Author: john-hoyte

  • The 2024 Journey Hall of Fame for Overcoming Adversity Non-Fiction

    The 2024 Journey Hall of Fame for Overcoming Adversity Non-Fiction

    Recognizing Resiliency 

     Chanticleer International Book Awards

    Journey Book Awards

    Narrative Non-Fiction Division

    for Overcoming Adversities and Challenges

    Journey Narrative Non-Fiction CIBA Badge
    The Journey Awards Closes at the end of June. Enter today!

    One of seven of the Non-Fiction Divisions for the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs) is the Journey Awards. This division  deals with some of the most difficult experiences people are challenged with. The Journey Book Awards was the first non-fiction division of the CIBAs.  As we received a considerable number of submissions that were uplifting and inspiring as well as those that focused on overcoming adversities, we decided to offer two divisions of narrative non-fiction. To be able to recognize these fully, we split off the more heartwarming works into the Hearten Awards, while continuing to recognize and discover works that give accounts of immense challenges and personal stories of the power resiliency and overcoming adversity (some of which should come with trigger warnings) in the Journey Book Awards.

    Chanticleer is looking to discover exceptional Non-Fiction dealing with Overcoming Adversity, Dysfunctional Families, Societal Issues of Race and Class, Personal Journeys, and Experiences relating to PTSD, Drug Addiction, Sexual Abuse, and Childhood Trauma. If you have a Non-Fiction Book with different themes, you can see our full list of Non-Fiction Awards here. Truth matters now, more than ever!

    Check out these exceptional reads and experiences from previous Journey Grand Prize Winners

    Barbed
    By Julie Morrison

    Barbed Cover

    Julie Morrison saddles up to take us for a ride through the harsh dry mountains of northern Arizona and beyond in her memoir, Barbed.

    Readers visit the ranch where Julie’s parents try to keep the family legacy alive. Julie reveals a cowboy’s world where she meets walls instead of doors but never gives up.

    Barbed opens with Morrison living in the rainy Seattle area with her husband. But the lure of a cowboy’s life on the range – working cattle and riding horseback – beckons them both. Julie needs salvation like this for her marriage, now distant and cold.

    Continue Reading here.

    Visit Julie’s website here to learn more!

    See the full list of 2023 Journey Winners here!

    A Fraction Stronger
    By Mark Berridge

    A Fraction Stronger Cover

    Author and businessman Mark Berridge, through the lived experience of himself and others after traumatic injuries, gained a wide understanding of overcoming disaster, and how to rehabilitate not only one’s body but mind and spirit as well. In sharing his wisdom, A Fraction Stronger is a must-read for anyone facing physical, emotional, or mental barriers.

    On March 10, 2019, Berridge, due to embark on a work-related flight from his Australian home to the US later that day, went on a bike ride with some buddies. He lost control of the bike over a piece of slippery road patch work, he wrecked falling into an open culvert, striking his head; conscious, but unable to move his feet and legs. The left side of his helmet was crushed, his spinal cord injured, and numerous bone broke. Hospitals would become his world as he dealt with spinal injuries and the long road to rehabilitation – relearning how to sit, stand, and walk.

    He learned more than just how to move again.

    Read more here!

    Visit Mark’s website to learn more about where he’s speaking here!

    See the full list of 2022 Journey Winners here.

    Better off Bald
    By Andrea Wilson Woods

    Better Off Bald Cover

    There exists a bond between sisters, and often that bond becomes a connection so strong that time cannot erase the love and the longing for the other. Andrea Wilson Woods defines such a bond in Better Off Bald: A Life in 147 Days.

    Woods details the choreographed life she lives with her sister Adrienne, who has been diagnosed with cancer. Together they begin their dance, pirouetting around IV ports and long lists of medications. Sisters in life, love, and an all-out war against liver cancer.

    Woods retells her story with compassion and a rational eye for detail while embracing all the deep emotions that ravage her as she records every one of the 147 days after the initial diagnosis.

    Continue Reading here.

    You can learn more about Woods’ journey and even hear early parts of the book on her website here.

    See the full list of 2021 Journey Winners here.

    The Parrot’s Perch — A Memoir of  Torture and Corruption in Brazil
    By Karen Keilt

    The cover for The Parrot's Perch by Karen Keilt

    Karen Keilt led a life of privilege, a life that most of us only dream of, but she turns the dream upside down in her memoir The Parrot’s Perch: A Memoir of Torture and Corruption in Brazil, where she exposes the seamy underside of that life and the corrupt government under which she lived. Keilt takes us from her childhood filled with the horses she loved, to her marriage to a man she adored, to the fatal incident that destroyed the world she knew.

    The memoir moves between New York and Sao Paulo as Keilt sets the stage for an incident that occurs shortly after her marriage. Keilt places no blame, but tells her story with an objective eye, while expressing the confusion she held of her experiences: the kidnapping, torture, rape, and interrogation by the police for “…forty-five days of hell. Three million, eight hundred and eighty-eight seconds.”

    Karen Keilt presents a memoir that is tough and unapologetic. She sandwiches her story within an interview at the UN, which is smart because some of the events are so intense and violent, they call for a breathing space where readers can decompress.

    Continue Reading here.

    Visit Karen Keilt’s website here to learn more!

    See the full list of 2020 Journey Winners here.

    Persistence of Light
    By John Hoyte

    Reading John Hoyte’s memoir, Persistence of Light, is like sitting around a campfire absorbing stories of adventure, loss, and love – and feeling better for it. With journalistic precision, Hoyte shares both the facts and the emotional impact of his fascinating travels, doing so void of self-pity for his suffering and without self-aggrandizement for his vast achievements.

    Born in 1932 to medical missionary parents (his father, Stanley, was British; his mother, Grace, American), Hoyte enjoyed a vibrant childhood taking nature walks and playing with his five siblings. A pivotal moment came at 8 years old when his parents were summoned to a missionary hospital, 1300 miles away in Lanchow. Hoyte and his siblings ended up in a Japanese internment camp without either parent.

    Despite weeks with little to no food, wearing tattered clothing and walking barefoot (shoes were a commodity), he mustered the energy and the interest to write, sketch and draw – ultimately finding mystery and hope in a world besieged by authoritarian forces. His intense curiosity that percolated as a child, along with his faith in God, leads him on the many adventures he depicts in this thoughtful and exciting memoir.

    Continue Reading here.

    Visit John Hoyte’s blog here.

    See the 2019 First Place Journey Winners here


    Thank you for celebrating our Journey Hall of Fame Winners with us!

    Remember to add your next reads to your StoryGraph or Goodreads account! Now that you’re set on your next five reads, what are you waiting for? The only way to join this amazing list of Journey Winners is to submit today! 

    Those who submit and advance will have the chance to win the Overall Grand Prize of the CIBAs and $1000!

    Are you a Chanticleer Author who has some good news to share? Let us know! We’re always looking for a reason to crow about Chanticleerians! Here are some recent achievements from our authors:

    Reach out with your news to info@ChantiReviews.com

    You know you want it…

    If you have a great Narrative Non-Fiction Book about Overcoming Adversity, submit it to us before the end of June to enter the 2024 CIBAs!

  • The 2020 Finalists for the 2020 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction CIBAs

    The 2020 Finalists for the 2020 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction CIBAs

    A compass logo for the Journey AwardsThe Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).

     

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books for our Journey Awards featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. We will put books about true and inspiring stories to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2020 SHORT LIST to the SEMI-FINALIST POSITION and have now progressed to the Premier FINALIST Level of Achievement in the 2020 CIBAs.   

    The following works have advanced in the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction.

    • Karen Keilt – The Parrot’s Perch 
    • Susan E Casey – Rock On: Mining for Joy in the Deep River of Sibling Grief
    • Laila Tarraf – Strong Like Water: How I Found the Courage to Lead with Love in Business and in Life
    • Patricia Eagle – Being Mean–A Memoir of Sexual Abuse and Survival
    • Susan E. Greisen – In Search of Pink Flamingos: A Woman’s Quest for Forgiveness & Unconditional Love
    • Janice Morgan – Suspended Sentence
    • Sharon Dukett – No Rules
    • David Crow – The Pale-Faced Lie: A True Story
    • Christine Nicolette-Gonzalez – My Mother’s Curse: A Journey Beyond Childhood Trauma
    • Ilene English – Hippie Chick
    • Barbara Clarke – The Red Kitchen 
    • Amy Byer Shainman – Resurrection Lily: The BRCA Gene, Hereditary Cancer & Lifesaving Whispers from the Grandmother I Never Knew
    • Steve Mariotti – Goodbye Homeboy
    • Steve Rochinski – A Man of His Time: Secrets from a Halfway World
    • Tiffani Goff – Loving Tiara
    • Isaac Alexis M.D. – The Seductive Pink Crystal
    • Renee Hodges – Saving Bobby: Heroes and Heroin in One Small Community
    • Deborah Burns – Saturday’s Child
    • Lydia Ola Taiwo – A Broken Childhood: How To Overcome Abuse: A Recovery Guide

    These titles are in the running for the First Place Winners of the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction.

    Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction?

    Good luck to all as your works move on to the next rounds of judging.

     

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    VCAC21 laurel wreath
    Register today!

     

       

       

      We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 Journey Book Awards. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2021. The winners will be announced in April 2022.

      Please click here for more information.

      Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

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

    • The 2020 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – the Semi-Finalists for the JOURNEY Division of the 2020 CIBAs

      The 2020 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – the Semi-Finalists for the JOURNEY Division of the 2020 CIBAs

      A compass logo for the Journey AwardsThe Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).

       

      Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books for our Journey Awards featuring true stories about survival, overcoming issues, trauma, and threatening life events,  along with turbulent personal journeys.

      Due to an unprecedented number of 2020 Journey Book Awards, we split off the Heartwarming, Inspirational, Heartwarming, Humorous, and Happiness. Think of Chicken Soup for the Soul.

      We also are now offering the following CIBA Non-Fiction Divisions:

      • The Mind & Spirit Book Awards
      • The Nellie Bly Book Awards for Investigative and Long Form Journalism
      • The I & I Book Awards for Insight and Instruction for How-To, Guide Books, Self-Help, Cook Books, etc.
      • The Harvey Chute Book Awards for Business, Finance, and Enterprise
      • The Heartening Book Awards

      New in 2021 will be the Military Veterans Non-Fiction works.

      These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2020 Journey Book Awards LONG LIST to the 2020 SHORT LIST and now have progressed to the 2020 SEMI-FINALISTS. The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the Finalists positions. 

      The following works have advanced in the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction

      • Karen Keilt – The Parrot’s Perch 
      • Susan E Casey – Rock On: Mining for Joy in the Deep River of Sibling Grief
      • Laila Tarraf – Strong Like Water: Lessons Learned from Leading with Love
      • Ashley Conner and Cierra Camper – Memoirs of Michael: The Hurricane Project
      • Patricia Eagle – Being Mean–A Memoir of Sexual Abuse and Survival
      • Susan E. Greisen – In Search of Pink Flamingos: A Woman’s Quest for Forgiveness & Unconditional Love
      • Mendek Rubin & Myra Goodman – Quest for Eternal Sunshine
      • Janice Morgan – Suspended Sentence
      • Marianne Ingheim – Out of Love: Finding Your Way Back to Self-Compassion
      • Sharon Dukett – No Rules
      • Judy Gaman – Love, Life, and Lucille
      • David Crow – The Pale-Faced Lie: A True Story
      • Christine Nicolette-Gonzalez – My Mother’s Curse: A Journey Beyond Childhood Trauma
      • Scott Hunter – And the Monkey Lets Go: Memoirs Through Illusion and Doubt
      • Mary Charity Kruger Stein – Fatherless, Fearless, Female: A Memoir
      • Ilene English – Hippie Chick
      • Barbara Clarke – The Red Kitchen 
      • Amy Byer Shainman – Resurrection Lily: The BRCA Gene, Hereditary Cancer & Lifesaving Whispers from the Grandmother I Never Knew
      • Tamra McAnally Bolton – A Blessed Life: One World War II Seabee’s Story
      • Steve Mariotti – Goodbye Homeboy
      • Steve Rochinski – A Man of His Time: Secrets from a Halfway World
      • Barbara Clarke – The Red Kitchen
      • Tiffani Goff – Loving Tiara
      • Kathleen Pooler – Just the Way He Walked: A Mother’s Story of Healing and Hope
      • Isaac Alexis M.D. – The Seductive Pink Crystal
      • Renee Hodges – Saving Bobby: Heroes and Heroin in One Small Community
      • Ted Neill – Two Years of Wonder
      • Deborah Burns – Saturday’s Child
      • Stefanie Naumann – How Languages Saved Me: A Polish Story of Survival
      • Lydia Ola Taiwo – A Broken Childhood: How To Overcome Abuse: A Recovery Guide
      • Lilly A Gwilliam – Generations of Motherhood: A Changing Story
      • Marilea C. Rabasa – Stepping Stones: A Memoir of Addiction, Loss, and Transformation
      • Christine Ristaino – All the Silent Spaces

        These titles are in the running for the Finalists of the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction. 

        Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction?

        Good luck to all as your works move on to the next rounds of judging.

        The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.

        The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

        VCAC21 laurel wreath
        Register today!

         

           

           

          We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 Journey Book Awards. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2021. The winners will be announced in April 2022.

          Please click here for more information.

          Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

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

        • Part Three – The 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards Overall Grand Prize Winner, Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – CIBAs

          Part Three – The 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards Overall Grand Prize Winner, Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – CIBAs

          We are deeply honored and excited  to announce the 2019 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs). Part Three of Three – 2019 CIBA  Winner Announcements

          CIBA Grand Prize Ribbons! You know that you want one!

          The winners were recognized at the Virtual Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Ceremonies that were held on during VCAC September 8 – 13, 2020 by ZOOM webinars based at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

          We want to thank each and everyone  of the CIBA judges who read each and every entry and then comment, rate, and rank within each of the 17 CIBA Divisions. Without your passion and labor of love for books, the Chanticleer International Book Awards would not exist and we could not fulfill our mandate:  Discovering Today’s Best Books!

          THANK YOU JUDGES!

           

          Each year, we find the quality of the entries and the competitiveness of the division competitions increasing exponentially. We added a new level to the judging rounds in 2019—the premier Level of FINALIST per each CIBA Division. The CIBA judges wanted to add the Finalist Level of Achievement as a way to recognize and validate the entries that had outstanding merit but were not selected for the very few First Place Award positions within each genre division.

          We are honored to present the

          2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards

          Grand Prize Winners 

          The 2019 CIBA Winners! 


          Romance Fiction Award

          The CHATELAINE Book Awards for

          Romantic Fiction and Women’s Fiction

          Grand Prize Winner is

          The SKEPTICAL PHYSCICK

          by Gail Avery Halverson

                • T.K. Conklin – Threads of Passion
                • Jule Selbo – Find Me in Florence 
                • Michelle Cox – A Veil Removed
                • Heather Novak – Headlights, Dipsticks, & My Ex’s Brother
                • Kari Bovee – Grace in the Wings
                • Joanne Jaytanie – Salvaging Truth, Hunters & Seekers
                • L.E. Rico – Mischief and Mayhem

          The SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary, Contemporary, and Mainstream Fiction

          Grand Prize Winner is

          A MANUSCRIPT

          The PROPRIETOR of the THEATRE of LIFE

          by Donna LeClair

              • Carl Roberts for The Trial of Connor Padget
              • Judith Kirscht for End of the Race
              • Patrick Finegan for Cooperative Lives
              • Santiago Xaman  for After Olympus
              • Claire Fullerton for Little Tea
              • Maggie St. Claire for Martha
              • Jamie Zerndt for  Jerkwater
              • R. Barber Anderson for  The Sunken Forest, Where the Forest Came out of the Earth
                • HONORABLE MENTIONS:
                  • Beth Burgmeyer – The Broken Road, ms
                  • Bob Holt – Firebird, ms

          Journey Narrative Non-Fiction

          The JOURNEY Book Awards for

          Narrative Non-Fiction, Memoirs, and Biographies 

          Grand Prize Winner is

          PERSISTENCE of LIGHT by John Hoyte

              • Anna Carner – Blossom ~ The Wild Ambassador of Tewksbury
              • Linda Gartz – Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
              • Steffanie Strathdee and Thomas Patterson – The Perfect Predator: A Scientist’s Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug
              • Nikki West – The Odyssey of the Chameleon
              • Eva Doherty Gremmert – Our Time To Dance 

          The INSTRUCTION and INSIGHT Book Awards for How-To Guides, Travel Guides, Cook Books, Self-Help, and Enlightenment

          Grand Prize Winner is 

          TEN THINGS EVERY CHILD with AUTISM

          WISHES YOU KNEW

          by Ellen Notbohm

            • Margaret A Hellyer – A Home on the South Fork
            • Donna Cameron – A Year of Living Kindly: Choices That Will Change Your Life and the World Around You
            • Brad Borkan and David Hirzel – When Your Life Depends on It: Extreme Decision Making Lessons from the Antarctic
            • Donald M. Rattner – My Creative Space: How to Design Your Home to Stimulate Ideas and Spark Innovation, 48 Science-based Techniques
            • Carole Bumpus – Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book One, Savoring the Olde Ways Series
            • Lisa Boucher – Raising The Bottom: Making Mindful Choices in a Drinking Culture
            • Ryan M. Chukuske – Bigfoot 200: Because, You Know, Why the #@&% Not? 

           

          Nellie Bly Awards

          The NELLIE BLY Book Awards for Investigative and Long Form Journalism Non-Fiction 

          Grand Prize Winner is

          Cover of Shaping Public Opinion by Janice S. Ellis, PhD. A burning typewriter sits in a series of concentric circles

          SHAPING PUBLIC OPINION:

          How Real Advocacy Journalism

          Should Be Practiced

          by Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D.

          • T.S. Lewis – The Why of War: An Unorthodox Soldier’s Memoirs
          • Maya Castro – The Bubble: Everything I Learned as a Target of the Political, and Often Corrupt, World of Youth Sports
          • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
          • Judy Bebelaar and Ron Cabral – And Then They Were Gone: Teenagers of Peoples Temple from High School to Jonestown
          • Patrick Hogan – Silent Spring – Deadly Autumn of the Vietnam War
          • Gordon Cross, Robert Fowler, Ted Neill – Finding St. Lo: A Memoir of War & Family

          CONGRATULATIONS to ALL! 

           

          And NOW for the 

          2019 CHANTICLEER INT’L BOOK AWARDS

          BEST BOOK

          and

          OVERALL GRAND PRIZE WINNER

          FORTUNE’S CHILD:

          A Novel of Empress Theodora 

          by

          James Conroyd Martin

          James Conroyd Martin will also be awarded $1,000 USD in recognition of his 2019 BEST BOOK of the YEAR – Chanticleer International Book Awards – Sponsored by Chanticleer Reviews & Media. 

          A Chanticleer Review of Fortune’s Child will be featured in the in the SPRING 2021 quarterly edition of the Chanticleer Reviews Magazine (print and epub) along with other promotional and marketing opportunities.

          Thank you James Conroyd Martin for participating in the 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards. We look forward to receiving the sequel to Fortune’s Child in the 2021 Chaucer Book Awards, a division of the CIBAs.

          We look forward to toasting James in person at our next gathering–hopefully in 2021. We are so happy that he joined us virtually for the CIBA announcements at VCAC20.

          CONGRATULATIONS JAMES CONROYD MARTIN! 

          From all of us at Chanticleer International Book Awards and Chanticleer Reviews. 


          THANK YOU to VCAC20 SPONSORS and FRIENDS

          And to FRIENDS of CHANTICLEER REVIEWS:

          J.D. Barker, Robert Dugoni, and Scott Steindorff.

           


          Link to Part One of the 2019 CIBA Announcements:

          The 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners (CIBAs) – Part One

          Link to Part Two of the 2019 CIBA Announcements:

          Part Two – The 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards Overall Grand Prize Winner and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

          We will post more photographs and information. Do check back and subscribe to the Chanticleer Reviews e-news letter.

          The video recordings of VCAC 20 are available on VIMEO. More information to come.

          We have exciting news for the Chanticleer Community on the horizon so do stay tuned!  

          You know you want a coveted Chanticleer Reviews Blue Ribbon! 

          Submit your works (manuscripts or novels published after or on January 1, 2018, are accepted) to the prestigious Chanticleer International Book Awards today! Entries are being accepted into the 2020 CIBAs in all 17 fiction divisions and five non-fiction divisions. 

          Be sure to register early for the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference that will start on April 16th, 2021 with the 2020 CIBA banquet and ceremony scheduled to take place on Saturday, April 17th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. If we cannot move forward with CAC21 due to the coronavirus, we will host another LIVE and HYBRID Chanticleer Authors Conference and 2020 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards ceremony.

          Pivot and Oscillate are the Words for Today’s Challenging Times.

          An email will go out to all 2019 CIBA award winners prior to October 30, 2020, with instructions, links, and more information about the awards packages. We appreciate your patience. As stated many times before “One does not need to be present at the CIBA ceremony and banquet to win. But it sure is a lot more fun!” –even if it is virtual!

          As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions!

          Be well. Stay Healthy. Take Care!

          The Chanticleer Reviews Team

        • NELLIE BLY Book Awards for the Best Non-Fiction Investigative and Long Form Journalism Works – 2019 CIBAs

          NELLIE BLY Book Awards for the Best Non-Fiction Investigative and Long Form Journalism Works – 2019 CIBAs

          Nellie Bly Awards

          Congratulations to the First Place Category Winners and the Grand Prize Winner of the Nellie Bly Book Awards for Investigative and Journalistic Non-Fiction Works, a division of the 2019 CIBAs.

           

           

           

           

          The CIBAs Search for the Best in the Nellie Bly Book Awards!

          Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring investigative works, long-form journalism, and reporting/correspondence. The CIBA judges are seeking the best journalistic works in social science, data-driven reports, equality and justice, ethics, human rights, activist groups, crimes and corruption, environmental, whistle-blowers, health and medicine, and politics. We love them all.

           

          The 2019 Nellie Bly Awards First Place Category Winners and the Nellie Bly Grand Prize Winner were announced at the Virtual Chanticleer Authors Conference that was broadcast via ZOOM webinar the week of September 8-13, 2020 from the Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Washington.

          Sean Dwyer, author of A Quest for Tears: Overcoming a Traumatic Brain Injury, 2018 Journey 1st Place Category Winner.

          This is the OFFICIAL 2019 LIST of the Nellie Bly Awards First Place Category Winners and the Nellie Bly Grand Prize Winner. 

          2019 is the FIRST year of the NELLIE BLY Book Awards – a non-fiction division of the CIBAs! 

           

          Congratulations to These Authors who Inaugurate the Nellie Bly Book Awards! 

          • T.S. Lewis – The Why of War: An Unorthodox Soldier’s Memoirs
          • Maya Castro – The Bubble: Everything I Learned as a Target of the Political, and Often Corrupt, World of Youth Sports
          • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
          • Judy Bebelaar and Ron Cabral – And Then They Were Gone: Teenagers of Peoples Temple from High School to Jonestown
          • Patrick Hogan – Silent Spring – Deadly Autumn of the Vietnam War
          • Gordon Cross, Robert Fowler, Ted Neill – Finding St. Lo: A Memoir of War & Family

          The Nellie Bly Awards
          2019 Grand Prize Winner is:

          Shaping Public Opinion:

          How Real Advocacy Journalism Should Be Practiced

          by Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D.

           

          Cover of Shaping Public Opinion by Janice S. Ellis, PhD. A burning typewriter sits in a series of concentric circles

           

          How to Enter the Nellie Bly Awards?

          We are accepting submissions into the 2020 Nellie Bly Awards until  November 30, 2020. 

          All CIBA Division Winners for 2020 will be announced at CAC 21 on April 17, 2021.

          Don’t delay! Enter today! 

          A Note to ALL the WINNERS: The coveted CIBA Blue Ribbons will be mailed out starting in October. We will contact you with an email to verify your mailing address and other items. We thank you for your patience and understanding.

          If you have any questions, please email info@ChantiReviews.com == we will try our best to reply in 3 or 4 business days.

           

        • JOURNEY Book Awards for the Best Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir Books – 2019 CIBAs

          JOURNEY Book Awards for the Best Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir Books – 2019 CIBAs

          Journey Narrative Non-Fiction Congratulations to the First Place Category Winners and the Grand Prize Winner of the Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoirs Works, a division of the 2019 CIBAs.

           

           

           

          The CIBAs Search for the Best in the Journey Book Awards!

          Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. We love them all.

           

          The 2019 Journey Book Awards First Place Category Winners and the Journey Grand Prize Winner were announced at the Virtual Chanticleer Authors Conference that was broadcast via ZOOM webinar the week of September 8-13, 2020 from the Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Washington.

          Janice Ellis, Ph.D., author of From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream, 2018 Journey Grand Prize Winner.

          This is the OFFICIAL 2019 LIST of the Journey Book Awards First Place Category Winners and the Journey Grand Prize Winner. 

           

          Congratulations to All!

          • Anna Carner – Blossom ~ The Wild Ambassador of Tewksbury
          • Linda Gartz – Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
          • Steffanie Strathdee and Thomas Patterson – The Perfect Predator: A Scientist’s Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug
          • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
          • Nikki West – The Odyssey of the Chameleon
          • Eva Doherty Gremmert – Our Time To Dance 

          The Journey Book Awards
          2019 Grand Prize Winner is:
          Persistence of Light by John Hoyte

           

           

          This is the original badge for the 2018 Journey Grand Prize Winner – From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream by Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D.

           

          How to Enter the Journey Book Awards?

          We are accepting submissions into the 2021 Journey  Book Awards until  April 30, 2021. 

          The 2020 Journey Book Awards winners will be announced at CAC 21 on April 17, 2021.

          Don’t delay! Enter today! 

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        • PERSISTENCE of LIGHT: in a JAPANESE PRISON CAMP, with an ELEPHANT CROSSING the ALPS, and then in SILICON VALLEY by John Hoyte – Memoir, Travel Adventure, Transformation/Inspiration

          PERSISTENCE of LIGHT: in a JAPANESE PRISON CAMP, with an ELEPHANT CROSSING the ALPS, and then in SILICON VALLEY by John Hoyte – Memoir, Travel Adventure, Transformation/Inspiration

          Reading John Hoyte’s memoir, Persistence of Light, is like sitting around a campfire absorbing stories of adventure, loss, and love – and feeling better for it. With journalistic precision, Hoyte shares both the facts and the emotional impact of his fascinating travels, doing so void of self-pity for his suffering and without self-aggrandizement for his vast achievements.

          Born in 1932 to medical missionary parents (his father, Stanley, was British; his mother, Grace, American), Hoyte enjoyed a vibrant childhood taking nature walks and playing with his five siblings. A pivotal moment came at 8 years old when his parents were summoned to a missionary hospital, 1300 miles away in Lanchow. Hoyte and his siblings ended up in a Japanese internment camp without either parent.

          Despite weeks with little to no food, wearing tattered clothing and walking barefoot (shoes were a commodity), he mustered the energy and the interest to write, sketch and draw – ultimately finding mystery and hope in a world besieged by authoritarian forces. His intense curiosity that percolated as a child, along with his faith in God, leads him on the many adventures he depicts in this thoughtful and exciting memoir.

          The second part of the title “…in a Japanese Prison Camp, with an Elephant Crossing the Alps, and then in Silicon Valley,” encapsulates just a few highlights of the author’s escapades – the most memorable of which was his 1959 trek across the French Alps with an elephant. Fascinated with history, he and college friends from Cambridge embraced the goal of trying to reenact Hannibal’s legendary crossing of the Alps that occurred in 218 BC (in case you don’t know: Hannibal trekked with an army and 37 war elephants en route to attack Rome more than two thousand years ago).

          In Hoyte’s case, they successfully guided Jumbo, a female Asian elephant provided by a zoo in Turin, Italy, from France over the Col du Mont Cenis. Life magazine, which sponsored the trek, published a considerable photo spread of Jumbo and parts of the trek in its Aug. 17, 1959 edition. To this day, Hoyte rounds up his kids and lifelong friend Richard Jolly (who accompanied Hoyte and wrote the book’s Preface) every few years for a reunion hike in the French Alps to celebrate that fateful crossing.

          This exciting, adventuresome spirit lives in Hoyte’s suspenseful storytelling. We learn of other notable moments like when he knew Eric Liddell, the Scottish Olympic runner, who tragically died while at Weihsien, the same internment camp as Hoyte (Liddell’s life is depicted in the 1981 movie, “Chariots of Fire”). Later, at the age of 27, Hoyte landed a contestant role on the American game show, “To Tell the Truth,” and in the mid-1960s, after leaving a corporate job at Hewlett-Packard, he took the leap to start his own company Spectrex in Palo Alto, Calif. Through all of his travels, Hoyte embraces light and color which lends a cheery quality to the book. Each chapter begins with a reference to Isaac Newton’s seven colors of the rainbow. For example, Chapter 4, An Alpine Journey, starts with green, evoking the natural beauty of the Alps.

          In addition to writing, Hoyte enjoys painting, sketching, and drawing and lives in Bellingham, Wash. with his wife, Luci Shaw, a poet. While he dedicates the book to his grandchildren, its universal appeal is for anyone who overcomes adversity – or may need to overcome adversity – and dreams about adventure in faraway lands.

          Highly recommended.

           


          “When Gandalf said to Frodo, ‘All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.” (J.R.R. Tolkien), surely John Hoyte was listening. Starting early and without choice, he and his siblings are interned in a Japanese prison camp, afterwards, he follows along Hannibal’s elephant trail over the French Alps. .” – Chanticleer Reviews