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  • PATHWAYS to HOPE by Harish Malhotra, M.D.

    PATHWAYS to HOPE by Harish Malhotra, M.D.

    Pathways to Hope is a wealth of practical advice and  positive messages presented in an easy to digest manner. It is a slightly more analytic approach to metaphor as a healing technique than Dr. Harish Malhotra’s earlier book, Metaphors of Healing. However, Pathways is still an accessible and powerful tool to help those with personal difficulties on a self-help basis, and yet comprehensive enough to be a guide to those professionals who want to add new methods and techniques to their patient communication skills.

    Dr. Malhotra proposes 23 essential pathways, all with playful titles, ranging from “Go on with Your Best Face,” “Leave Nothing Unturned” to “Change the Storm into a Breeze.” As the titles imply, the author employs ordinary experience to deal with extraordinary issues that afflict humans.  Again, Dr. Malhotra offers a simple, but brilliant, idea: Use the healing language of metaphor as a therapeutic strategy and a curative approach for daily life. What do these pathways of hope offer therapists and patients?

    He advises, that first, therapists should not depend on a single approach to solving problems, such as depending exclusively on standard psychotherapy or behavioral techniques. Dr. Malhotra believes in adjusting the style to fit the person, regardless of the type of therapy. For example:  If a patient has hallucinations that tell him to cut himself, his behavior is unlikely to change by telling him to look at the origins of the behavior.  He offers that instead of taking the “origin’s route” that the therapist shifting his patient’s attention to what voice the patient is actually listening to, and then guide the patient to determine  whether that voice is using  good judgment. This pathway may enable the patient to “deny the voice that is only loud thoughts” in his mind.

    Second, Dr. Malhotra advises us to highlight the positives—thought, word and deed—so that we may “put different highlights in our life book.”  How can one counsel a lonely patient, one who seeks but has no hope of meeting people?  The author shows that by connecting to the social media, hundreds of different opportunities present themselves. We strike up friendships through slight measures: small talk, shaking hands, smiling and just paying attention to a person.  A simple recipe: Grow a social network by taking small positive steps whenever and wherever you can.

    Whether you are a therapist, patient or truth seeker, what can be learned from this book?  We can summarize some major markers. Pathway l, “Go with Your Best Face,” emphasizes that we focus on our strengths, not our weaknesses. Pathway 8, “Search for the Silver Lining,” encourages the reader to pay attention to the joys of living rather than the fear of dying. Pathway 11, “Make Yourself a Happy Person,” clarifies that we all have choices, and that “happiness is an inside job.” One more illustration of metaphor, Pathway 12, “Leave Nothing Unturned,” focuses on good habits that inspire positive attitudes and healthy lifestyles—“neither of which require a copyright.”  Ordinary people can live extraordinary lives by considering new pathways, by hearing new stories, by learning by metaphor.

    Pathways of Hope and Metaphors of Healing are not theoretical psychotherapy books. As Dr. Malhotra makes clear, these are lighthearted stories to provide innovative insights and language to enhance our everyday lives. He seeks to empower readers with his decades of experience in helping people transform their lives and improve difficult situations in their daily lives.

    As with Metaphors of Healing, this is not a book to be read in one sitting or all at once. It is one that the reader will find herself/himself picking up again and again taking in a chapter or a metaphor to ponder and, perhaps, adapt. It will become a gentle companion that guides and inspires. One will find, on reflection and on rereading, that these simple stories contain deep insight and wisdom. Clinicians and those seeking to increase their understanding of themselves and their fellow humans would benefit immensely from reading Dr. Malhotra’s gentle, healing stories.

  • BLOOD RELATIONS by Lonna Enox

    BLOOD RELATIONS by Lonna Enox

    In a tangled web of mystery and lies, the truth can only be discovered, if the seeker can survive. Often working out a mystery and following the clues can lead to danger. Unfortunately, sometimes the answers found may not be the ones sought after.

    Blood Relations is the second book in this cozy mystery series set in the contemporary Southwest. Not only will readers be intrigued throughout the story, they will enjoy the vivid descriptions of a wild bird refuge, the rugged beauty of the Southwest, along with the visuals of the quaint small towns and their local personalities that the mystery revolves around.

    Sorrel, a retired investigative journalist, is simply seeking peace after the brutal murder of her husband. She opened a small gift shop out of her home in Saddle Gap, with a close girlfriend, Teri, who handles the daily operations. This allows Sorrel to pursue her passion, photography, especially wildlife photography. She is mentored by her friend, John, also a professional wildlife photographer.

    It was on one of John and Sorrel’s trips that this mystery starts. Sorrel arrives at the Annual Crane Festival in Socorro, New Mexico as she and John had planned.  The morning starts with some amazing views of the wintering birds, as well as a striking sunrise. When John fails to show up, and she is instead greeted by Chris Reed, a Saddle Gap detective, Sorrel fears the worst.

    Sorrel is determined to figure out what has happened to John. She feels that he is in trouble, and she will not stop searching until she gets some answers. Reed and Sorrel start to investigate John’s disappearance. Along the way they encounter many strange things that, at that point, don’t seem to make any sense: a dead body of an unidentified man, strange papers, phone messages from John’s attorney, and strange coded messages left in various places.

    Sorrel and Reed’s search propels them into harm’s way, where  they find themselves terrorized and in situations that require tenacity, survival skills, and teamwork. When these experiences cause Sorrel to question the people and events in her life, she learns of a deception that will change her life forever.

    Sorrel and Reed have a feisty friendship that teeters on becoming more. She dodges his romantic flirtations with her sassy comments, exerting her independence. Undaunted, Detective Reed is more intrigued by her and her secretive past.

    Not many books leave me with the urge to immediately re-read them, but Blood Relations most certainly did. The subtlety of the details and clues written throughout the mystery surfaced only after I finished reading. It is an amazing talent for an author to leave you wanting to re-read her novel. And this well-written and entertaining book made me do so. I then went on to read book one, The Last Dance, which was awarded the Best Debut Mystery in the CLUE Awards. I was not disappointed. This reviewer is looking forward to reading the next book in this captivating and engaging contemporary Southwestern mystery series by Lonna Enox.

     

  • LOVE and THE ARTS, a Blog-post from Kiffer Brown

    LOVE and THE ARTS, a Blog-post from Kiffer Brown

    Edward_Burne-Jones_Le_Chant_d_Amour_(Song_of_Love) (1)The Love Song by Sir Edward Burne-Jones portrays each of the three young people alone with their thoughts and dreams, but gathered together, as the sheep are in the distance, for comfort and support.

    Sir Burne-Jones was forty years-old when he painted this, perhaps remembering the daydreaming times and wistfulness of his youth.

    Sir Burne-Jones was mentored and influenced by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Rossetti was one of Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood founders who, in 1848, sought to create works of art that conjured a realm of heightened emotions, aspirations, and visual splendor that would elevate a modern society beset by change.1 

    These are apt words for today’s hyper-charged digital age.

    Sir Burne-Jones own words asserted, “Only this is true, that beauty is very beautiful, and softens, and comforts, and inspires, and rouses, and lifts up, and never fails.”  And this sentiment  is where the Pre-Ralphaelite movement artists of poets, novelists, painters, music composers, and craftsmen found connection and inspiration for their collaborations and works. 2

     

    The Dante Gabriel Rossetti Influence

    We have chosen Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s work to symbolize several of our writing competitions logos. We feel that the sentiment expressed by the Pre-Raphaelite movement exemplifies what inspires many authors to pick up their  proverbial pens to express their emotions and their observations of the visceral dynamics of living.

    Dante Gabriel Rossetti: artist, poet, and scholar of Italian Medieval art

    Dante Rossetti images

    Imagine nineteen-year-old Dante Rossetti looking at himself in a mirror as he is drawing his self-portrait in 1847.

    As a young man, Rossetti was known to be confident, articulate, and charming as he was zealous, emotional, and irresponsible.  His contemporaries called this a “poetic nature,” which drove him to combine the “human with the divine” in his art. His  self-portrait captures these many traits. 1

     

    We felt this portrait of  Rossetti would be perfect to represent Chanticleer’s novel competition for young adult fiction as it deftly embodies the flashing range of emotions that young people from any era have experienced, and probably will continue to experience in the future, as they encounter the crossroads of adulthood.

    Jane Burden Morris: muse, artist’s model, wife, and paramour

    The Chatelaine Awards

    Twenty years later Rossetti painted Jane Morris in a “Blue Silk Dress” in 1868. She was twenty-nine.

    He sublimely captures the many nuances of romance, love, and longing. Did a lover give her the flower tucked into her sash? What is she wistfully looking up from reading? What is on the other side of the drapery? Where did the flowers in the vase come from? Did she cut them or are they from a different suitor? As  many find with Rossetti’s work, there are endless possibilities for story ideas when viewing his art.

    Rossetti was a scholar of Medieval Art and Letters, along with pursuing knowledge of Arthurian Legend. He was profoundly influenced by his namesake, Dante Alighieri, and the English poet John Keats.

    Rossetti’s portrayal of Jane Burden Morris in the “Blue Silk Dress” (to me) is an ethereal image of women–a perfect image for the Chatelaine Awards for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction.

    An Arthurian Legend Comes True in the Victorian Era?

    Jane Burden (Morris),  known as the Pre-Raphaelite ideal of beauty, came from an impoverished background, her father a stable-hand and her mother an illiterate domestic servant. Rossetti and Burne-Jones were struck by her beauty when they saw her when she and her sister attended a play in Oxford in 1857.  The artists asked her to model for them. She was eighteen and destined for a life as a domestic servant. The rest is history in this fairy-tale-come-true story–essentially Arthurian legend come to life.

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    Jane Morris as Guinevere
    “Guinevere” by William Morris. Artist’s model is Jane Burden, 18)

     

    Morris fell in love with Jane when she was modeling for his “Guinevere” painting and he asked her to marry him.  After they were engaged, she was privately educated to become a suitable wife for a gentleman of high society standing such as he was. They married on April 26, 1859; she was twenty, Morris was twenty-five.

    Apparently, she was quite intelligent, as she quickly took to her lessons and became fluent in French and Italian, became an accomplished pianist, and was known for her refined manners and eloquent  speech.

    Jane Burden Morris is considered to be the woman who inspired Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, more currently known as My Fair Lady of Audrey Hepburn fame. 1

     

    After her marriage to William Morris, she continued to model for Rossetti, which is another story unto itself. Jane Morris is said to have “consumed and obsessed him (Rossetti) in paint, poetry, and life.”4

    Was Morris Rossetti’s King Arthur? Was Rossetti Morris’s Lancelot? And Jane, was she Morris’s Guinevere?  Does life imitate art? 

    Love and the Arts during the Victorian Era in England

    If you ever get the opportunity to view the works of the Pre-Raphaelites, I urge you to do so! I have had the pleasure of viewing them at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and at a touring exhibit at the Rijkesmuseum in Amsterdam.  An interesting note is that the Rijkesmuseum titled the Pre-Raphaelite exhibit unabashedly as “Wives and Stunners.”  The artists and their wives must have been the subject of many a gossip column in the newspapers and scandal broadsheets as well as inspiration for the contemporary authors of that era: Oscar Wilde, Charles Dickens, the Brontë sisters,  Alfred Tennyson, Rudyard Kipling, and other notables.

    The Pre-Raphaelite art movement is one that has resonated with me since I was teenage girl. And now that I am a woman of a “certain age,” I find that it still does, increasingly so–especially now that I have come to know more about the artists and their muses.

     

     Background Information:
    • Sir Edward Burne-Jones, 1833–1898.
    • Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1828-1882.
    • Jane Burden Morris, 1839-1914.
    • William Morris, 1834-1896.
    Citing and Acknowledgments
    1. Wikipedia Commons. 
    2. Metropolitan Museum of Art
    3. All art images via Wikipedia Commons. 
    4. Pamela Todd, "Pre-Raphaelites at Home," New York (2001).

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  • THE DEVIL’S MUSIC by Pearl R. Meaker

    THE DEVIL’S MUSIC by Pearl R. Meaker

    The last thing Emory Crawford – loving wife, empty nester, knitter,  library volunteer, blue-grass fiddler, and an avid reader of Miss Marple mysteries – would ever expect to find at quiet Twombly College, was an on-campus murder. The victim was a friend, fellow bluegrass musician, and bestselling author, Dr. Archibald Finlay Dawson.

    When the police arrive, college president Jarius Twombly declares that he wants the whole thing kept as quiet as possible during the conference. And he wants the murderer arrested before it is over, while everyone is still in attendance. He assigns Jebbin Crawford, college chemistry professor (and Emory’s husband), to monitor and report on the investigation. His friend and lab partner, Dr. Chatterjee, known as Chatty, will conduct the actual forensics analysis.

    The stunned Emory seeks furry comfort with her two cats, Hortense and Kumquat, and her dog, Sophie. She finds liquid comfort in the form of hot chocolate in one cup and herbal tea in the other. As curiosity consumes her, Emory begins asking herself questions: Who could have wanted to kill Dr. Dawson?  Who had an alibi for the time of the murder? Then she wonders aloud just what her favorite mystery series sleuth, Jane Marple, would do. The cats stare at her.

    Pearl R. Meaker, the author of The Devil’s Music, introduces us to a range of intriguing and peculiar characters as Emory, a self-acknowledged Miss Marple wannabe, begins her own investigation in her own non-threatening way. After all, she is a grandmother who knits and bakes cookies.

    The author delightfully takes us through Emory’s transformation from empty nester homemaker to crime-solver in The Devil’s Music. Emory must wrestle with self-doubt as she begins to trust her own investigative deductions. While the scientists use their labs and research methods to solve the crime, Emory precedes to continue seeking clues and answers in her own way.

    We learn that Emory is quite well-read, and that her broad collection of interests aids her in astutely and stealthily gathering information. Meaker deftly weaves in fascinating bits of Salem witch trials history, old superstitions, the powers of herbal tinctures, the symbolism of flowers, and Bluegrass music. One can almost hear the devil’s music, a specific type of Bluegrass—practically a character itself in the mystery—as Emory discovers the missing pieces to the puzzle.

    The inquisitive and delightful Mrs. Emory Crawford, who uses her intuition and her knitting projects to solve crimes, will surely become a favorite sleuth to cozy mystery fans. Her quirky sidekicks with their interesting peculiarities, along with the locals of this quaint college town in the heartland of America, add touches of humor to this mystery.

    Classic mystery readers will not be disappointed with The Devil’s Music’s plot twists and intriguing puzzles in this entertaining whodunit by Pearl R. Meaker. We look forward to the next book in this winsome new cozy mystery series.

  • The Mystery & Mayhem Awards 2014 – Official Finalists List

    The Mystery & Mayhem Awards 2014 – Official Finalists List

    mandm

     The M&M Awards 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 Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    More than $25,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2014 writing competition winners!

    The M&M 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 Awards Packages.

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made in through the first three rounds of the M&M 2014 Novel Competitions are:

    Danger Comes Home by Judy Alter

    No Place Like Rome by Julie Moffett

    Mrs. Kaplan and the Matzoh Ball of Death by Mark Reutlinger

    Civil Blood by Linda Triegel

    Grand Theft Death by  Ann Philipp

    Sex, Lies, and Snickerdoodles by Wendy Delaney

    The Deep End by Julie Mulhern

    Peete and Repeat by Karen Musser Nortman

    The Only Clue by Pamela Beason

    Sati and the Rider by Winslow Eliot

    Behind the Walls by Elaine L.Orr

    Find Me Again by Janet K. Shawgo

    Murder on the Bermuda Queen by Cheryl Peyton

    The Ghost of Laurie Floyd by Courtney Mroch

    Tax Cut by Michele Lynn Seigfried

    Kauai Temptations by Terry Ambrose

    The Wham Curse by Virgil Alexander

    Contempt of Court by Ken Malovos

    Her Father’s Daughter by Kate Vale

    Who Killed Tom Jones by Gale Martin

    Sydney West by R. McKinsey

    Parchman Redeemer by Michael H. Thompson

    Ladd Springs by Dianne Venetta

    The Green Remains by Marni Graff

    Killed Milk by Stephen Kaminski

    Dead Silent by Amy Beth Arkawy

    Summerville by JoHannah Reardon

    The M&M Finalists will compete for the M&M First In Category Positions, which consists of Four 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 $1,000 purse.   

    • All First In Category Award Winners will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.
    • First In Category winners will compete for the M&M Awards Grand Prize Award for the $250 purse and the M&M  Grand Prize Ribbon and badges.
    • TEN genre Grand Prize winning titles will compete for the $1,000 purse for CBR Best Book and Overall Grand Prize.
    • A coveted Chanticleer Book Review valued at $325 dollars U.S. CBR reviews will be published in the Chanticleer Reviews magazine in chronological order.
    • A CBR Blue Ribbon to use in promotion at book signings and book festivals
    • Digital award stickers for on-line promotion
    • Adhesive book stickers
    • Shelf-talkers and other promotional items
    • Promotion in print and on-line media
    • Review of book distributed to on-line sites and printed media publications
    • Review, cover art, and author synopsis listed in CBR’s newsletter
    • Award winning books may be eligible to be included in the  Chanticleer Collections (which sell and promote the winning titles) in North America through Promontory Distribution. The Chanticleer Collection is represented toIndependent Book Stores and major bookseller chains such as Barnes & Noble and Books A Million through an exclusive agreement with Promontory Distribution for our vetted Chanticleer Collection. Participating in the Chanticleer Collections is not required.
    • The Chanticleer Collection is our way of helping new Indie authors find North American distribution for their titles, but is in no way mandatory. Self-published and Indie published authors in our pilot program have found the CC to be extremely beneficial in increasing sales and readership.

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

    • Default First in Category winners will not be declared. Contests are based on merit and writing craft in all of the Chanticleer Writing Competitions.

    Congratulations to the Finalists in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to all of the M&M Finalists as they compete for the coveted First In CATEGORY positions for the 2014 M&Ms.

    First In Category announcements will be made in March 2014. Results will be announced in social media as they come in.

    The M&M Grand Prize Winner will be announced at the September 29th Chanticleer Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2015 M&M Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is March 30th, 2015. Please click here for more information. 

     

  • WORST OF ALL EVILS by Janet McClintock

    WORST OF ALL EVILS by Janet McClintock

    After an economic collapse, the US Constitution is set aside; civil rights are a thing of the past. A driver can get pulled over just for being out late. Even unpaid parking tickets can warrant harassment and a stint in a holding cell.

    This is not the America that Joan Bowman fought for in Iraq; she swore an oath to uphold the constitution. An underground group, The Constitutional Defense Legion (CDL) has formed to do just that, through any means possible. They have adopted John Stark’s motto, “Live Free or Die” which always elicits “death is not the worst of all evils” as a response.

    Joan meets a CDL recruiter at the gym, and decides that by joining their forces, she can help overthrow the current tyrannical government. Her reasoning followed the quote from Edmond Burke: ‘The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.’

    Joan’s life gets turned upside-down when the CDL decides to make her home into a ‘base of operations’ and moves two other CDL members into it. She learns that asking questions isn’t the best way to get answers; everything is on a ‘need to know’ basis.

    Joan is a martial arts enthusiast, putting her fighting skills to good use when some of the CDL’s missions go sideways. Disobeying orders, she uses her own decision-making skills to rescue her colleagues.

    She can charm the keys off an unsuspecting suitor while gathering intelligence undercover, with no one questioning her motives. But as Joan starts to rise through the ranks, she starts to question the legion’s direction and becomes wary of the stone-cold, heartless personalities in the inner circle, witnessing unnecessary use of force.

    Duncan, who is grooming Joan for his own position, “is” the Legion, and lives for the Legion. He suffers from PTSD from a jungle ambush where he was the sole survivor. His best friend, Kearney, resents Joan and makes no effort to hide it, making her life as miserable as he can. Duncan works closely with Joan but is respectful and distant. Joan is told to be watchful of Duncan, and is unsure, for a while, why everyone is so afraid of him.

    Duncan realizes Joan might be the key to unlocking his personal demons, but their budding romance keeps getting interrupted. It was refreshing to see a relationship develop without the cliché “he noticed her curves” or similar sentiment that finds its way into so many stories where a man and woman are forced to work together and then form a connection. Instead, Joan starts to notice Duncan’s physique after a very long time, but knows she can’t trust him as much as she’d like to.  After all, he admitted he would have killed her if she hadn’t turned over her house to the CDL.

    Just because a person is paranoid it doesn’t mean there isn’t someone actually following him.” Over time, Joan becomes paranoid from being undercover for so long. Joan knows that no one can get out of the CDL alive and she has few options left.  The CDL’s motto, that “there are evils worse than death” begins to haunt her.

     Worst of All Evils is a harrowing look into how a terrorist organization might function, how individuals can get trapped in a situation that spirals out of their control, beyond their ability to leave. McClintock doesn’t spare us torture, violence, or even the after-effects of drinking too much. However, the fight sequences and chase scenes are entertaining and fun to visualize.

    This thriller will have you on the edge of your seat wondering what is going to happen next. I can easily see Worst of All Evils as a TV series because of the Joan character, a “relatively unnoticeable brunette,”  who surprises us at every turn with her skills of observation, quick thinking, as well as with her flaws and mistakes. If you enjoy raw dialogue, fast action, and risk taking (powered by PTSD), you’ll love Worst of All Evils by Janet McClintock.

     

  • Engaging Readers and Building a Fanbase Using Leadership Communication, Part 2

    Engaging Readers and Building a Fanbase Using Leadership Communication, Part 2

    Writing Craft may be the key to writing a great story, but engaging people is the key to building a readership and a fan base.

    Engaging Readers and Building a FanbasePart 2. Establishing Competence and Credibility as an Author in Today’s Digital World of Publishing: Engaging Readers and Building a Fan-base using Leadership Communication Skills

     

     

    Recap of Part 1. Creating Identity and then Communicating It

    Authors must take the leadership role in communicating with potential readers. Authors are also responsible for maintaining and nurturing the author/reader relationship. If they do not, then other authors who do will gain ‘mindshare’ of those readers.

    By leading the communication about you and your work, you will have a distinct advantage of the hundreds of thousands of authors who do not.  And with a million plus books hitting the market this year alone, every advantage helps to position your work a notch higher.

    As an author, lead the way to creating the digital paths that will help people discover your books. Today, that means communicating via the Internet. 

    We listed the four cornerstones of Leadership Communication in the previous article as:

    1) Creating Identity

    2) Establishing Credibility and Competence

    3) Creating Shared Content

    4) Committing to Action

    We also defined the Interverse as a global network that is overlaid on the Internet. The Interverse is where the virtual digital universe intersects with reality. To have an Internet presence means you must have a website that communicates your brand, your identity, as an author.

    Part 2:  Establishing Credibility and Competence

    Engaging Readers and Building a Fan-baseAuthors must recognize the need for strong credentials to demonstrate competence to potential readers, book buyers, librarians, and media professionals.

    Authors must be empathetic to readers. Why should they read your book? What will drive their decision? Where can they discover it/find it? How can you as the author gain their confidence and trust? When do readers decide what to read? Who are your readers/your audience?

    Authors need to answer these questions honestly for themselves and then begin establishing credibility, credence, and competence with their potential readers.

    Establishing Competence

    Make sure that your work is the best that it can be. Believe in your work by putting together the best team of editors, proof readers, beta readers, press formatting editors (digital and/or print), cover designers, and publishing professionals that you can to produce your book. First impressions do count as do second, third, and so on. Readers are savvy.

    Then acknowledge the team of talent that worked on making your work the best it can be in your work’s preface. Your team then has a stake in your work and they will, in all probability, broadcast your work because it broadcasts their work.

    Let the world of readers know that you did your very best for them—that you acknowledge them and that you are showing respect for them. Publishing your work as a professionally as you can conveys respect for Readers.

    Results: Book buyers for bookstores and libraries are wary about buying books from Indie authors and small presses because of quality issues they have had to deal with previously. Their selections determine their next pay raise or even keeping on the payroll. Help them do their job by making it easy for them to see that your work is of a professional level and that it reflects the time-honored traditions of publishing that their readers have come to expect and demand.

    A Reader will be more willing to tell others of your work if it reflects well on her.

     Ask Readers for their feedback & insights—not just reviews—and then reward them for their time and effort whether or not the information was positive or negative. Ask them for this information on a one- on-one basis through your website and social media messaging. (Of course, never feed the Internet trolls.)

    Results: Readers will make a connection with you and your work. Connections lead to more introductions to other readers. This is how fan bases are created. Also, you gain valuable reader perspectives about your work.

    Establish Credibility

    Highlight Quotes, Reviews, and Support from Others to Gain Credibility

    Why are reviews important?

    Book ReviewsReviews add weight to your credibility. Reviews allow for comparison and judgment thereby engaging potential readers in the mental process of decision making and discussion points. Your promotional efforts are not dissipating into the ether, but are actually getting noticed by potential readers and publishing professionals.

    • Reviews distinguish your work from the millions of other books that are in the market place.
    • Reviews support your author platform and add evidence that your work is validated by readers.
    • Reviews allow for discourse about your work.
    • Editorial reviews make available the language for readers to discuss your work and to use in their reviews. Authors have told us is that Editorial reviews give their readers the language and vocabulary to discuss their works. Editorial reviews also help to set the tone of reader interaction.
    • Reviews are critical to your work’s success in today’s digital age of publishing. Readers may never actually see your printed book, but your reviews will be easily available to read on the Internet.
    • Reviews crystallize what your book is about from its reader’s viewpoint.
    • Reviews connect your readers through a commonality and promote discussion.
    • Reviews give authors something to post, blog, and chat about with their works that someone else has said. Authors can easily re-tweet, share, like, and comment on their Editorial Reviews without sounding “self-promoting.”

    Book Reviews are consistently one of the most powerful tools available to authors.

    As much as you love your book and your family and friends think that it awesome, readers want to know what others think of your work to make their decisions. There are several types of reviews and reviewers:

    • peer reviews by other authors
    • editorial reviews by professional reviewers in the publishing industry
    • manuscript overviews – pre-publication editorial reviews
    • consumer reviews by individual readers
    • reviews by family and friends (cheerleader reviews)

    An author requires the first four to make a professional impression on potential readers because each type of review has its own targeted audience and its own aim. And since there are many shades of gray, authors will benefit from having reviews from all categories.

    For more information on reviews, please read “What is an Editorial Review? And How is It Different from just a Review?”

    Use Quotes from:

    • Editorial Reviews
    • Other authors who write in your genre and have read your book
    • Those who have inspired you
    • Writing competition awards (be sure to link to competition’s official listing of award winners)
      • Post and display digital badges from writing contests and affiliations
    • Notable personalities in fields related to book. For example, if your work is about a murder mystery that takes place in Provence, France, could you ask for quotes from a notable chef, or artist, or business owner from the area who has read your work. OR if your work is a medical thriller, try to get a quote from a medical examiner. Be creative!

    All of the above increases your sphere of potential readers and adds value to your work and your author brand. Most importantly, quotes from others supporting your work will help you win the hearts and minds of your readers.

    Let your passion and creativity show to engage readers! Make it easy for your readers to help you create your fanbase and for them to become evangelists about your work.

    INFORM, INVOLVE, ENGAGE

    As an author, lead the way to creating the communication paths that will help people discover your books.

     

    My next post will be about:  Creating Shared Content in Today’s Digital World.

    Kiffer Brown, CBRKiffer Brown discovers today’s best books with reviews and writing contests at Chanticleer Book Reviews, L.L.C., which she founded in 2010.  She is also a media scout and trend-spotter for executive film producers (with film options to her credit), literary agents, and publishing houses. She searches for today’s sparkling gems that will become tomorrow’s best sellers. She truly loves what she does and her passion shows. 

     

    Kiffer helps authors develop methods that engage readers and expand their fan-bases. She has presented at Writers Digest NYC, RWA National, PNWA, PubSense Summit, and other conferences, where she focuses on the business of being an author. She invites you to attend the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala held Sept. 27, 28, & 29 in Bellingham, Wash.  www.ChantiReviews.com 

     

  • Win this STONE SOUP Necklace from Janet K. Shawgo, award winning author

    Win this STONE SOUP Necklace from Janet K. Shawgo, award winning author

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”]

    20150206_185151
    Look For Me Readers Prize

    Lovers of Romance Fiction here is a CBR Reader’s Special just FOR YOU!Find Me again

    To have a chance at winning this Key Charm Necklace exclusively made for the Look For Me series, all you have to do is visit author Janet K. Shawgo’s Look For Me Facebook page and LIKE it!

    If you happen to be the person to click LIKE at the lucky number of times, you will win this handmade pendant from Stone Soup. It is valued at $20. Janet will mail it to you. There are no shipping or handling charges, unless it is mailed outside of North America.

    The Lucky Number of LIKES has already been determined. All you have to do is leave a comment on Janet’s LOOK FOR ME Facebook page telling her what YOUR LIKE number is or FB message her with the LIKE number. It’s that easy!

    We will post the LOOK FOR ME LUCKY WINNER’s name here and number here.  To read the review of FIND ME AGAIN, please click here. To read the review of the award winning LOOK FOR ME, please click here.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • JOURNEY AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction FIRST PLACE Category Winners

    JOURNEY AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction FIRST PLACE Category Winners

    journeyChanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the JOURNEY Awards 2014, a genre division of the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Award Writing Competitions.

    The Journey Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer Book Reviews Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    First Place Category Winners for the Journey Awards are:

    • Global Enlightenment: Thwarted Escape by Lopamudra Banerjee
    • Personal Journey: The Breast is History, by Bronwyn Hope
    • Career Experiences: Caregiving Our Loved Ones by Nanette J. Davis, Ph.D.
    • An Era Memoir:  Soviet Letters by Alex Posoukh
    • Travelogue Experiences:  Moroccan Musings by Anne B. Barriault
    • True Action: Waking Reality by Donna LeClair
    • How-to/Life Experiences: The Accidental Teacher: Life Lessons from my Silent Son by Annie Lubliner Lehmann
    • Best Manuscript: Five Thousand Brothers in Law: Love in Angola Prison by Shannon Hager

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the JOURNEY AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2014 JOURNEY category winner was announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala in September 2015. See the Grand Prize Winners.

    • The deadline for entries into the Journey Awards 2014 was Feb. 28, 2014.
    • The deadline for entries into the Journey Awards 2015 is Feb. 28, 2015.

    GRAND PRIZE Overall Journey Awards Winner from 2013:

    Christine Smith, More Faster, Backwards: Rebuilding David 

     

    To view the 2013 JOURNEY  Award Winners, please click here.

    To compete in the 2015 Journey Awards or for more information, please click here.

    THE DEADLINE TO ENTER THE 2015 JOURNEY Novel Writing Competitions is February 28th, 2015.

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_button link=”https://www.chantireviews.com/services/#!/Narrative-Non-fiction-Blue-Ribbon-Awards-Writing-Contest/p/21521217/category=5193080″ color=”default” size=”” type=”flat” shape=”pill” target=”_self” title=”” gradient_colors=”|” gradient_hover_colors=”|” accent_color=”” accent_hover_color=”” bevel_color=”” border_width=”1px” shadow=”” icon=”fa-book” icon_position=”left” icon_divider=”no” modal=”” animation_type=”shake” animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”1″ alignment=”right” class=”” id=””]Enter Now[/fusion_button]

     

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews international writing competitions.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C.  retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Terms and Conditions  page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • A NEW YEAR, A NEW LOOK with NEW SERVICES at Chanticleer Reviews

    A NEW YEAR, A NEW LOOK with NEW SERVICES at Chanticleer Reviews

    happy new year wallpaper 2015 for facebookWe’ve been busy building a new website so that we can offer more to the Chanticleer Community of Authors and Readers!

     

    IF you haven’t had a chance to visit the Chanticleer Reviews’ website recently, please do! We have added new features and services.

     New! Book Clubs and Readers Community News 

    book clubsNow you (Chanticleer Authors) can submit your book promotion contests, sales, and deals to be posted on Chanticleer’s  brand new just for Book Clubs and Readers section! Reach Readers and Book Clubs with your latest book deals and sales, author promotions and goodies, and book club special offers that are linkable right  from the homepage of Chanticleer’s website!

    Book Clubs can easily discover Chanticleer authors who want to engage with them. And they can enter CBR’s Book Club of the month contest for a chance to win ten free books from the featured title of the month.

    Readers will be excited about new book promotions such as sales, goodies, beta reader opportunities, and reader contests.

    There is nothing quite like the joy of discovering a new fav author! 

    Better Website Visitor Engagement

    The new website platform (found at the old URL address www.ChantiReviews.com) is  Mobile & Tablet friendly. Give it a try! 

    Chanticleer Writing Competitions Contest Winners’ Listing Now Featured on the Homepage

    Booksellers, librarians, literary agents, publishing houses, and readers & book clubs can now quickly access the Chanticleer Writing Competitions Winners’ information with an easy to spot direct link on the home page (‘above the fold’)–permanently!

    Newspaper Layout for Quick Access 

    Now you can easily scan the home page of the CBR website for: Latest Book Reviews, Contest News, Book Marketing & Promotional Tools & Tips, the Latest News from Chanticleer, Book Clubs & Readers Community News, links to the Chanticleer Reviews quarterly magazine, and Calendar of Events.

    We are making our way through the entire website to better serve the Chanticleer Community of Authors and Readers. And we are working on it continuously to make it easier to navigate and adding new services. So, do check back often!

    We want to thank all of the Chanticleer Community Members for a Fantastic 2014!

    We wish each and every one of  YOU—Authors, Publishers, and  Readers—a happy, healthy, and prosperous 2015 from all of us at Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media.

    We love discovering TODAY’s BEST BOOKS here at Chanticleer! cbr-150-147