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  • HISTORICAL FICTION Novels – The SHORT-LIST for the 2016 CHAUCER BOOK AWARDS (Semi-Finalists)

    HISTORICAL FICTION Novels – The SHORT-LIST for the 2016 CHAUCER BOOK AWARDS (Semi-Finalists)

    Pre 1750 Historical Fiction AwardThe CHAUCER Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The Chaucer Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 1, 2017!

    Because we received an unprecedented amount of entries for the 2015 Chaucer Awards we divided the writing competition into two separate awards for 2016: The Chaucer Awards for pre-1750’s historical fiction and the Goethe Awards for post-1750 historical fiction.  We have moved entries that are post 1750 to the 2016 Goethe Awards tracking and judging rounds.

    This is the Official Semi-Finalists List of the Authors and Titles of Works that have been SHORT-LISTED for the Chaucer 2016 Novel Writing Contest.

    NOTE: This list is COMPLETE as of January 28, 2017.

    The Chaucer Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Pre-Historical Fiction, Ancient Historical Fiction, World/International History (non-western culture historical fiction), Americas-Historical Fiction Pre-1750s, Dark Ages/Medieval, Renaissance, and Elizabethan/Tudor 1600’s.

    Chanticleer Short List

    The following Short-Listed titles will compete for the 5 First Place Category Positions and Awards Packages.

    • Hana Samek Norton – The Serpent’s Crown: A Novel of Medieval Cyprus
    • Kate Braithwaite – Charlatan
    • Sandra Vasoli – Truth Endures: Je Anne Boleyn Book Two #2
    • Lorraine Buck – The Last Rosary
    • Gina M. Bright – 1381: The Forgotten Revolt
    • H.J. Reynolds – A Treachery of Spies
    • Michal Strutin – Judging Noa: a Biblical Woman’s Journey
    • Lilian Gafni – The New World: Flower from Castile
    • Catherine T Wilson and Catherine A Wilson – The Gilded Crown
    • Bruce Gardner – Hope of Ages Past
    • Helena P. Schrader – Envoy of Jerusalem: – Balian d’Ibelin and the Third Crusade
    • Gail Avery Halverson – The Boundary Stone
    • Carol Cram – The Towers of Tuscany 
    • James Conroyd Martin – The Boy Who Wanted Wings

    These Chaucer Semi-Finalists will compete for the Chaucer Awards First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Book Award winners will automatically be entered into the Chaucer GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $200. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.   

    • All Short-Listed authors who attend #CAC17 will be recognized on stage at the awards ceremony and 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 all the 2016 Chaucer Finalists.  

    Good Luck to all of the Chaucer Semi-Finalists as they compete for the First Place Category positions.

    First In Category announcements will be made at the Awards Ceremony. The Chaucer Grand Prize Winner and First Place Category Winners will be announced at the April 1st,  2017 Chanticleer Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 Chaucer Awards and the Goethe Awards writing competitions for Historical Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

  • Jumpstart your author career at CAC17 with Wendy Delaney & Jacquie Rogers

    Jumpstart your author career at CAC17 with Wendy Delaney & Jacquie Rogers

    We have a LOT of terrific sessions planned for CAC17, and we are still adding more. One of those amazing sessions will be:

    Author Career Plan Boot CampThere is so much more to being an author than just writing a book. In Career Plan Boot Camp, Jacquie & Wendy share their experience as authors who have “been there,” and provide ten “must have” tips to help emerging writers learn how to create a professional writer’s platform and grow their writing careers. Wendy Delaney & Jacquie Rogers.

    Jacquie and Wendy are both authors of multiple book series’ (between the two of them, they have over 2 dozen books!), with twenty years of experience in the business of being authors. They’re also veteran Chanticleer Award winners and know how to use awards, ribbons, book stickers, reviews, and all kinds of things you never even considered before, as TOOLS to enhance their success as authors.

    We asked them to tell us a little bit more about their upcoming session at CAC17 and they took some time to give fill us in.


    Chanticleer: Hi guys, what inspired you to create the session Author Career Plan Boot Camp?

    Wendy & Jacquie: A good share of us started this writing gig with a great story in mind, but had no idea what being an author actually meant.

    Chanticleer: What is the reality? Lay it on us.

    Wendy & Jacquie: The average book sells fewer than 200 copies. [This] intrepid writer has spent $1,000 on editing, cover fees, and pre-publication promotion to sell 200 copies (remember, that’s average—many books don’t sell that many), and of those probably 25 went to family and friends. How does this pencil out? At the entry level pricing of $2.99, gross receipts would be $598. Of that, Amazon pays out 70% so the book would net $419.60, leaving a net loss of $581.40. None of us want to be that writer—but without a solid platform, we are.

    Chanticleer: A lot of people assume that a book with average sales is just an average story, they believe that a really good story will sell itself. What do you think about that?

    Wendy & Jacquie: Writing a good story isn’t enough. Essential, but not enough. Polishing the manuscript isn’t enough. Hiring the best editor and cover artist are not enough. All those things are vitally important, of course, but unless a writer has built a solid platform, potential readers will likely never see this fantastic book.

    Chanticleer: What is your advice for authors who want to have better than average book sales?

    Wendy & Jacquie: Focus on success. You can achieve your dream!  With some hard thinking to build an organized and targeted author platform, your book won’t be flailing in those sub-200 numbers. Come to [our session at] the Chanticleer Authors Conference and learn how from two authors who’ve spent nearly twenty years perfecting their writing and building their platforms, Wendy Delaney and Jacquie Rogers.


    Award-winning writer Jacquie Rogers is author of eleven novels, including five books in the Hearts of Owyhee series, two books in the Honey Beaulieu – Man Hunter series, and others. She’s published over a dozen short stories and novellas in three genres.  Under the house name Ford Fargo, she writes for the Western Fictioneers Wolf Creek series.  She co-wrote Nail It! The Secret to Building a Fiction Writer’s Platform, and Growing Your Audience: Workbook for Published, Unpublished, and Under-published Writers.

    Wendy Delaney writes fun-filled cozy mysteries and is the award-winning author of the Working Stiffs Mystery series. Like her human lie detector sleuth, Wendy loves to bake, so when she’s not killing off story people she can be found on her treadmill, working off the calories from her latest culinary adventure. Wendy makes her home in the Seattle area with the love of her life and is a proud grandma.

  • YOUNG ADULT Novels – The SHORT-LIST for 2016 DANTE ROSSETTI BOOK AWARDS (Semi-Finalists)

    YOUNG ADULT Novels – The SHORT-LIST for 2016 DANTE ROSSETTI BOOK AWARDS (Semi-Finalists)

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Young Adult Fiction. The Dante Rossetti Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Book Awards Writing Competitions.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    These titles are in the running for the 5 First Place Positions for the 2016 Dante Rossetti Book Awards.

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2016 Rossetti Finalists to the Short List. The novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to FINALISTS LIST  and now has moved forward to the SHORT LIST of the 2016 Rossetti  Book Awards. They are now 2016 M&M Semi-Finalists as they compete for the limited First in Category Positions of the 2016 Rossetti Book Awards in the last rounds of judging.

    Chanticleer SHORTLIST

    Each of the titles below have earned the Rossetti Book Awards SHORT LIST Semi-Finalists bragging rights!

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 writing competition winners!

     

    The Dante Rossetti Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:  Contemporary Young Adult, Science Fiction/Fantasy/Paranormal, Dystopian/Edgy/Urban, Mystery/Thriller/Suspense, Historical Young Adult, YA Adventure.

    The following titles will compete for the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions and Book Awards Packages and the 2016 Dante Rossetti Grand Prize for Best YA Book.

    This is the OFFICIAL SHORT LIST as of Jan. 26, 2017 for the Dante Rossetti 2016 Novel Writing Contest for Young Adult Fiction.

    • Bryan Ney – Calamity Jane: How the West Began
    • Jodie Esch – Little White Lies
    • T.S. Pettibone – Hatred Day
    • D. J. Adamson – Outre
    • Wende Dikec – Tiger Lily
    • Susan Faw – Seer of Souls 
    • K.C. Finn – Legion Lost
    • Harold Coyle – The Other Side of the Wire
    • Richard Mann – Wasted in Waldport
    • Jesikah Sundin – ELEMENTS (The Biodome Chronicles #2)
    • K.J. McPike – XODUS
    • Christopher Mannino – School of Deaths
    • Alex Paul – SeaJourney
    • Sheena Snow –  Sparked (The Metal Bones Series Book 1)
    • Nancy Pennick – 29
    • Jeffrey Stagg – A Campfire Nightmare
    • Norma Hinkens – Immurement
    • Edward Mountain – Cerulean Skies

    This is the Official List of Semi-Finalists for the 2016 Dante Rossetti Awards

    Chanticleer Short List

     

    Short-Listed Authors in attendance will be recognized on stage during the awards ceremony on April 1, 2017 and are eligible for “Short-Listed” Rossetti YA Book Awards promotional stickers. 

    The Dante Rossetti Semi- Finalists will compete for the Dante Rossetti First In Category Positions, which consists of Four Judging Rounds.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Dante Rossetti GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition, which has a cash prize of $200. The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse.  First Place Category titles and the Rossetti Grand Prize award winner will be announced at the CAC17 awards ceremony. 

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

    Congratulations to the Semi-Finalists who were Short-Listed in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to all of the Dante Rossetti Finalists as they compete for the coveted First Place Category  positions.

    First In Category announcements will be made in our social media postings as the results come in.

    The 2016 Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 Dante Rossetti Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is May 30th, 2017. Please click here for more information or to enter the contest.

  • Writers’ Chinese New Year Horoscopes for 2017 – Year of the Rooster!

    Writers’ Chinese New Year Horoscopes for 2017 – Year of the Rooster!

    Fun and Inspirational Good-Fortune Horoscopes for Writers for the Chinese New Year – the Year of the Rooster!  by 殿堂级 Diàntáng Jí (Chanticleer’s cousin)

    January 28th heralds the New Year according to the Traditional Chinese  Calendar

    This is the Year of the Rooster! 

    Writers should expect more inspiration, increased creativity, and an increase in book sales with perseverance and diligence in publishing!

    If your Chinese Zodiac sign is the Rooster, it is advised that you wear a lot of RED this year to attract good luck. The red garments could be a scarf, socks, tee shirts, underwear, shirts, and they will bring you  more good luck if someone gives them to you.

    This year you will be motivated to achieve your publishing goals and will be rewarded for your hard work and fierce ambition. This is the year to get those endorsement cover quotes from your favorite best selling authors. Special perks this year includes travel to your favorite destinations. Work hard and play hard. Dream big!

     

    If your sign is a Dog:

    You may want to step out of the box of your normal writing routine. Try writing in a new place and at a new time of day. If you write at home, update your writing space with elegant new touches. As your confidence increases, you will make new connections that will expand your readership.

     

    If your sign is a Pig:

    If you are published, this is your year to succeed and achieve! Be sure to schedule many author signings and book fairs/ This is your year to promote your books. Remember each new reader counts! Your imagination and creativity will give your entrepreneurial spirit a competitive edge.

    If your sign is a Rat:

    You are passionate about writing craft. This is the year to indulge that passion with advanced writing classes. Excelling at grammar and punctuation is of paramount importance to you. You love to research and add just the right amount of details to your scenes and characters.

    If your sign is an Ox:

    Your stresses about writing will dissipate as you make a plan to achieve your writing goals for the year. Implement a new planning tool to help you organize your writing. You may want to include an animal as a character in your current work. You like the challenge of getting inside your characters’ heads.

    If your sign is a Tiger:

    Embrace new challenges! Seek out book clubs to promote your works. Take a journey to some place you have never been before to broaden your horizons and rejuvenate your creativity. The destination could be near or far, but must be new to you. Presenting at book clubs is a very good way to  advance your writing career.

     

    If your sign is a Rabbit:

    Your investment in publishing will pay off. Splurge on that new cover design. Make sure to make time to share a cup of coffee or glass of wine with friends frequently. Consider the time an investment in your future happiness.  Your story telling tends to have subtle undercurrents of life lessons.

     

    If your sign is a Dragon:

    You are due for an awakening and fulfillment that will take your confidence to new levels. Be sure to keep a gratitude journal and mediate or do yoga every day. Be sure to support your favorite author friends! This is the year to take on that story challenge that you’ve been putting off.

    If your sign is a Snake:

    A healthy regimen will have you writing better than ever! Your romance scenes will brim with passion and energy that will make your characters charismatic and irresistible. The scenes do not have to be explicit, in fact, the more sensual without explicitness the more you will capture your reader’s imagination.

    If your sign is a Horse:

    If you have been considering writing in a new genre, this may be your time to do so. Parlay your writing experience of previous works into a new channel that will make your next work transcend genres creating a crossover novel that is groundbreaking.

    If your sign is a Sheep:

    Make your writing space cozier to create a place of harmony and warmth. Be sure to nurture fellow writers who are having craft issues or writer’s block. Your inspiration and support will turn these issues around for them while invigorating your own writing.

    If your sign is a Monkey:

    Make sure that you meet new people, travel to new places, and try new adventures. Try writing in new spaces. Attend a new conference that you haven’t been to before. Welcome new experiences and meet new people to reinvigorate your writing. You will be welcomed wherever you go!

     

    Wondering How to Determine Your Chinese Zodiac Sign?

    Use the handy table below to find your birth year.

    We hope that you enjoyed this fun article that is meant as a way of thinking about new perspectives. 

    Chanticleer believes that we each make our own destiny by being optimistic and positive, being kind and loving, by dreaming and inspiring, being bold and doing, by appreciating and being grateful, and by expanding our awareness of the Universe.

    We wish you an AWESOME New Year of Good Fortune, Good Health, and Many Book Sales!

    The Chanticleer Reviews Team  

     

  • Spotlight on: Susan Colleen Browne, CAC17 Speaker, Author & Creative Writing Instructor

    Spotlight on: Susan Colleen Browne, CAC17 Speaker, Author & Creative Writing Instructor

    Meet Susan Colleen Browne, author and creative writing instructor. She has been writing, self-publishing and selling books for many years. She is full of information about every step of the process of being an author.

    And you can find her at the upcoming Chanticleer Author ConferenceCAC17March 31st to April 2nd where she will be teaching Writing in Multiple Genres, High Touch Marketing in a Digital World, and Mindfulness for Writers.

    As part of our spotlight series, we asked Susan our five questions to get her perspective on professional success.

    1. When did you know what you really wanted to be?

    When it comes to writing, I was a late bloomer. Before my early thirties, the only writing I’d ever done was college term papers—the mere idea of creative writing completely intimidated me. That is, until one spring day, when my then-husband brought home a new Apple II GS computer. Compelled by the thought of that hideously expensive Apple becoming nothing more than a really big desk decoration, I sat on my front step with a pen and yellow pad of notepaper, and began scribbling what was to become my first novel. A couple of pages later, I got a faint inkling of the power writing would have over me. But it wasn’t until I started pounding away on the Apple keyboard—using a program called GraphicWriter that regularly made the chapters I’d written completely disappear—did I discover I’d found my bliss: I wanted to be a novelist.

    2. What was the biggest challenge you faced?

    The first few years I was writing fiction, my biggest challenge, like most fledgling writers, was balancing writing time and energy with family commitments and the necessity of earning an income. These days, those challenges are ongoing—only I’ve added my commitment to running our little farm, and making time to create and promote my books too!

    3. How do you define success?

    Success for me changes all the time. Sometimes, I feel successful when I’ve finished a scene that really sings. Other times, it’s getting a favorable review or a compliment from a reader that shows she really “got” the story. And there are those rare days: success is my feeling of euphoria when I’ve completed a manuscript or a finalized a novel.

    4. How long did it take to achieve your success?

    “Achieving success” feels kind of nebulous—to me, it’s more of a process than a goal. Still, one of my most memorable experiences as an author was the April afternoon I walked into the Bellingham Public Library with the two, hot off the press copies of Little Farm in the Foothills they requested for purchase, and soon after, leaving with a check in my hand! Selling my first two books ever took place almost exactly 21 years after I began scribbling on that yellow tablet.

    5. What is the best advice you have ever received?

    My dad was a political scholar and author of a dozen academic books. He always told me that if I wanted to be a published author, I should write 4 hours a day. He managed to fit in his four hours almost every day for nearly forty years, pounding on his little Smith-Corona manual typewriter, while pursuing an academic career, being a devoted father of six children, and being an excellent golfer! I don’t always make four hours at the keyboard, but I do keep in mind that time-honored acronym: BICHOK (Butt-in-chair-hands-on-keyboard) is really all you need to find your success!

    If you have not registered for CAC17 yet, what are you waiting for? Susan Colleen Browne and more fantastic speakers (including yourself possibly, if you register before the schedule is full) will be sharing their experience and knowledge about writing books, selling books, and everything to do with being a successful author.


    About Susan

    Susan Colleen Browne weaves her love of Ireland and her passion for country living into her Village of Ballydara series, novels and stories of love, friendship and family set in the Irish countryside. She’s also the author of an award-winning memoir, Little Farm in the Foothills, as well as the Morgan Carey fantasy-adventure series for tweens. A community college creative writing instructor, Susan runs a mini-farm in the foothills of the Pacific Northwest. Coming up: Book 4 of the Ballydara series, and a sequel to Little Farm in the Foothills!
    In this holiday story, Kerry McCormack has a loving family and a beautiful home in the suburbs, yet this thirty-something Dublin girl is wondering, “is this all there is?” After years of a passionate marriage, she’s grown apart from her husband Stephen. Unresolved grief is only creating more distance between them, just as a secret from Kerry’s past suddenly comes to light…

    Susan’s classes:

    Writing in Multiple Genres – Join authors Pamela Beason (YA, mystery, romantic suspense and non-fiction), and Susan Colleen Browne (women’s fiction, short stories, MG and memoir) to look at the ins and outs of writing in different genres. Pamela and Susan will discuss story development, juggling different writing projects, and how genre influences their marketing approaches. They’ll also share what they’ve learned in their multi-tasking writing lives!

    High Touch Marketing in a Digital World – As technology migrates into more aspects of our lives, forging personal connections with readers is crucial to an author’s success. In this session, we’ll discuss high-touch approaches and incorporating them into your marketing efforts. We’ll explore authors’ communities and how you can enhance your book events. We’ll also brainstorm ways to bring more of a personal touch to online interactions and look at authors who have mastered high-touch outreach. You’ll leave with new ideas to boost your marketing and promotion!

    Mindfulness for Writers – Is your writing time squeezed, your story stalled, or technology taking over your life? In this informal gathering, we’ll practice a few mindfulness exercises to help you tune into your self- awareness for your all around well-being. We’ll also look at tapping into your intuition to address your writing challenges, and share tips for creating more balance and focus in your writing life!

    Check out all the classes and sessions we have scheduled!

    Register for CAC17 NOW!

  • The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs by H. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd – Non-Fiction/Memoir

    The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs by H. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd – Non-Fiction/Memoir

    Thousands of wild mustangs now have a sanctuary to call home thanks to one man: H. Alan Day. This is his story.

    Perhaps you’ve heard of a horse whisperer: a person who gently and patiently communicates with an animal. Multiply that by 1,500 and you have H. Alan Day, a cattle rancher from the southwest turned horse herder who takes on what would seem to be an unimaginably huge project.

    The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs, is Day’s story of Mustang Meadows Ranch in the Sand Hills of South Dakota, the first government-sponsored wild horse sanctuary established in the United States.

    In beautifully vivid prose, Day transports us to the prairie, as in this passage: “The sun highlighted the horses, now twelve hundred strong, creating a canvas of golds, bronzes, beiges, blacks, and deep browns that stretched out before me.”

    Day’s youth played a critical role in his success and interest with horses as he grew up on a 200,000-acre cattle ranch straddling the high deserts of southern Arizona and New Mexico. After college, he returned to manage Lazy B, the family ranch, for the next 40 years. Later, he (hesitantly) purchased 35,000 acres in South Dakota and dedicated it as a horse preserve for 1,500 wild mustangs. Relying on a herd medication program he used at Lazy B, he trained the group of mustangs, those considered unadoptable, to follow a lead horse from the wild through the gates and into the horse meadow.

    However, it wasn’t always easy. Initially, Day scoffed at the idea. “Come on, wild horses? I was a cattle rancher…”

    Thanks to a heartfelt and informative introduction by his sister, Sandra Day O’Connor (the first female US Supreme Court Justice who retired in 2008 after 25 years on the bench), we learn that wild mustangs, formerly running free, breeding and multiplying, were being captured, sold, or destroyed. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) took care of many of them; however, the remainder was considered unadoptable.

    Day remained stalwart facing dangers, frustrations, and heartbreak and had to deal with government red tape. Through his eloquent and moving story, he shows us the resolve and passion required for undertaking South Dakota ranching.

    It’s no surprise Horse Lover is well written and poignant; in 2002, Day partnered with his sister to co-author the family memoir, “Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest,” which went on to become a New York Times bestseller.

    Horse lovers will not want to miss this book – and witness the magic of thousands of horses running wild. The rest of us will marvel at what Day was able to accomplish in this story of loyalty and hope.

  • Between Heaven and Hell by Jacqui Nelson – Western Romance Drama

    Between Heaven and Hell by Jacqui Nelson – Western Romance Drama

    The year is 1841 when nine-year old Hannah watches the murder of her family by drunk white renegade men. She was found by native Americans and taken in. Thrust into a new and unfamiliar life that will challenge and change her forever. But over a decade later, a tragic event has left her on the run from the tribe she grew accustomed to and now she must find a way to make a living on her own.

    She and her trusted horse travel to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas – in other words, Hell – where she hopes to find a job. With the skills she learned from living with the tribe and her dead eye skills with a gun, she’s hoping to land a scouting job. There, she meets Paden Callahan, a seasoned traveler and military man who is looking for a replacement for his current scout, Dawson.

    After being taken at such a young age, Hannah finds it better to be strong and live independently than take up a typical woman’s profession. Hannah has honed her shooting skills and has an aim better than most men, which astonishes everyone and angers those she bests. But, despite her skill and strength, Callahan still isn’t too sure a woman can handle the tough trail life and also isn’t too sure he can control himself around a woman this beautiful.

    With little options to choose from, Callahan reluctantly allows her to come, but they both discover there are more dangers following Hannah than anyone realized.

    Between Heaven and Hell is an alluring romance that captivates readers in a time period where Pioneers fought for land and Native Americans retaliated in order to keep what was their home. Jacqui Nelson’s characters are multi-dimensional and drift between bridging the gap between the two groups.

    Hannah is an inspiring strong woman whose path represents the bridge between Natives and Settlers, and who spends most of the novel struggling to reconcile her two very different identities. Her life with the tribe has helped make her the woman she is, yet many of the settlers she must find a life with are those who do not understand, nor wish to understand, where she came from. Despite her personal battle and the difficulties she faces as a woman on her own, Hannah proves herself to be tough and resilient.

    Callahan is also haunted by his past, though it differs greatly from Hannah’s and he fights to understand her and how to help her. The connection that develops between them despite their differences makes their relationship worth rooting for.

    Nelson delivers a perfect, steady-paced book with poetic descriptions of romance and easy-to-follow fluidity of Callahan and Hannah’s journeys. Those who love romance and hot sensual scenes, along with the Western historical fiction, will find themselves enamored with this novel.

  • Contest Rankings for the Chanticleer Book Awards – The Latest 411

    Contest Rankings for the Chanticleer Book Awards – The Latest 411

    Genre Grand Prize Winners

    Authors and writers from around the world (from more than 35 countries) submit their latest works to the Chanticleer International Writing Competitions. The winners of these novel writing contests are recognized at the annual Chanticleer Book Awards Ceremony and Banquet that takes place at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and 3 Day Book Fair.

    We have recognized each of the 14 genres that are represented  First Place category winners along with announcing the genre GRAND PRIZE Award Winners and then top the evening by announcing the Overall Grand Prize Winner for the year’s Best Book Award. At this year’s ceremony, we will also recognize a new level of award winners, the Short Listed award winners.

    Books that have reached the Short List or the Semi-Finalist rounds have been read completely. These are books that we love and that we want to give extra recognition. However, only a handful will go on to achieve First Place Category Positions and only one of these will be awarded the genre’s grand prize.

    The Short Listed Award Winners (aka Semi-Finalists) will compete for the 5 coveted First Place Category Position within each of the offered genre novel competitions. Conference and Banquet Attendees who have been awarded a Short List position will be recognized on stage at the awards ceremony and their books will have the opportunity to be available in the 3 Day Book Fair managed by Village Books. 

    Short Listed titles may use the digital badges below for website, digital, and social media promotion. “Short Listed by Chanticleer Reviews” stickers are available to Short Listers.  Authors may use “Short Listed by Chanticleer Reviews on their Short Listed titles.

    Chanticleer Short List

     

     

    For more information about the Chanticleer International Book Awards, please click here.

    We are grateful for our contests judges — for theirs is truly a labor of love! 

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

     

     

     

  • Robbing the Pillars by Kalen Vaughan Johnson – Historical Fiction

    Robbing the Pillars by Kalen Vaughan Johnson – Historical Fiction

    When James MacLaren flees his native Scotland, he leaves a body behind – but not his hatred of the upper class. In England, he meets and weds Emma, but will the skeletons in their shared past remain silent?

    Robbing the Pillars crosses the Atlantic and lands in Nevada City, California at the beginning of the Gold Rush, amidst the discovery of seemingly endless supplies of the precious mineral. James and Emma, now with their young daughter Charlotte, come out to California by wagon train accompanied by Emma’s best friend, Althea and her son Justin.

    Along the way and upon arrival in the region, they meet friends and ruffians including an entrepreneurial chancer with a conscience, an inveterate loser with a taste for alcohol and his eye fixed on Althea, and a Mexican who finds that MacLaren is the first white man he can trust.

    MacLaren involves himself in mining, engineering, and homesteading while Emma and Althea get a taste of town life and community activism. Their children meanwhile are growing up with a sense of true freedom that their European-born parents could never have known. In pursuit of his personal quest, Justin will come up against Althea’s past; and the beautiful, willful Charlotte and her father must learn to live with the pangs of lost love.

    Meanwhile, the territory is changing rapidly. Big men with big ideas are taking an interest in the fate of the new state and move to monopolize its resources. Into this mix, author Vaughan Johnson has expertly interwoven both fictional characters and real “empire barons” such as Leland Stanford, Collis Huntington, and Mark Hopkins into her epic tale.

    This first part of a planned series ends with the rumbling of war that splits the nation and brings about a sad parting that begs for a reunion in a later volume.

    Author Kalen Vaughan Johnson has created a large canvas; her knowledge of the region – its history, the mix of cultures, the lilt of varied accents, even the cuisine – highlights her obvious talent for creating richly detailed historical fiction. The title, for example, references an arcane aspect of mining in which, as the miners retreat from a played out vein, they risk dislodging the roof pillars as they go, endangering their lives by ferreting out every last flake of gold. Johnson depicts with equal verve and realism the lives of the rich, the wannabes, and those at the bottom struggling upward.

    A sweeping look at personal idealism and autonomy pitted against the forces of greed and manipulation, Robbing the Pillars is an emotive family saga solidly rooted in the American dream.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

     

  • MYSTERY & MAYHEM SHORT-LIST for 2016 (2016 M&M Semi-Finalists)

    MYSTERY & MAYHEM SHORT-LIST for 2016 (2016 M&M Semi-Finalists)

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardThese titles are in the running for the 5 First Place Book Awards for the 2016 Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards competition!

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2016 M&M Finalists to the Short List. The novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to FINALISTS LIST  and now has moved forward to the SHORT LIST of the 2016 M&M  Book Awards. They are now 2016 M&M Semi-Finalists as they compete for the limited First in Category Positions of the 2016 M&M Book Awards in the last rounds of judging.

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

    The Mystery & Mayhem Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Cozy Mysteries and Classic Mysteries. The M&M Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 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, Y/A, and Senior Sleuth.

    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 2016 SHORT LIST.

    Chanticleer Short List

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the Short-list (aka The Semi-Finalists) of the M&M 2016 Novel Writing Contest are:

    Under English Heaven  by Alice K. Boatwright

    Secrets Revealed by Kate Vale

    The Body Next Door by Gay Yellen

    A Scone To Die For  – H.Y. Hanna

    Death Runs on Time by A. B. Michaels

    Secrets, Lies, and Champagne Highs  by Jeanette Hubbard

    Killer Transaction  by Catherine Bruns

    Twelve for Twelve  by Dawn Rasmussen

    The Prosecution of Mr. Darcy’s Cousin by Regina Jeffries

    The Secret Life of Anna Blanc by Jennifer Kincheloe

    A Girl Like You by Michelle Cox

    Engaged in Danger: A Jamie Quinn Mystery by Barbara Venkataraman

    Death Unscripted by M.K. Graff

    Deadly Dye and a Soy Chai by Traci Andrighetti

    Sherlock Holmes and the Dance of the Tiger -Suzette Hollingsworth 

    Skyrizer # 7 by Phillip Buchanon

    The Erotica Book Club for Nice Ladies by  Connie Spittler

    Smart, but Dead by Nancy G. West

    Hot Scheming Mess by Lucy Carol

    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, which has a cash prize purse of $200.  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 Finalists in this fiercely competitive contest! 

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

    Good Luck to all of the M&M Semi-Finalists as they compete for the coveted First Place Category  positions.

    First In Category announcements will be made in our social media postings as the results come in. The 2016 First In Category Winners and Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the 2017 Chanticleer Annual Awards Gala and Banquet.

    The M&M Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 M&M Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is March 31st, 2017. Please click here for more information.