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  • CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – The SHORTLIST  for 2018  the CIBAs

    CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – The SHORTLIST for 2018 the CIBAs

    Pre 1750 Historical Fiction AwardThe CHAUCER   Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The CHAUCER 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 to the 2018 CHAUCER Book Awards SHORT LIST. These entries are now in competition for the limited 2018 CHAUCER  Semi-Finalists from which the First Place Category Positions will be chosen. The CHAUCER Book Awards Semi-Finalists and First Place Positions along with the CHAUCER Grand Prize Award Winner will be announced at the Awards Gala on Saturday, April 27th, 2019. 

    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 titles are in the running for the next round – the SEMI-Finalist positions for the 2018  CHAUCER  Book Awards novel competition for pre-1750s Historical Fiction. Good Luck to All!

    • Nicole Evelina – Mistress of Legend (Guinevere’s Tale Book 3)
    • Robert Wright – King David’s Lost Crown, Book 1 Before They Awaken Trilogy
    • 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
    • Brett Savill – Medici Apprentice
    • Gregory Hansen – Pelsaert’s Nightmare
    • P.K. Adams – The Greenest Branch, a Novel of Germany’s First Female Physician
    • Amy Wolf – A Woman of the Road
    • Eileen Stephenson – Imperial Passions – The Porta Aurea
    • Helena P. Schrader – Rebels against Tyranny: Civil War in the Crusader States
    • Charlene Newcomb – Swords of the King
    • Anna Belfrage – The Cold Light of Dawn
    • Anna Belfrage – Under the Approaching Dark
    • Kate Murdoch – Stone Circle
    • Jehan d’Elleby – Lanz & Gwenhevre: Love Against the Tide

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up to the Short List from the slush pile.  These novels will now compete for the (Semi-Finalists) Positions!

    The CHAUCER  Short Listers will compete for the SemiFinalists positions that will compete for the CHAUCER First-In-Category Positions.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the CHAUCER 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.

    Good Luck to each of you as your work competes in the 2018 CHAUCER International Book Awards. 

    The Chaucer  Grand Prize Winner and the Five 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 with Edward Rickford and DJ Munro.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2019 CHAUCER Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions into the 2019 CHAUCER  Book Awards 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. 

  • GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards for Middle-Grade Readers – 2018 SHORT LIST

    GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards for Middle-Grade Readers – 2018 SHORT LIST

    Gertrude Warner Children's Chapter BooksThe Gertrude Warner Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Middle-Grade Readers. The Gertrude Warner Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) and Novel Competitions.

     

     

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best Chapter Books and Middle-Grade Readers featuring stories of all shapes and sizes written to an audience between the ages of about eight to twelve. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Mystery, Paranormal, Historical, Adventure we will put them to the test and choose the best Middle-Grade Books among them.

    These titles have made it to the SHORT LIST of the 2018 GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards writing competition for Middle-Young Adult Fiction Novels!

    Congratulations to the 2018 GERTRUDE WARNER SHORT LISTERS! You will receive an email shortly with links to digital badges and contest book stickers.

    • K.B. Shaw – From the Shadows
    • Alexander Edlund – Keelic and the Pathfinders of Midgarth
    • Rebekah Stelzer – Susa’s Story
    • M. P. Follin – Dakota Joy and the Traveling Stones
    • Joanna Cook – The Life of Bonnie Dickens
    • Victoria Adler – Emma and Mia
    • Cheryl Carpinello – Guinevere: At the Dawn of Legend
    • Jules Luther – The Portals of Peril 
    • James Sulzer – The Card People 
    • T. L. Frances – The Bird Queen’s Book
    • Patricia M Ahern – Pondlife: Blue Moon Eclipse
    • Patrick Thornton – Stepping Up
    • Elizabeth Doyle Carey – Junior Lifeguards: The Test
    • Kay M. Bates – The Adventures of Rug Bug: The Revolution
    • Diane Rios – Bridge of the Gods
    • P.H.C. Marchesi – Shelby & Shauna Kitt and the Dimensional Holes
    • Gloria Two-Feathers – Tallulah’s Flying Adventure
    • Aric Cushing – Vampire Boy

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the LONG LIST  to the 2018 Gertrude Warner Book Awards SHORT LIST.  These SHORTLISTERS  are now in competition for the 2018 Gertrude Warner limited Semi-Finalists Positions. The judges will choose from the  Semi-Finalists the coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 Gertrude Warner Book Awards in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the 2018 GERTRUDE WARNER GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition. The First Place Category Winners will be announced at the #CIBA awards ceremony on Saturday, April 27, 2019.  

    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.

    #CIBAwards

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

    Grand Prize Ribbons!

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the Gertrude Warner Book Awards Short List. 

    Gertrude Warner Book Award Winners

    The Gertrude Warner 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. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2019 Gertrude Warner Book  Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is May 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. 

  • FISHING WITH HYENAS by Theresa Mathews – Narrative Non-Fiction, Memoir, Sea-Faring, Romance

    FISHING WITH HYENAS by Theresa Mathews – Narrative Non-Fiction, Memoir, Sea-Faring, Romance

    Romance, typhoons, and exotic scenery highlight this exceptional sea-faring memoir about love and surviving loss by debut author, Theresa Mathews.

    When the author first meets Bart, he strikes her as a “wonderful blend of sophistication and blue collar.” Captain of a fishing boat, he prowls the seas for albacore, the long-fin tuna beloved of sushi fans. To hook up with this romantic figure, Mathews must accept the reality of connection with one of the “Hyenas”—a group of hardy fishermen (and some women) who give each other humorous nicknames and look after one another at sea and “on the beach” (their term for being on dry land). Bart fishes for three-month stretches, so it isn’t long before Mathews decides to drop her professional career and sign on as the cook and a deckhand on his next voyage.

    On that voyage, Mathews learns more than she ever imagined about the perils and pleasures of the sea, tuna fishing, and—herself. She hauls in the big fish, cutting and wounding her hands so severely she can barely hold a toothbrush. She cooks and also keeps watch, once needing the assistance of a fellow crewman to avoid a close encounter with another vessel.

    It gradually becomes clear, as the Hyenas often say, that “Mother Ocean” changes a person. On land, Bart is talkative and flirtatious; at sea, he is the Captain with no time for chitchat. On their last voyage together, the couple, now married, discovers that the going rate for a tuna haul is half what it had been. They are beyond broke, so Bart keeps fishing while Mathews stays on land and works. Then she receives a call—her beloved husband has died at sea of a heart attack.

    Flashing from the shock of that news to the halcyon, sometimes perilous and often amusing days at sea with a cast of colorful characters too fascinating to be fictional, Fishing With Hyenas evokes heartthrob and heartbreak. Mathews’ creative competence is beyond question, as this skillfully constructed narrative attests. Well-chosen photographs bring the episodes alive.

    The memoir is partly catharsis and partly a paean to Bart and his many staunch friends. Mathews deftly weaves the lore of the independent fishermen and adventures on the water through every page: the rescue of a kitten, the freeing of a bird, camaraderie among fishing families, and the occasional spectacular sunset.

    The aftermath of Bart’s death leaves Mathews grief-stricken, penniless and fighting for his legacy—the boat he had borrowed everything to possess. But we know from her courageous account that Mathews will overcome any hardship—having experienced a weathered life at sea and the loss of a good man.

    Fishing With Hyenas won 1st Place in the JOURNEY Awards, the narrative non-fiction category of the Chanticleer International Book Awards in 2017.

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • WHEN STARS GO OUT by Ransom Grey – Y/A Dystopian Thriller, Fantasy, Christian

    WHEN STARS GO OUT by Ransom Grey – Y/A Dystopian Thriller, Fantasy, Christian

    Welcome to the new America, the one where everyone who reaches age 18 is shipped off to heavily controlled (albeit, dark and oppressive) compounds to work. Don’t worry, your meals and your housing are already taken care of. We’ll pay you, too. Sure, there’s a curfew and some rules… but that’s the price you pay for order.

    What’s that? You don’t want to follow the rules? You don’t want to work in our compounds?

    Guards!

     

    When Reed turns 18-years-old he’s shipped off to one of several heavily controlled compounds, part of a new national order known as the Great Reorganization Operation, or GRO. Once there, he spends his days as an involuntary worker at “The Hill” where he lives in a dorm and works in a factory. He receives reasonable pay, is fed and housed, and has some hours before curfew each day to mingle with other entrapped young people. There is no choice in the matter. Suddenly, Reed’s life is not his own.

    At first, he’s furious. He longs to live without the heavy-handed discipline those who fall out of line endure. His roommates, Riley and Reagan, warn him that the ruling clique known as the Council has brutal methods of treating those who speak out against their governance. Better to keep your head down, they tell him. Better to stay alive.

    But then Reed notices Nathan, a guy that never seems to have a bad day. Reed wants to learn his secret. At great risk, he joins with Nathan and other young people who meet covertly. To his surprise, the group’s focus centers around how to oppose the Council, the GRO, and everything those institutions stand for. Elijah, their leader, gives Reed a radically new perspective. But nothing is perfect and soon Reed is forced into a position where he must choose to sacrifice his own safety for another’s well-being. His decision sends him on a path he could’ve never anticipated.

    Debut author, Ransom Grey, offers an adventurous mix of speculative and dystopic vision for the Y/A audience. In fact, his futuristic dystopia is unnervingly close to current day America. When Stars Go Out echoes the totalitarian overlord vibe of George Orwell’s 1984 with a cast of characters who are brave and honorable pitted against the machinations of a society gone very wrong. Grey’s prose is solid, with compassionate leads and a few scenes of violence to underscore the hatefulness of the GRO and the Council.

    A dark dystopian fantasy, When Stars Go Out posits a credible projection from today’s current reality of a nation led by a dark and dreadful class of elitists, with the young people secretly meeting at the GRO facility as the only ones who have the guts to save it. Mr. Grey’s work is published with Defiance Press.

  • AMP UP TENSION WORD by WORD – with a Handy List by Jessica P. Morrell

    AMP UP TENSION WORD by WORD – with a Handy List by Jessica P. Morrell

    Tension is part curiosity, part unease, part dread or anticipation. It’s linked to every aspect of stories, found on every page, and creates a vivid fictional world that seethes with trouble and obstacles to overcome. Tension prickles readers’ nerves and makes them fret and worry.

    Tension, along with suspense, jabs at the reader’s senses with haunting questions and shifting circumstances that must be unraveled.

    “Tension is a crucial ingredient that compels readers to keep turning the pages.” – Jessica P. Morrell

    Tension is a force field in fiction, or any type of storytelling, that is created on a word-by-word basis that is underlying the story in every scene. Tension is also used to create mood and tone. Mood and tone are important aspects of storytelling often not given their due.

    You see, great fiction is designed to cause a reader’s emotions to jangle and his mood to go up and down with every turn of the page. Unlike real life where people usually avoid conflict and misery, in fiction, the best parts of the stories are where the characters are in the worst trouble. Readers love to suffer along with characters, because they’re removed from these miseries, perhaps because they’re escaping their own miseries while comfortable in their homes or airplane seats as characters battle doubts and demons in a fictional world. Tension sometimes  helps readers (and listeners) to experience catharsis.

    Jessica advises writers to pay particular attention to the words they use to increase tension and impact. These are her tips on how and what to look for when you are wanting to write a page-turner and who would not want to do this?

    • Recognize that you’re constantly making choices when you write. Know when you want your words to emphasize an aspect, resonate, slow down, or speed up your story.
    Vary your word choices and respect ‘word territory’—that is, don’t repeat words and phrases, especially those in close proximity, especially with unusual words.
    Vary sentence lengths because they can be numbing when repeated.
    Write tight. Short sentences generally increase tension. Every word in every sentence needs a job. If it doesn’t have a job, fire it.
    Use hard consonant sounds to increase tension. Examples are cowgirl, geek, gimme, trigger, castrate, succor, cackle.
    Use sibilance or a hissing sound to disturb readers and suggest unpleasantness. Examples are: sinister, shyster, sizzle, simper, slice, buzz.
    Insert punchy, muscular verbs whenever they serve your purpose: roil, blurt, thunder, sting, crash, grovel, conjure, hobble, jacked, leer, muzzle.

    Most of the time dialogue should be zingy, taut, and to the point.

    • Place the most emphatic words at the end of a sentence or paragraph: The door closed with a resounding click, confirming that I was trapped.

    “All stories begin with word choice; and word choices will either doom
    it or set your story apart.” – Jessica P. Morrell

    Jessica’s  HANDY LIST OF 1,130 words to print out and use for your writing toolbox. 

    Click here for Jessica’s List of 1,130 words that could add more tension to your story and boost your writing vocabulary.

    Jessica Page Morrell
    Jessica Page Morrell

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

    Jessica understands both sides of the editorial desk–as a highly-sought after content development editor and an author. Her work also appears in multiple anthologies and The Writer and Writer’s Digest magazines. She is known for explaining the hows and whys of what makes for excellent writing and for sharing very clear examples that examines the technical aspects of writing that emphases layering and subtext. Her books on writing craft are considered “a must have” for any serious writer’s toolkit. For links for her writing craft books, please click on her name above.

    Chanticleer Reviews and OnWord Talks will interview Jessica for more of her writing tips and advice. Stay tuned! ~ Chanticleer

     

  • AUGUST’s SPOTLIGHT is on the CHATELAINE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

    AUGUST’s SPOTLIGHT is on the CHATELAINE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is seeking today’s best books featuring romantic themes and adventures of the heart, historical love affairs, perhaps a little steamy romance, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    A little information about the Chatelaine Book Awards icon:

    We feel that Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s Pre-Raphaelite painting of Jane Morris (muse and wife of William Morris) in a Blue Silk Dress captures the many moods of the Chatelaine division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.  Jane Morris (nee Jane Burden—little is known about her childhood but that it was poor and deprived) was known for her keen intelligence. William Morris fell in love with her when she sat for him as a model. She was privately tutored to become a gentleman’s wife upon their engagement. It is said that she was the inspiration for George Bernard Shaw’s character Eliza Dolittle of My Fair Lady fame. The Blue Silk Dress was painted in 1868 by Rossetti and it currently resides in the Society for Antiquaries of London.  She was 29 when Rossetti painted it. Rossetti and Jane Morris became closely attached until his death in 1882. To read more about the fascinating Jane Morris, click on this Wikipedia page.

    Please join us in congratulating and reading these top works in this diverse range of all reads Chatelaine: Romance, Chick-Lit,  Women’s Fiction, Inspirational, Suspenseful, and, of course, Steamy and Sensual.

    Leigh Grant’s MASK OF DREAMS  took home the Chatelaine Grand Prize Ribbon for 2017. Congratulations!

      

    Mask of Dreams is a love story, enhanced by the literature of the Renaissance, in particular, Petrarch. This carefully researched historical fiction takes time to develop; Caterina and Rade have their own stories until the letter stitches them together. A tale of sacrifice and honor, violence and fear of conquest, the plight of women in a patriarchal society, immigration and outsiders, Mask of Dreams has resonance in today’s world. And occasionally, even a sense of humor.

    Join us in wishing Leigh Grant the very best luck in her publishing adventure! Leigh submitted her unpublished manuscript to the 2017 Chatelaine Book Awards competition.

    Leigh Grant has this to say about winning the Chatelaine Grand Prize Book Award for 2017, “I wanted to let you know that the award got me something that I had really wanted: an agent. She is talking (insert top traditional publishing house here), I should be so lucky…Chanticleer’s contest has been a very good thing for me. Best, Leigh Grant

    CHATELAINE BOOK AWARD WINNERS for 2017, a division of the CIBA.

    Cheri Champagne, Gail Noble-Sanderson, Elizabeth Crowens, Eileen Charbonneau

    The 2017 books have all won a Chanticleer Book Reviews package!

    • Magic of the Pentacle by Diane Wylie
    • Dear Mr. Hitchcock by Elizabeth Crowens
    • Watch Over Me by Eileen Charbonneau
    • Mask of Dreams by Leigh Grant ***CHATELAINE 2017 GRAND PRIZE WINNER*** 
    • The Passage Home to Meuse by Gail Noble-Sanderson
    • Love’s Misadventures by Cheri Champagne   

     

      M.A. Clarke Scott’s The ART of ENCHANTMENT took home the 2016 Chatelaine Grand Prize.

    The Art of Enchantment, M.A. Clarke Scott’s 2016 Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner
    Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner M. A. Clarke Scott

    First Place Category Winners for 2016 are: 

    The Chatelaine Award-Winning Authors of 2016: M.A. Clarke Scott, Diana Forbes, and Gail Avery Halverson

    Click on the hyperlinks to read their Chanticleer awarded reviews:

     

     

    Nicole Evelina’s DAUGHTER of DESTINY took both the Chatelaine Grand Prize and the OVERALL Grand Prize winner for 2015.

    Nicole proudly displayed her Overall Grand Prize Ribbon

     

    • Historical Romance: The Particular Appeal of Gilliane Pugsley by Susan Örnbratt
    • Regency: Once Upon a Scandal by Julie Le Mens
    • Women’s Fiction-Short Story Collection:  Ladies in Low Places by Mary Ann Henry
    • Women’s Fiction: In a Vertigo of Silence by Miriam Polli  
    • Adventure/Suspense: Banished Threads by Kaylin McFarren
    • Mystery/Suspense: A Season for Killing Blondes by Joanne Guidoccio 
    • Inspirational/Restorative:  A Foolish Consistency by Andrea Weir
    • Young Adult/New Adult: Deep Blue Eternity by Natasha Boyd 
      • Daughter of Destiny by Nicole Evelina***CHATELAINE 2015 Grand Prize Winner & OVERALL Winner***
      • Honorable Mentions:
      • Danica Winters – Smoke and Ashes
      • Belangela G. Tarazona – Hiatus
      • J.L Oakley  Mist-shi-mus: A Novel of Captivity
      • John Herman – The Counting of the Coup

       

      Janet Shawgo’s FIND ME AGAIN won the 2014 Chatelaine Grand Prize.

      Janet Shawgo Won the Chatelaine Grand Prize

      Find Me Again Janet Shawgo

      • Historical: Catherine A. Wilson and Catherine T. Wilson  for The Order of the Lily  
      • Romance Regency: Kerryn Reid for Learning to Waltz 
      • International Intrigue/World Events: Kristine Cayne for Deadly Betrayal
      • Contemporary: Kim Sanders for The Ex Lottery
      • Mystery/Suspense/Thriller Romance: Donna Barker for Mother Teresa’s Advice for Jilted Lovers
      • Inspirational/Restorative: Peggy Patrick for Surrendered II: Pride 
      • Romance & Adventure: Martha Rather for Kismet or Kamasutra
      • Fantasy/Mythological: Danica Winters for Montana Mustangs
      • Jane Austen Inspired: Betty Codd for Eleanor Grace 
      • Debut Novel: Julie LeMense for Once Upon a Wager
      • YA: M.A. Clarke Scott for The Dissimulation of Doves 
      • Women’s Fiction: Kate Vale for Destiny’s Second Chance
      • Women’s Fiction/Humorous: Lisa Souza for  Beauty and the Bridesmaid 
      • First Loves: Jennifer Snow for The Trouble with Mistletoe
      • Blended Genre:  Janet Shawgo for Find Me Again ***CHATELAINE 2014 GRAND PRIZE WINNER***

       

      Kate Vale’s CHOICES was awarded the 2013 Chatelaine Grand Prize

      • Historical Romance: The Lily and the Lion by Catherine T. Wilson & Catherine A. Wilson
      • Southern Romance: Swamp Secret by Eleanor Tatum
      • Mystery: The Hourglass by Sharon Struth
      • Jane Austen Inspired: Pulse and Prejudice by Colette Saucier
      • Paranormal: Crimson Flames by Ashley Robertson
      • Christian Inspirational Romance: Chasing Charlie by C. M. Newman
      • Restorative: A Path through the Garden by Nancy LaPonzina
      • Classic Bodice Ripper: To Dare the Duke of Dangerfield by Bronwen Evans
      • Contemporary: Choices by Kate Vale ***CHATELAINE 2013 GRAND PRIZE WINNER***

       Who will win the CHATELAINE Book Awards Blue Ribbons for 2018?

      The judging rounds will commence in August! Submit your works today!

      The last day for submissions into the 2018 Chatelaine Book Awards is August 31, 2018.

      Click here for more information and submission form! 

      Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

      Insiders’ Tip: Other genre divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards have romance categories as well. Multiple submissions of the same work to a variety of  CIBA writing competitions divisions are accepted. 

    • EPSTEIN’S PANCAKE by Bjarne Rostaing – Political Thriller, Thriller & Suspense, Mystery, CLUE AWARD WINNER

      EPSTEIN’S PANCAKE by Bjarne Rostaing – Political Thriller, Thriller & Suspense, Mystery, CLUE AWARD WINNER

      Blue and Gold Clue 1st place badgeStyled in the cooling off days of the Reagan era and the still heated Iran Contra imbroglio, Epstein’s Pancake features a street-wise hero afflicted by PTSD and new to the spy vs. spy game. Viet Nam vet Rob Price is not having an easy time with civilian life when a friend introduces him to a mysterious man who wants to hire him for some low-level, well-paid courier work in France – dropping things off, meeting people in airports, that kind of thing.

      Of course, it’s espionage and despite how careful Price normally is, he doesn’t hesitate. He has little to lose, though he will gradually realize that even someone with little to lose might find something worth saving. In this case, possibly, the entire world. As he gets more tightly drawn into more secretive levels of the work, Price begins to wonder who the good guys really are. He has one trustworthy supporter, a martial arts teacher name Jennie whose instruction might save his life as he takes on an entire military-industrial complex.

      At the core of this multi-layered plot is a scientist playing with something that still seems ultra-futuristic, though it has been around for longer than most people realize: artificial intelligence. In this case, AI is represented by a plate full of genetic mush connected to wires and computers – the eponymous pancake that multi-nationals, dictators and even the leaders of the free world want to control. After numerous near-death experiences and constant switchbacks that force Price to re-learn his playbook almost daily, he will identify the villains in the piece and force their hand. But not without cost to his psyche.

      Rostaing, an award-winning author, paints a remarkable picture of the times and the setting of this action-rich, intelligent tale, and is able to convey it in rich language. Doubtless, he has accessed many sources in piecing together a novel that seems entirely accurate down to small but significant details, from everything that was on TV in the late 1980s to how the bigwigs were thinking.

      He inserts some believable behind-the-scenes vignettes and a few well-chosen opinions without weighing the narrative, and he has an excellent ear for dialogue. In Price, he has brought to life an enjoyable mix of John le Carré’s cool-headed Smiley and Dashiell Hammett’s hard-bitten Sam Spade.

      With international intrigue, a new twist on almost every page, life-threatening danger, and a hard-living hero with a soft heart, Epstein’s Pancake is a smart story solidly in the spy thriller genre that’s bound to garner a loyal readership.

      Epstein’s Pancake won First Place in the 2016 Clue Awards for Bjarne Rostaing.

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

       

       

    • 2018 M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem – The Short List

      2018 M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem – The Short List

      Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThe M&M  Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Mystery & Mayhem Fiction. The M&M Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions CIBA).

      These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from Long Listers (Slush Pile Survivors) to the 2018 M&M Book Awards SHORT LIST. These entries are now in competition for the limited 2018 M&M  Semi-Finalists from which the First Place Category Positions will be chosen. The M&M Book Awards Semi-Finalists and First Place Positions along with the M&M Grand Prize Award Winner will be announced at the Awards Gala on Saturday, April 27th, 2019. 

      The M&M Book Awards competition discovers today’s  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 are in the running for the next round – the SEMI-Finalist positions for the 2018 M&M Book Awards novel competition for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction! Good Luck to All!

      • B.L. SmithBert Mintenko and the Minor Misdemeanors
      • Mary AdlerShadowed by Death: An Oliver Wright WW2 Mystery Novel
      • Charlotte StuartWhy Me?
      • Becky Clark Fiction Can Be Murder
      • Alan ChaputSavannah Sleuth
      • Christine Evelyn VolkerVenetian Blood: Murder in a Sensuous City
      • Susan Lynn SolomonDead Again
      • Michelle CoxA Promise Given
      • Chief John J. MandevilleOld Dark and Dangerous
      • Traci AndrighettiCampari Crimson
      • Mark W StoubThe Fifth Trumpet: Fire in the Blood
      • M. Louisa LockePilfered Promises: A Victorian San Francisco Mystery
      • C.A. LarmerDo Not Go Gentle
      • C.A. LarmerEvil Under The Stars: The Agatha Christie Book Club 3
      • James MusgraveChinawoman’s Chance
      • James Scott ByrnsidePrisoners of the Past
      • Kate ValeOnly You
      • Nancy J. CohenHair Brained
      • Carl and Jane Bock  Death Rattle
      • C. C. Harrison Death by G-String, a Coyote Canyon Ladies Ukulele Club Mystery
      • Stone WinklerBlood on a Blue Moon: A Sheaffer Blue Mystery
      • Julie ChaseCat Got Your Secrets
      • Lo Monaco Lethal Relations
      • Donna Huston MurrayFor Better or Worse
      • Anna CastleMoriarty Takes His Medicine
      • Carl and Jane BockDeath Rattle
      • Deborah RichUnder the Radar
      • Kelly OliverFOX: A Jessica James Mystery
      • Susan Lynn SolomonDead Again

      Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2018 M&M Long List to the Short List.  These novels will now compete for the (Semi-Finalists) Positions!

      The M&M Short Listers will compete for the SemiFinalists positions that will compete for the M&M First-In-Category Positions.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the M&M 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.

      Good Luck to each of you as your work competes in the 2018 Mystery & Mayhem International Book Awards. 

      The M&M  Grand Prize Winner and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 28th, 2019 Chanticleer 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 2019 M&M Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions into the 2019 M&M  Book Awards is April 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.