Author: juilette-douglas

  • LARAMIE Book Awards for Western and Americana Fiction – 2019 CIBAs

    LARAMIE Book Awards for Western and Americana Fiction – 2019 CIBAs

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardCongratulations to the First Place Category Winners and the Grand Prize Winner of the LARAMIE Book Awards for Western, Civil War, Pioneer, First Nation Novels and Americana Fiction, a division of the 2019 CIBAs.

    The Search for the Best New Western and Americana Books!

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is celebrating the best books featuring, the Wild West, Pioneers, Civil War, Americana, and First Nation Novels. We love them all.

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

    Jacquie Rogers, author of Honey Beaulieu, Many Hunter series   2016 Laramie  Grand Prize Winner announced the 2019 Laramie  Book Award Winners.

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

    Congratulations to All! 

    • E. Alan Fleischauer – Rescued  
    • Lynwood Kelly – The Gamble: Lost Treasures    
    • David Fitz-Gerald– Wanders Far-An Unlikely Hero’s Journey     
    • Eileen Charbonneau – Seven Aprils  
    • Juliette Douglas – Bed of Conspiracy  
    • John Hansen – Hard Times
    • J. R. Collins – Spirit of the Rabbit Place   

    The Laramie Book Awards

    2019 Grand Prize Winner is

     Seven Aprils  by Eileen Charbonneau 

    This is the digital badge for the 2018 Laramie Grand Prize Winner – Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale by Ruth Hull Chatlien.

    Laramie Book Awards

    How to Enter the Laramie Book Awards?

    We are accepting submissions into the 2021 LARAMIE  Book Awards until July 31, 2021. Submissions into the 2020 Laramie Book Awards are closed. 

    The 2020 Laramie Book Awards winners 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.

    • FRECKLED VENOM COPPERHEAD by Juilette Douglas — Best Debut Western

      FRECKLED VENOM COPPERHEAD by Juilette Douglas — Best Debut Western

      Straddling a big, gray horse, a young boy rides into White River, a small isolated town with few people. A town he fled years before. He is alone and sick.  Multiple questions percolate, but the first one is, “How can he carry on?” Readers who seek historical western adventures, will find Freckled Venom by Juliette Douglas a  satisfying read to be enjoyed by all ages of readers, youngsters or seasoned.

      Juliette Douglas writes with a unique Western voice, full of quirky phrases that establish character, humor, emotional content, and moves the story briskly along. The story is set in 1878, and the narrative revolves around the opposing goals of the town marshal and the obsessed bounty hunter. Its supporting characters are enjoyable, although some lean toward stereotypes, but this old-time Western presents an engaging hero and heroine.

      Tension and conflicts are layered and contain some violence. The Marshal Rawley and the venomous woman Lacy suffer as they’re jammed together against vile weather: rain, wind, cold and snow, while hunting three brutal socio-pathic brothers. While the villains provide gripping conflict and suspense, an underlying theme through the story is Lacy’s irreparable childhood damage.

      Rawley tries to break through her emotional barricade, but is returned with Lacy’s biting reactions. However, such interactions define these characters as they grow; both of them learning while searching for a way to deal with their dilemma. Two plots climax at the end of the dual hunts: the hunt for the murdering scum brothers and the hunt for a resolution to Lacy’s pain.

      As the narrative deepens, internal and external dialogue represents character reflections, and drives home. In almost every conversation with Lacy, Rawley uses a nickname, partly with affection, but also to taunt her, and the nickname becomes tiresome to Lacy and maybe to the reader also. However, the payoff for reading past these bumps is thoroughly enjoying a story that makes the Old West come alive.

      Douglas writes the physical senses organically; readers see, hear, touch, and smell everything in the setting, know the season, feel the weather, and can taste the dust.  Freckled Venom, Douglas’ debut novel, brings the Old West to life with vivid settings, believable adventures, and suspenseful plotting. She weaves together danger, Lacy and Rawley’s growth, their longing for intimacy, and induces reader empathy for Lacy and Rawley right to the end. Readers wanting to know more can look forward to Douglas’s sequel, Freckled Venom: Copperhead Strikes.