Author: linda-cardillo

  • Valentine’s Day 2024 – SWEET READS From Chanticleer with all the Genres of the Heart

    Valentine’s Day 2024 – SWEET READS From Chanticleer with all the Genres of the Heart

    Will your book be our Valentine?

    At Chanticleer we love Romance Books and we love to show it off with our Chatelaine Awards! We’re currently working as hard as we can to get out the Finalist List for those Awards, and you can see the Semi-Finals for them here! Who will win? Only time will tell.

    However, right now we just want to celebrate some of the best romantic books we’ve been able to discover. Like chocolate, romance is one of those extraordinary genres that can go with almost anything! Historical Romance, Mystery Romance, YA Romance, SciFi Romance, Fantasy Romance, the list goes on!

     

    Even better, romance is one of the bestselling genres out there! Being able to add that tag to your book makes it that much more marketable! For our own Chatelaine Awards, we’re always happy to crow about our winners!

    Our 2022 Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner was Operation Mom by Reenita Malhotra Hora.

    What does Chanticleer have to say about Operation Mom?

    Master storyteller Reenita Malhotra Hora’s YA romance Operation Mom: My Plan to Get My Mom a Life and a Man takes us on a charming journey through the life of one teen, Ila Isham.

    Hora introduces Ila and her best friend Deepali, two boy-crazy teens on a summer quest. Readers will fall in love with the smart, sassy, angst-filled, rebellious Ila. A typical teenage girl, Ila lives in Mumbai with her mom and Sakkubai, their house manager. Ila’s mother calls her obsessed, but that seems unfair. Is she obsessed just because her every waking minute is spent thinking of Ali Zafar, famous pop icon, singer, and heartthrob? Or is she obsessed with fellow classmate Dev?

    No, Ila couldn’t be taken with Dev because he’s one of three young men that her best friend Deepali is juggling in her summer experiment of exploring her “feminine mystique.” This turn of phrase becomes just one of many opportunities for Hora’s humor to shine as Ila remarks, “That’s a book by Gloria Steinem . . . no Betty Friedan.” Deepali’s response? “Yaar. Don’t be so literal.” The delightful balance between Ila’s book smarts versus Deepali’s street smarts carries us through Hora’s expertly crafted story.

    Read more here!

    Operation Mom also took home a First Place Blue in the Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction. We’d love to share other romance books that meet with other genres and why they touch our heart!

    A SPYING EYE: A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel
    By Michelle Cox
    2023 Overall Grand Prize
    Grand Prize for the M&M Awards for Cozy Mysteries

    A Cozy Mystery Romance!

    A Spying Eye Cover

    Brooding Château du Freudeneck, just outside Strasbourg, France has villains in the drawing rooms, stolen art hidden in the cellars, and bats in the belfry – all the best elements for a 19th-century Gothic mystery.

    However, in Michelle Cox’s novel, A Spying Eye it’s the 20th century. The Great War is passed, but the next war already looms on the horizon. The people of Strasbourg feel the growing conflict sharply, at the heart of Alsace-Lorraine, a fertile region that has been contested between France and Germany since time immemorial.

    Which means those bats are in the unfortunate head of the elderly Baron Von Harmon, the current lord and master (as much as he’s still able to be, at least) of the Chateau, while the stolen art is pursued by both the villainous Nazis and the only slightly-less villainous agents of Britain’s MI5.

    Read more here!

    THE LAST LUMENIAN
    By S.G. Blaise
    2023 Cygnus Grand Prize Winner

    A SciFi Romance!

    The Last Lumenian Cover

    Nineteen-year-old Lilla could have an idyllic life, but in The Last Lumenian by S.G. Blaise, she comes face to face with a rebellion and their just cause.

    Lilla’s father leads the Pax Septum Coalition, a nineteen-planet confederation. As a princess in her own right, she should be enjoying the status and wealth that comes from living on Uhna, the richest planet in the coalition due to the diamond mines found by her pirate ancestors centuries ago. She most definitely shouldn’t be worried about the rebellion brewing right under her father’s nose. However, when Lilla meets rebels in a refugee camp, she thinks she has found her destiny, a true purpose.

    Wanting to fight against the injustice and horrific treatment of the refugees, Lilla tries desperately to prove herself, especially after a disastrous first mission where she not only crashes her ship but also ends up in the hands of General Callum, leader of the Teryn Praelium.

    Read more here!

    NORTH QUEEN
    By Nicola Tyche

    A Fantasy Romance

    Norah Andell, Princess of Mercia and future North Queen, has been missing for three years.

    Her father secreted her away to protect her from a prophesied attack in a ten-year war, but he dies shortly after their departure and takes her location to the grave. Alexander Rhemus, Lord Justice to Queen Regent Catherine, Norah’s grandmother, was told by a seer that Norah would be found in the deep forests of the Northern Kingdom, and has searched the woods ceaselessly. Having loved her since they were children, Alexander’s desperation leads him to the Wilds, a legendary and feared area where men often do not return. So opens The North Queen.

    To Alexander’s shock, he finds Norah, who has no memories of her former life or even of her own name. At first, she refuses to believe she’s the missing princess, now Queen, and bristles against her newfound world and the restraints it casts upon her.
    Norah struggles with a position she doesn’t want, governing a people on the verge of starvation and facing an arranged marriage to protect her people from the Shadow King, a ruthless man hell-bent on taking her kingdom.

    Read more here!

    A PLACE Of REFUGE: Book Four of First Light
    By Linda Cardillo

    A Historical Romance

    A Place of Refuge Cover

    Izzy Monroe has lost herself. Three months after an accident that damaged a portion of her brain, she isolates herself in her parent’s home on Chappaquiddick Island, on the eastern end of Martha’s Vineyard.

    She has spent her life in the world of academia, working on a doctorate in literature at Harvard, but now with her short-term memory gone, she has to give up her dreams. Her emptiness and doubt have left her rudderless and deeply depressed.

    When her former college roommate, Maria, suggests she intern at Portarello, Maria’s grandfather’s self-sustaining farm in the Italian countryside, Izzy isn’t immediately convinced she can make the journey alone much less work at the successful inn and thriving farm. However, Izzy remembers the peace she felt there on the one visit she and Maria made years ago, and she knows this is her only chance to regain any sense of normalcy.

    Read more here!


    Thank you for joining us on this adventure of books, and we hope you found a read that caught your fancy! 

    Looking for more quality time with us?

    Join us at

    The Chanticleer Authors Conference

    Featuring authors like D.D. Black, book doctor Christine Fairchild, and Mark Berridge, our twelfth annual conference is shaping up to be excellent! You won’t want to miss out on the best tips around the business of being an author!

    Seating is Limited. The esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887) has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    We’d love to see you there!

  • A PLACE Of REFUGE: Book Four of First Light by Linda Cardillo – Romance, Historical Fiction, Women’s Literature

    A PLACE Of REFUGE: Book Four of First Light by Linda Cardillo – Romance, Historical Fiction, Women’s Literature

     

    Izzy Monroe has lost herself. Three months after an accident that damaged a portion of her brain, she isolates herself in her parent’s home on Chappaquiddick Island, on the eastern end of Martha’s Vineyard.

    She has spent her life in the world of academia, working on a doctorate in literature at Harvard, but now with her short-term memory gone, she has to give up her dreams. Her emptiness and doubt have left her rudderless and deeply depressed.

    When her former college roommate, Maria, suggests she intern at Portarello, Maria’s grandfather’s self-sustaining farm in the Italian countryside, Izzy isn’t immediately convinced she can make the journey alone much less work at the successful inn and thriving farm. However, Izzy remembers the peace she felt there on the one visit she and Maria made years ago, and she knows this is her only chance to regain any sense of normalcy.

    Daniel Richetelli, a Jesuit priest and Maria’s cousin, is facing a crisis himself. After ten years of self-sacrifice, he has lost his faith and is desperate to find a new path.

    He knows his grandfather can help him find his way, so he leaves the Church and goes to Portarello. A chance encounter with Izzy leaves him reeling. In her, he feels he has found that for which he is searching, but the guilt of his physical attraction to her and the criticism of his sister, Linda, make him once again question who he really is. Meanwhile, Izzy hasn’t felt so much like her old self since the accident. The farm and Daniel are bringing her back to life, but she fears his past will forever stand in the way of their happiness.

    The search for self is the central theme of the novel.

    Izzy remembers the strength she had prior to the accident. She was adventurous and outgoing, a lifelong learner. Not even a disability left over from her bout with childhood polio could keep Izzy down. Half-Wampanoag, half-Irish, Izzy was a warrior from the beginning. She was fearless. Now, she knows she is hiding from this new Izzy, a woman who doubts herself and cannot see past her brain damage to the new life she must build. She is scared to risk the possibility of failure and pain, but Maria convinces her she cannot rediscover herself without taking the risk.

    When she does finally gather the courage to leave her hovering, protective family, she thinks she must keep her inability to remember a secret from the other interns and Maria’s family. She hopes to reinvent herself among strangers and the physical labor of farm life. That journey to self-discovery feels like stepping off the edge of the world, and finding to courage to take that step is a part of reclaiming her life.

    Though she cannot truly interact with the other interns or inn guests because of her memory, she plays the part in yet another step toward normalcy.

    Izzy is amazed by the power she finds in physical labor. Working in the vegetable gardens and tending to the pigs form a sense of connection as her brain begins to heal and form new pathways. This also leads to a deeper appreciation for her Native American heritage, a deeper contemplation of the natural world – a world so foreign to her after years spent in study and academics.

    Her immediate attraction to Daniel and the physical relationship they share also give her purpose.

    United in their vulnerability, the two draw on and strengthen each other. Daniel’s path to the farm began with a forced leave of absence from the Church. He struggles with Jesuit ideology to find God in everything. In fact, he can find his maker in nothing recently. He is not looking forward to the mental grilling his grandfather will give him, but he knows it is the only way to truly rediscover himself. He lacks Izzy’s courage, though, and doesn’t immediately face his indecision.

    Daniel recognizes a mystical power within Izzy, likely from her brush with death, and he is inexplicably drawn to that power. The guilt he feels over his fascination with her and his lack of courage nearly push him to self-destruction, and it is only her love that pulls him back from the brink. She gives him the freedom to be himself, and he gives her the freedom to face her new limitations.

    Just like the archaeological dig occurring on the farm, the two must uncover the treasures buried beneath layers of doubt and uncertainty, and just as those artifacts show a connection to the past, Daniel and Izzy must use their pasts to create a new future.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • Valentine’s Day 2022 — Take a Book on a Date! A FUN TWIST on Reviews!

    Valentine’s Day 2022 — Take a Book on a Date! A FUN TWIST on Reviews!

    A book covered in flower petals with the pages formed into a heart

    We Love Books at Chanticleer for Valentine’s Day

    Love is in the air with Valentine’s Day, and what better way to find yourself than curling up with a good book and a warm drink. But, with the advent of romance, we thought we’d give you the chance to “date” a few of the many excellent books Chanticleer has reviewed. 

    Of course, now is the time that most people think about romance for Valentine’s Day like our Chatelaine Authors. Like with dating sites, the best way to improve your book’s dating profile is by submitting it for Reviews and Awards — and we have some great ones for you to look over here! 

    As the adage goes, don’t judge a book by it’s cover!

    What we’re doing for this is just providing you some images and part of the review associated with the book, but not the book itself. If you think you’d be interested in giving it a read, feel free to click the “see more” button at the end of our review excerpt. 

    We do have to give a special thanks to Village Books and Paper Dreams right here in Whatcom County for inspiring us with their idea for “Blind Date with a Book,” where customers buy a book based on a review rather than knowing what it is. 

    Books wrapped in red paper with a heart and brief description on the front
    Look at those beautiful books you can bring home with you!

    Let’s look at some of the books for Valentine’s Day:

    Do you like Paranormal Romance wrapped in Mystery and Family Relationships?

    A Purple Room. Eyes Watching, a Phone Booth, and Space

    At first, Aura hopes that Natalie just went off with friends and didn’t bother to call. But the silence continues for more than a week. Aura jumps in her truck to search the last place Natalie’s cell phone had been used, a mountain near Somers, Montana, behind a place called the Diamond Ranch. Before she can get onto the mountain to search, Aura becomes embroiled in a darker mystery when she finds a mutilated hand near where Natalie had been staying. With the gruesome discovery, she fears that Natalie ran into more serious trouble than she had first suspected.

    When a handsome sheriff’s deputy questions her, Aura feels a stirring she hasn’t ever experienced.

    Dane Burke, a no-nonsense lawman, has a case to solve. He shouldn’t be thinking about the mysterious, beautiful drifter in any way except as a possible suspect. With one failed marriage and a non-existent relationship with his estranged brother, he can’t allow himself to feel anything, not even lust. Little does he know, Aura feels much the same, but for very different reasons. Aura keeps her true identity hidden: a shape-shifting nymph. As part of her supernatural nature, any man who loves her or that she loves will die. The two delve deeper into the mystery and the search for Natalie, and their feelings become impossible to deny.

    See more here!

    Do you like Women’s Fiction that has Divorce, Romance with a splash of Literary Fiction? 

    Florence background with blue flowers, a happy traveler, and a pair of glasses on a book

    In 1966, Jenny, a Mud Angel, dropped everything to fly to Florence, Italy, in search of treasures buried in mud and water after the Arno flooded. She worked tirelessly alongside her fellow Mud Angels to rescue these priceless works of art and ancient books.

    For all of Lyn’s life, she heard her mother’s stories until they became mundane and commonplace. But before Jenny passe away, she gave Lyn instructions on where to find her precious journal from her time in Italy. She left a cryptic message, so when Lyn, an up-and-coming writer, has a chance to teach at a writer’s retreat in the city her mother loved, she jumps at the opportunity. Three years later, she still journeys there yearly for one month to explore Florence. With her latest book under her belt, Lyn decides to tell her mother’s story.

    See more here!

    Do you like Historical Renaissance Fiction with a Literary Twist?  

    The Last Judgement in the Background with ancient Italian images below

    Vittoria Colonna, an Italian noblewoman and poet born in 1490, lives with grief and isolation. As an adult, she meets and forms a deep friendship with the revered painter and poet Michelangelo. This meeting forms the center point of the novel that takes readers back and forth through time. The story traces Vittoria’s life from her childhood and betrothal to her future husband Ferrante, to her later years with Michelangelo.

    As a child, Vittoria leaves home for the island of Ischia. There, she lives with her betrothed Ferrante and his aunt Costanza d’Avalos.

    Vittoria and Ferrante’s future union will strengthen political alliances. But will Vittoria and Ferrante happily fall in love?

    Later, Vittoria becomes a widow and withdraws from public life for several years. One day, she meets Michelangelo, while he paints The Last Judgment in the Sistine Chapel. Their friendship changes each other’s lives forever.

    See more here!

     

    Do you like Medieval Historical Fiction steeped in Alternate Religions with a nod to Ancient Civilizations? 

    A verdant forest background with a druid, a druid goddess, and a scroll with herbs

    Nonbelievers of the Great Mother Goddess threaten certain persecution. But Herrwn has maintained the traditional practices passed to him by his own father. As an orator in charge of repeating the legends and beliefs of his people, he knows the importance and the heavy responsibility required by his sacred office. With the decrease in believers outside of the valley, he understands the precarious position of the community and the difficult balance he must maintain.

    Over the course of his long life, he has come to rely on his cousins, Olyrrwd, Chief Healer, and Ossiam, Chief Oracle, but as the years pass, his loyalties become torn when what starts as simple gibes between the two priests morphs into unspoken fear of what the other might do to gain favor with the various priestesses chosen as the Goddess Incarnate. Having lost his beloved wife and young child, Herrwn grows closer to Olyrrwd, and becomes the peacekeeper between the priests to keep what remaining family he has left.

    See more here!

    Do you like Historical Thriller Adventures?

    The Background of battlefield. The Sacre Couer from 1860s, Union Flag, and two people ready for a duel

    Jack Volant, an aspiring painter and Union cavalry officer, wounded at Gettysburg, travels to Paris following the war to become a more accomplished artist. It is there that he begins a tumultuous relationship with Charlotte, a sculptor who sells her work to Empress Eugenie, wife of the Emperor, and a noted art patroness.

    Jack’s younger brother Steven, while still in America, becomes embroiled in an affair with a professor’s wife. When the professor, an expert shot, learns of it, he challenges the young man to a duel. Fearing for his life, Steven changes his name and flees to Paris where he engages in the eerie occupation of unwrapping mummies in the salons attended by the elite.

    All these dynamic characters, many involved in intrigue and murder, will interact in the decadent City of Light. They enjoy its ambience for only a short time, however, before war finds them once again. In 1870, the influence of the Empress, Prussian militarism and national rivalry will lead to disaster for France in the Franco Prussian war, the siege of Paris. In the chaos, Charlotte, deeply in love with Jack, waits anxiously as he attempts to save his brother and Jerome from the Prussian onslaught.

    See more here!


    Thank you for joining us on this adventure of books, and we hope you found a read that caught your fancy! 

    Looking for more quality time with us?

    VCAC22 Sparkles

    VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

    FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

    Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

    Featuring: International Best Selling Authors: Cathy Ace and  Robert Dugoni along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

  • LOVE THAT MOVES the SUN by Linda Cardillo – Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction, Renaissance Fiction

    LOVE THAT MOVES the SUN by Linda Cardillo – Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction, Renaissance Fiction

       

      Blue and Gold Chaucer 1st Place BadgeLinda Cardillo debuts triumphantly into historical fiction with her novel, Love That Moves the Sun.

      Vittoria Colonna, an Italian noblewoman and poet born in 1490, lives with grief and isolation. As an adult, she meets and forms a deep friendship with the revered painter and poet Michelangelo. This meeting forms the center point of the novel that takes readers back and forth through time. The story traces Vittoria’s life from her childhood and betrothal to her future husband Ferrante, to her later years with Michelangelo.

      As a child, Vittoria leaves home for the island of Ischia. There, she lives with her betrothed Ferrante and his aunt Costanza d’Avalos.

      Vittoria and Ferrante’s future union will strengthen political alliances. Later, Vittoria becomes a widow and withdraws from public life for several years. One day, she meets Michelangelo, while he paints The Last Judgement in the Sistine Chapel. Their friendship changes each other’s lives forever.

      Cardillo takes great care with the novel’s front matter. She includes lots of material to help the reading experience.

      In the front sections of the book, readers will find a timeline, to help as the novel shifts around. The author also provides a list of historical figures, and fictional characters added for entertainment value. In her author’s note, Cardillo adds that while she followed facts as much as possible, she filled in the gaps with fiction. This shows respect to the life of Vittoria Colonna. Cardillos brings her to life in fiction as Vittoria did for her husband in poetry.

      A theme of polarity shapes Love That Moves the Sun.

      Michelangelo, an artist of paint and of words, “Sees humanity’s secrets and brings them to life on the page.” But the unwavering expectations of the public burden him. Vittoria struggles between staying in her self-imposed seclusion to pray and write, and the powerful pull towards rejoining society and her bond with Michelangelo. The events of the past and present also mirror each other. Events have a subtle organization that sees them building off the context of what happened before. As the past meets with the present, the gaps in Vittoria’s story come together.  Readers get the full picture of her life and feel like they know her strongly.

      Linda Cardillo’s Love That Moves the Sun keeps alive the memory of Vittoria Colonna’s life and work, as a woman who struggled between being a woman of God and a woman in love. Readers of historical fiction and romance should not miss Love That Moves the Sun.

      Love That Moves the Sun by Linda Cardillo won 1st Place in the 2019 CIBA Chaucer Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction.

       

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

       

       

       

       

       

    • CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – 2019 CIBAs

      CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – 2019 CIBAs

      Pre 1750 Historical Fiction AwardCongratulations to the First Place Category Winners and the Grand Prize Winner of the CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s historical fiction, a division of the 2019 CIBAs.

       

       

      The Search for the Best New Pre-1750s Historical Fiction 

      Chanticleer Book Reviews is celebrating the best books featuring Pre-1750s Historical Fiction, Including Pre-History, Ancient History, Classical, World History (non-western culture), Dark Ages and Medieval Europe, Renaissance, Elizabethan, Tudor, and 1600s. We love them all.

      The 2019 CHAUCER Book Awards First Place Category Winners and the CHAUCER 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.

      Michelle Cox, author of the Henrietta and Inspector Howard Mystery Series, the 2016 M & M Grand Prize Winner, announced the 2019 CHAUCER Book Awards.

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

      Congratulations to All! 

      • Gail Avery Halverson – The Skeptical Physick
      • Linda Cardillo – Love That Moves the Sun: Vittoria Colonna and Michelangelo Buonarotti
      • June Hall McCash – Eleanor’s Daughter: A Novel of Marie de Champagne
      • James Hutson-Wiley – The Sugar Merchant
      • James Conroyd Martin – Fortune’s Child: A Novel of Empress Theodora
      • Catherine Mathis – Death in Coimbra
      • Patricia J. Boomsma – The Way of Glory
      • A.L. Cleven – 26.2

      The CHAUCER Book Awards

      2019 Grand Prize Winner is 

      Fortune’s Child: A Novel of Empress Theodora

      by James Conroyd Martin 

       

      This is the digital badge for the 2018 CHAUCER Grand Prize Winner – The Serpent and the Eagle by Edward Rickford

      How to Enter the Chaucer Book Awards?

      We are accepting submissions into the 2021 CHAUCER Book Awards until June30, 2021. Submissions into the 2020 CHAUCER Book Awards are closed. 

      The 2020 CHAUCER 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 mid-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.

    • ALL THINGS GOETHE! June 2020 SPOTLIGHT on Post-1750 Historical Fiction

      ALL THINGS GOETHE! June 2020 SPOTLIGHT on Post-1750 Historical Fiction

      Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

       

      Welcome to the SPOTLIGHT on post-1750 Historical Fiction novels… in other words,
      Welcome to the GOETHE Book Awards!

       

      Why do we like Johann Wolfgang von Goethe so very much? It’s simple! He’s the guy who wrapped up everything we believe in with this simple sentence:


      “Whatever you can do or dream, you can begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it.” – Goethe

       

      Of course, this was also said about Goethe (Super Goethe by Ferdinand Mount) that “…[his] company could be exhausting. One minute he would be reciting Scottish ballads, quoting long snatches from Voltaire, or declaiming a love poem he had just made up; the next, he would be smashing the crockery or climbing the Brocken mountain through the fog.”  

      So…, moving on… Goethe was also a very cool guy. In his lifetime, he saw the beginning of the Industrial Revolution in 1750 through Mary Shelley’s publishing of Frankenstein in 1818 – and everything in between! Check out the list of what happened during those nearly seventy decades at the end of this post – you will be A-Mazed!

      Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalist Badge


      Now, Welcome to the GOETHE Hall of Fame!

      We wish to congratulate 2018’s Goethe Book Awards Grand Prize Winner –

      The Lost Years of Billy Battles by Ronald E. Yates

      Billy Battles is as dear and fascinating a literary friend as I have ever encountered. I learned much about American and international history, and you will too if you read any or all of the books. Each is an independent work, but if read in relation to the others, the reader experiences that all too rare sense of complete transport to another world, one fully realized in these pages because the storytelling is so skillful and thoroughly captivating. Trust me; you’ll want to read all three volumes. Chanticleer Reviewer’s Note

      Mr. Ronald Yates not only won Grand Prize in the CIBAs 2018 GOETHE Awards – he won OVERALL GRAND PRIZE!

       

      To learn more about Ronald E. Yates, please click here.

       

       

      Congratulations to the 2018 Goethe Book Awards First Place Category Winners! 

       

       

       

       

       


      The GOETHE Book Awards for post-1750s Historical Fiction Grand Prize is awarded to:

       

      Paladin’s War: The Adventures of Jonathan Moore by Peter Greene

      Congratulations to the 2017 Goethe Book Awards First Place Category Winners! 

       

       

       

       

       

       


      The Goethe Grand Prize Ribbon for Historical Fiction Post 1750s 2016 was awarded to:

      The Jøssing Affair by J.L. Oakley

      Congratulations to the 2018 Goethe Book Awards First Place Category Winners! 

      • Women’s Historical: A Seeping Wound by Darryl Wimberley
      • Manuscript World Wars and Other Wars: In Their Finest Hour by Duncan Stewart
      • North American Turn of the Century: The Depth of Beauty by A.B. Michaels
      • Regency, Victorian, 1700s/1800s: A Woman of Note by Carol M. Cram
      • British/Europe Turn of the Century: Silent Meridian by Elizabeth Crowens
      • Historical Fiction Manuscript: Running Before the Wind by Carrie Kwiatkowski
      • 20th Century: The Boat House Cafe by Linda Cardillo

       

       

       

       

       

       


      Post 1750s Historical Fiction AwardThe deadline for entering manuscripts and recently published works into the 2020 Goethe Book Awards is coming up fast! JUNE 30, 2019 is the deadline!

      For more information, please click here!

       

      Submit your manuscript or recently released Historical Fiction (post-1750s) to the Chanticleer International Book Awards!

       

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

      Grand Prize and First Place Winners for 2019 will be announced during our 2020 conference, #CAC20.

      The Grand Prize and First Place for 2020 CIBA winners will be held on April 17, 2021.

      Any entries received on or after June 30, 2020, will be entered into the 2021 Goethe Book Awards that will be announced in April 2022.

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

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

      The 2020 winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony during #CAC20. 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! 


      Goethe

      Some events that occurred during  Goethe’s lifetime:

      1750 – The Industrial Revolution began in England
      1756 – Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg Austria
      1761 – The problem of calculating longitude while at sea  was solved by John Harrison
      1765 – James Watts perfects the steam engine
      1770 – Ludwig van Beethoven was born in Bonn, Germany
      1774 – Goethe’s romantic novel, The Sorrows of Young Werther, propels him into European fame
      1774 – Goethe’s play Gotz von Berlichingen, a definitive work of Sturm und Drang premiers in Berlin
      1776 –  America’s 13 Colonies declare independence from England. Battles ensue.
      1776 – Adam Smith publishes the Wealth of Nations (the foundation of the modern theory of economics)
      1776 –  The Boulton and Watt steam engines were put to use ushering in the Industrial Revolution
      1783 – The Hot Air Balloon was invented by the Montgolfier brothers in France.
      1786 – Le Nozze di Figaro by Mozart premiered in Vienna
      1789 – George Washington is elected the first president of the United States of America
      1780 – Antoine Lavoisier discovers the Law of Conservation of Mass
      1789 – The French Revolution started in Bastille
      1791 – Thomas Paine publishes The Rights of Man
      1792 – Napoleon begins his march to conquer Europe
      1799 – Rosetta Stone discovered in Egypt
      1802 – Beethoven created and performed The Moonlight Sonata
      1802 – A child’s workday is limited to twelve hours per day by the British parliament when they pass their first Factory Act
      1804 – Napoleon has himself proclaimed Emperor of France
      1808 – Atomic Theory paper published by John Dalton
      1811 –  Italian chemist Amedeo Avogadro publishes a hypothesis, about the number of molecules in gases, that becomes known as Avogadro’s Law
      1811 – Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility was published anonymously. It was critically well-received
      1814 – Steam-driven printing press was invented which allowed newspapers to become more common
      1818 – Mary Shelley publishes Frankenstein
      1832 – Goethe’s Faust, Parts 1 & 2 are published posthumously (March 22, 1832)

      In 1830, Eugene Delacroix  created Liberty Leading the People to epitomize the French Revolution. The movement officially began with the Storming of the Bastille on July 14, 1789, a day that is still celebrated in France.  The French people were rebelling against the extreme wealth of the French royal family who overtaxed and underpaid the people of France to the point where they could not even feed themselves and had nothing to lose by going to battle. They were starving to death.  The uprising of 1830 was featured in Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables (1862)

      Claude-Michel Schönberg and Alain Boublil’s (1980s) musical can look at Delacroix’s Liberty Leading the People and hear the lyrics of the song that serves as a call to revolution:
      Do you hear the people sing? Singing a song of angry men? It is the music of a people. Who will not be slaves again.
      Liberty Leading the People by Eugene Delacroix, 1830. On display at the Lourve, Paris.

       

      Resources 

      *Britannica Encyclopedia 

      ** Oxford Reference

      ***New Yorker Magazine

    • The BOATHOUSE CAFE: Book One of FIRST LIGHT by Linda Cardillo – Intercultural Romance, Literary, Historical Fiction

      The BOATHOUSE CAFE: Book One of FIRST LIGHT by Linda Cardillo – Intercultural Romance, Literary, Historical Fiction

      Mae Keaney is looking for a way back to her childhood, back to safety, and finds it in a property on Chappaquiddick Island. A wind-tattered cottage and an old boathouse she envisions as a café will be her haven, as long as she can keep her regrets and sorrows hidden.

      With determination, she brings her talents as cook and waitress to bear, attracting locals and tourists alike with her hearty sandwiches, delicious cakes, and teas. She has her privacy and her shelter, and that is all she craves – until she meets Tobias, a quiet, kind, dark-skinned fisherman who begins the difficult process of enflaming her cold heart. Tobias is the son of the chief of the island’s Wampanoag tribespeople and scurrilous rumors begin to fly about Mae and her lover.

      Set during the Second World War years and beyond, The Boathouse Café reminds us of a time when an unwanted pregnancy could ruin a woman for life and prejudice against Native Americans was status quo. These factors affect the star-crossed, inter-cultural relationship between Mae and Tobias, twisting it into a complex carpet of unanswered–and unanswerable–questions. Only strong, sincere, honest love can hold them together to face the storms that will beset them before their union can be secured.

      This is a story that breaks through the barriers of race and challenges tradition and social mores for love.

      Award-winning writer Cardillo planned out this stunning family saga with extreme care. Though the motivations and histories of her well-constructed characters may be mysterious at first, the author will thoughtfully tie up every thread as the story progresses. Her setting, a tiny dot of land hanging out in the Atlantic Ocean, subject to torments of both harsh weather and human weakness, gives the tale great power, somehow presenting more potential for drama than similar yarns spun on safe, dry land. When a fire rages on Mae’s property or a vindictive enemy vandalizes her cozy home, there will be people on “Chappy” who value the land and the traditions of the island and will step in to help and widen the circle of Mae’s support. The island, in Cardillo’s skilled hands, becomes not just an enthralling environment but a shared ethos.

      Ultimately, this beautifully written, passionate, page-turning adventure of a blended family history and a romance of grand proportions will have readers yearning to continue the series with The Uneven Road and Island Legacy

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • The UNEVEN ROAD: Book Two of First Light by Linda Cardillo —  a coming of age novel

      The UNEVEN ROAD: Book Two of First Light by Linda Cardillo — a coming of age novel

      Ringing with the changes from the deceptively placid 1950s to the turbulent 1960s, from the picturesque New England island of Martha’s Vineyard to the bloody jungles of Viet Nam, The Uneven Road is a sophisticated coming-of-age novel that intersects with historical events of this period.

      The second book of Linda Cardillo’s award-winning series, First Light, is written with verve and intelligence. Cardillo carefully constructs The Uneven Road with rich characterizations, diverging and interlocking plot elements, and fine attention to detail that explores family dynamics and the search for individual identity.

      This gripping saga continues when Izzy, Mae and Tobias’ seven-year-old daughter, contracts polio. Their twelve-year-old boy, Josiah, feels responsible not only for his sister’s pain, but all the troubles in his small world. Jo’s conflicted feelings escalate when he realizes that Mae’s island property, Innisfree, will be sold to pay for Izzy’s surgery. Even though he loves Izzy and wants her to walk without crutches, his parent’s cold-blooded willingness to part with Innisfree drives Jo to smash an important symbol of his past, the ceremonial Wampanoag drum bestowed on him by Tobias, and then runs away to Boston, where he stays with his Irish uncle, a policeman. Finally he enlists in the army, winding up as a medic on the killing fields of Viet Nam.

      Cardillo’s precise writing adds credibility to the vivid scenes that take place in Viet Nam where Jo struggles with the necessity to kill the enemy while charged with saving lives. Later, the author, again, deftly describes Jo’s very different experiences when he returns to the US, where he hangs out in a commune. No matter, Jo maintains his family contact mostly through Izzy, now in college on the mainland. Back on Chappy, Mae, going through her own changes, longs to see her son again. His journey home with Izzy and her friend Grace will re-connect him with his people, both Irish and Native American, and reveals to him that he and his mother are more alike than they ever thought possible.

      Captivatingly infused with often raw emotions and haunting memories of race, heritage, culture, and family dynamics, The Uneven Road, scatters its characters over time and place and draws them back together again with enduring values of family love and respect for heritage.