Author: jesikah-sundin

  • Awards Banquet & Ceremony for the CIBA FINALISTS Information by Kiffer Brown

    Awards Banquet & Ceremony for the CIBA FINALISTS Information by Kiffer Brown

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media

    is the proud sponsor of the

    Chanticleer International Book Awards

    for Fiction and Non-Fiction Works

    The CIBA Banquet and Ceremony is the crowning event of the Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    The FINALISTS

    We recognize and celebrate the FINALISTS whose works have advanced up through the Levels of Achievement at the annual conference. Their works came a long way to reach the coveted FINALIST Level of Achievement. All Finalists are notified by direct email that includes links, digital Finalists Division Badges  to use for promotion of the work in social media, digital and print promotions.Blue and gold finalist badge for the CIBAs

    In addition to the digital badges, the Finalists for each CIBA division are posted on the Chanticleer website, emailed out to our entire subscriber list, posted on Facebook, Linked In, and Twitter.

    The tiers of achievement for the CIBAs

    We invite each Finalists to join us at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference that specializes in:

    • Book to Film Sessions  (See Maggie Marr, Atty workshop on Book to Film)
    • The Business and Marketing side of being an Author – Technologies, Trends, Legal, & Forecasts
    • FLYWHEELS: Book Promotion and Increasing Book Sales – Methods, Techniques, and Tools and Long-Tail Marketing Flywheels
    • The All Important ALPHABET SOUP for Book Distribution and Sales (SEO, AISEO, BISAC Codes, Meta-Data, Keywords)
    • Branding – Yes, you need it!
    • Audio-Books for AuthorsTried and True methods without breaking the bank

    And waaaay too many other sessions to list here.

    The CIBA Banquet and Awards Ceremony! 

     

    Janet Shawgo overjoyed with her Chatelaine Book Awards Grand Prize! We love this photo!
    Jesikah Sundin when her name was announced for the OZMA Fantasy Grand Prize

     

     

    Avanti Centrae with coveted Blue Ribbons awarded to her at the CIBA banquet ceremony.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    The Icing on the Cake, the Crowning Moment, the Highlight of the conference is the CIBA Banquet and Awards Ceremony that is held on Saturday evening of the conference.

    The CIBA Banquet and Ceremony

    First, we start with a cocktail hour (five-thirty in the afternoon with a cash bar, complimentary appetizers are served at six o’clock in the evening.

    Most every one is dressed to impress – either “in brand,” posh, or “after-five” special. Of course, this is Bellingham, so there will always be those who bring out their best fleece and wool socks!

    The ceremony photographer is set-up to take complimentary headshots, group photos, and, of course, photograph the ceremony announcements and presentations. After the event, he continues with division group photos, winner photos, cheering sections photos—a lot of photos—that attendees may download digitally for free!

    Our CAC23 photographer is Dwayne Rogge of PhotoTreeHouse Photography, Bellingham, WA.

    FINALIST attendees are given a Finalist Ribbon to attach to their name badge upon registration pick-up—btw.

    Who will take home the coveted Chanticleer Blue Ribbons?

    At seven o’clock in the evening, each attendee is handed a ceremony program with all the Finalists listed by division.

    Next, we are seated for a lovely dinner catered by the Hotel Bellwether. Acknowledgements, a short keynote presentation, and recognition of the Finalists in attendance during the salad course.

    Then we enjoy the Northwest inspired dinner prepared by the Hotel Bellwether’s  Executive Chef Marcello Mazzoleni.  

    After dinner,  coffee and dessert (the cash bar stays open the entire time!) are served and we begin the announcements for the Division First Place Award Winners. We have a small break and photo opportunities.

    Next, we announce the Division Grand Prize Winners. And, finally, the Overall GRAND PRIZE WINNER of the 2022 CIBAs!

    More photos are taken!

    At the end of the glorious evening, we all head to the Hotel Bellwether’s fireside bar to gather and enjoy each others company and congratulate the winners!

    The next day is Sunday. We get started at 10 a.m. (due to the previous evenings festivities). The Book Fair opens to the general public at noon!

    Each CIBA Division  FINALIST receives a $100 discount code for CAC 23 and the 2022 CIBA’s Ceremony via email to attend and join in the celebrations!

    OH! And I forgot to mention the $30,000 USD in cash and prizes awarded to the winners!

    And the CIBAs HALL of FAME for continued long-tail marketing and promotion.

    Do you have to attend to win?  No. But it sure is a lot more fun!

    Meanwhile, CAC attendees are learning from the BEST! And increasing their circle of other publishing industry professionals.

    As always, if you have any questions please email KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or DBeaumier@ChantiReviews.com (Author Outreach).

    HANDY LINKS

    Register for CAC 23 

    Lodging Suggestions from the economical to the luxurious. 

    Maggie Marr, Atty Sessions and Workshop Info.  BOOK to FILM

    Please check back often as we are updating the CAC2023 and the 2022 CIBA Ceremony and Banquet information on a weekly basis!.

    Don’t miss out! Reserve your seat today! 

  • DANTE ROSSETTI SPOTLIGHT – Young Adult Novel Book Awards, #CIBAs

    DANTE ROSSETTI SPOTLIGHT – Young Adult Novel Book Awards, #CIBAs

     

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

     

    Do you have a Y/A Fiction manuscript or recently published novel?

    Enter it today in the CIBA 2020 DANTE ROSSETTI Awards! Let us decipher the best of the best. 

    If you know anything about Chanticleer International Book Awards, you know that we never stop sharing the good news and accomplishments of our authors! Never!

    What that means is we believe in book promotion, highlighting our winners, standing on our platforms, and telling the known world all about YOUR BOOK! 

    Sound good to you? 

    Enter your Y/A Fiction Novel TODAY into the CIBA 2020 DANTE ROSSETTI Awards. 


     

    The Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction are named for the British painter and poet,
    Dante Gabriel Rossetti

     

    Chanticleer has chosen Dante Rossetti as the namesake of our young adult fiction awards, because of Rossetti’s strong connection to works of beauty and emotions as swift as the changing seasons. Both aspects embody what it means to be young. 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.

    Besides, he was a rock star. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, an exclusive group in the mid-nineteenth century which garnered as much fame and attention as equatable to the Game of Thrones cast today.

    The Love Song by Sir Burne-Jones who was mentored and influenced by Dante Gabriel Rossetti


     

     

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

     

    You won’t regret it – Just ask the following authors who did enter, and won!


    The 2018 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards GRAND PRIZE:

    Whispers by Yvonne Moon

    WHISPERS by Lynn Yvonne Moon

     

    2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction
    First in Category Winners

    • Climb, Run, Drown by Cheryl G. Bostrom
    • Tookan Attack by Alex Paul
    • Reality Gold by Tiffany Brooks
    • 2nd Gen by Andrea and William Vaughan
    • Change of Chaos by Jacinta Jade
    • Sneaking Out by Chuck Vance
    • Soul Sacrifice by Susan Faw   

    Here’s a little more about our Dante Rossetti … (can we claim him as our own?)

    Rossetti’s paintings, in particular, were characterized by the long and wavy hair of young women. It is this youthful beauty that has been immortalized in his work and captures the immovable spirit of adolescence which is so fraught with changing emotions. These women he painted are often quite romantic. His wife would often model for the paintings or the wives of his friends in the Brotherhood. It was rumored that Rossetti had several lovers…

    Visitors today can view Rossetti’s work at the Louvre or the Met. In addition to painting, he was also a writer. Several of his poems address emotions and feelings in all of their complexity, similar to his painted works.

    La Viuda Romana, 1874 by our fav guy, Dante Gabriel Rossetti

     

     

     

     

     


    The 2017 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

    SLAVE to FORTUNE  by D. J. Munro

     

    2017 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners

     


     

    The 2016 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

    SEER of SOULS by Susan Faw

     

    2016 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


     

    The 2015 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

    The GIRL and the CLOCKWORK CAT by Nikki McCormack

     

     

    2015 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


     

    The 2014 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

    LEGACY: Biodome Chronicles Book One by Jesikah Sundin

    2014 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


     

    The 2013 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

    The BOREALIS GENOME by Thomas & Nancy Wise

     

     

    2013 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners

     

    Want to be a winner next year? The deadline to submit your book for the Dante Rossetti Awards is June 30, 2020. Enter here!

     


    Do your works have what it takes to make it through the CIBA judging rounds?  Submit manuscripts and published works into the Chanticleer International Book Awards – Click here for more information about The CIBAs! 

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

    The last day to submit your work is June 30, 2020. We invite you to join us, to tell us your stories, and to find out who will take home the 2019 CIBA prizes at CAC20  in September.

    The deadline for  2020 YA submissions is June 30, 2020. Grand Prize and First Place Winners for 2020 will be announced on April 18, 2021.

    Any entries received after June 30, 2020, will be entered into the 2021 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Young Adult Fiction. The Grand Prize and First Place for 2021 CIBA winners will be held on April 2022.

     As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your work deserves!  Enter today!

    The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards – the CIBAs.

    The winners will be announced at the 2019 CIBA  Awards Ceremony in September 2020, which will take place during the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Semi-Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the first-place winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of celebrations! 

    Don’t delay! Enter today! 

  • CYGNUS SPOTLIGHT for SCI-FI – Book Awards, Science Fiction, Space Opera, Time Travel, Genetic Mods, Tech, Apocalyptic, Space Aliens

    CYGNUS SPOTLIGHT for SCI-FI – Book Awards, Science Fiction, Space Opera, Time Travel, Genetic Mods, Tech, Apocalyptic, Space Aliens

    Cygnus Award for Science Fiction

    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 (The CIBAs).

    Chanticleer International Book Awards 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 for the CYGNUS Book Awards division. 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, our judges from across North America and the U.K. will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    Get your Sci-fi on

     enter the CYGNUS AWARDS today!

    Who will receive a beautiful CIBA  CYGNUS Blue Ribbon? 

    Which CYGNUS AWARD winner will receive the next big publishing contract or land a top agent…? 

    Bennett Coles CYGNUS Grand Prize for VIRTUES of WAR 

    Harper Collins Voyager has picked up CYGNUS Grand Prize Winner Bennett R. Coles for his latest work Winds of Marque.

    Titan U.K. picked up his CYGNUS award-winning Virtues of War and then contracted for two more books in his series: Ghosts of War and March of War.

    Virtues of War

     

    Will it be you? 

    THE DEADLINE TO ENTER THE 2020 CYGNUS Novel Writing Competitions is April 30, 2020.

    ENTER TODAY!


    The CYGNUS BOOK AWARDS 

    Hall of Fame

    2018 Grand Prize Winner: 

    The Korpes File by J.I Rogers took home the 2018 CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Grand Prize Blue Ribbon.

     

     

     

    2018 First in Category Winners:

    • The Fortune Follies by Catori Sarmiento
    • It Takes Death to Reach a Star by Stu Jones & Gareth Worthington
    • Solar Reboot by Matthew D. Hunt
    • Apex Five by Sarah Katz
    • The One Apart: A Novel by Justine Avery
    • The Selah Branch by Ted Neill   

    2017 Grand Prize Cygnus Winner: 

    The Future’s Dark Past by John Yarrow

     

     

     

    2017 Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction First in Category Winners

     

     

    2016 Grand Prize Cygnus Winner:

     

    OVER by Sean Curley

     

    2016 Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction First in Category Winners


    2015 Grand Prize Cygnus Winner:

    The Great Symmetry by James Wells

    2015 Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction First in Category Winners


    2014 Cygnus Grand Prize Winner:

    Enemy of Existence by Yuan Jur

    Citadel 7, Earth’s Secret: Enemy of Existence by Yuan Jur

    2014 Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction First in Category Winners:


    2013 Grand Prize Cygnus Winner:

    Bennett R. ColesVirtues of War

    2013 First Place Category Winners for the Cygnus Awards are:

    • The Lotus Effect by Bridget Ladd
    • Celia’s Heaven by Nancy Canyon
    • Artemis Rising by Cheri Lasota
    • The Maiden Voyage of the Mary Ann by Linda Reed
    • Ragnarok: Demon Seed by Ea Bishop

         

         

        Don’t delay. Enter today! 

        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 Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

        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 the Chanticleer International Book Awards. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

        Click here for more information about the Chanticleer Book Reviews International Book Awards.

      • 12 MUST-DO’s for AUTHORS for a Successful and Productive 2020 and Beyond. Number Two of Twelve – a Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox Series by Kiffer Brown and Sharon Anderson

        12 MUST-DO’s for AUTHORS for a Successful and Productive 2020 and Beyond. Number Two of Twelve – a Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox Series by Kiffer Brown and Sharon Anderson

        Number Two of Twelve Must-Do’s for Authors

        Creating Your Marketing and Promotion Calendar for 2020 and Beyond… Part One

        I’ve been in marketing a number of years (dare I say decades?). Marketing and Promotion have always been moving targets, but now with the internet they are targets that move at light speed.

        If you want to sell books and you want to have your author career advance, you will need to have a promotion and marketing plan that can pivot and is flexible.

        Plan for your Success!

        And if you have an M & P plan already, you will need to constantly update it, add to it, and evaluate what works and what doesn’t.

        First of all, the M & P Calendar is complex and integrated at many levels, which can make it overwhelming. But that is where Chanticleer can assist.

        Do keep in mind, that many of the moving parts are small and incremental steps that are not hard to do, but they will add up and add up substantially.

        Promotion of a book (or any product) is a continuous exercise of good marketing and promotional habits. Many are not difficult or time consuming but most be done on a regular basis. Marketing  and Promotion are NOT one trick ponies.

        Let us start at the beginning. Laying the Groundwork for your M&P calendar.

        Strategy – First start with the Big Picture.

        What I do is keep a notebook and a calendar. I tend to be old school and like paper and pencil for my reminders and calendar. I then add the information to my Google calendar so that it will remind me on my smart phone.

        Andy prefers to go all digital with no paper. He uses integrated digital calendars and custom project management software—thank goodness because that is how we track and manage the CIBAs.

        Here are 10 Points to consider and implement.

        We will then fill in with more detailed information in Part Two of this blog-post.

        One. Identify 10 best-selling author in your genre that you would like to ask for an author blurb? 

        It doesn’t matter if you are launching a new work or promoting your back list.

        Write their names down in your M&P notebook. We will come back to this in the next blog post. Promise.

        Two. Identify any seasons or holidays that are associated with your titles. 

        I always think of Love of Finished Years by Gregory Erich Phillips at Christmas time because of his touching WWI Christmas Eve scene that takes place in the heat of battle. It is book that I can read and reread.

        Gregory Erich Phillips Love of Finished Years won Chanticleer International Book Award for Best Book while it was still a manuscript.

        Or Ann Charles’ Deadwood Series that feature Violet Parker, real estate agent and single mom gets me in the mood for Halloween.

        Would your books make awesome vacation reads? Or cozy sit by the fire reads? Or perfect for traveling?

        Are your books page turning thrillers that will have readers consuming it at one sitting? Or something for a reader to look forward to reading a chapter or two a night?  Know your readers.

        A personal favorite cozy mystery series of mine that I like to read is Michelle Cox’s Henrietta and Inspector Howard mystery series because I enjoy tthe time frame that series takes place in, and I like the protagonists. Reading the series is a wonderful escape for me.

         

        What holidays or seasons can you target to promote your works? Write them down in that notebook.

        Three. Target Book Clubs – Online and Groups that meet in person

        Book clubs tend to chart out their reads months in advance if not a year in advance. Start getting “Top of Mind” share and getting on the “think about list.”

        Make sure that your website, author description, Facebook page, Twitter, blog posts, and any other media alerts readers that you are available for Skyping, showing up in person, supplying stimulating questions for the group, and that you just adore BOOK CLUBS. If there are libraries that have your books in their book club kits, list them on the Book Club section of your website.

        Keep a running list of Book Clubs that you want to reach out to and keep in contact with them. Put reminders in your calendar to continually reach out to book clubs of all types. They can propel an author and have far reaching affects on readership gains.

        The Roost at Chanticleer will have a running list of book clubs and how to contact them. This will be up and running before the end of January.

        Four. Author Events

        Again, dates fill up at book stores, retail outlets, book fairs, book conventions, libraries,  and specialty events. Chanticleerians have passed on to me that they have had great success at wine bars, grocery stores, flower shops, seasonal events such at the Lavender events in the PNW, comic cons, brewpubs, entertainment events if your work has a connection with them, re-enactments, hobbyists, the list can go on and on.

        The award-winning Janet Shawgo has presented sessions on this at the Chanticleer Authors Conference. All in attendance were inspired by her creativity and willingness to share.

        Janet Shawgo’s author event at a winery.

        And I have it good advice that one shouldn’t discount small events. It is better to be a big fish at a small event rather sitting idly by while a line a mile long forms for a celebrity author. I’ve seen this happen more times than I can count.

        Guerrilla marketing is the friend of aspiring authors. It can even the playing field with its unconventional interactions and surprises. Remember, readers are acquired one by one—which makes guerrilla marketing especially effective.

        Be creative. Be open. But get those gigs lined up and on the calendar. Pronto! And start on next year’s events.

        Make your list with the venue, date, date of contact, date of recontact, results. Continuously add venues and events as you discover them.

        Add the confirmed dates to your Promotion Calendar. There will be more work to be done.

        Jesikah Sundin, award-winning author of The Biodome Chronicles excels at  guerrilla marketing, branding, and author events that build loyal readership. And her books deliver and keep her readers coming back for more!

        Jesikah Sundin

        Five. Discover experts who will resonate with your books. (We call this SLANT in the marketing industry).

        Who is an expert in the field that your work is associated with?

        Ann Charles is a full-time author of mysteries. Her popular protagonist is Violet Parker, a real estate agent in Deadwood? Guess who her biggest fans are? Real Estate agents! And she has targeted them and they have become evangelical fans for her series. The real estate network is huge. And so is her fan-base.

        For instance, Pamela Beason writes mysteries that tend to take place in wilderness areas. She is a career author (making a living at writing) and a retired private investigator. Pam targets hikers, backpackers, wilderness protectors. One of her mystery series is focused around Neema, a communicating gorilla who can communicate using sign language. Pam targets these folks in social media. Her YA series has a rescued elephant. You get the picture?  Did I mention that I am a Neema fangirl?

        Pamela Beason’s wildly successful Sam Westin wilderness series.

        What are your books’ angles? What is the slant? (what is the voice? what is your underlying message?) 

        This exercise is one that you should repeat each year with your back list.

        If you can get an endorsement from experts that have a common interest in your books, you will be able to broaden your target market. It doesn’t matter if the expert is a real estate agent, or a barista, or is leader in a knitting circle… This is how word of mouth is created. Create these bonds. It will make your next book launch much more easy.

        Remember Jesikah from Point #Four. Her books crossover from fantasy, YA, cyber-punk, eco-punk, gaming, science fiction, steampunk, and … just imagine all the blurbs, recommendations, and READERS and their reviews that Jesikah’s marketing attracts.

        Six. Identify 10 Authors to Network within Social Media and in Real Life. 

        These should be authors whose readers will also enjoy your works and authors that your readers will enjoy their books.

        If you have ten, then add ten more. You can never have enough.

        This is called increasing your CIRCLE of INFLUENCE. The relationship should be reciprocal. We will circle back around to this.

        A good test is to determine if your works and the selected authors works would be shelved together at the book store or at the local library.

        Write this list down in your M & P book/ledger. Each year, continue to expand it.

        J.D. Barker, a masterful storyteller,  recommends that your genre should crossover… just imagine having your books shelved in more than one location at booksellers. Get the picture?

        Shameless self-promotion here … you should check out his interview in the last issue of the Chanticleer Reviews magazine.

        Order your copy today… 🙂

        Seven. Focus Your Author Brand. 

        Each and every visual element associated with you as an author should have focus and should move your author brand forward on your website, in your social media, in your type fonts, in the background imagery. A reader should be able to tell in less than three seconds what overall genre you are writing in. Are your books dark and mysterious? Fantastical? Sexy? Historical? Dystopian? Everything from the icon that marks your website in the browser to the background that coordinates with all of your internet and real marketing collateral (covers, book swag, business cards, etc.). Make sure that your author photos resonate with your works. That doesn’t mean you have to be brooding in person if your books are dark and mysterious, but you should have a persona, a brand that distinguishes you from the other millions of authors and writers. A visual brand.

        Ann Charles is a maestro at author branding. Visit her website and Facebook pages for inspiration (and to buy her U.S.A Today bestselling books).

        Ann Charles

        Eight. Become an Expert in Some Area of Publishing and Share Your Knowledge

        Writers by far make up the largest number of readers. We just can’t help ourselves. An excellent way to get on writers’ reading list is to present at writer’s conferences. It is widely known that after a writer gives a presentation, his/her/they see an increase in sales. Most would say a direct correlation.

        Many best-selling authors have gotten their start and created an ever increasing fan-base by sharing their knowledge and expertise with other authors and aspiring writers. Diane Gabaldon shared (and continues to) her knowledge for years by presenting at writers’ conferences. She is known for being extremely generous with her knowledge and expertise as is Robert Dugoni. The list goes on and on with international best-selling authors who share and mentor authors—authors such as J.D. Barker, C.C. Humphreys, Ann Charles, Ursula Le Guin, George R.R. Martin, Pamela Beason, are among the authors who believe in mentoring aspiring authors and giving back to the writing community.

        Robert Dugoni is one of our most popular speakers at CAC. Pam Beason is conducting the panel discussion.

        Discover your publishing expertise. Is it coming up with inciting incidents? Or world building? Or a knack for dialogue? Or social media  posts that garner attention? Or being creative in where to do book promotions? Or how to get that first draft out of your head and into black on white? Or discovering new platforms to sell works on? Or working ? Or posture while writing? Or?

        The main thing is to share your knowledge and expertise.

        So start asking to present or participate in panels at author events, in schools, at libraries, in your local writing groups, or the conferences that you are planning on attending.

        Write down your opportunities. Find out the deadlines for proposals. Keep a list and add to it.

        Nine. Podcasting and Video Blogging — Be the Interviewer or be the Interview-ee but be in the Podcast Airwaves

        With the advent of voice-driven assistants, podcasts are becoming more and more a part of daily life. Just like audio books. ( the fastest growing segment of publishing).

        Chanticleer has podcasts and video blogs. It is the new and latest that is certain to replace  “blog hopping.”  Make sure that you get your foot in the door! Even this blog post is converted to a podcast.

        As with any transition, you will need to do both: blogging and podcasting. Learn how to build your content pyramid at the Chanticleer Authors Conference 2020.

        Podcasting is going to be a feature at CAC20 this year with Hindenburg Systems (programs and apps to create podcasts and audio books) presenting sessions and podcast work shops.

        Paul Cutsinger, head of Amazon’s Alexa Code Labs will present and keynote.

        He will discuss

        • Why Voice Enabled Technology is Here to Stay 
        • The Publishing Industry and Voice Technology
        • StoryTelling and Voice Technology
        • Audiobooks and Voice 
        • Engaging Readers with Voice-driven Devices

        With more than 100 million Alexa devices in use, this a market segment that should not be overlooked in any author or publisher’s marketing plan.

        Time to start lining up your calendar with podcast and video blog events.

        Ten. Enter Your Works into Book Award Competitions and Contests

        Of course, we want to promote the Chanticleer International Book Awards with its 14 genre divisions and 2 non-fiction divisions.

        Book awards are a time honored tradition that help to distinguish best books and manuscripts from the millions of books that are written each year (and published).

        They give authors talking points, interviewers talking points, allow for point of sale marketing, social media marketing and so much more.

        Make sure to enter your works and see how they stack up against the others in your genre.

        Deadlines are closer than they appear! And there is nothing like a blue ribbon to help sell more books at a book fair or author event. #justsaying

        CIBA Grand Prize Ribbons!

        That calendar should be starting to fill in.

         

        Click here for a Handy Worksheet that you can print out to help  you to create your Market and Promotion Calendar.

         

        This Second Installment will take time to complete and you may need to work on it intermittently (but consistently) to get everything logged.

        Then the real work will begin.

        The next post will discuss implementing these first 8 Goals and creating discrete tasks to implement on a regular basis:

        Annually, Seasonally/Quarterly, Monthly, Twice a Month, Weekly, Almost daily.

        And social media postings, and blog postings, and articles, and…

        We elaborate on the first ten items and incorporate them into the calendar and create a schedule.

        Thank you for joining us in this Writer’s Tool Box series: The 12 MUST-Do’s for Authors Number Two of Twelve blog-post articles.We hope these were handy reminders or something new to consider. 

        If there is something we should add to this blog-post or you have an experience that you would like to share or a question that you would like to ask about this blog post, please contact us at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com

        We’d love to hear from you! 

        Thank you for joining us and please stay tuned for the next article!The Secret to Successful Publishing

         

         

      • SPOTLIGHT on DANTE ROSSETTI Awards — Young Adult Fiction

        SPOTLIGHT on DANTE ROSSETTI Awards — Young Adult Fiction

        The Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction are named for the British painter and poet,
        Dante Gabriel Rossetti

         

        Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

         

        Do you have a Y/A Fiction manuscript or recently published novel? Enter it today in the CIBA 2020 DANTE ROSSETTI Awards! Let us decipher the best of the best. 

        If you know anything about Chanticleer International Book Awards, you know that we never stop sharing the good news and accomplishments of our authors! Never!

        What that means is we believe in book promotion, highlighting our winners, standing on our platforms and telling the known world all about YOUR BOOK! 

        Sound good to you? 

        Enter your Y/A Fiction Novel TODAY into the CIBA 2020 DANTE ROSSETTI Awards. 


         

         

        Chanticleer has chosen Dante Rossetti as the namesake of our young adult fiction awards, because of Rossetti’s strong connection to works of beauty and emotions as swift as the changing seasons. Both aspects embody what it means to be young. 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.

        Besides, he was a rock star. He founded the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, an exclusive group in the mid-nineteenth century which garnered as much fame and attention as equatable to the Game of Thrones cast today.

        The Love Song by Sir Burne-Jones who was mentored and influenced by Dante Gabriel Rossetti


         

         

         

        Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

         

        You won’t regret it – Just ask the following authors who did enter, and won!


        The 2018 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards GRAND PRIZE:

        Whispers by Yvonne Moon

        WHISPERS by Lynn Yvonne Moon

         

        2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction
        First in Category Winners

        • Climb, Run, Drown by Cheryl G. Bostrom
        • Tookan Attack by Alex Paul
        • Reality Gold by Tiffany Brooks
        • 2nd Gen by Andrea and William Vaughan
        • Change of Chaos by Jacinta Jade
        • Sneaking Out by Chuck Vance
        • Soul Sacrifice by Susan Faw   

        Here’s a little more about our Dante Rossetti … (can we claim him as our own?)

        Rossetti’s paintings, in particular, were characterized by the long and wavy hair of young women. It is this youthful beauty that has been immortalized in his work and captures the immovable spirit of adolescence which is so fraught with changing emotions. These women he painted are often quite romantic. His wife would often model for the paintings or the wives of his friends in the Brotherhood. It was rumored that Rossetti had several lovers…

        Visitors today can view Rossetti’s work at the Louvre or the Met. In addition to painting, he was also a writer. Several of his poems address emotions and feelings in all of their complexity, similar to his painted works.

        La Viuda Romana, 1874 by our fav guy, Dante Gabriel Rossetti

         

         

         

         

         


        The 2017 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

        SLAVE to FORTUNE  by D. J. Munro

         

        2017 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


         

        The 2016 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

        SEER of SOULS by Susan Faw

         

        2016 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


         

        The 2015 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

        The GIRL and the CLOCKWORK CAT by Nikki McCormack

         

         

        2015 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


         

        The 2014 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

        LEGACY: Biodome Chronicles Book One by Jesikah Sundin

        2014 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners


         

        The 2013 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Grand Prize:

        The BOREALIS GENOME by Thomas & Nancy Wise

         

         

         

        2013 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners

         

        Want to be a winner next year? The deadline to submit your book for the Dante Rossetti Awards is June 30, 2020. Enter here!

         


        Do your works have what it takes to make it through the CIBA judging rounds?  Submit manuscripts and published works into the Chanticleer International Book Awards – Click here for more information about The CIBAs! 

        Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

        The last day to submit your work is June 30, 2019. We invite you to join us, to tell us your stories, and to find out who will take home the prize at CAC20 on September 5th.

        The deadline for 2019 submissions is June 30, 2020. Grand Prize and First Place Winners for 2019 will be announced on September 5th, 2020.

        Any entries received after June 30, 2019, will be entered into the 2020 Dante Rossetti Book Awards Young Adult Fiction. The Grand Prize and First Place for 2020 CIBA winners will be held on April 17, 2021.

         As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your work deserves!  Enter today!

        The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards – the CIBAs.

        The winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony on September 5th, 2020, which will take place during the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Semi-Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the first-place winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of dinner, networking, and celebrations! 

         

        Don’t delay! Enter today! 

      • Building Your Readership Community – Not Just for YA Authors

        Building Your Readership Community – Not Just for YA Authors

        #SocializingWithInternetStrangersForTheWin

        Dear YA Writer,

        You know that moment right before you hit “Post”? The seconds seem to still, like a roller coaster summiting a steep incline. Click. Movement. A loading bar appears. Aaaaand, plunge. Self-promotion rockets into cyberspace on the wings of a WiFi prayer to the cat gods of the interwebs.

        Then the wait.

        Refresh! And still no notification. Doubt creeps in and whispers error messages from your social media past. But you’ve changed. You no longer join the horde of desperate town criers who scream into the void “buy my book!” with every tweet. Your contribution is now a diverse portfolio of hooks and calls to action with appropriate yet ironic hashtags.  

        A notification pops up. Someone has engaged! Impressions increase.

        Inhale relief. You did it! Exhale negativity. Whew, you spelled there/their/they’re right.

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

         

        Yeah, that moment.

        Lather. Rinse. Repeat.

        This is authordom. This is #amwriting about #writerslife and #writerproblems. Because, let’s face it. For all our word-slinging bravado, marketing via social media is not our best use of wordsmithery. OK, some of you are seriously boss when it comes to online engagement. Most of us, though, are introverted, please-dear-god-don’t-make-me-have-small-talk-with-strangers types who require naps to recharge our social anxiety batteries. Shooting proverbial fish in a cyberspace barrel cuts into our writing time. <<inserts angry eyebrows>>

        So what do we do? We sin against the Internet by cluttering newsfeeds with our amateur attempts at marketing. Why talk with strangers when we can talk at them?

        No, YA Writer. Just, no. Better to not Internet at all.

        I know, I know, I know… You’ve changed. A reformed self-promotion junkie. I believe you. But revision is the theme song of writing, amirite? And when it comes to engaging young adult readers, one thing is critical.

        Socializing.

        Yeah, you read correctly. I said socializing. Some of you just cringed. Sorry-not-sorry. Strange as it may sound, social media is designed for community and relationship building, not marketing. The kind of place where you talk with people, not at them. YA readers (especially actual YA-aged YA readers) are sensitive to this online phenomenon, too.   

        Get to know your readers and potential readers. Ask them questions about what they like. Be silly. Be serious. Be everything in-between. Share strange but true tidbits about you.

        While plunking away at this blog, shoulders hunched and face pinched with all the feels, my elbow bumped a book stack where an unsuspecting gummy cinnamon bear rolled off the edge and met an untimely end in a cup of tea. Not bad. I think I just found my new favorite sweetener. #RIP #GummyBear2017 #NeverForget

        What is the strangest thing you’ve drank in your coffee or tea?

        What is the strangest thing you've drank in your coffee or tea?
        What is the strangest thing you’ve drank in your coffee or tea?

        See what I did there?

        Did I mention my books? Nope.

        Did I direct someone to my website or Amazon page? Negatory.

        Did I ask them to comment? You betcha.

        But I chose a safe topic. Neutral ground. No sales pressure here. Instead, I’m building a community for my followers and establishing a thread of conversation. Interact with comments. Like, heart, wow, and laugh. Weep with your followers when they give you a piece of their troubled heart. Be outraged when they describe crimes against humanity.

        Be you.

        Socializing.

        You totally got this.

        True confession: I don’t always post like a saint. Sometimes I sin against the Internet with shameless plugs and yadda-yadda-yadda about my product rather than engaging my community. Sometimes this is necessary. Sometimes it’s too much, and my followers show me by ignoring my attempts for attention.

        The best combo is 75% community building and 25% self-promotion.

        Hey, don’t worry. I’m still learning this, too. We’ll do this social media thing together.

        First, a cautionary tale: Please, for the love of cat GIFs, don’t bore your followers with business details. Your readers don’t care. Your younger readers care even less. Authordom is not the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and readers are not brokers waving money and shouting at machines with fluctuating values. OK, so they sorta are, and the giant AI that is Amazon oscillates prices like Oprah. Here’s a saving for you. And a saving for you. Savings for everyone! You get the gist. They don’t need the gritty details of your sales or the publishing industry. <yawns> Plus, people notice when other people stop looking at them as fellow humans and blink $$$ instead.

        Don’t be that author.

        Join the resistance! I’ll stand beside you fellow #YAlit writer as we lift our keyboards and Smart tech in solidarity to reclaim our followers and engagement!

        Click.

        Plunge.

        #SocializingWithInternetStrangersForTheWin

        Sincerely,

        Me


        P.S. Pssst. This isn’t goodbye. Oh, no. You’re stuck with me for a few more blog conversations. So stay tuned!

        P.P.S. Many of us have day jobs or other duties outside of writing. Since we’re getting to know each other here: Using only GIFs, comment on what you do for a living.

         

        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.

      • LEGACY by Jesikah Sundin, Book One of the Biodome Chronicles

        LEGACY by Jesikah Sundin, Book One of the Biodome Chronicles

        A captivating YA hybrid of sci-fi and medieval fantasy, mystery, and romance, Legacy opens The Biodome Chronicles series with divergent worlds on a carefully planned collision course.

        Cyberpunk culture in 2054: hard-living, nihilistic youth who hate themselves as well as the world. Fillion Nichols, a brilliant but dissolute hacker, can claim a third object of hatred: his father, Hanley Nichols, mastermind—and, as Fillion suspects, cult leader—of New Eden Enterprises. He is the creator of New Eden, a hand-picked community living within the real-life Biosphere 2, to test the psychological effects of long-term isolation. To study the second generation of Biospherians who’ve never interacted with the Outside world, Nichols’ team created The Code, a strict set of rules to which the inhabitants closely adhere.

        The first generation play along—quite literally, as LARPers role-playing per a script created by Hanley Nichols, one that includes a noble class divided into four houses and social mores gleaned from medieval times. For the young people of New Eden Township, however, although they have a vague sense of being an experimental colony, all they really know of life is that it’s an agrarian affair based on ritual, work, and the laws of nature.

        Heirs to the Earth Element noble house, chivalrous Leaf and temperamental Willow Oak Watson, discover all is not as idyllic as it seems. They learn soon after their father’s death that secrecy and murder have also been scripted into the game. A mysterious death card, a lost scroll, and a secret underground room lead the siblings to a portal to the Outside world, and to Fillion Nichols, self-professed Dungeon Master of New Eden.

        Once Willow conquers her terror of “magic” satellite communications, she finds herself spellbound by the strangely dressed, tattooed, and pierced young man. Fillion is equally captivated: not only by Willow’s beauty, but by the fact that the Watson children supposedly died nearly six years ago. His father went to trial on charges of negligence and manslaughter, and though never convicted, the infamy lingered on the family name.

        Although he is now the Earth Element, Leaf finds that the other Elements are determining his future, even making conditions for his marrying the daughter of the Fire Element, whose son passionately pursues Willow. Meanwhile, Fillion endures his own trial for falsifying IDs, resulting in a 90-day sentence, which, as he’ll soon find out, was also manipulated by his father from the start.

        As Leaf and Fillion grapple with understanding their respective legacies, New Eden Enterprises begins preparation for the project’s completion, Even as their increasingly twining paths are set out by their elders, the two young men are determined to discover the mystery behind Joel Watson’s murder and the unexplained faking of his children’s death.

        Laced through with excerpts from news reports and interviews with both the real Biosphere 2 participants and the fictional members of New Eden Enterprise, and infused equally with near-future technology and ancient ceremony, Legacy will entice readers into its unfolding story.
        2014 winner of Chanticleer Book Reviews Great Beginnings Cygnus winner for Sci-Fi/Fantasy, National Indie Excellence Award Finalist for Science Fiction, Cygnus Award for Sci-Fi/Cyberpunk, Dante Rossetti Award First in Category for Sci-Fi/Cyberpunk, and the Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Award for Young Adult Fiction.