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  • MY DEAR WIFE and CHILDREN: CIVIL WAR LETTERS FROM a 2nd MINNESOTA VOLUNTEER by Nick K. Adams – Civil War Memoir, Family Letters

    MY DEAR WIFE and CHILDREN: CIVIL WAR LETTERS FROM a 2nd MINNESOTA VOLUNTEER by Nick K. Adams – Civil War Memoir, Family Letters

    Collected and annotated by the great-great-grandson of a Union soldier, these recollections of the Civil War take on new life and meaning in current times.

    Nick K. Adams, a retired schoolteacher and Civil War re-enactor, was fortunate to have access to letters written by his ancestor, Brainard Griffin. A Minnesota farmer, Griffin volunteered to fight for the Union, leaving behind his wife Minerva, their two young daughters and baby son. His first letter home was written on September 30, 1861. The letters, 100 in all, express his longing to be back home while describing in often minute detail the life of an ordinary combatant.

    Griffin wrote the letters in quiet times, holding a board or his knapsack on his lap as a table. The repeated themes are poignant: loving messages to his wife and children, advice for the management of the farm, even bits of gossip.

    Money worries were constant; at one point Griffin washed the clothes of other soldiers so he could send more of his pay back to his family. Around the mid-point in his service he avows that, “experience is a good school,” assuring “Nerva” that when he returns, he will “prize” his time with family and home.

    Griffin’s regiment traveled extensively through Kentucky, Tennessee, and Alabama, constantly on the alert, experiencing battles, sickness and the travails of heat, mud, and snow. He observed the ravages of war in the farming communities and burned-down towns he passed through and saw firsthand the horrors of a field hospital. He met slaves and engaged them in personal conversation. He often lamented “the curse of slavery” and vowed to fight to end it. From the outset, he believed that the war would soon be over—in a few months, or a year at the most. His accounts of mealtimes indicate the increasing stress on the army’s resources: from coffee twice a day, pancakes, beef, fresh fruits, even pies, to half rations for months at a time, and towards the end of his accounts, mostly salted meat and crackers.

    Despite his optimism that the war would soon end, and his repeated visions of returning to Minerva and the children, Griffin was killed in the first few moments of the savage Battle of Chickamauga, two years after his first letter home, and was buried by Confederate soldiers in a mass grave.

    Adams has taken care to present the letters in their original form. Before each section, he highlights the coming contents and includes a map of troop movements. Though there is repetition, it seems fitting that almost every letter begins and ends with loving greetings to Griffin’s wife and children (some written directly to the girls), and that all express the simple daily trials of the foot soldier. Griffin had illnesses, lost teeth, grew a beard, and never ceased encouraging his wife in her work on their homestead.

    His homey remarks and even a bit of good-natured joking show him as a strong-willed, positive person, and his views on the progress of the national struggle reveal him as a thoughtful patriot with a mind to the future of his country and all its inhabitants.

     

  • CORRALLING KENZIE: BOOK 4 of the WINTERS SISTERS by Joanne Jaytanie – Genetic Engineering, Fantasy, Romance, Psychics

    CORRALLING KENZIE: BOOK 4 of the WINTERS SISTERS by Joanne Jaytanie – Genetic Engineering, Fantasy, Romance, Psychics

    Jaytanie veers off the sister track with her introduction to brand-new characters in her latest sizzling Winters Sisters Series read, Corralling Kenzie.

    Kenzie Vaughn leaps out of her bed in the dead of night, responding to a cry from her horse. She discovers Boone shot and bleeding out. Kenzie contacts her neighbor, Victory Winters, who happens to be the closest vet in the area. While Victory is tending to Boone and Kenzie, Logan Mendoza, one of the DNA-enhanced Special Operations Command team (SOCOM) who investigates her ranch, is confident that the notorious Kaleidoscope Group (KG) used the mysterious shooting to get to Kenzie. Further probing indicates that Kenzie’s background may provide essential clues, particularly from her brother, Marcus who was sent to an institution when he was seven.

    It is during an attempt on Kenzie’s life that she encounters Marcus. He, in turn, sets up a meeting with SOCOM to divulge the connective tie with KG. Indeed, KG is in the process of furthering their diabolical DNA experimentation, and Kenzie is a key player. More information unfolds with each day as Kenzie develops friendships with the Winters sisters. During Logan’s assignment to guard Kenzie, the two become close, and their friendship evolves into a steamy romance. Logan determines to keep her safe even while he’s away on a brief mission. But upon his return, Kenzie is not around. She’s been kidnapped!

    For fans who are caught up in the lives of the Winters sisters, they are in for a big surprise with Jaytanie’s fourth installment. Up to this point, books one thru three have mainly concentrated on Victory, Payton, and Willow and KG’s sinister schemes directed toward the girls. But with the addition of the sisters’ neighbor Kenzie, Jaytanie opens the door to a whole new world of outsiders who have fallen prey to DNA tampering. Although pseudo-realism in design, this chilling realm into the dark side of medicine is reminiscent of the grisly experiments on children throughout history.

    Jaytanie does a stellar job balancing the bad and ugly with the good, and “good” comes in various forms, the most obvious from the alpha-male SOCOM team and the Winters sisters. But on a deeper level, Jaytanie has created relatable characters; their near-realistic personas are riddled with strengths and weakness, even on a romantic playing field. Certainly, when Logan and Kenzie get their mojo on, it’s steamy. Leading up to those moments, Jaytanie sets an example of what a beautiful friendship should look like—slow but steady.

    As with all of the books in this series, Corralling Kenzie functions perfectly well as a stand-alone read. There is richness when readers start from the very beginning of the series. Let’s just say that Jaytanie is a master of all things and will thrill and delight new readers as well as her loyal fans with this new installment.

    The exciting aspect of this series is that book four does not complete the set. Closing on a major cliffhanger, Jaytanie has much more in store for her beloved audience. Stay tuned!

     

  • The SILVER LINING: ENCOUNTERS WITH ANGELS by Phoebe Walker – Memoir

    The SILVER LINING: ENCOUNTERS WITH ANGELS by Phoebe Walker – Memoir

    Imagine a crisp autumn afternoon, taking a walk with a favorite companion on a country lane. You share stories about life’s ups and downs; you both laugh and cry. When you get to your destination, you give each other a goodbye hug and part separate ways with a smile, feeling a sense of strength in your friendship.

    Meandering through the pages of Phoebe Walker’s, The Silver Lining Encounters with Angels, is like a walk down this country lane, leaving us with warmth and hope.

    Admittedly, Walker’s book is a tough read – a story rife with abuse, her parent’s divorce at a young age, a suicide attempt, battling Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and other health concerns, and a near-death experience. It’s a lot to handle, for both the author and reader, but Walker makes the story accessible and down to earth with her conversational tone. Flipping through the pages is like a fireside chat.

    In one early and instrumental memory, Walker recalls how she was introduced to God. In 1989, her friend Christi said, “speaking to Jesus was just like talking to your best friend.” Accepting Christi’s advice, Walker became convinced that certain people in her life were placed there by God as “silver linings.” “God provides the crutches,” Walker says in her memoir.

    And so it went in Walker’s life, assigning silver linings to people who helped during dark days, including her loving husband Chip. The memoir is engaging and heartfelt, a recommended read for anyone wishing optimism and hope amid adversity.

    Not only do we learn that Walker survived incredibly tough times, but also she thrived, earning a college degree, having children, and living a full life, later without vision due to MS.

    A theme of revelation is what led her to write and share her story. She says: “By allowing myself to become fully exposed, I’m confident that not only will I continue on my journey of healing, but that it will offer hope, peace, and perhaps even direction to others. That makes sharing my story fully worth [it].” Today, she maintains a website displaying her art and ways she helps others through a life coaching business.

    While Walker’s book takes us on an emotional rollercoaster, even to the edge of despair, she holds our hand with thoughtfulness and humor. She avoids lecturing and being preachy by staying in her own story, ultimately showing how her deep faith has healed her during life’s challenges.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

     

  • SCIENCE FICTION BOOK AWARDS — 2017 CYGNUS SHORT LISTERS!

    SCIENCE FICTION BOOK AWARDS — 2017 CYGNUS SHORT LISTERS!

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

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from Long Listers (Slush Pile Survivors) to the 2017 Cygnus Book Awards SHORT LIST.  These entries are now in competition for the limited 2017 Cygnus  First  Place Category Positions and will be announced at the Awards Gala on Saturday, April 21st, 2018. 

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    [/fusion_text][fusion_button link=”https://www.chantireviews.com/services/Science-Fiction-Writing-Contests-Chanticleer-Book-Reviews-p21521218″ target=”_self” alignment=”center” hide_on_mobile=”small-visibility,medium-visibility,large-visibility” color=”default” stretch=”default” shape=”pill” icon_position=”left” icon_divider=”no” animation_type=”shake” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”0.3″]Enter Cygnus 2018 Today[/fusion_button][fusion_text]

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

    These titles are in the running for the First Place Category Positions Book Awards for the 2017 CYGNUS Book Awards novel competition for Science Fiction!

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2017 CYGNUS Finalists to the Short List (Semi-Finalists). These novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    • Jim Cronin – Hegira
    • Elizabeth Crowens – A Pocketful of Lodestones
    • Michelle Bryan – Strain of Resistance
    • Sara Stamey – Wild Card Run
    • MWAnderson – Breaching The Parallel
    • John Yarrow – The Future’s Dark Past
    • Pamela LePage – Virtuous Souls
    • Darrell Lee – The Gravitational Leap
    • David Neuner – Fear Factory
    • Chris Rasmussen – The Cat & The Fiddle
    • Rhett Bruno – From Ice to Ashes
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Magnus Victor – Oort Rising
    • Brian Cohn – The Last Detective
    • Julian North – Age of Order
    • Wende Dikec – Starr Valentine
    • Jerry Amernic – The Last Witness
    • Candace Sams – Galaxy Man
    • Cathy Parker – The Power of Three: The Novel of a Whale, a Woman, and an Alien Child
    • Matthew Buscemi – Schrodinger’s City
    • Darren D. Beyer – Casimir Bridge
    • KB Shaw – Neworld Papers: The Warrior’s Tale
    • Andrew Craven – Moshiah 
    • Alexander Weinstein – Children of the New World
    • Michael Simon – First Command
    • Michele Fogal – Root of the Spark
    • Sydney M. Cooper – Forsaken Lands Book II: Sacrifice
    • Dayna Ingram – All Good Children

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

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

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

    Congratulations to the Short Listers in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the CYGNUS Awards  First Class Category Positions. 

    The CYGNUS Grand Prize Winner and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 21st, 2018 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 2018 CYGNUS  Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is January 31st, 2018. Please click here for more information. 

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  • ELEVEN – A BRANDON FISHER FBI Series #1 by Carolyn Arnold – Thriller/Suspense, Hard-Boiled Police Procedural

    ELEVEN – A BRANDON FISHER FBI Series #1 by Carolyn Arnold – Thriller/Suspense, Hard-Boiled Police Procedural

    Carolyn Arnold’s absorbing crime thriller, Eleven, is taut with suspense from the very first page.  Brandon Fisher, just starting his two-year probationary period with the FBI Behavioral Analysis Unit, is doing his utmost to impress his supervisor, the legendary Special Agent Jack Harper, as they survey a shocking crime scene.

    They’re standing in an underground dirt bunker with tunnels that lead to small, circular rooms with chicken wire pressed against the dirt walls.  There are ten corpses in all, their bodies marked with identical incisions that tell a tale of ritualistic torture and murder.  Only one victim has not been disemboweled.  Brandon, growing more claustrophobic in the bunker by the second, struggles to show no emotion in front of unflappable Jack, but that’s difficult when he realizes the bunker contains a room for an eleventh victim.  Before long, Brandon will learn that he very well could be the serial murderer’s next target.  Could his first case be any more difficult?

    The forensic team ascertains that the killer is highly intelligent and disciplined.  While they have an immediate suspect, the team is also certain that the killer had a helper.  Most of the book focuses on discerning who, amongst a large group of possibilities, serves as the accomplice.  This second perpetrator is thought of as a “follower” or an “apprentice.” This mentor-apprentice relationship unnervingly echoes the relationship between Jack and Brandon.

    Readers who are drawn to crime thrillers will not be disappointed with the details Brandon, Jack and the rest of the team sort through as they gather evidence.  As the title of the book indicates, the number eleven is a key clue.

    The dialogue involving the latest method s for extracting DNA from objects and lifting fingerprints indicates the author has done her homework; she integrates scientific details nicely into the plot.  In fact, each member of the team is distinct and well realized.

    This book is a fast read as the writing is straight-forward and engaging. Arnold leads the reader through some winding plot twists and each one is more riveting than the last.  Suspense builds and builds and the ending is every bit as shocking as the opening pages of the novel.  Although Jack tells Brandon, “This isn’t like TV,” there’s no doubt that fans of shows like CSI (in its various locations) and Criminal Minds (which has a small cameo) will want to read Eleven.  Readers will find the book difficult to put down – and, if they do, they may very well sleep with the lights on.

    A lead FBI agent hunts his prey and grooms his apprentice while a ritualistic killer does the very same thing. Riveting and disturbing, Eleven, is guaranteed to thrill and terrorize readers.

  • ENGAGED in DANGER: A JAMIE QUINN MYSTERY by Barbara-Venkataraman – Cozy Mystery/Thriller & Suspense, Amateur Sleuth

    ENGAGED in DANGER: A JAMIE QUINN MYSTERY by Barbara-Venkataraman – Cozy Mystery/Thriller & Suspense, Amateur Sleuth

    Did I really lose my guy to a Hairy-Nosed Wombat … a Northern Hairy-Nosed wombat? That’s the question that plagues attorney Jamie Quinn while she lays awake and stares at the ceiling every night. But it’s not too long after her boyfriend, Kip, drops his Save the Wombat bomb and flies off to Australia, that she has more immediate issues to keep her awake—secret business machinations, a hint of Russian collusion, blackmail, and murder, for starters.

    In Engaged in Danger – A Jamie Quinn Mystery by Barbara Venkataraman anything is possible. And even though Hollywood, Florida where Jamie lives and practices family law is a small, quiet town surprising things happen there.

    Three days after Kip announced his temp job and is packing for a three-month stint in Australia, an elegant, older woman walks into Jamie’s office seeking a divorce. Someone is trying to kill her spouse, but she doesn’t care—she just wants a divorce, and money is no problem. Interest piqued, Jamie soon learns the husband in question is the most “famous/infamous” (translated, rich, powerful, and politically connected) attorney in town. He also proves to be a crafty, dangerous opponent with fingers in many pies. On the home front, Jamie’s neighbors who are caring for their orphaned niece, ask Jamie to look into the details surrounding the recent plane crash that killed the child’s parents.

    Enlisting the assistance of her BFF, corporate attorney Grace Anderson, along with that of the charming PI, Duke Broussard, a good old Louisiana boy who has one foot on either side of the law, Jamie simultaneously takes on the high-profile divorce case and the suspicious airplane crash. What ensues is an intriguing mix of characters and events interwoven into a mystery that satisfies even the pickiest fan.

    While written as a stand-alone, this book is like a gift of Babushka dolls. Allusions to backstories and Jamie’s history with Kip, with her dad in Nicaragua whom she’s never met, with Grace, and with Duke can at times be distracting, at other times, tantalizing.

    Engaged in Danger is a fast-paced, well-written cozy with its complex, quirky characters, and unique plot brings unexpected twists and turns and has more than a bit of romance tucked between its pages. Venkataraman tempers the story with wry, self-deprecating humor that entertains and engages the mind, tickles the funny-bone, warms the heart, and leaves the reader ready for more.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

     

     

  • MYSTERY & MAYHEM 2017 Book Awards SHORT LISTERS

    MYSTERY & MAYHEM 2017 Book Awards SHORT LISTERS

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThe Mystery & Mayhem Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Cozy Mysteries, Not-so-Cozy, and Classic Mysteries. The M&M Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

     Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2017 M&M slush pile survivors to the Short List. The novels will now compete for the First Place Category positions!

    Each of the titles below have earned the M&M AWARDS SHORT LIST bragging rights!

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2017 writing competition winners!

    The M&M Book Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Amateur Sleuth, Romance, Animals, Cooking/Knitting/Hobbies, Blended Genre, Medical/Lab, Travel, Humorous, Historical, Classic British, and Y/A.

    The following titles will compete for the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions and Book Awards Packages.

    NOTE: This is the Official List of the M&M 2017 SHORT LIST.

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the highly competitive Short-List (aka The Semi-Finalists) of the M&M 2017 Book Awards are:

    This is the Official 2017 Short List for the Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards – Dec. 7, 2017.

    • Carl and Jane Bock – Coronado’s Trail: An Arizona Borderlands Mystery
    • David Selcer – The Dream Catcher Murders
    • Sherrie Todd-Beshore – The Count Of Baldpate
    • Cherie O’Boyle – Missing Mom
    • Anna Castle – Moriarty Meets His Match
    • Jennifer Mueller – Never Turn Your Back on a Wolf
    • Cindy Sample – Dying for a Donut
    • Nancy G. West – River City Dead
    • Kim Hunt Harris – Unsightly Bulges, A Trailer Park Princess Cozy Mystery
    • Valerie Tate – Frog Legs
    • Betty Jean Craige – Fairfield’s Auction
    • Libi Astaire – The Moon Taker
    • Lucinda Brant – Deadly Peril: A Georgian Historical Mystery
    • J.L. Newton – Oink. A Food for Thought Mystery
    • Vee Kumari – DHARMA
    • D. J. Adamson – Suppose
    • M. K. Graff – The Golden Hour: A Nora Tierney English Mystery
    • Kathleen Kaska – Run Dog Run
    • Susan Breen – Maggie Dove’s Detective Agency
    • Elaine Orr – Demise of a Devious Neighbor
    • Michelle Cox – A Ring of Truth
    • Amy Boyles – Scared Witchless
    • Jeanette Hubbard – Chasing Nathan
    • Susan Boles – Cherry Cake and a Cadaver
    • Fred Shackelford – The Ticket
    • Dennis M. Clausen – The Sins of Rachel Sims
    • M. Louisa Locke – Deadly Proof: A Victorian San Francisco Mystery
    • Mollie Hunt – Cat’s Paw
    • Carol June Stover – Kenmore Square
    • Lonna Enox – Striking Blind
    • Suzette Hollingsworth – Sherlock Holmes and the Chocolate Menace
    • Traci Andrighetti – Amaretto Amber
    • Susan Boles – Death Of A Wolfman
    • Diane Weiner – Murder is Collegiate
    • Amy S. Peele – CUT
    • Catherine Bruns – Baked to Death
    • Richard T. Ryan – The Vatican Cameos: A Sherlock Holmes Adventure

    The M&M Semi-Finalists will compete for the M&M First-In-Category Positions, which consists of Seven Judging Rounds.  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 CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.

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

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

    Congratulations to the Short Listers in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to each of you as your works compete for the M&M  Awards  First Class Category Positions. 

    The M&M Grand Prize Winner and the Five First Place Category Position award winners along with all Short Listers in attendance will be announced at the April 21st, 2018 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 2018 M&M Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is March 31st, 2018. Please click here for more information. 

  • Part 2 Building Your Readership Community – Not Just for YA Authors by Jesikah Sundin

    Part 2 Building Your Readership Community – Not Just for YA Authors by Jesikah Sundin

    Dear YA Writer,

    In the previous blogisode, the YA Writer stumbled upon a gritty secret. A secret that revealed the often un-used marketing processor installed in every bonding animal who hawks bookish wares inside the All Powerful Cybersphere.

    Socializing.

    Now the YA Writer is forced to make a choice that may alter their impressions, clicks, and engagement foreverrrrrrr…

    <<dramatically clears throat>>

    We are gathered here today to witness the exchange between this author to this reader in meme-y internetrimony. Author, do you take this social media thing-a-ma-gig seriously? Do you solemnly swear to post interactive content and reply to comments until defective accounts do you part?

    Before you shout, “I object!” … THIS is what I believe most authors hear when told to engage their readers online. I’ve talked to hundreds of authors face-to-face on this subject. The reaction is typical­­––dear-in-headlights look, nervous laughter, shifting on their sudden cold feet.

    Yeah, I know … commitment is a scary idea for many. Perhaps even a monstrous call-to-action for us please-dear-cat-gods-of-the-interwebs-don’t-make-me-small-talk introverts. Some view social media as a black vortex that will suck away their humanity until their cyber-Gollum alter ego hisses, “My preciousssss…,” whenever a notification chimes.

    Do not despair, fair YA Writer. Even if socializing with strangers is nothing but rainbows, unicorns, and kittens for you, I have encouraging news.

    You don’t have to love it, therefore you don’t have to marry it.

    You don’t even have to put a ring on it.

    But you do have to care. Because sharing is caring.

    Literally. What you share on your social media accounts reflects what you care about.

    So, what do you care about? Beyond book sales, that is. Dig deeper. Think broader. Embrace this exercise as a way to tone and sculpt your creative marketing muscles.

    Bring to mind a writer or celebrity you enjoy following on any social media platform. Then ask yourself, why? Why do you enjoy following them so much? Is it because they talk incessantly about buying the book you’ve already read and own? Doubt it. Maybe it’s their keeping-things-strictly-business posts that only announce events and new releases?  <<yawns>> Yeah, didn’t think so.

    Every once in a while? Sure. But if that’s all you share? #DontCare

    Make me care. Make them care. You know, your followers. The ones who clicked you into their newsfeed existence. Rise up and say, “My people!” and lead them into a conversation. Actual YA-aged readers long for this. It’s psychologically built into an adolescent and twenty-something to search for and declare “their tribe.” Give your audience, regardless of age or genre preference, a sense of belonging. You found me. You belong here. Welcome. Let’s discuss all the things! Let’s discuss YOU.

    The YA reading crowd is passionate. Intelligent. Lively. Transparent. Witty. And always on the hunt for immersive communities. They also care deeply about the characters and worlds you’ve created. They also care about the word magician behind the curtain who cast a spell over their imagination.

    True confession: I’m legit socially awkward. No, really. Small talk is my arch nemesis. I have a terrible habit of nervously laughing at just about everything. And if I’m not nervously laughing, I’m nervously rambling. Even when I recognize the social cue that I need to stop talking, I CAN’T STOP TALKING [-_-]

    If you’re socially awkward like me, take heart! The best form of caring is sharing the spotlight with another. Just remember, talk with people and not at them. Here are ideas on how:

    • I just finished reading [title] by [author name] and [gush about book]. Not sure what I should read next. What are YOU reading right now? I’ll add your answers to my TBR list on Goodreads.
    • So full. Just enjoyed [food]. Aaahhh, happiness. What’s your favorite comfort food? Bonus points for posting a recipe link!
    • Let’s play a game! [You can use a meme-ready prompt like, “What’s your Hobbit Name?” Or, you can provide your own prompt like, “Using only a meme or GIF, share your favorite female superhero.” Search through Pinterest or various fandom sites on your fave social media for more examples.]
    • [Share an image related to characters or worldbuilding in your book with a quote from said story. You can leave it as is for people to like, comment, and re-post. Or, you can end with a question.] “Is this how you imagined them?” “What would you do in this situation?” “Do you think [character] made the right choice?”

    Examples are endless! The point is to start conversations. People will begin interacting with each other’s comments, or tag their friends to participate, too. #SharingIsCaring

    First, the cautionary tale: Please, for the love of emoji reaction buttons, REPLY. If a friend invited you into a face-to-face discussion but ignored you, how would you feel? Right. That’s how your followers would feel, too. This isn’t a contest to see who has amused you the most. Don’t––I repeat––don’t ignore your followers when they’re taking time out of their busy lives to participate with your conversation prompt. A simple acknowledgement is all that’s needed with a blue thumbs up or a heart-like. Go the extra mile and interact further if you like. Make the reward centers in your follower’s brains light up wildly.

    OMG, she spoke with me!

    He thinks my recipe for pickled shark chops in a beet reduction sauce sounds yummy!

    The more you engage, the more your followers will engage, too.

    Socializing. It’s a thing.

    A thing you need to make time for, like in real life.

    Caring fosters loyalty. And that, folks, is the end goal. All customers for you are short-term. They read your book. They move on. But with a community to keep them company, they’ll stick around until you release your next title. The best launches are built from established reader pre-orders who are in-the-know because they stuck around on your social media to find out. *wink, wink*

    So how often should you post? Totally up to you and your followers. Honestly, I post 1-3 times a week on my author social media accounts, save Twitter. When not posting, I make time to participate in other accounts I follow. It’s a give and take, right?

    Share.

    Care.

    If you don’t? You might discover an intervention at your social media doorstep from fellow YA Writers 😉 But only because we care

    #SocializingWithInternetStrangersForTheWin

    Sincerely,

    Me

     

    A note from Chanticleer: 

    Many thanks to Jesikah Sundin for sharing her effective and fun social media techniques with us!

    Two words could describe Jesikah: books and coffee. She pours a cup of dark roast writer’s ambrosia before approaching her keyboard. And the forest is her happy place.

    Jesikah invites you to socialize with her on her website and social media pages (visit her website for direct links).

    Jesikah Sundin is the award-winning author of the Biodome Chronicles. 

    Biodome Chronicles

    Short Description of Legacy: Book One

    Siblings born and raised inside an earth-based experimental Mars biodome have only known a rustic medieval life rich in traditions and chivalry. Groomed by The Code, they have built a sustainable community devoid of Outsider interference––until the unthinkable happens.

    Cultures clash when the high technology of the Anime Tech Movement collides with the Middle Ages in a quest for truth, unfolding a story rich in mystery, betrayal and love.

     

  • RUTH 66 by Elizabeth Barlo – Humorous, YA, Family & Social Issues

    RUTH 66 by Elizabeth Barlo – Humorous, YA, Family & Social Issues

    When a banged-up old bus pulls into his family’s driveway, Charlie has no idea that the rattling junker would be his ride to freedom. For years he’d been suffering under the thumb of a cold-hearted mother and a vindictive twin sister, while his father languished behind bars for tax fraud. The only family member with whom the young man held a loving bond was his grandfather, Opa Bill. Since Bill’s recent death, Charlie has been holding it together by listening to the music he and his grandfather loved. That musical thread weaves its way throughout the story as a sort of narrative jukebox.

    Now Charlie’s respectable Oma Ruth has careened back into his life in a shocking new incarnation: a freewheeling hippie in kaftan and beads, unafraid to swap barbed words with her appalled daughter, nor to insist that Charlie accompany her on her road trip. He’s dead-set against it – he’d just found his dream job at a record store – and is disgusted when his mother dumps him on her mother without hesitation.

    So Charlie sets out with Ruth – and, as it turns out, with Opa Bill, whose urn rests on the dashboard. At first, Ruth’s bizarre behavior and Charlie’s resentment at being dragged along make for a very uncomfortable ride. She insists on traveling without modern technology, but when she relents and allows his iPod and a new stereo system, the thaw begins.

    Although Route 66 is the road they travel as they head west, this is no travelogue about nostalgic remnants of yesterday. This is a journey of discovery: of Charlie’s strength and capacity to love, of Ruth’s ability to be honest with herself, of her secrets and those of her late husband, and of the people who will teach them along the way.

    There’s the comical Count Doobie, and Jonas the Swede, who appreciates Ruth’s beauty and makes her feel truly free. There’s also heartbroken Barry, who, with his daughter Rosie, barely keeps afloat a strip joint in the middle of nowhere, Texas. And there’s even Charlie’s embittered sister Becky, who rediscovers compassion and her affection for her twin away from their mother’s toxic influence.

    Above all, there’s Rosie, the beautiful young woman who pines for her missing mother and valiantly offers to become a stripper to help her father’s business. She sets Charlie’s heart and hormones on fire, turning him into a bumbling puppy before he learns to overcome his insecurities and grow into a hero of sorts. Their relationship becomes entangled in the revelation of Ruth’s secrets, but the resolution is both satisfying and a bit of a relief.

    A word of caution to the straight-laced reader: Ruth has embraced the hippie lifestyle to its fullest, and so you’ll find pot-smoking, swearing, nudity, and sex, as Charlie and Rosie let loose their teenage hormones and Ruth re-engages her lost libido. But far more than that, there is love, forgiveness, and bravery on this journey, not to mention a lot of laughs, some wonderfully wacky moments, and at times exciting and literally explosive revelations.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • The HARRIET CLUB: A NOVEL of SAN FRANCISCO by Kathe Maguire – Literary, Y/A Mystery/Thriller, Romance

    The HARRIET CLUB: A NOVEL of SAN FRANCISCO by Kathe Maguire – Literary, Y/A Mystery/Thriller, Romance

    In 1999, 13-year-old Virgil McCormick disappeared without a trace while waiting for the 43 Masonic bus. Thus, the Harriet Club was born, with 8-year-old Harriet, and her friends Nikki, Dahlia, and Casey, each longing to find out what happened to Virgil. Especially Harriet.

    Ten years later, new leads in the cold case have emerged, including suspicious sketches by city graffiti artist Blinky, and the “Spatterer,” someone eager to erase all Blinky’s creations. Harriet’s obsession with the case hasn’t waned, even amid her life with her two moms, two dads, and their sometimes unpredictable lifestyle. The question now is whether The Harriet Club is up to the task of closing the Virgil McCormick case once and for all, as the teenagers face college applications, neglectful parents, substance abuse, and sexual advances from older men. With a complex and diverse cast of characters and incongruous developments at every turn, The Harriet Club definitely has their work cut out for them.

    Kathe Maguire brings a dark, twisted humor to this mystery/thriller, demonstrating that in seemingly idyllic San Francisco, the city’s shadows can run deep and sinister. Maguire also does a great job of inserting local culture and color through realistic settings and dialogue. For example, Virgil’s fictional mystery is intertwined with San Francisco’s real-life cases of kidnapped children in the area, including Kevin Collins, Jaycee Dugard, and others, adding a dark and suspenseful element.

    This is a well-written and well-paced novel that will capture readers from the opening pages all the way until the end. With exquisite description and visceral imagery, the story definitely tends more on the literary rather than the commercial side, but the break-neck pacing won’t leave genre readers disappointed. There are lots of moving pieces and plots that Maguire skillfully weaves together into a compelling read.

    Although the main players in this story are teens, each with different shades of diversity, a much-needed trait in YA literature, this is not a typical YA mystery, and parents should be cautioned that the inclusion of graphic language, talk about sex, scenes of drug use, and themes makes this gritty story a selection for teens at least 16 and older. Dog lovers should also be cautioned of certain scenes involving animal violence. Regardless, this is a must-read for those looking for a compelling mystery that incorporates razor-sharp wit. Those from and in Northern California, and those who wish they were, will also relish in the book’s authentic setting and textures.

    Obsession and dedication go hand in hand in Kathe Maguire’s The Harriet Club, a hard-core Y/A mystery thriller set in the shadow of San Francisco.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker