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  • MONEY JANE: The Hunt for a Legendary Magic Thief, Book 2 of How to Set the World on Fire Series by T.K. Riggins – Fantasy, Sword & Stone, Middle-Grade

    MONEY JANE: The Hunt for a Legendary Magic Thief, Book 2 of How to Set the World on Fire Series by T.K. Riggins – Fantasy, Sword & Stone, Middle-Grade


    Money Jane won First Place in the 2018 CIBAs OZMA Awards for Fantasy Novels. Congratulations!


    OZMA 1st Place Blue and Gold BadgeLiving in a fantastical world filled with magic and mythical creatures, Kase Garrick is studying at The Academy. His main course of study focuses on becoming a great warrior. As he grows close to his friend Lenia, he’s influenced by what is dear to her. Lenia is working hard at becoming a well-respected and powerful wizard.

    But that isn’t the problem. The troubles begin when Lenia’s magical black trident is stolen. It’s a bold and surprising attack by a hooded figure who has the mysterious resemblance and mystical presence of a legendary criminal, a cloaked thief who lived long before their time. Could this be that daring, and feared Money Jane? Welcome to the second book in T. K. Riggins series, How to Set the World on Fire, Money Jane: The Hunt for a Legendary Magic Thief.

    Kase’s skills have grown by leaps and bounds as part of this group of fierce combatants in training. Their battle cry resonates as they shout in unison, “Dragoon!” Yet, this adventure will truly test Kase’s fortitude and commitment to what’s right. When Lenia is devastated by the theft of the trident, which is the focus of her wizardry, Kase devotedly fights by her side. He sets out to track down this devious thief and return what was taken from her.

    Will Kase be able to match wits with this ancient culprit, and how will he confront him? On his mission, Kase plunges into a magical world that’s full of new people and many surprises – some beautiful and some dangerous. In the midst of all this, Kase and his friends are further challenged in the annual Academy competition. Others at the Academy are plotting to beat Kase’s team at solving the difficult and complex scenarios that require excellent execution of skills from the three interwoven studies:  Warrior, Wizard, and Scholar.

    In this school of magic world where balance exists between the strength of a warrior, the intellectual prowess of a scholar, and the passionate magic of a wizard, Riggins creates vulnerable, but eager characters who are learning that “we do our best when we work together.” Dragoon!

    How to Set the World on Fire, book one of the self-titled series, won Grand Prize in the OZMA Awards for Fantasy in the 2017 Chanticleer International Book Awards Competition.

     

     

  • Quick Tips to Make Your Email Marketing Campaigns More Effective by Kiffer Brown

    Quick Tips to Make Your Email Marketing Campaigns More Effective by Kiffer Brown

    EMAILS – How to improve your “Open Rate” of Your Email Campaigns and E-newsletters that use MailChimp, Constant Contact, or Customer Relations Management software systems (CRM).

    Don’t let your emails to your subscribers end up in the dreaded SPAM folder!

    Make sure that you DO NOT use the following words in your emails’ subject lines or in the first line of your emails.

    These WORDS have been shown to decrease your “open rates” when used in the Subject Line and may have the ability to direct your email campaign into the SPAM folder/Junk Mail folder of your recipients’ inbox. How does this happen — the web crawlers try to determine what is “Spam” and what isn’t.

    • Hurry
    • Look inside
    • Free (but Freebie works!)
    • SALE or Sale
    • DEAL or Deal
    • Incredible Deal
    • This won’t last
    • Offer expires
    • Limited Time
    • Last Chance
    • Don’t use a  ? and ! in the subject line — this combo is known to redirect emails into the dreaded SPAM folder.
    • Don’t use ALL CAPS in the subject line because that is equivalent to YELLING at your recipient. However, do capitalize one or two words.

    Basically, make sure that your emails subject lines do not read like a sales pitch.

    The Dreaded SPAM Folder

    How to organize emails campaigns?

    1.  TARGET. Make sure that your list is targeted to correct recipients. I know this sounds like it should be common sense, but it is often the first obstacle.
      1. You can ensure that you have a targeted list by having a “subscribe” button on your website. Never buy email lists and we advise never selling your subscribers’ emails.
      2. BLUE Subscribe buttons have been found to be clicked more than any other color.
      3. All of your social media and marketing collateral should be targeted to drive potential readers and fans to your website (not your Amazon page or a book sales page). You want to engage your readers and potential readers to interact with you and your stories (your brand). To do this you must have a website that resonants with your targeted audience. (This will need to be a separate topic).
    2. FREQUENCY and TIMING. I would caution you to send out three or fewer email campaigns per week. Make sure that your email campaign is not getting lost in “Holiday” traffic. I have found that emails campaigns that land in our subscribers’ email boxes on holidays have a reduced open rate.
    3. UNLESS. If your campaign is  21 Days to a Better _____ campaign, then deliver what you promise!
    4. VALUABLE CONTENT. Only send out an email campaign when you have something of value to present to your targeted audience.
    5. SHORT and SWEET.  Remember to keep your message concise and interesting. Make sure that your email stands out from the rest of the emails in the recipient’s inbox.
    6. WORDSMITHING. Make your language entertaining (do this always because you are supposed to be a master word-crafter! )
    7. CONVERSATION. Make it a  two-way conversation by encouraging the recipients to ask questions, give feedback, or join the discussion about characters, events, or enter a contest specifically created to resonate with your readers. Here is a link to how (Ann Charles is a USA Today Bestselling author who writes award-winning sassy mysteries) Ann Charles offers contests on her website.  Notice that she doesn’t scream CONTEST. But it is there for her beloved fans. http://anncharles.com/2018-traveling-with-ann-calendar-contest/
    8. SUBJECT LINE. Spend some time crafting the subject line of your email. It will determine the “open rate” of your email campaign more than anything else that you could do. Subject lines are to email campaigns like covers are to books.
      1. Pique your readers’ interest
      2. Avoid ALL CAPS and exclamation points in the Subject line along with the dreaded sales words.
      3. Capitalize at least one word.
      4. Do keep it SHORT. Most people are reading emails on their mobile devices.
      5. Really think about what will intrigue your recipient to continue reading and to OPEN your campaign email.
      6. Make sure that the subject line matches the content of your email. Don’t “bait and switch’ because that leads to unsubscribes.
      7. What do you want your recipient to do? Keep the email focused on that. Is it engagement? Attend an event? Know that you have a new book in the works?
      8. What is the purpose of your email?
    9. TEST and REPEAT.  Keep track of what works and what doesn’t.

    What is a GOOD OPEN RATE for email campaigns?

    Open rates vary from industry to industry and purpose to purpose.  This is what MailChimp has to say about open rates. Click here to learn more. 

    Words that do work in the SUBJECT LINE and increase your email campaigns’ open rate are along the following veins: 

    • Announcements
    • Invitations
    • Thank you
    • Personalizing Subjects (are you emailing  “Quick Tips” or “How to” or “Announcing” )
    • Direct and to the point messages — >  The ONLY WITNESS to a tragic crime is Neema, (THEN this could go into the “preview text”>  Neema is a gorilla who can communicate  (Will this get your readers attention?) – Then the preview  continues…the latest eco-mystery by award-winning author Pam Beason.  (Notice how the power words are front-loaded in the Subject Line). Beason can then go on in the email body to say that her works on now on sale or where they are available or when she is doing an author event or that there is a new book in the series.
    • Make your recipients feel special.
      • For my readers and fans of Neema (subscribers would know about Neema, the communicating gorilla in a research project).
      • My gift to you
      • You’re invited
      • An exclusive offer only for my dear (insert name) subscribers
      • Did you know that Neema had a baby? (Subscribers, again, would know about Neema and her companion and that this email is just for them.)
    • Most email recipients do appreciate a good pun or a clever or quirky use of words.
    • IMAGES – studies have shown that having an image for every two-to-five hundred words of text makes for a more positive interaction with the email recipient.

    In conclusion, study what works with your target market, continue to evolve your email templates and campaigns, keep testing and analyzing your open rates and click rates. Discover what resonates with your readers.

    Freddie of MailChimp

    Crafting email campaigns is quite the art. Generators of  email campaigns must consistently try to improve “their game.” Fortunately, MailChimp has easy methods to test your email campaign effectiveness through A/B testing, analytics, and feedback.

    A word about A/B testing> Only test one A/B variable at a time. As I always say, “Today’s digital marketing is all about the long game.”

    I have read and researched many articles and posts on how to increase the effectiveness of Chanticleer Reviews email campaigns. To include all of the links would make this article cumbersome and longer than it already is. I hope that you don’t mind that I put the information in a more digestible format. For more information about how to make your email campaigns more effective, just “google it” and click on the links in this post.  Meanwhile, I hope that you have found some of the tidbits that I’ve shared with you interesting and valuable in promoting your brand and books.

    Remember to never forget that social media posts and comments, emails, and websites are you represented in the Internet of Things is akin to being in attendance of the Earth’s biggest cocktail party. Be the guest that always gets invited and not the one to be avoided at all costs.

    And now for inserting those images! One thousand words equal two-to-five images. Let me know what you think! Kiffer Brown, Chanticleer Reviews Team

    Chanticleer Book Reviews
  • DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – 2018 Long List

    DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – 2018 Long List

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Young Adult. The Dante Rossetti Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBA).

     

    Rossetti Book Awards is looking for the new best books featuring stories of all shapes and sizes written to an audience between the ages of about twelve to eighteen. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Dystopian, Mystery, Paranormal, Historical, Romance, and Literary.

    Information about  the #CIBA Long Lists and Short Lists

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2018 Rossetti  Book Awards LONG LIST (aka the Slush Pile Survivors). We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries are now in competition for the 2018 ROSSETTI SHORT LIST. Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will compete for the coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 Rossetti Book Awards in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the Dante Rossetti GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Divisions 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 SHORT LIST of the 2018 ROSSETTI  Book Awards novel competition for Young Adult Fiction.

    2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – The LONG LIST

    • Andrea R. Smith – Ensnared
    • Janeen Swart – The Hidden Truth
    • JoAnna Rowe – Flowers & Fire
    • Olivia Bernard – The Balance and the Blade
    • Averil Drummond – Gloam
    • Jennifer Healey – Speak American
    • Alexander Edlund – Keelic and the Pathfinders
    • KB Shaw – From the Shadows
    • Dan Morales – The Scouts of St. Michael Operation Archangel
    • Carmela A. Martino – Playing by Heart
    • Robert Wright Jr – Unwanted
    • David L. Carter – From the Edge of the World
    • Gina Detwiler – Forlorn
    • Cheryl G. Bostrom – Climb, Run, Drown
    • Alex Paul – Tookan Attack
    • Annaliese Plowright – Bleeding Hearts
    • D.C. Carlisle – Surviving Eros: The Paradox of Jayne Le Faye
    • Susan Miura – Healer
    • Lynn Yvonne Moon – Whispers
    • Leslea Wahl – An Unexpected Role
    • Anne Sweazy-Kulju – Grog Wars, Dos
    • Tiffany Brooks – Reality Gold
    • C.A. Gray – Uncanny Valley
    • Molly Lazer – Owl Eyes: A Fairy Tale
    • Luke Jacket – Stuck-up Scumbags of the Eighth Grade
    • Tom Edwards – The Honourable Catherine
    • Andrea and William Vaughan – 2nd Gen
    • Denise Lammi – Lucid World
    • Mara Gan – Joined
    • P. L. Hamilton – League of Potioneers
    • Jacinta Jade – Change of Chaos
    • Chuck Vance – Sneaking Out
    • Andrea Murray – Something New
    • Andrea Murray – White Knight
    • Susan Faw – Soul Sacrifice
    • Sarah Mendivel – Sam’s Theory
    • Christy Nicholas – The Enchanted Swans
    • Jennifer Alsever – Ember Burning: Trinity Forest Book 1

    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 works compete for the Dante Rossetti  Book  Awards Short List.

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

    PJ Devlin, Deen Ferrell, Susan Faw, DJ Munro, Rebekah N. Bryan, 2017 Dante Rossetti Book Award Winners

    The Dante Rossetti 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 Dante Rossetti 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. 

     

     

  • JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2018 SHORT LIST #CIBA

    JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2018 SHORT LIST #CIBA

    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 (CIBA).

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the Long List to the 2018 Journey Book Awards SHORT LIST (aka the Slush Pile Survivors). We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries are now in competition for the 2018 Journey Semi-Finalists List. First Place Category winners and the Journey Grand Prize winners will be selected from the Semi-Finalists and the winners will be announced at the Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019.

    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 are in the running for the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards Semi-finalists list for the Narrative Non-fiction Fiction and Memoir CIBA Awards. Good Luck to all of the  CIBA Journey Short Listers 2018!

    • Joy Ross Davis – Mother Can You Hear Me?
    • Sean Dwyer – A Quest for Tears: Overcoming a Traumatic Brain Injury
    • Philip Muls – Mind on Fire: A Case of Successful Addiction Recovery
    • H. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd – Cowboy Up! Life Lessons from Lazy B
    • Andrew Jurkowski and Lisa Wright – Between The Swastika and the Bear: A Polish Memoir 1925 – 1948
    • Janice S. Ellis – From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream
    • Kayce Stevens Hughlett – SoulStroller: experiencing the weight, whispers, & wings of the world
    • Liberty Elias Miller – The Heart of the Runaway
    • Karen A. Anderson – The Amazing Afterlife of Animals; Messages and Signs From Our Pets on the Other Side
    • Jeff O’Driscoll, MD – Not Yet
    • Julie Morrison – Barbed
    • GySgt L Christian Bussler – No Tougher Duty, No Greater Honor – a memoir of a Mortuary Affairs Marine
    • Terry Milos – North of Familiar: A Woman’s Story of Homesteading and Adventure in the Canadian Wilderness
    • Janis Couvreux – Sail Cowabunga! A Family’s Ten Years at Sea
    • Dennis M. Clausen – Goodbye to Main Street
    • Russell Vann – Ghetto Bastard, A Memoir
    • Dr. Rick Scarnati – God’s Light 
    • Rebecca Brockway – Miss Matched at Midlife: Dating Episodes of a Middle-Aged Woman
    • Austin M Hopkins – The Loose Ends Became Knots
    • Katrina Shawver – HENRY: A Polish Swimmer’s True Story of Friendship from Auschwitz to America
    • Lou McKee – Klee wyck Journal
    • Donna LeClair – IMMUNITY: Entitlement of Wealthy Political Notables
    • Cheryl Hughes Musick – The Day the Musick Died
    • Cheryl Aguiar – Great Horned Owlets Rescue: Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way…

    Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction 2018 Judging Rounds

    1. Slush Pile (all entries)
    2. Long List (Slush Pile Survivors)
    3. Short List (Stickers and Digital Badges available (Website and e-newsletter notifications. Please LIKE and Follow Chanticleer Book Reviews to be tagged in social media).
    4. Semi-Finalists (notified by email) Selected from Short List.
    5. First Place Category Positions (announced at the CIBA ceremony in April, 27th 2019. (Selected from Semi-Finalists). Ribbon packages, stickers, digital badges awarded.
    6. Journey Book Awards Grand Prize winner (selected from First Place Category Positions).  Ribbon packages, stickers, digital badges awarded.

    CIBA Grand Prize Winner

    1. CIBA Grand Prize Winner (selected from the 16 CIBA divisions grand prize winners). $1,000 cash prize,  CIBA ribbon packages, stickers, digital badges awarded.

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

    Susan Marie Conrad, 2017 JOURNEY GRAND PRIZE WINNER
    Journey Book Award Winners

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the JOURNEY Book Awards Semi-Finalists positions. 

    The JOURNEY 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. 

     

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

     

  • SECRETS REVEALED, Cedar Islands Tales Book 4 by Kate Vale – Contemporary Romance, Mystery, Women’s Fiction

    SECRETS REVEALED, Cedar Islands Tales Book 4 by Kate Vale – Contemporary Romance, Mystery, Women’s Fiction

    M&M Blue and Gold 1st Place Badge ImageOwen Haskins is returning to his childhood home on fictional Cedar Island (which has an uncanny resemblance to Whidbey Island for those readers in the know) with his seven-year-old son Ian so they can have a new start. Ian has had trouble being bullied in his old school, and Owen is worried that new teacher, Faith Russell, may not be up to the job of helping his vulnerable son. Of course, Faith and Owen clash, while simultaneously being attracted to each other, but painful experiences in their past initially keep them from acting on their growing feelings for one another.

    Secrets Revealed by Kate Vale is the 4th book in her Cedar Island Tales series, and it is not necessary to read the previous tales to jump right into this heartwarming romance. Each of the main characters has their own secret that affects their relationship. Faith is an accomplished teacher but is distrustful of men. She dresses in clothes that used to fit but now are worn and oversized, almost as a shield to keep people at bay, something her mother (who shares the other side of a duplex with her) constantly harps about.

    Owen left his hometown due to a very difficult relationship with his abusive father. He didn’t return until after his mother’s death—something he regrets.

    Ian is withdrawn, possibly from the bullying he endured at his old school, but he has a secret as well, one that goes back to the tragedies of losing both his mother and grandmother in Idaho while still a young boy.

    As Owen and Faith interact, they can’t ignore the attraction between them, and they begin a sensual relationship but agree not to become “serious.” Faith can’t help but fall in love with Owen, but their relationship is complicated by misunderstandings and young Ian’s desire to have Miss Russell become his new mom. These secrets have a lot of sway over the lives of those keeping them, and the story is a good reminder of the power of secrets and words in our lives.

    A nice twist in the romance genre, Vale tells her story from not just the point-of-view of the two romantic leads, but also from the viewpoint of young Ian, a character whom readers will care about from the very beginning of the novel.

    Secrets Revealed won First Place in the 2016 Mystery & Mayhem Awards for Kate Vale.

     

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • A TALL TALE ABOUT a DACHSHUND and a PELICAN: How a Friendship Came to Be by Kizzie Jones – Children’s Books, Tall Tales, Friendship

    A TALL TALE ABOUT a DACHSHUND and a PELICAN: How a Friendship Came to Be by Kizzie Jones – Children’s Books, Tall Tales, Friendship

    Goldie the dachshund thinks she’s found a new friend. When she comes upon a pelican on the beach during her walk with her owner, she immediately approaches the strange creature, trying to strike up a new friendship based on their physical similarities.

    After she points out they both have long muzzles, Pelican shows how its mouth is made to hold fish, which Goldie cannot do. Undeterred, Goldie points out their similarly long bodies, but Pelican explains how its body isn’t covered with fur, but feathers made to fly. Finally, Goldie accepts how truly different the two are and is about to leave disappointed when Pelican explains that creatures with differences can still be friends as long as they try to learn about each other. Just like Goldie and the little girl who owns her, the two very different creatures become forever friends.

    Kizzie Jones has created a whimsical tale celebrating the differences in everyone. Whether human, animal, or bird, differences don’t have to separate. In accepting the differences rather than forcing similarity, people can create a symbiotic existence, just like a dachshund and a pelican. In a world that often condemns individuality and forces an artificial sameness, this short children’s book, A Tall Tale About a Dachshund and a Pelican: How a Friendship Came to Be, embraces what makes people, or in Goldie’s case, animals, unique.

    While myths and tall tales typically show fun explanations for how the natural world works, A Tall Tale About a Dachshund and a Pelican takes a more emotional and less physical path. When Goldie is about to leave disappointed, Pelican points out what makes both him and Goldie unique, effectively cheering Goldie on to appreciate those differences while showing how friends don’t have to be the same, only accepting and receptive to diversity.

    It is also beautiful that Goldie sees similarities where there really aren’t any. She looks for ways to identify with Pelican before she introduces herself. She works to find common ground even when it means trying (and failing) to fly. What a better place this world would be if everyone looked for the “sameness” in others instead of first attacking the differences!

    Scott Ward’s illustrations make the tale come alive with bright colors and whimsical representations of sand and sea. An unusual feature is the illustrations within the written text. Graphic designer, Nelz (Nelson Agustín), who did the interior and cover book design, highlights some important words by making them cartoonish and large, which adds to the overall fantastical appearance sometimes with a sprinkling of stars, sometimes with a rainbow of color.

    Perhaps Goldie says it best when she summarizes, “All kinds of creatures can like each other without being alike.” Humans of all ages, not just the children for whom the book is written, can use a little more Goldie attitude.

    Simply put, here is a beautifully penned children’s story about friendship and diversity and what happens when a dachshund and a pelican happen to meet one glorious day.

    A Tall Tale About a Dachshund and a Pelican: How a Friendship Came to Be won First Place in the LITTLE PEEPS Awards for Kizzie Jones. Congratulations!

     

     

     

     

     

  • ADVENTURES in SELF-PUBLISHING, #2: A PRIMER by Gail Noble-Sanderson – Marketing, Book Promotion, Self-Publishing

    ADVENTURES in SELF-PUBLISHING, #2: A PRIMER by Gail Noble-Sanderson – Marketing, Book Promotion, Self-Publishing

    Once you decide to embark on the adventure of self-publishing, take some time to clearly articulate your purpose and vision.  Is your writing a hobby or are you wanting to commit to something broader? Remember, this is your experience and you can craft it in any way that feels just right for you.

    If you decide to pursue going the distance, it is important that you accept the fact that there is a learning curve to self-publishing and to give yourself permission to feel occasionally overwhelmed and sometimes scrambled. Below are action steps and informational links to help us ink up our hands, Self-Publishers, and take on the task.

    Establish a Budget: 

    Some authors publish their work on a shoe-string budget doing their own editing, acquiring public domain images or designing their own cover designs, setting up their own files for printing, etc.  Others choose to spend more and hire a content and/or copy editor, professional cover artist, typesetting, etc. Depending on your piggy bank and your vision, you may spend anywhere from a few hundred to thousands of dollars.

    Acquire Your ISBN(s) – INTERNATIONAL STANDARD BOOK NUMBER(s):

    An ISBN is the most important identifier you can possibly give your book – that will assist book buyers worldwide to search and find your novel. The number (along with its barcode) will link to essential information, sales tracking, catalogs for bookstores, libraries, and online sellers. Each version of your book will need its own ISBN – in addition, if you are involved in a major rewrite, or you’ve just gotten your rights back from your publisher, you will need to acquire a new ISBN for your book. Take a deep breath, it’s not that difficult.

    Unless you are absolutely sure this will be your only book and you will never, ever revise it, I suggest buying multiple numbers. It is both convenient and economical to purchase ISBNs ( as a bundle (www.bowker.com ). There are providers out there who will offer to sell you ISBN numbers, but Bowker is the official source for the United States and worldwide, and well, why wouldn’t you go to the source?

    Work with a Skilled Editor:

    Some self-publishing authors choose to work with friends, family or other authors who serve as their editor. People often assume that editing is only about correct punctuation and spelling. That is a myth sometimes used to rationalize why we don’t need to spend money on a “professional” editor.  If you can jiggle some more coins from your publishing piggy bank, I believe it is of utmost importance to place your manuscript in well-seasoned, competent editorial hands. Nothing says “poor quality” and “I don’t believe my work is relevant” louder than a poorly edited book. Network with other authors who have established successful relationships with their editors and secure recommendations.

    Chanticleer Aside: Do you know that Chanticleer Reviews has a host of Industry-tested, skilled editors just ready and willing to work with you? Well, we do! We cover all aspects of editing from Manuscript Overviews, Proofreading, LineEditing, and Copyediting. Simply contact us for details, at: Editor@ChantiReviews.com

    Cover Art:

    What captures our attention when we are buying books? The cover! Good covers are the first point of a sale.  How many times have we read a book and as the story unfolds we go back, again and again, to look at the cover? Good cover art reflects the story. Again, network with your author friends and contacts to explore options. My sister, artist Kathleen Noble, (www.watercolorwonderpaintings.com) does the cover art for my books. Unless the artist is your sister or a talented, generous friend, working with a cover artist can cost more or less $300 – $600 to purchasing licenses for photography and artwork that can range in the thousands of dollars.

    Kiffer Brown says (along with many queried independent booksellers) that your book’s cover is the number one tool to selling your book. The content between the cover will sell your next book.

    Here is a helpful link titled FIVE ESSENTIAL BOOK COVER ELEMENTS or Effective Book Covers Deconstructed. 

    Here are some helpful links to explore for book covers:

    • SelfPubBookCovers This site walks you through their predesigned templates. You choose your picture array, your font, any quote you want on the cover. Once you settle on a design, the site promises the uploaded images that make up your design are yours and yours alone.
    • 99Designs Simply put, upload what you are looking for (your genre, character, setting) and in a few days, you will be able to choose from 99 designs for your cover. This site allows voting, so that is an interesting way to find out which cover resonates best with your potential readers.
    • Fiverr On the go since 2010, Fiverr is a site that offers competitive designs from an array of artists for a reasonable price.

    Choose Your Typesetter, Printer, & Distributor: 

    There are many venues to choose from in getting these steps accomplished. I suggest working with a  book production professional to layout your book. Most of us do not have the skills to do the nitty-gritty needed to execute a book’s final exterior, interior design, cover layout, typesetting, and formatting.  Once you have the final files then you can then upload them to book-selling platforms. If you want Indie Booksellers to sell your books in their brick-and-mortar stores, then you should consider uploading your books to IngramSpark (www.ingramspark.com) for print-on-demand and e-book publishing. Distribution is through Lightning Source, www.ingramcontent.com. CreateSpace is another on-demand publishing service that is owned by Amazon (www.createspace.com).  There are many options which you can view on the web. *You may wish t0 utilize artists and designers on 99 Designs and Fiverr to accomplish the typesetting for print and ebook. 

    Copyright, Library of Congress:

    A very informative site is www.loc.gov.  Don’t let the amount of information overwhelm you.  Just take your time and peruse as you learn.  You can call their helpline and very kind people will assist you.

    Protect your work by registering your work at the Writers Guild of America (WGA) Here is why you should:  “…The registration process places preventative measures against plagiarism or unauthorized use of an author’s material. While someone else may have the same storyline or idea in his or her material, your evidence lies in your presentation of your work. Registering your work does not disallow others from having a similar storyline or theme. Rather, registering your work would potentially discourage others from using your work without your permission.”

    Business License & Dept. of Revenue:

    I formed an LLC (Limited Liability Company), Noble Press, and submit quarterly tax reports. I have yet to pay a penny.  Guess you know what that means!  But now that my books have been out there a few years and selling, I am beginning to make money after expenses.  Not much and I certainly won’t quit my day job, but enough to say “Yahoo!”  These are a few helpful links: www.sba.gov, and www.irs.gov.  There are many sites online offering to take your money to set up your business.  I strongly urge you to do this yourself as it is important as a self-publisher and business owner to be educated on every aspect of setting-up, running and maintaining your self-publishing business. Remember, the business is a separate entity from your writing.  I find writing much more enjoyable but the business aspect is a necessity for meeting my goals and is proving rewarding in itself. Be patient with yourself as you learn, asking many questions.

    Final Thoughts: 

    In conjunction with finishing your final edits, allow four to six months to complete all the business pieces. I say, again, that it is important to be organized and to track where you are in each step of every process. In addition to my online and hard files, I keep a writing and publishing journal and make dated notes all along the journey.  It has helped me time and time again to look back and see when what occurred as well as my thoughts.

    Make a weekly and monthly schedule. For instance, two mornings a week tend to the business aspects, and three days a week focus on your editing and writing. You will change it up along the way as you figure out what works best for you but, if you can begin in an organized, systematic fashion, you will feel productive and not stymied by too much to do and losing your way. Well, you may still lose your way from time to time but you will never be lost! You will have a vision, a well thought out plan, and be ready to go! Next month we will discuss marketing and promotion.

    Remember, “Keep falling in love with the potential of what you are doing!

    • Gail Noble-Sanderson

    Read the conclusion to this article series here.


    Gail Noble-Sanderson is the author of two works of historical fiction, both of which are self-published under her own Noble Press.  The Lavender House in Meuse is an emotional, intriguing, and sensitive account of the crises of World War I and one woman’s journey towards recovery and growth. 

    Her second novel, The Passage Home to Meuse won 1st Place in the 2017 Chatelaine Awards, the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBA) for romantic fiction.

    Both books are available through Amazon and Village Books.

     

    She invites you to visit her website  http://gailnoblesanderson.com/ and to follow her on social media.

     

  • The VOID: Book 3 in the TANNER SEQUENCE by Timothy Johnston – Sci-fi Thriller, Galactic Empire, Space Exploration Mystery

    The VOID: Book 3 in the TANNER SEQUENCE by Timothy Johnston – Sci-fi Thriller, Galactic Empire, Space Exploration Mystery

    Blue and Gold Clue 1st place badgeHomicide detective, Lieutenant Kyle Tanner, successfully captures the brutally sadistic serial killer known as The Reaper, whose modus operandi is to systematically dismember his victims while keeping them alive to suffer as long as possible. Tanner receives orders to transport The Reaper from Pluto, where he and his soul-mate Shaheen are stationed, to the CCF Home System where the killer will stand trial. Tanner, more dissatisfied than ever about the CCF contemplates a way out, a way to fall off the grid to start life anew on some distant outpost free from oppression and the totalitarian military regime of the CCF. At least, that’s the plan as soon as he and Shaheen complete their mission to deliver The Reaper to authorities in The Home System.

    Along the way, their small transport ship loses power as some unseen force shuts down the systems aboard the ship. Tanner, Shaheen, and his prisoner are left to drift aimlessly in space with a disabled drive and a damaged communications system whose crippled range won’t allow them to call Pluto or any other station for help.

    As the number of failing systems grows, their fortunes change. A research ship in the vicinity, the Phoenix, passes within range to receive their distress call and rescues them. But all is not well aboard the Phoenix, either. They have hit the same anomaly and are battling systems shutdowns of their own, albeit with more success.

    As the story progresses, Tanner is sure of three things, none of them good: The crew is hiding a secret. No help is on the way. And he a Shaheen will be dead within three days.

    Johnston is a master at blending science fiction, mystery, and thriller genres into a captivating read. The Void is well written in the first person, past tense, from the protagonist Tanner’s point of view. The characters are well fleshed out, engaging, and believable. The does contain mild sexual content, though nothing overly graphic. And there is violence, more than this reviewer expected in light of his previous experience with the Kyle Tanner series. This occurs at the very beginning of the novel and almost crossed the line. Then the story takes over and picks up speed leaving the graphic violence behind. (See Chanticleer Reviews of Book 1, The Furnace and Book 2, The Freezer.)

    In deep trouble on an unfamiliar ship with the odds stacked against him, Tanner must determine who is enemy, who can be trusted, and what secrets lurk aboard the Phoenix.

    The Tanner Sequence by Timothy Johnston won first place in the 2015 Clue Awards in the Chanticleer Int’l Writing Competitions.

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historic Fiction – Long List (aka Slush Pile Survivors)

    GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historic Fiction – Long List (aka Slush Pile Survivors)

    Post 1750s Historical Fiction AwardThe Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Late Historical Fiction set after the 1750s. The Goethe Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBA).

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian,18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. (Looking for Chaucer Pre-1750 Book Awards or Laramie Western/Pioneer/Civil War Book Awards, just click on the links.)

    Information about  the #CIBA Long Lists and Short Lists

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2018 GOETHE Book Awards LONG LIST (aka the Slush Pile Survivors). We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries are now in competition for the 2018 GOETHE SHORT LIST. Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will compete for the coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 GOETHE Book Awards in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the Goethe 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 SHORT LIST of the 2018 GOETHE Book Awards novel competition for post-1750s Post Historical Novels.

    • Peter Curtis – Cafe Budapest
    • Michelle Cox – A Promise Given
    • Bruce Joel Brittain – Brother Daniel’s Good News Revival
    • Patricia Suprenant – Behind the Scarlet Letter
    • Patricia Suprenant – Journey to the Isle of Devils
    • Harold Coyle – No Small Thing, A Novel of the American Revolution
    • John Hansen – Unfortunate Words
    • Trevor D’Silva – Fateful Decisions
    • K. M. Sandrick – The Pear Tree
    • John Thomas Everett – No Slave To Reason
    • Tom Edwards – Jane Sinclair 
    • Jackie Jobe Haines – Little Mill on Beaver Creek
    • Ruth Hull Chatlien – Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale
    • Richard Alan – American Journeys: From Ireland to the Pacific Northwest (1854-1900) Book 2
    • Richard Alan – A Female Doctor in the Civil War
    • J.P. Kenna – Allurement Westward
    • Jocelyn Cullity – Amah & the Silk-Winged Pigeons
    • J.L. Oakley – Mist-chi-mas: A Novel of Captivity
    • Ellen Notbohm – The River by Starlight
    • J. R. Collins – Living Where the Rabbits Dance
    • Josanna Thompson – A Maiden’s Honor
    • Carol M. Cram – The Muse of Fire 
    • Noelle Clark – Stone of Heaven and Earth
    • Rosalind Spitzer – Anna’s Home
    • Neal Katz – Scandalous, The Victoria Woodhull Saga, Volume II: Fame, Infamy, and Paradise Lost
    • Rita Dragonette – The Fourteenth of September
    • Sharon Hart-Green – Come Back for Me: A Novel
    • Meredith Pechta – The Prejudice That Divides Us
    • Jeffrey K. Walker – Truly Are the Free
    • Jeffrey K. Walker – None of Us the Same
    • Ronald E. Yates – The Lost Years of Billy Battles (Book 3, Finding Billy Battles Trilogy)
    • J. Victor Tomaszek – The Tatra Eagle
    • Pat Wahler – I am Mrs. Jesse James
    • R. S. Rowland – Portrait of a Bitter Spy
    • Kit Sergeant – 355: The Women of Washington’s Spy Ring

    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 works compete for the GOETHE Awards Short List. 

    2017 Goethe Book Awards Winners Joe Vitovic & Peter Greene Grand Prize

     

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

    The Goethe 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 GOETHE 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. 

  • THREADS of PASSION by T.K. Conklin – Western, Romance, Historical Fiction

    THREADS of PASSION by T.K. Conklin – Western, Romance, Historical Fiction

    Who is trying to kill Logan McCord?

    The frontier town of Rimrock, deep in Wyoming Territory, is a usually a quiet little place, at least it has been for the past two years since Willow and Skye Strykes settled there to be close to their brother. The sisters stay busy with their successful dress shop, the occasional town dance breaking the monotony, but when Willow’s would-be suitor nearly hangs for a murder he didn’t commit, their lives are altered forever.

    In a desperate bid to save the man she doesn’t even realize she loves, Willow does a crazy thing that ends with the two in a forced marriage, but the young couple’s problems don’t end at the wedding alter. Willow and Skye have their own secret, the secret which compelled them to run from New Orleans in the first place. Before long, Skye and Willow realize their secret has caught up with them, and they must find a way to escape it again before it consumes the entire town.

    The Southern-transplanted sisters, Willow and Skye, are far from the typical romance novel heroines. Both women carry their own scars, Willow on the outside, Skye on the inside. Willow’s limp, the product of severe child abuse, isn’t a focus in the novel but is a definite reflection of the kind of protagonist Willow is. Her strength despite her weakness carries both herself and her sister for a time, and though Skye seems weak and damaged beyond repair, she manages to find a tenacity she never knew she had. Her ordeal is terrifying and devastating, but her love for Willow proves stronger than her memories and the pull of her suicidal thoughts. She must literally face her demons, and with her sister, she manages to do exactly that. Though initially, the number of familial relationships described are daunting, the connection between siblings, both with the women and the men, prove to be a major theme in the novel.

    Logan, the barroom brawler, on the surface appears to be the typical romance hero. But he is more than tall, dark, and handsome. Both Logan and Rafe, his cousin who loves Skye, are gentle and loving. These men help the sisters find the courage to not only share their story but to challenge it head-on. The withholding of physical relationships by these characters creates a strong sexual tension which greatly enhances the plot, and for all those readers who love a touch of the paranormal, Logan’s family will add that, too.

    With threats on all sides and action galore, the mystery will keep you guessing. The almost dual storylines give readers two loves stories for the price of one, and with the potential for a series, more great adventures are likely to come for the McCords and the Strykes.

    Threads of Passion won First Place in the 2017 LARAMIE Awards for T.K. Conklin!