonsense!” I say.

    A review can be one sentence: “This was a great book; I enjoyed it!”

    There.  Done.

    You don’t have to go into a lengthy reworking of the synopsis (why do people do this?) or delve into symbolism or themes or whatever.  Just give your one-sentence opinion!

    Chanti: I’ve been telling my non-writing friends this for years… Do you ever experience writer’s block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Cox: Not really!  I have a lot of story ideas in my head, and thus I usually have the opposite problem.  This is where outlining can really help.  If you have a pretty weighty outline sketched out, then when you sit down to write each day, you pretty much already know what you’re supposed to write that day.  Likewise, I enjoy taking an evening walk (or I try to, anyway!), during which I think about tomorrow’s chapter and what needs to go into it.  Sometimes I even voice record if I have a really good idea or some strands of dialog.  There’s something about walking—moving the legs back and forth, back and forth—that seems to stimulate something in the brain. They say that Dickens used to walk the streets of London for hours in the wee hours of the night.  Now I know why!

    Chanti: Time to reflect and let your mind wander. Movement really does help with this. What excites you most about writing?

    Cox: Creating something out of nothing.  I’ve always been a really creative person.  Looking back, I see now that I’ve always been striving to create, and for a long time it took on many different forms.  As a kid, I was always trying to illustrate Louisa May Alcott’s books or write little fan fiction stories based on Jo March.  As I got older, it took the form of gardening and decorating the house, and then baking and then creating elaborate kids’ birthday party invitations!  When I finally decided to try writing (long story), the creativity within me, that divine essence, finally found its true home.  I’m happiest when I’m creating, and I hope I can keep writing for a long time.

    Chanti: We hope you do, too, Michelle. What a fabulous interview! Thank you for sharing your story with us. 

    Speaking of sharing, if you like what you’ve read, please “like, comment, and share!” Sharing is caring, baby!

    The CIBA Grand Prize Winners

     

    Michelle Cox is a multi-award-winning author who recently spent some time with us at CAC19. This year was particularly special because Michelle won the CIBA 2018 Grand Prize for Mystery & Mayhem Awards!

     

    and took 1st Place in the Chatelaine Awards for Romantic Fiction – both awards are in honor of her book, A Promise Given. We will probably never stop celebrating this – it’s just too much fun!

    To find out what Michelle’s up to next, Find and Follow her here:

     Facebook 

    Twitter

    Instagram 

    Michelle’s Website: http://michellecoxauthor.com/