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  • OUR DUTY by Gerri Hilger – Friendship, World War II, Military Romance

    OUR DUTY by Gerri Hilger – Friendship, World War II, Military Romance

    Our Duty opens with a group of nursing students sunbathing on the roof of their apartment. Pauline Garrity, aka Polly, has a little bit of fun and decides to sunbathe sans robes. While this stirs some of the girls up a bit, others know Polly is only being Polly. When a fighter plane does a fly-by on a training mission, Polly has a little more fun.

    Here’s a story of World War II with a slightly different bend. Rather than focus on the horrors of what was happening in the trenches, Gerri Hilger centers her novel around Polly and her close-knit group of friends who are attending nursing school together. Our Duty is a novel for fans of lighthearted historical fiction with a sprinkling of cozy romance and a thread of Christianity.

    The first part of the novel follows Pauline Garrity, aka Polly, alongside her close friend Aggie and their schoolmates as they navigate their studies and personal lives while attending nursing school in the early 1940s. There are inter-peer rivalries to contend with, gossip that occasionally falls into the mean-spirited category, and the looming presence of the war which begs the question—which of the young women will choose to enlist after graduation?

    Polly and friends persevere through nursing school and graduate with their degrees, and then each promptly goes her own way. Aggie enlists in the service while Polly stays in the States and works in a maternity ward, often calling on the Lord to give her strength as she helps new mothers whose husbands have enlisted. Life continues on, however, despite the war, and Polly soon finds herself becoming more and more involved with a charming young man named Johnny.

    In Our Duty, Hilger tackles the hefty topic of why some people enlist while others try their hardest to stay home. It should be noted that all of the characters’ reasons for avoiding war have everything to do with family responsibilities and less to do with worrying about whether or not one may die as a result of enlisting.

    Our Duty is largely based on the lives of the author’s family and ends with Hilger discussing what happened to the characters after the story’s end as well as her family’s ties to one another and the war. And while the 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.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards 2018 SHORTLIST for Lab Lit and World Power – The CIBAs

    GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards 2018 SHORTLIST for Lab Lit and World Power – The CIBAs

    The GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Lab Lit and Global Thrillers. The GLOBAL  THRILLERS Book Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Book Awards and Writing Competitions.  (The CIBAs)

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring suspense, thrilling stories that put the balance of world power or that will end the world as we know it. We include with Global Thrillers the Lab Lit genre. Lab Lit is when Fiction Meets Real Science and Research or stories that are based on real science and research up to a certain “what if” point.

    Examples from www.LabLit.com:

    Enigma by Robert Harris; A brilliant mathematician struggles to crack German codes in the second world war. Historical Fiction
    The Highest Tide by Jim Lynch; A budding marine biologist has an unforgettable summer.
    Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis; A scientist/medic leans the hard way that pure research is nobler – and cures plague in the process.

    GLOBAL Thriller examples:

    Best examples of these are James Bond books, X-Men, Tom Clancy novels, and Star Wars/Star Trek where humankind is at stake or the planet is doomed.

    (For light-hearted, cozy, or classic Mystery and Suspense entries see our Mystery & Mayhem Awards and for Thriller/Suspense/Hardboiled-Detective series, please see the CLUE Awards)

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2018 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 21st, 2018!

    This is the Official announcement of the Authors and Titles of Works that have been SHORT-LISTED for the GLOBAL THRILLERS  2018 Book Awards. These titles will now compete for the First In Category positions.

    Information about the #CIBAs Long Lists and Short Lists and Announcement Rounds.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the SHORTLIST.  These entries are now in competition for the 2018 GLOBAL THRILLERS SEMIFINALISTS  positions. The coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards will be selected from the Semi-Finalists in the final rounds of judging.  

    The First Place Category Winners will be announced at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony. The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the GLOBAL THRILLER GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington.

    The Official 2018 GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards SHORTLIST:

    • Richard Garis – Magenta is Missing
    • Randall Krzak – Dangerous Alliance
    • Timothy S. Johnston – The War Beneath
    • R. Barber Anderson – The Sunken Forest
    • John W. Howell & Gwen M. Plano – The Contract Between Heaven and Earth
    • E.M. Kelly – Addiction & Pestilence
    • Rachael Sparks – Resistant
    • Michael Pronko – The Moving Blade
    • L M Hedrick – The Rigel Affair
    • Michelle Bryan – Strain of Defiance
    • W. A. Holdsworth – Novum Orbis Regium
    • Randall Krzak – The Kurdish Connection
    • Paul McHugh – The Blind Pool
    • Stephen Martino – The Final Reality
    • Lawrence Verigin – Beyond Control
    • Kamalendu Malaker – The Plasma
    • Elena Mikalsen – All the Silent Voices

    Good Luck to all of the 2018 GLOBAL THRILLERS Short-Listers as they compete for the Semi-Finalists positions.

    Grand Prize Ribbons!
    Sara Stamey, Global Thrillers Grand Prize Winner

     

     

    First In Category announcements will be made at the Awards Ceremony. The GLOBAL THRILLERS Grand Prize Winner and First Place Category Winners will be announced at the April 27th,  2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards  Annual Awards Gala, at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2019 GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is November 30th, 2019. Please click here for more information. 

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

  • To DREAM the BLACKBANE: A Novel of the Anomaly by Richard J. O’Brien  – Paranormal, Mystery/Caper, Fantasy

    To DREAM the BLACKBANE: A Novel of the Anomaly by Richard J. O’Brien  – Paranormal, Mystery/Caper, Fantasy

    If you liked Alice in Wonderland as a child, To Dream the Blackbane: A Novel of the Anomaly may captivate you now. While not suitable for children, this dark fantasy engages the reader with strange and unique characters, gritty, Sam Spade-like dialogue, and fanciful imagery.

    In 2063, sixty years after The Anomaly, during which everything changed, in a world now populated by pedigreed humans, hybrids, and a whole gamut of imagined and legendary creatures from other planes of existence, the canis sapien, Wolfgang Rex, operates as a private eye in Chicago’s hybrid ghetto. He is assisted by his secretary, Sally Sandweb, a fun-loving faerie with blue and black wings, and green-tinged skin.

    One evening, two locally venerated vampires barge into Wolfgang’s office to enlist his services. Like the Templar’s treasure was stolen from Jerusalem, a sacred vampire scroll was taken from their lair atop the Sears Tower whilst they slept. After they make him an offer he can’t refuse, Wolfgang agrees to recover the scroll, and a disapproving Sally draws up the contract.

    Shortly after, he has another visitor, Charlotte Sweeney-Jarhadill, from Beggar Creek, Louisiana, who wishes to hire Wolfgang to exorcize the ghost of a Confederate soldier who’s been hanging around her home and bothering her. After another offer he can’t refuse, and deciding he has some leeway on time with the vampires, Wolfgang agrees to do the exorcism.

    Little does he know that these two cases would involve life-threatening danger, and ultimately change the course of his life forever—whatever and wherever forever may be.

    The ensuing story takes Wolfgang to stygian places in Chicago, and to rural Louisiana where Wolfie learns that reality is elusive, whom you can trust isn’t always clear, and there’s no safe place.

    Like the 2063 reality imagined in this story, its tone and mood fluctuate. At times, Richard J. O’Brien’s story seems merely a dark fantasy—a kind of 21st century American gothic with unique settings and characters that keep the reader engaged. At other time, it feels more like a tongue-in-cheek, “gotcha” kind of yarn where the author uses satirical humor, exaggerated characters, and intriguing situations, to entertain fantasy fans. The story’s ambiguous ending contributes to this perception. We hope this means there is more to come!

    One thing is certain, though, when you close the book a haunting suspicion may just well remain: has O’Brien used this genre as a vehicle for a symbolic allegory, addressing certain long-held religious beliefs and currently trending social and political events? In short, To Dream the Blackbane: A Novel of the Anomaly is a curious, provocative read that lingers on. One that we recommended.

  • 12 CLEVER GIFTS for the AUTHOR in YOUR LIFE: A Guide by Sharon Anderson – Gift Ideas, Authors, Humor

    12 CLEVER GIFTS for the AUTHOR in YOUR LIFE: A Guide by Sharon Anderson – Gift Ideas, Authors, Humor

    It’s that time of year when we ask veiled questions to try and discern the perfect gift for our loved ones.

    And writers, you know when we drop not-too-subtle hints about what we would like to see under the tree come December 25th.

    There is a lot weighing on us during the season!

    Not only is there shopping to be done, but there’s a whole sleigh full of baking to manage, parties to attend, promotions to muster, people to cheer, songs to sing…

    It can stress a person out!

    This year, I want to share with you the top dozen gifts that the writer in your life will want—

    Are you ready?

    Handy links to Chanticleer’s Holiday Marketing Blog posts are at the end of Sharon’s blog post.

    The Twelve Days of a Writers’ Holiday

    (with some handy gift ideas!)

    On the First Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    A Chanticleer Editorial Review package!

     

    On the Second Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Two Storiarts Gloves to keep me warm while I write the next great American novel 

     

    On the Third Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Three Stainless Steel Insulated Coffee mugs, one for me and two for my best friends 

     

    On the Fourth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Four cases of paper!

    (Because some of us still need to edit and proof using printouts! )

     

    On the Fifth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    FIVE Gift Certificates for Chanticleer Editorial Services!

     

    On the Sixth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Six pounds of coffee

     

    On the Seventh Day of Chrismas, my true love gave to me: 

    Seven Audio Book Reviews  from my favorite audiobook reviewer ever–Chanticleer!

     

    On the Eighth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Eight trips to Pure Bliss Desserts Cafe’

    (Yes, this is where we escape to when we want to be bad…champagne and cake and coffee! )

    On the Ninth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: 

    Nine entries into the CIBAs!

     

    On the Tenth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me:

    Ten personalized mechanical pencils 

    (Because I continually lose them!)

    On the Eleventh Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: 

    Eleven “Shares” of my blog post!

    (It is true, sometimes money can’t buy writer’s what they “love”)

     

    On the Twelveth Day of Christmas, my true love gave to me: 

    Twelve hours of rest! 

     

    If you follow these simple gift ideas for the author(s) in your life, you will certainly be on top of the “Nice List!”

    Happy Holidays from all of us at Chanticleer Reviews! 

    Editor’s Note: Sharon shared a few of her favorite Bellingham treats – Pure Bliss Cakes, Moka Joe Coffee, along with some other hints.

    And for your convenience, here are some handy links on how to increase book sales during the Holiday Season that we have posted before:

     

    Quick and Easy Tips to Get Your Books Ready for the Biggest Book Buying Season of the Year! by Kiffer Brown

    Online Holiday Book Buying

     

    Brick and Mortar Stores – Quick and Easy Point of Sale Marketing Tips – by Kiffer Brown

    Book store interior - how to make your book stand out

     

    Point of Sale Book Marketing Tips for Holiday Gift Fairs, Author Signing Events, & Temporary Markets – by Kiffer Brown

    Happy Holidays from Chanticleer Reviews

  • CATARI: A Novella by Karl G. Larew – Mystery, Psychological, Literary

    CATARI: A Novella by Karl G. Larew – Mystery, Psychological, Literary

    Maxwell Roux introduces us to his story with a Prologue, beginning with a minds-eye picture of a grand house in New Orleans. It is a soft, blossom-scented spring evening. From his hiding place behind a tree, he sees Catari step out on the wrought-iron balcony, fan in hand. Her gown is unbuttoned at the top, revealing her pale complexion glowing in the moonlight, contrasted by her dark-brown eyes and hair. Max had flown down from New York late that afternoon to surprise her, but he chooses to enjoy her beauty from the solitude of the dark garden for a moment before their blissful reunion ensues—marred only by the unpleasant gaze of her step-father.

    This sketch is now a memory of what had been a happy engagement—until Max unforgivably accused Catari of having an ungrateful heart, as Enrico Caruso sang of in “Core n’grato,” a song both of them knew and loved.

    The story begins when Max is called to another grand house, in Fontano, Italy, the home of Catari’s beloved Gran’papa, Il Barone di Fontano. He hears the Requiem Mass sung by a local choir at the funeral of his beloved Catari—only 27 years old—and sees her casket placed in the Fontano Crypt on the grounds of the family villa. It is there that he hears the gossip that Catari was drunk when she fell into the pool at 2:00 AM, as well as the comment by her step-father, Hugh Fontane, that Max, as nothing but an “ex-boyfriend,” has no right to be present. But the Baron had invited him to come, and then to stay at the villa. Later that evening, he and Max talk as friends about their beloved Catari. Max had visited the villa with her several times, and the two men like and trust each other. Finally, fatigue sends them to bed—Max in the room where he had slept before.

    Max awakes at 2:00 AM, somehow urged to go to the pool. He senses Catari’s presence and hears her voice, “I did not want to die. I did not want to die like this.” He hears his own voice, “I’ll find out…how and why, Catari.”

    Thus is this sad love story transformed into a murder mystery, its solution sought by Max, Darlene (Catari’s close friend), and the Baron. Larew’s tale is filled with family history, dating back to the Fontane brothers who fought in Napoleon’s Army in the conquest of Lombardy and were rewarded with the land on which the villa stands; the Fontano brothers who served in the Italian Resistance during WWII; and the Fontano family’s current history in the making. The Three Musketeers, as they decide to call themselves, question the servants and several villagers and search the property inside and out. They engage the help of the family doctor, who had examined the body and found a lesion on the back of Catari’s head. The doctor does not believe that she was drunk. They work with the Chief of Police, who is intrigued when he learns about the pilfering activities of the servants.

    As he has done in previous books of greatly different natures—their characters ranging from WWII military families to Good and Bad vampires—Karl Larew skillfully brings his characters to life. In Catari, he artfully draws not just their natures, but oddities of their physical features, speech, and movement, such as town gossip Madame Cavalli, who finally runs out of words, and the rude and overbearing Hugh Fontane, bursting into the villa declaring that he will have the Baron declared incompetent, thereby revealing his own incompetence. Larew’s knowledge of military history stands him in good stead, as well.

    Max fulfills the poolside promise he made to the ghost of Catari, to “find out…how and why,” but I won’t spoil the how and why for the reader. Nor will I tell you what happens to the Three Musketeers. I’ll say only that, for many reasons, this book offers a good read.

     

  • The SEMI-FINALISTS for the LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction – 2018 CIBAs

    The SEMI-FINALISTS for the LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction – 2018 CIBAs

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    The LARAMIE Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Western Fiction. The Laramie  Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions ( The #CIBAs).

     

     

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the SHORTLIST  to the 2018 Laramie Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTs. These entries are now in competition for the limited 2018 Laramie  First Place Category Positions. The Laramie Book Awards First Place Positions along with  Laramie Grand Prize Award Winner will be announced at the Awards Gala on Saturday, April 27th, 2019. 

    We are looking for the best books featuring cowboys & cowgirls, the Wild West, pioneering, Civil War, contemporary American West, and early North American and Central American History. 

    These titles are the SEMI-FINALISTS the 2018  LARAMIE  Book Awards novel competition for Western Fiction. Good Luck to All!

    • Brenda Stanley – The Treasure of Cedar Creek
    • J.L Oakley – Mist-chi-mas: A Novel of Captivity
    • J.R. Collins – Living Where the Rabbits Dance
    • TK Conklin – Promise of Tomorrow
    • John Hansen –Chasing Demons
    • Curt Locklear – Splintered
    • Richard Alan – A Female Doctor in the Civil War
    • Ronald E. Yates – The Lost Years of Billy Battles (Book 3 in the Finding Billy Battles Trilogy)
    • Pat Wahler – I am Mrs. Jesse James
    • Ruth Hull Chatlien – Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale
    • Mari Anne Christie – Blind Tribute
    • Jayme H. Mansfield – RUSH

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up to the Semi-Finalists from the Shortlist. These novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    Click here for links to SemiFinalist Digital Badges and Book Stickers.

    The LARAMIE  SemiFinalists will compete for the LARAMIE First-In-Category Positions.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the LARAMIE GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CIBA Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.

     

    Michele Rene, Laramie Grand Prize Winner and Overall Best Book Grand Prize Winner for HOUR GLASS

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2019 Laramie Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions into the 2019 Laramie  Book Awards is July 30th, 2019. Please click here for more information. 

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

  • PRIVATE MONEY LENDING: How to Consistently Generate a Passive Income Stream by Gustavo J. Gomez, Ph.D. – Budgeting & Money Management, Analysis & Strategy, Personal Finance

    PRIVATE MONEY LENDING: How to Consistently Generate a Passive Income Stream by Gustavo J. Gomez, Ph.D. – Budgeting & Money Management, Analysis & Strategy, Personal Finance

    Are you in retirement, or close to it, wondering how you’re going to make ends meet pulling from your portfolio? Well, you’re not alone if you’re staying up at night thinking about how low-interest rates are killing your investments.

    In a practical and easy to read format, Gomez explains to investors the particulars of a little known, yet potentially lucrative investment technique that can handle the ups and downs of the stock market. Unlike stocks, the underlying security of private money lending is a tangible asset – brick and mortar, so there is another layer of protection for you, the investor.

    But what is Private Money Lending? According to Gomez, it refers to a private individual or organization that lends money. Typically, when you’re looking for financing, you would go to a bank. With private funds, on the other hand, you’re going to an individual or organization that specializes in this type of lending. The upside of private money lending is that it’s less regulated, which means less red tape. The icing on the cake, he says, is that these investments have consistently generated 9 to 12 percent returns* – not bad considering stock market investments have averaged closer to 7 percent, and with much more fluctuations. We can’t forget the economic crash of 2008 when many stock market investments plummeted close to 40 percent.

    In a nutshell, amid the 2008 economic crash, the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates to help boost the US economy, the author explains in fluid and well-organized chapters. The general thinking was to reduce interest rates to encourage people to borrow money, who then would go on to buy more products – all good for the American economy. However, those same low-interest rates translated to less growth for those in retirement. Private money lending offers an alternative strategy that could generate a “predictable, safe, and consistent income stream that this low-interest rate environment does not currently permit,” Gomez says.

    No investment comes without risk, Gomez reminds his readers, so his bottom line advice for investors: do your homework (start with this book), find out who is offering the loan, and check they have a good track record.

    Even though the content derives from Gomez’s doctoral research and dissertation conducted at Florida Christian University in Orlando, it’s not academic in style. In fact, you will find it conversational and accessible, with a thorough glossary of terms (e.g., origination fee, negative amortization, and Private Mortgage Insurance) and recommended reading to further your knowledge.

    Whether you’re in your golden years relaxing on a sandy beach or fast approaching retirement, you will want to read Gustavo Gomez’s Private Money Lending: Learn How to Consistently Generate a Passive Income Stream.

    *as of the book’s publishing (2015)

     

    Private Money Lending Learn How to Consistently Generate a Passive Income Stream won First Place in the 2017 CIBAs for Instruction & Insight!

  • The GIFT of the TWIN HOUSES: Book One, The Perils of a Reluctant Psychic by V & D Povall – Ghosts, Mystery/Suspense, Psychic

    The GIFT of the TWIN HOUSES: Book One, The Perils of a Reluctant Psychic by V & D Povall – Ghosts, Mystery/Suspense, Psychic

    Six-year-old Sarah Salas blurts out a piece of information she could not have known at a friend’s birthday party. The neighbors begin to gossip about this, calling wee Sarah “evil” and “witch.” In a jiffy, things get uncomfortable. So uncomfortable, in fact, Sarah’s parents to sell their home and relocate to protect their daughter. 

    From that moment on, Sarah’s parents beg her to ignore and suppress her natural psychic abilities. Completely. What’s a six-year-old to do?

    Sarah, eager to please her parents, buries her abilities throughout her life. As a consequence of suppressing such a strong aspect of her character, Sarah inhibits the most essential part of herself: the ability to be transparent, intimate with another living soul. So much so, that her first fiancé leaves her at the altar. Suffering the humiliation, she shuts down another part of herself: her sexuality.

    And the story would end there, but for the fact that upon her early retirement, Sarah heads out to parts unknown, driving with a purpose, but lacking conscious intent. She is, for the first time in decades, allowing that ‘other’ part of her to lead the way. It is only when she truly lets go of the restraints set upon her in childhood that she finds herself in the foothills of the Cascade Mountain Range in Washington state.

    Following a private path, she stops her car in front of a beautiful and compelling home. The house has a note attached to the door indicating it is for sale.

    This house, she knows, must be the reason why she’s here.

    What follows is a whirlwind of characters, both living and deceased, that import their stories into a meaning narrative that forms the basis of the book. And there are a lot of stories to be told: from forbidden love to murder and more. As Sarah opens up to her long, supposedly dormant psychic talents, she creates a path toward understanding the people who once lived in this house – and its twin – and how they wove their DNA into the rooms, floors, and wall, and moreover, how they affect the lives of those still living. The gift is in the telling, and how love conquers all.

    Husband and wife writing team, David and Victoria Povall, bring their talents to the page to introduce the characters in book one of The Perils of a Reluctant Psychic series. The writing is fine with a sweet romance set in the middle of it that lovers of paranormal romance books of a certain age will relish. What is clear, is there are plenty more storylines and adventures in store for Sarah Salas and her rediscovered psychic abilities – and more romantic adventures with her handsome soulmate. A paranormal romance with a happy ending and a promise of more to come! A win!

     

     

    The Gift of the Twin Houses by V&D Povall is also available on Barnes & Nobles and iBooks.

  • The SEMI-FINALISTS for the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction (CIBAs)

    The SEMI-FINALISTS for the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction (CIBAs)

    • Pre 1750 Historical Fiction AwardThe CHAUCER Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Historical Fiction set before the 1750s. The Chaucer Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBA).

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is seeking for the best books featuring Pre-1750s Historical Fiction, including pre-history, ancient history, Classical, world history (non-western culture), Dark Ages and Medieval Europe, Renaissance, Elizabethan, Tudor, 1600s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. (Looking for Goethe Post 1750 contest or Laramie Western/Pioneer/Civil War contest?)

    These Semi-Finalists will compete for the coveted five positions of the First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the CHAUCER GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington.

    These titles are in the running for the limited First Place positions of the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards novel competition for pre-1750s Post Historical Novels.

    Good luck to all in these next final rounds of judging to see which titles will move forward.

    CONGRATULATIONS to the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards SemiFinalists:

    • Nicole Evelina – Mistress of Legend (Guinevere’s Tale Book 3)
    • Jehan d’Elleby – Lanz & Gwenhevre: Love Against the Tide
    • Prue Batten – Michael – Book 3 of the Triptych Chronicle
    • Edward Rickford – The Serpent and the Eagle
    • Bernard Mann – David & Avshalom Life and Death in the Forest of Angels
    • Gregory Hansen – Pelsaert’s Nightmare
    • P.K. Adams – The Greenest Branch, a Novel of Germany’s First Female Physician
    • Helena P. Schrader – Rebels against Tyranny: Civil War in the Crusader States
    • Eileen Stephenson – Imperial Passions – The Porta Aurea
    • Robert Wright – King David’s Lost Crown, first of the Before They Awaken Trilogy
    • Anna Belfrage – Under the Approaching Dark
    • Kate Murdoch – Stone Circle

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

    Good Luck to each of you as your work competes for the 2018 CHAUCER  Book Awards First Place positions and the CHAUCER 2018 Grand Prize.  

    To view the 2017 CHAUCER Book Awards winners, please click here.

    The CHAUCER Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 27th, 2019 Chanticleer Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    CHAUCER Grand Prize Award Winners Catherine T. Wilson & Catherine A. Wilson

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2019 CHAUCER Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is June 30th, 2019. Please click here for more information. 

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

  • The ONE APART by Justine Avery – Family Saga, Fantasy, Metaphysical/Visionary

    The ONE APART by Justine Avery – Family Saga, Fantasy, Metaphysical/Visionary

    A perfect blend of realism, fantasy, and deep spirituality awaits those who open Justine Avery’s novel, The One Apart. It is what readers bring to the novel – faiths, belief systems, philosophical dilemmas – that will influence and shape their perceptions of this fascinating and compelling read. Avery’s book, like life, is full of instruction for those who want to be fully aware.

    Aware of what?

    Everything—including awareness itself.

    This is certainly the case for the main character, Aaron, a remarkable boy who lives with his mother, Sancha, and his grandmother, Maria. Although she’d planned to give Aaron up for adoption, Sancha bonds so deeply with her son at birth that she can’t fathom life without him. His grandmother realizes his uniqueness, too, as the newborn communicates with her through blinking his eyes. He makes astonishing progress through developmental milestones, walking and reading within the first months of life.

    As a toddler, he speaks with the wisdom of a timeless soul. Maria suspects that these physical and mental feats indicate that her grandson is chosen for a special purpose, but she hopes he’ll live as normal a life as possible. He’s distracted, however, by a malevolence that only he can see.  As Aaron comes of age, he strives to act normal and blend in, but his very few close friends and girlfriend notice his preoccupation, his never being fully present in this world.

    There’s a reason for Aaron’s constant distraction, for his never feeling a part of this life; he is connected to “the Apart,” the other-worldly dimension that is both removed from human existence, “corporeality,” but ever at hand. Since childhood, he has sensed that his true name is Tres and that his existence as Aaron is somewhat play-acting. His hyper-awareness alerts him to his “OnLooker,” a sort of guardian angel who’s a liaison between Aaron and the sagacious luminary beings of the Apart that consult and advise on Aaron’s tutelage.

    Much of the book involves Aaron learning, with the instruction of his OnLooker, how to fully experience awareness, to understand that every moment is this moment despite previous lives and the variety of life’s experiences. At a critical juncture in the novel, Aaron is given a choice, one that will impact his own existence dramatically but also that of all other beings. The author adroitly merges Aaron’s worldly existence and his relation to the realm of the Apart in a poignant and satisfying conclusion to the novel.

    This is a quiet book, one that allows the reader the time and space to experience life with its main characters. The stillness is at times deeply peaceful, at other times eerie and ominous. The novel illustrates the power of compassion and empathy, but also the chilling consequences when power is exercised for self-serving purposes.

    While the character of Aaron has similarities to various religious and mythic figures, the author has also imbued him with a uniqueness and a relevance to our times. This book will stay with you long after you finish it, a hallmark of excellent literature. Justine Avery’s The One Apart inspires deep contemplation of self, community, and individual and collective purpose.

     

     

    The One Apart won First Place in both
    OZMA and SOMERSET Awards in 2017!