Author: linda-ulleseit

  • The 2025 Goethe Hall of Fame for Late Historical Fiction

    The 2025 Goethe Hall of Fame for Late Historical Fiction

    The Goethe Hall of Fame

    Celebrating the Best Late Historical Fiction with the Goethe Awards!

    Goethe as the badge for the Post 1750s Historical Fiction Awards

    **Send Us Your Story by the end of August!**

    One of our many Historical Fiction Categories, Named after German Writer, Scientist and Playwright Johan Wolfgang Van Goethe (1749-1832), Considered to be one of the most Influential and Greatest Writers of the German Language.

    This Award Division covers anything after 1750, so there can be anything from The American Revolution, to the 1930s.

    For our other Historical Fiction Divisions, See the Chaucer Award for Pre-1750, Hemingway for 20th & 21st Century Wartime and Laramie for Western and Americana

    Let’s take a look at some of our Grand Prize Winners and Discover your next great read!

    Abigail’s Song
    By Alina Rubin

    Our review for the newest Grand Prize Winner is forthcoming. In the meantime, here is what some GoodReads readers have been saying:

    “Abigail’s Song is a powerful novel about Jewish/Gentile relationships set in 1800s England. The novel’s protagonist Abigail is a sixteen-year-old orphan who is taken in by a Jewish family after becoming severely ill on the streets. Abigail is skeptical of Jews at first but soon realizes that her prejudices were wrong and that she has been taken in by a family who genuinely loves and cares for her.

    The novel offers great chemistry between Abigail, David, and the rest of David’s family. Rubin has a penchant for writing sharp dialogue and an excellent eye for detail when observing Jewish customs.” -Eric

    ABIGAIL’S SONG is a tender, heart-warming novel about young Abigail, an impoverished Catholic orphan in early 19th century England. Her path to happiness and fulfillment is blocked by death, neglect, prejudice, and ignorance, but in an almost true-Dickensian turn-of-events, she is found and adopted by a devoted, talented, and close-knit Jewish family.

    Acceptance, love, music, and even romance, comes Abigail’s way, and through the course of the novel she blossoms from a needy child into a young woman who not only knows how to harness her emotional strength, but can help others do the same.” -Ana

    See more here!

    If Someday Comes
    By David Calloway

    David Calloway’s moving historical fiction, If Someday Comes: A Slave’s Story of Freedom, tells the true story of his great-grandfather George Calloway, born into slavery on January 8, 1829. in Cleveland, Tennessee.

    It is a tale of determination, perseverance, and achievement before and during the Civil War. If Someday Comes covers George’s final years in slavery; detailed accounts of the Civil War and its impacts on George and his family, both Black and White.

    It is a family saga of survival and endurance.

    The story begins in Cleveland, Tennessee, March 6th, 1857. We meet George and his family, his wife Elizabeth, their infant daughter Baby Caroline, and the stratified world of slavery in which they live. Thomas Howard Calloway (Marsa Thom), is their White owner who owns the East Tennessee and Georgia Railroad, the South’s only copper mines, and the local bank. He is one of Cleveland’s prominent town leaders.

    Read More Here

    After The Rising & Before The Fall
    By Orna Ross

    After the Rising and Before the Fall Cover

     

    Award-winning Irish author Orna Ross has created a volume comprising the first two novels of The Irish Trilogy, drawing from her Irish birth and upbringing for a special grasp of the country’s history, how its wars and political strivings have affected its people directly, personally, over multiple generations.

    Her two books take on a span of time rooted in the early 1920s and delve deeply into the interlocking fate of the extended family and ancestry of Jo Devereux. Jo, the book’s central narrator, leaves Ireland in her twenties, only returning in her forties in 1995 when she learns that her mother is near death.

    The journey back will draw her into the family’s complex relationships, and reacquaint her with Rory, her former, and perhaps only, true love.

    Read More Here

    The Aloha Spirit
    By Linda Ulleseit

    Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

    In Linda Ulleseit’s novel The Aloha Spirit, we meet the plucky heroine, Dolores, as her father leaves her.

    “Dolores’s father deemed her useless when she was seven. Neither he nor her older brother, Pablo, ever said that, but every detail of their leaving told her so. Papa had tried to explain the Hawaiian custom of hānai to her. All she understood was the giving away, leaving her to live with a family not her own.”

    Her story starts in 1922; the place, multi-ethnic, multilingual Hawaii. Papa, a sugar cane cutter from Spain who worked in Hawaii, decides to take his son Pablo with him to seek his fortune in California. His wife died five years earlier. He leaves 7-year-old Dolores with a large family on Oahu in an arrangement called hānai, an informal adoption. Dolores doesn’t know the family well. She feels abandoned, with no idea when or if her father will send for her or return.

    Read More Here

    Peccadillo At The Palace: An Annie Oakley Mystery
    By Kari Bovee

    Kari Bovée’s Peccadillo at the Palace, the second book in the Annie Oakley Mystery series, is a historical, mystery thriller extraordinaire. Fans of both genres will thrill at Bovée’s complex plot that keeps us guessing from its action-packed beginning to the satisfying reveal at the end.

    The book opens with the Honorable Colonel Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show to England on a voyage to perform for Queen Victoria. They are not on the high seas long, when Annie’s beloved horse, Buck, jumps overboard. Her husband and the Queen’s loyal servant, Mr. Bhakta, jump in to save the horse, or was Mr. Bhakta already dead before he reached the water? Thus, begins the mystery of who killed Mr. Bhakta, leaving all to wonder, is the Queen safe?

    Someone wanted the Queen’s man dead, and he is, but was it a matter of racism, intrigue, or an accident? Annie’s search for clues points her in several directions, but is it the doctor, or the woman dressed in rags with the posh accent, or the crass American businessman and his floozy wife? All have motive.  Even Annie’s husband has motive with his Irish background and ties to the Fenians and the Irish Republican Army (IRA).

    Read More Here


    Thank you for celebrating our Goethe 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 Goethe Winners is **Send Us Your Story by the end of August!**

    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!

    Reach out with your news to info@ChantiReviews.com

    The Best Books Grand Prize Book Award Badge
    You know you want it…

    If you have a great Post 1750 Historical Fiction Story, submit it to us before the end of August to enter the 2025 CIBAs!

  • The Goethe Late Historical Awards Fiction Round Up for the 2023 First Place Winners!

    The Goethe Late Historical Awards Fiction Round Up for the 2023 First Place Winners!

    Post 1750s Historical Fiction AwardThe Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Late Historical (Post 1750s) Fiction. The Grand Prize Winner, David Calloway’s book, If Someday Comes will be promoted for years to come in our annual Hall of Fame article, as well as be featured on the Goethe contest page year ’round!

    The best part about being a Chanticleer Int’l Book Award Winner is the love and attention you get all year ‘round!

    The 2023 Goethe Winners were announced at the 2024 Chanticleer Authors Conference in April, and you can see the official winners post here!

    Join us in celebrating the 2023 First Place Goethe Winners!

    Lisa Voelker The Spoon

    The Spoon Lisa Voelker

     

    The Spoon is historical fiction based on the personal anecdotes of survivors of what we now know as the 1956 Hungarian Revolution. At the heart of The Spoon is the true story of two people incongruously brought together during the maelstrom of this historic event; a story that is embodied in one small heirloom and remembered and shared through the generations when the family gathers each year for Christmas.

    From Chanticleer:

    Lisa Voelker’s historical fiction novel, The Spoon, takes us back to the 1950s in Hungary during the daring student uprising, and attempted revolution,. The author weaves historical facts with fiction in the form of family lore that has been handed down for generations.

    We follow scores of people whose lives intersected during this uprising of 1956. The revolution was, at its inception, a time of joyous upheaval, but in less than two weeks became one of devastating dissolution. People fled Hungary by the thousands, but not before giving the Soviet Union a taste of their discontent.

    Voelker introduces Rebeka, a member of the Varga family with old ties to the bourgeoisie, who lived a life of privilege on a farm. She is contrasted by Peter, a member of the Turea family who attends Budapest Technical University, where students began demonstrating against the Hungarian Government that was under Soviet control.

    Read more here!

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    Robert W Smith – A Long Way From Clare

    A Long Way From Clare Cover

    Conor Dolan, a young Irishman, travels to Chicago in 1903 to visit his older brother; instead, he finds a mystery. His journey sparks a quest to peel away secrets and rediscover a dead sibling he idolized but never really knew as he strives to learn the true meaning of brotherhood.

    His search reveals an Irish Republican plot to assassinate a visiting British royal. In the process, he is drawn into an alliance with two women: a mesmerizing Jewish widow and a struggling young Irishwoman. Each teaches Conor existential truths of life and love in her own way.

    But the brother he finds may not be the brother he remembers. A Long Way from Clare is a story of Chicago’s early twentieth century immigrants and one man’s struggle with both bigotry and justice in an unforgiving city where no good deed goes unpunished.

    From Chanticleer:

    Twenty-four-year-old Conor Dolan had intended to surprise his older brother and catch up after years apart. However, what he finds when he arrives in Chicago will spark a harrowing mystery, in A Long Way from Clare by Robert W. Smith.

    Kevin, a beat cop in twentieth-century Chicago’s worst neighborhood, was found six weeks before Conor’s visit, in what the police have dubbed a suicide. However, Conor has his doubts. Each time he asks people about Kevin, he is met with resistance and denial. When Conor speaks with Detective Flynn, the man assigned to Kevin’s case, his suspicions become certainties. Flynn’s bizarre behavior, the minimal effort on the police’s part to investigate, and the men following Conor at every turn convince him to stay in Chicago rather than return to his home in Springfield.

    Conor’s determination to find answers to Kevin’s death lead him in a dangerous dance with darkness amidst the shadows of Chicago’s underworld.

    Read more here!

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    Mitzi Zilka – Water Fire Steam

    The year is 1884. Rolla Alan Jones, an ambitious dreamer fresh out of an East Coast engineering school, is commissioned to design and build the first water system in Spokane Falls, Washington, a booming town of twenty-thousand. He is everyone’s golden boy for five years until the city burns down on August 4, 1889. The once-celebrated engineer is scapegoated for the catastrophe alleging his system yielded inadequate water pressure. Asked to resign, betrayed by his friends, shunned by the community, and abandoned by his pregnant wife and three-year-old son, Rolla must find the strength to reinvent himself or return to New York as an abject failure. Based on a true story, Water Fire Steam is a story of forgiveness and redemption for anyone who has ever had to claw their way back from an unwarranted accusation.

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    Susanne Dunlap – The Adored One

    Lillian Lorraine was a naive 15-year-old chorine on Broadway when she attracted the notice of the notorious 41-year-old Florenz Ziegfeld. Accustomed to getting what he wanted, Ziegfeld took Lillian under his wing and into his arms, giving her coveted numbers in the Ziegfeld Follies and taking control of her career. But Lillian’s rebellious spirit chafed against him, refusing to play according to his rules, and nearly destroying her own career in the process. The Adored One follows her through rise and fall after rise and fall as she comes of age in a world where her youthful beauty was an asset-and a liability.

    From Chanticleer:

    Step into the glittering world of fame and betrayal in Susanne Dunlap’s The Adored One. At just four years old, Leleanne de Jacques, aka Lillian Lorraine, began her acting career. After fleeing an abusive husband in San Francisco, Mary Anne, Lillian’s mother, moves to Philadelphia, seeing her daughter’s talent as their potential meal ticket.

    Soon after arriving in Philadelphia and changing her daughter’s name, Mary Anne relocates them both again to New York, where she puts Lillian in front of artists who see her potential for print ads. Lillian soon meets Fred McKay, her first talent agent, and she begins performing in Lee Shubert productions.

    When Florenz Ziegfeld sees Lillian onstage, he knows he must have her, both in his productions and his bed. At only sixteen, Lillian signs with Broadway’s biggest producer. She begins to spiral soon after. Drinking and partying become a staple in Lillian’s life, and she is soon keeping more secrets than her young heart can handle. Florenz’s obsession, Mary Anne’s domineering, and Lillian’s own need for approval lead her down a dangerous and lonely path. Losing every friend she ever makes as well as a part of herself, Lillian wonders if the prize of fame is really worth the cost.

    Read more here!

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    Linda Ulleseit – The River Remembers

    Samantha Lockwood, Day Sets, and Harriet Robinson come to Fort Snelling from very different backgrounds. It’s 1835 and the world is changing, fast, and they are all struggling to keep up. After she refuses another suitor he’s chosen for her, Samantha’s father banishes her to live in the territory with her brother. He, too, tries to take over her marriage plans—but she is determined to find her own husband, even when her choices go awry.

    Day Sets demands that her white husband create a school to educate their daughter, supporting her father’s belief that his people must learn the ways of the white man in order to ensure the tribe’s future. Until events prove her father wrong. Harriet’s life in the territory is more like that of a free person than anywhere she’s lived. She even falls in love with Dred Scott and dreams of a life with him. But they are both enslaved, and she keeps being reminded of how little control she has over her own fate. As their cultures collide, each of these three women must find a way to direct her own future and leave a legacy for her children.

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    Nicole Evelina Catherine’s Mercy

    Based on a true story, Catherine’s Mercy brings to life Irish reformer and Sisters of Mercy founder Catherine McAuley.

    In 1824, Catherine, a Catholic spinster of 44, unexpectantly inherits millions. However, she doesn’t use it to climb the social ladder or snare a husband; she uses it to fulfill a lifelong dream of building a refuge for the poor and sick of Dublin, Ireland. That an unmarried woman would dare propose such a thing is so scandalous, even her own brother calls it “Kitty’s Folly.” Society turns against her. The Church tries to take over. Catherine must defend her choices or lose not only her inheritance, but her reputation and life’s calling.

    One of the first women who seeks Catherine’s help is Margaret, a maid in the house of Lord Montague, the loudest of Catherine’s detractors. Daring to protect herself from his advances and rebel against his maxim of total obedience, Margaret is forced to flee for her life. She desperately approaches Catherine for help, setting off a series of events that haunt Catherine all her days and prompt a rule that holds today, in the real-life Sisters of Mercy.

    Find it Locally and on Amazon

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    William MazThe Bucharest Legacy: The Rise of the Oligarchs

    The CIA is rocked to its core when a KGB defector divulges that there is a KGB mole inside the Agency. They learn that the mole’s handler is a KGB agent known as Boris. CIA analyst Bill Hefflin recognizes that name—Boris is the code name of Hefflin’s longtime KGB asset. If the defector is correct, Hefflin realizes Boris must be a triple agent, and his supposed mole has been passing false intel to Hefflin and the CIA. What’s more, this makes Hefflin the prime suspect as the KGB mole inside the Agency.

    Hefflin is given a chance to prove his innocence by returning to his city of birth, Bucharest, Romania, to find Boris and track down the identity of the mole. It’s been three years since the bloody revolution, and what he finds is a cauldron of spies, crooked politicians, and a country controlled by the underground and the new oligarchs, all of whom want to find Boris. But Hefflin has a secret that no one else knows—Boris has been dead for over a year.

    Find it Locally or on Amazon


    Thank you for joining us to celebrate the 2023 Goethe First Place Winners!

    Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

    You can see our Hall of Fame on the Goethe Grand Prize Winners, including David Calloway’s incredible book If Someday Comes here.

    Your book can join the Tiers of Achievement, but only if you submit to the Goethe Awards!

    The tiers of achievement for the CIBAs

    Got a great Historical Fiction Story?

    The 2024 Goethe Book Awards are open through the end of June!

    Blue button that says Enter a Writing Contest
    Submit to the Goethe Awards Today!
  • 10 Days Left! The 2024 Ozma and Goethe Awards Close at the End of July!

    10 Days Left! The 2024 Ozma and Goethe Awards Close at the End of July!

    The Fantasy is soon to be History!

    The Ozma and Goethe Awards both close at the end of July! Don’t let your History become a Fantasy!

    The Ozma Award for Fantasy Fiction and The Goethe Award for Post-1750 Historical Fiction close submissions on JULY 31st.

    You can’t win if you don’t submit!

    Blue button that says Enter a Writing Contest
    Submit to the CIBAs Today!

    Only 10 days left to submit your books to the prestigious CIBAs and embark on an extraordinary journey to success. With over $30,000 in prizes awarded annually, now is the time to make your mark!

    The Ozma Awards for Fantasy and The Goethe Awards for Late Historical Fiction are still open until JULY 31st!

    Best Book Grand Prize for the Chanticleer Int'l Book Awards

    Congratulations to the Winners of the 2023 Ozma Awards!

    • Lilla Glass – The Unseen
    • Charles Allen – The Order of the Red God
    • Jaime Castle & Andy Peloquin – Black Talon
    • Jonathan UffelmanBook of Leprechauns: The Lore Gatherers
    • PJ Devlin – The Chamber

    And a huge round of applause to this years Overall Grand Prize, and Division Grand Prize for OZMA

    A Vengeful Realm by Tim Facciola!

    A Gold Ribbon dividing this section from the next

    Congratulations to the Winners of the 2023 Goethe Awards!

    And a huge round of applause to this years 2023 Goethe Grand Prize Winner- If Someday Comes by David Calloway

    A Gold Ribbon dividing this section from the next

    The CIBAs offer more than just recognition — they provide a ladder to success with a range of achievement tiers and expert long tail marketing strategies. From the highly anticipated Long List to the prestigious Overall Grand Prize Winner, the CIBA lists energize both authors and readers, maximizing your digital footprint and expanding your fan base.

    The tiers of achievement for the CIBAs (Chanticleer Int'l Book Awards)

    We are always eager to support the Best Books through the CIBAs. Join the ranks of celebrated authors who have already taken this critical step in their publishing.

    Your book deserves to be discovered, celebrated, and shared with the world. Don’t miss the chance to showcase your talent and gain valuable exposure at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (April 3-6, 2025) where Winners from all 25 Book Award Divisions will be announced and honored.

    In a world hungry for good books, your story deserves to be heard. Submit now and leave a lasting impression.

    Let’s celebrate exceptional storytelling together!

  • The 2024 Goethe Hall of Fame – Celebrating the Grand Prize Winners of one of our most popular Divisions!

    The 2024 Goethe Hall of Fame – Celebrating the Grand Prize Winners of one of our most popular Divisions!

    The Goethe Hall of Fame

    Celebrating the Best Late Historical Fiction with the Goethe Awards!

    Goethe as the badge for the Post 1750s Historical Fiction Awards

    **Send Us Your Story by the end of July!**

    One of our many Historical Fiction Categories, Named after German Writer, Scientist and Playwright Johan Wolfgang Van Goethe (1749-1832), Considered to be one of the most Influential and Greatest Writers of the German Language.

    This Award Division covers anything after 1750, so there can be anything from The American Revolution, to the 1930s.

    For our other Historical Fiction Divisions, See the Chaucer Award for Pre-1750, Hemingway for 20th Century Wartime and Laramie for Western and Americana

    Let’s take a look at some of our Grand Prize Winners and Discover your next great read!

    If Someday Comes
    By David Calloway

    This is the true story of my Great-Grandfather George Calloway, a slave in Cleveland, Tennessee, before and during the Civil War. It is written as historical fiction, based on George’s life, and stories I heard growing up. It is a tale of determination, perseverance, and achievement.

    George protected his family through war, famine, and plague; he risked his life repeatedly to protect his owner’s family, and thus his own wife and children.

    More fact than fiction, George’s story has also been my journey, grappling with the humiliation of slavery; sorting through the many myths and false modern-day narratives, and discovering a long lost relative, I found that to understand America, you must first understand the Civil War. George was then, and remains, a hero of our family.

    • Winner, the 2023 Phillis Wheatley Historical Fiction Prize
    • Grand Prize Winner, 2023 Goethe award for Historical Fiction
    • Winner, The 2023 Next Generation Indie Book Awards African American Fiction Award
    • Finalist, the 2023 Eric Hoffer Montaigne Medal
    • 5 Stars Award, Reader’s Favorite 2023

    A Chanticleer Review is forthcoming! In the meantime, visit David Calloway’s website here!

    After The Rising & Before The Fall
    By Orna Ross

    After the Rising and Before the Fall Cover

     

    Award-winning Irish author Orna Ross has created a volume comprising the first two novels of The Irish Trilogy, drawing from her Irish birth and upbringing for a special grasp of the country’s history, how its wars and political strivings have affected its people directly, personally, over multiple generations.

    Her two books take on a span of time rooted in the early 1920s and delve deeply into the interlocking fate of the extended family and ancestry of Jo Devereux. Jo, the book’s central narrator, leaves Ireland in her twenties, only returning in her forties in 1995 when she learns that her mother is near death.

    The journey back will draw her into the family’s complex relationships, and reacquaint her with Rory, her former, and perhaps only, true love.

    Read More Here

    The Aloha Spirit
    By Linda Ulleseit

    Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

    In Linda Ulleseit’s novel The Aloha Spirit, we meet the plucky heroine, Dolores, as her father leaves her.

    “Dolores’s father deemed her useless when she was seven. Neither he nor her older brother, Pablo, ever said that, but every detail of their leaving told her so. Papa had tried to explain the Hawaiian custom of hānai to her. All she understood was the giving away, leaving her to live with a family not her own.”

    Her story starts in 1922; the place, multi-ethnic, multilingual Hawaii. Papa, a sugar cane cutter from Spain who worked in Hawaii, decides to take his son Pablo with him to seek his fortune in California. His wife died five years earlier. He leaves 7-year-old Dolores with a large family on Oahu in an arrangement called hānai, an informal adoption. Dolores doesn’t know the family well. She feels abandoned, with no idea when or if her father will send for her or return.

    Read More Here

    Peccadillo At The Palace: An Annie Oakley Mystery
    By Kari Bovee

    Kari Bovée’s Peccadillo at the Palace, the second book in the Annie Oakley Mystery series, is a historical, mystery thriller extraordinaire. Fans of both genres will thrill at Bovée’s complex plot that keeps us guessing from its action-packed beginning to the satisfying reveal at the end.

    The book opens with the Honorable Colonel Buffalo Bill Cody’s Wild West Show to England on a voyage to perform for Queen Victoria. They are not on the high seas long, when Annie’s beloved horse, Buck, jumps overboard. Her husband and the Queen’s loyal servant, Mr. Bhakta, jump in to save the horse, or was Mr. Bhakta already dead before he reached the water? Thus, begins the mystery of who killed Mr. Bhakta, leaving all to wonder, is the Queen safe?

    Someone wanted the Queen’s man dead, and he is, but was it a matter of racism, intrigue, or an accident? Annie’s search for clues points her in several directions, but is it the doctor, or the woman dressed in rags with the posh accent, or the crass American businessman and his floozy wife? All have motive.  Even Annie’s husband has motive with his Irish background and ties to the Fenians and the Irish Republican Army (IRA).

    Read More Here

    The Lost Years of Billy Battles
    By Ronald E. Yates

    (2018 Overall Grand Prize Winner)

    For those not familiar with the series, Yates presents his books as works of “faction,” a story “based in part on fact” but also “augmented by narrative fiction.” The protagonist, William Fitzroy Raglan Battles, born in Kansas in 1860, lives a full 100 years and takes part in some of the most significant events of his time. He encounters key figures of the day (Bat Masterson, Wyatt Earp, President Wilson, Francisco “Pancho” Villa, among others), gives us their backstories, and quietly appraises them.

    Yates, a journalist with a keen eye for nuance and subtlety, has created a protagonist with superb critical thinking skills. William, a journalist, and occasional soldier examines people and transactions from every angle. Just as at ease in a Kansas saloon as he is at the captain’s table on a grand ocean liner on the Pacific, Billy Battles is also ruthlessly honest about his shortcomings and feels tremendous guilt when he acts impulsively or inadvertently causes harm to others. Yates has crafted a fully human character who is easy to admire, perhaps because he is admirably cognizant of his own flaws.

    Read More Here

    Reviewer’s Note:

    I’ve begun few books as eagerly as I did this one. Having read the first two volumes of Ronald E. Yates’ extraordinary trilogy, Finding Billy Battles, I couldn’t wait to continue his story in the final volume, The Lost Years of Billy Battles. The third installment lived up to the exceedingly high standard set in the first two volumes. 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.


    Thank you for celebrating our Goethe 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

    The Best Books Grand Prize Book Award Badge
    You know you want it…

    If you have a great Post 1750 Historical Fiction Story, submit it to us before the end of July to enter the 2024 CIBAs!

     

  • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

    The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

    Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

    The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction Short List to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalists. Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists. All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    These titles are the Semi-Finalists of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

    Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalist Badge

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

    • J.G. Schwartz – The Curious Spell of Madam Genova
    • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
    • Leah Angstman – Falcon in the Dive
    • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
    • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
    • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
    • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
    • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
    • Ron Singerton – The Refused
    • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
    • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
    • S. Lee Fisher – Becoming Olive W. – The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga: Book 1
    • Drema Drudge – Victorine
    • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
    • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
    • Orna Ross – After the Rising 
    • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
    • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
    • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
    • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
    • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
    • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
    • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
    • Judith Berlowitz – Home So Far Away
    • Jenni L. Walsh – A Betting Woman: A Novel of Madame Moustache

    Good Luck to All in the next rounds that will determine the which titles advance to the FINALISTS Level. 

    A few entries have been moved to the 2021 Laramie Book Awards as per judges recommendations for Americana, Prairie,

      MORE PROMOTION! 

      This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

      Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

      Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

      Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

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

      The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2020 Goethe Awards is Linda Ulleseit for The Aloha Spirit

      Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit
      Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

      We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

      Please click here for more information.

      For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

      Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

      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 Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

       

       

       

    • Celebrating Women’s History Month 2022 at Chanticleer

      Celebrating Women’s History Month 2022 at Chanticleer

      Happy Women’s History Month from Chanticleer

      Women’s History Month began being celebrated nationally in just 1981

      And back then it was only Women’s History Week! As a woman owned company, Chanticleer is a big proponent of Women’s History Month. Generally the month is about celebrating and recognizing the accomplishments of women throughout history. It also is the month where we celebrate International Women’s Day on March 8th. You can read more about current events happening with Women’s History Month here.

      The 2022 National Women’s History Theme
      “Women Providing Healing, Promoting Hope”

      President Jimmy Carter issued the first Presidential Proclamation in February 1980 declaring the Week of March 2nd – 8th 1980 as National Women’s History Week.

      “From the first settlers who came to our shores, from the first American Indian families who befriended them, men and women have worked together to build this nation. Too often the women were unsung and sometimes their contributions went unnoticed. But the achievements, leadership, courage, strength and love of the women who built America was as vital as that of the men whose names we know so well.” President Jimmy Carter’s Message to the Nation.

      What Exactly is International Women’s Day?

      The origins of the holiday may surprise you. The Socialist Party of America celebrated decided February 28, 1909 would be the first National Women’s Day. The day was meant to honor immigrant women who went on strike.

      The day gained international recognition just the following year, and has focused in the last century on equal rights for women and suffrage, and then evolved to include a greater focus on working class women of color. For an excellent deep dive into a fuller history of International Women’s Day you can read this article from the Washington Post here.

      This year’s theme for International Women’s Day is Break the Bias — #BreakTheBias – focusing on creating a gender equal world.

      Women in Words

      One of the most famous recent examples of a woman in the world of words is Amy Schneider on the hit show Jeopardy! She made history not only as the second longest streak holder (behind Ken Jennings), but also is the first openly transgender contestant to qualify for the Tournament of Champions and as the most successful woman to grace the show with both a 40-game streak and $1.3 million in winnings!

      When asked why she specifically did so well at the wordplay questions Schneider said, “I think a lot of it comes from doing crosswords for years, it’s given me practice at thinking of words as both a concept and a collection of letters at the same time.”

      Now Amy has quit her former job as a software engineering manager. She’s sitting down to focus on one of our favorite activities: writing a book! It’s wonderful to see a woman go so far in such a popular television program.

      Women at Chanticleer

      Recently we were excited to share the good news of Dr. Janice Ellis being featured across the nation as she discussed the recent decision surrounding the next Justice for the Supreme Court. If Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson is confirmed, she will be the fourth woman on the court and the first Black woman ever appointed to the US Supreme Court. You can read our report on Dr. Ellis’s full article here.

      Here is a link to our Homage to the Suffrage Centennial – Women’s Rights, Suffrage, the 19th Amendment post that celebrates the 100 Year Centennial Celebration of the 19th Amendment.

      Click on the above link to read more about these amazing women: Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Matilda Electa Joslyn, Alice stone Blackwell, Belle Squire, Ida B. Wells, Mary Church Terrel, and Harriet Tubman.

      Wyoming Territory Women could vote in 1869.

      It would take until 1920 for the 19th Amendment to pass that would allow women to vote.  ANOTHER 51 YEARS!


      Now let’s dive into some of our favorite recent reviews of books written by women:

      PAUSE
      By Sara Stamey
      First Place Winner in Somerset Awards

      Pause Cover

      Sara Stamey’s Pause features a hero who defies gravity, a scintillating setting, and a lovely backdrop for this riveting story.

      This story is about women: strong, weak, abused, cherished, divorced, cancer survivors, mothers, sisters, friends, frenemies. It is a book about survival and hope, about getting back to self to reemerge into a life worth living.

      Meet Lindsey, a fifty-two-year-old divorced woman going through menopause, living alone with her two cats, and worrying about her 1 and ¾ breasts. Readers will be hooked from the very beginning with the first of many poignant and funny journal entries. Here is Lindsey’s reality: a middle-aged woman suffering hot flashes that sear her skin and cause spells of nausea, who suffers PTSD from an abusive spouse.

      Continue reading here.

      THE ALOHA SPIRIT
      By Linda Ulleseit
      Grand Prize Winner in Goethe Awards

      Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

      In Linda Ulleseit’s novel The Aloha Spirit, we meet the plucky heroine, Dolores, as her father leaves her.

      “Dolores’s father deemed her useless when she was seven. Neither he nor her older brother, Pablo, ever said that, but every detail of their leaving told her so. Papa had tried to explain the Hawaiian custom of hānai to her. All she understood was the giving away, leaving her to live with a family not her own.”

      Her story starts in 1922; the place, multiethnic, multilingual Hawaii. Papa, a sugar cane cutter from Spain who worked in Hawaii, decides to take his son Pablo with him to seek his fortune in California. His wife died five years earlier. He leaves 7-year-old Dolores with a large family on Oahu in an arrangement called hānai, an informal adoption. Dolores doesn’t know the family well. She feels abandoned, with no idea when or if her father will send for her or return.

      Continue reading here.

      MYSTERY in HARARE
      By M.J. Simms-Maddox
      First Place Winner in M&M Awards

      Mystery in Harare Image

      In M.J. Simms-Maddox’s atmospheric thriller, Mystery in Harare: Priscilla’s Journey into Southern Africa, a former legislative aide’s wedding day turns deadly.

      As the second installment of The Priscilla Trilogy opens, Priscilla J. readies to walk down the aisle in an American church to marry Jonathan. Not the man of her dreams, but the man she believes may be right for her. Love isn’t exactly on the table, but Priscilla hopes it will be in the future.

      Before she can even take her vows, her soon-to-be husband is murdered in cold blood in front of her and those in attendance. Priscilla catches a glimpse of the murderer before succumbing to unconsciousness. She’s been drugged, and the kidnappers will confound and surprise readers.

      Continue reading here.

      ACROSS the DISTANCE
      By Christina A. Kemp

      In her nonfiction debut Across the Distance, Christina Kemp showcases a collection of eight personal stories that delve into the most poignant relationships throughout her life.

      The well-crafted narratives encompass relationships with her parents, brother, childhood friends, boyfriends, and mentors as they moved in and out of her life. Themes of love, loss, distance, self-preservation, and healing rise to the surface.

      Within the book, Kemp ponders the course of a romantic relationship as she realizes that love cannot make underlying differences disappear. At thirteen years old, her father died, and Kemp analyzes how she was able to come to terms with his death, reflecting on his kindness and heroic deeds. Several years later, she is diagnosed with the same condition that took her father; she feels as if she carries her father’s memory in the cells of her own body.

      Continue reading here.

      SOULMATED
      By Shaila Patel
      First Place Winner in Paranormal Awards

      Soulmated Cover

      Eighteen-year-old Liam Whelan must balance the pressure and danger of his new role leading his entire empath clan while searching for a fabled ‘soulmate’ in Shaila Patel’s paranormal romance novel, Soulmated.

      Since the age of six, guided by his father’s visions, Liam and his family have traveled across the United States, moving from town to town searching for the girl destined to “join” with Liam. However, no empath in centuries has found a soulmated union. No one knows what joining actually means. Liam tires of his parents’ search for what he considers a fantasy girl, but he agrees to give up one more year of his life. The family moves to North Carolina for Liam’s senior year.

      Continue reading here.

      SHAPING PUBLIC OPINION
      By Janice Ellis, Ph.D.
      Grand Prize Winner in Nellie Bly Awards

      Shaping Public Opinion Book Cover Image

      Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D., introduces the journalistic theories of Walter Lippmann in her new non-fiction work, Shaping Public Opinion: How Real Advocacy Journalism™ Should be Practiced.

      Walter Lippmann, considered one of the foremost journalists in the field over the last 100 years, was a mentor in absentia of Dr. Ellis in the art of advocacy journalism. During Lippmann’s 40+ year career, his columns were syndicated in over 250 newspapers nationwide and over 25 other international news and information outlets. Lippman focused on the ethical dissemination of information, especially about communities, society, and the world. A theory, which Dr. Ellis calls Real Advocacy Journalism™.

      Real Advocacy Journalism™ theory pertains to foundational behavior and ethical standing for those who report on, translate, and share information with the masses. This theory identifies the tension between individualism and collectivism, the private sector and public sector, the ruling elite, and the dormant masses.

      Continue reading here.


      Thank you for joining us on this adventure of books, and we hope you found a read that will help you celebrate the women in your life!

      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.

    • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Short List – CIBAs 2021

      The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Short List – CIBAs 2021

      Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

      The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

      The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

      Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

      These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction Long List to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards SHORT LIST. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalist positions. Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists. All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

      The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

      We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

      These titles are in the running for the Semi-Finals of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

      Short Listed for the 2021 CIBAs

      Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

      • J.G. Schwartz – The Curious Spell of Madam Genova
      • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
      • Leah Angstman – Falcon in the Dive
      • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
      • Anna Bullock – The Companion
      • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
      • Pamela Nowak – Never Let Go
      • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
      • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
      • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
      • Ron Singerton – The Refused
      • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
      • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
      • S. Lee Fisher – Becoming Olive W. – The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga: Book 1
      • Drema Drudge – Victorine
      • Sophia Alexander – Silk: Caroline’s Story
      • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
      • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
      • Orna Ross – After the Rising 
      • Alfred Nicols – Lost Love’s Return
      • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
      • Bryan Ney – Absaroka War Chief
      • Jenni L. Walsh – A Betting Woman: A Novel of Madame Moustache
      • Dana Mack – All Things That Deserve to Perish
      • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
      • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
      • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
      • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
      • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
      • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
      • J. E. Dyer – Barons
      • Judith Berlowitz – Home So Far Away

      PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

      This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

      Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

      Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

      Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

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

      The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2020 Goethe Awards is Linda Ulleseit for The Aloha Spirit

      Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit
      Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

      We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

      Please click here for more information.

      For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

      Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

      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 Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

       

       

       

    • THE ALOHA SPIRIT by Linda Ulleseit – Hawaiian Cultural Fiction, World War II Historical Fiction, Women’s Divorce Fiction

      THE ALOHA SPIRIT by Linda Ulleseit – Hawaiian Cultural Fiction, World War II Historical Fiction, Women’s Divorce Fiction

       

      A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Goethe Post-1750s The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

      In Linda Ulleseit’s novel The Aloha Spirit, we meet the plucky heroine, Dolores, as her father leaves her.

      “Dolores’s father deemed her useless when she was seven. Neither he nor her older brother, Pablo, ever said that, but every detail of their leaving told her so. Papa had tried to explain the Hawaiian custom of hānai to her. All she understood was the giving away, leaving her to live with a family not her own.”

      Her story starts in 1922; the place, multiethnic, multilingual Hawaii. Papa, a sugar cane cutter from Spain who worked in Hawaii, decides to take his son Pablo with him to seek his fortune in California. His wife died five years earlier. He leaves 7-year-old Dolores with a large family on Oahu in an arrangement called hānai, an informal adoption. Dolores doesn’t know the family well. She feels abandoned, with no idea when or if her father will send for her or return.

      There follow years of drudgery in which she works as an adult, laundering clothes for many people at least six days a week as part of her hānai arrangement. The hard-working couple she lives with struggles to survive. Befriended by Maria, an older hānai girl, Dolores escapes her situation when Maria leaves to marry Peter. Dolores goes to live with them, to help Maria through her pregnancy, and for a while, she gets to share their happy family and have some things of her own.

      At age 16, Dolores marries Manolo Medeiros, a boy she met on the beach and barely knows.

      She becomes part of his large, extended Portuguese family, which includes Alberto, a nephew four years younger than Dolores. She hopes the Medeiroses will be the family she always wished for. When she met him on the beach, Manolo gave his interpretation of the aloha spirit: “Aloha begins with love.”… “Love yourself first.”… “Love the land.”… “Love the people.”… “Aloha is the joyous sharing of life’s energy.”

      Dolores has her first child at age 17. But Manolo’s serious drinking problem, anger, and physical abuse of Dolores estranges him from her and the family, forcing her to take more control of her own life and protect her daughters. As Manolo’s behavior worsens, Alberto steps up to support Dolores, and they fall in love. But as part of a devout Catholic family, Dolores can’t possibly divorce Manolo.

      Novelist Ulleseit gives us a vivid picture of the life of a hard-working Hawaiian woman and her community in the early decades of the 20th century.

      Anyone interested in the history of Hawaii or in women’s history will enjoy this book. This book centers on abuse, overwork, and alcoholism as major themes, described in a matter-of-fact way. Dolores lives through interesting times, including the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the United States’ entry into the war, rationing, and the removal of Japanese Americans from Hawaii. Dolores goes to California and visits the World’s Fair, so we get to see the fair through her eyes. A glossary at the end of the book provides translations and a pronunciation guide for the many Hawaiian and Spanish words.

      Linda Ulleseit was born and raised in Saratoga, California, and taught elementary school in San José. In addition to The Aloha Spirit, she wrote Under the Almond Trees, another historical novel, which takes place in California starting in 1896. She has also written a series of Flying Horse books, young adult fantasy books set in medieval Wales. She has an MFA in writing from Lindenwood University, serves as marketing chair of Women Writing the West, and is a founding member of Paper Lantern Writers.

      Linda Ulleseit’s The Aloha Spirit won Grand Prize in the 2020 CIBA Goethe Book Awards for post-1750s Historical Novels.

      5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

    • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Long List – CIBAs 2021

      The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Long List – CIBAs 2021

      Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

      The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

      The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

      Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

      These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction entries to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards LONG LIST. Entries below are now in competition for 2021 Goethe Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalist positions. Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists.  All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

      The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

      We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person. 

      These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

      Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

      • Sandra Vasoli – The Masterpiece Pursuit
      • J.G. Schwartz – The Curious Spell of Madam Genova
      • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
      • Leah Angstman – Falcon in the Dive
      • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
      • Anna Bullock – The Companion
      • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
      • Pamela Nowak – Never Let Go
      • Michael J. Coffino – Truth Is in the House
      • Georgia Nicolle – Maiden Scars
      • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
      • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
      • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
      • Ron Singerton – The Refused
      • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
      • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
      • S. Lee Fisher – Becoming Olive W. – The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga: Book 1
      • Victoria Laurienzo – Toolie
      • Drema Drudge – Victorine
      • Sophia Alexander – Silk: Caroline’s Story
      • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
      • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
      • Julie Weary – Skeleton World
      • Orna Ross – After the Rising & Before the Fall
      • Alfred Nicols – Lost Love’s Return
      • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
      • Bryan Ney – Absaroka War Chief
      • Emmett J Hall – Runaway
      • Jenni L. Walsh – A Betting Woman: A Novel of Madame Moustache
      • Dana Mack – All Things That Deserve to Perish
      • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
      • Adriana Girolami – The Zamindar’s Bride
      • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
      • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
      • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
      • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
      • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
      • J. E. Dyer – Barons
      • Judith Berlowitz – Home So Far Away

      PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

      This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

      Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

      Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

      Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

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

      Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

      Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

      We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

      Please click here for more information.

      For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

      Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

      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.

    • Part Two of The 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

      Part Two of The 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

      We are deeply honored and excited to continue to announce the 2020 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs) with our second of three official postings.

      Click here to visit the First Posting out of Three Official Announcements for the 2020 CIBA Winners.

      Click here to visit the Third Posting out of Three Official Announcements for the 2020 CIBA Winners.

       

      VCAC21 laurel wreath

       

      The winners were recognized at a special CIBAs ceremony held on June 5th, 2021 in-person and by ZOOM webinars based at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

      The CIBA announcements were made LIVE with Chanticleerians participating and interacting from around the globe and North America.

      We cheered on the CIBA Premier Finalists with our bubbly of choice from wherever we were Zooming!

      Btw, Kiffer’s favorite Champagne!

      We want to thank all of the CIBA judges who read each and every entry and then comment, rate, and rank within each of the 24 CIBA Divisions. Without your labors of love for books, the Chanticleer International Book Awards would not exist. THANK YOU!

       

      We want to thank all of the authors and publishers who participated in the 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs). 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 2020—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.

      This post will recognize the First Place and Grand Prize Winners for the Laramie, Chaucer, Goethe, Hemingway, Chatelaine, Mark Twain, and Somerset Awards.

      Coveted Chanticleer Blue Ribbons!

      We are honored to present the

      2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards

      Grand Prize Winners 

      The 2020 CIBA Winners! 


       

      Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

      The LARAMIE Book Awards for

      American, Western, Pioneer, Civil War, and First Nation Novels

      The Grand Prize Winner isA blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Laramie Westerns for Trouble the Water, a novel by Rebecca Dwight Bruff

      TROUBLE THE WATER, A NOVEL by Rebecca Dwight Bruff

      Cover of Trouble The Water by Rebecca Dwight Bruff

       

      • Eileen Charbonneau – Mercies of the Fallen 
      • James Kahn – Matamoros 
      • Daniel Greene – Northern Wolf
      • David Fitz-Gerald – She Sees Ghosts? The Story of a Woman Who Rescues Lost Souls 
      • Gerry Robinson – The Cheyenne Story   
      • J.B. Richard – Jesse  
      • Mike Shellenbergar – Quail Creek Ranch 
      • Mike Shellenbergar –Refuge
      • J. Palma – The Chaffee Sisters   
      • Fred Dickey – Days of Hope, Miles of Misery – Love and Loss on the Oregon Trail 

      The Chaucer Awards for Historical Novels

      The CHAUCER Book Awards for

      Pre-1750s Historical Fiction 

      Grand Prize Winner is

      BIRD IN A SNARE by N.L. Holmes

      Cover of Bird in a Snare by N.L. Holmes

      • B.L. Smith – The Fall of the Axe
      • Helena P. Schrader – The Emperor Strikes Back
      • Denis Olasehinde Akinmolasire – The Mission to End Slavery
      • Thoren Syndergaard – Ripley of Valor
      • Brook Allen – Antonius: Son of Rome
      • Janet Wertman – The Path to Somerset
      • Regan Walker – Summer Warrior    

      Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

      The GOETHE Book Awards for

      Post-1750’s Historical Fiction 

      Grand Prize Winner is

      A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Goethe Post-1750s The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

      THE ALOHA SPIRIT by Linda Ulleseit

      Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit

      • Wendy Long Stanley – The Power to Deny       
      • Ben Wyckoff Shore – Terribilita      
      • Donna Scott – The London Monster   
      • Michelle Cameron – Beyond the Ghetto Gates    
      • P. L. Jonas – Beneath a Radiant Moon     
      • Dorothea Hubble Bonneau – Once in a Blood Moon  
      • Jule Selbo – Breaking Barriers: A Novel Based on the Life of Laura Bassi

      Ernest Hemingway looking off to the right

      The HEMINGWAY Book Awards for

      20th Century Wartime Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is

      THE QUISLING FACTOR by J.L. Oakley

       

                     


       

      Romance Fiction Award

      The CHATELAINE Book Awards for

      Romantic Fiction and Women’s Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is

      A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Chatelaine Romantic Fiction When the Wind Chimes by Mary Ting

      WHEN THE WIND CHIMES by Mary Ting

      Cover of When the Wind Chimes by Mary Ting

      • Linda Stewart Henley –Estelle: A Novel
      • Lindy Miller –The Magic Ingredient
      • Alexandrea Weis – The Christmas Spirit
      • Linda Lee Graham – A Thimbleful of Honor
      • Gayle Woodson – After Kilimanjaro
      • Eileen Charbonneau –Mercies of the Fallen
      • Carol Van Den Hende – Goodbye, Orchid       
      • Gail Noble-Sanderson – The Lavender Bees of Meuse   
      • Barb Warner Deane – The Whistle Stop Canteen     
      • T.K. Conklin – Promise of Spring    

      Mark Twain Awards

      The MARK TWAIN Book Awards

      for Humor and Satire

      Grand Prize Winner is

      A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Mark Twain Humor and Satire Arnold Falls by Charles Suisman

      ARNOLD FALLS by Charlie Suisman

      Cover of Arnold Falls by Charlie Suisman

      Blue and Gold Mark Twain First Place Winner Badge for Best in Category

      • Lenore Rowntree – Cluck
      • Wayne Edmiston – UNfatally Dead: to thaw or not to thaw?
      • Haris Orkin – You Only Live Once
      • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Bernie, I’m Glad You’re Dead
      • Alex J. Tremari – Dragoncast
      • Matt Tompkins – Odsburg
      • J.P. Kenna – Toward A Terrible Freedom           

      The SOMERSET Book Awards

      for Literary, Contemporary, and Mainstream Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is

      A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction A Season in Lights By Gregory Erich Phillips

      A SEASON IN LIGHTS by Gregory Erich Phillips

      Cover for A Season in Lights by Gregory Erich Phillips

      Blue and Gold Somerset First Place Winner Badge for Best in Category

      • Sara Stamey –Pause
      • Candi Sary –Magdalena
      • Kathleen Reid –Sunrise in Florence
      • T P Graf – As the Daisies Bloom
      • Julie Weary – Knowing Marjorie Thane
      • Barbara Linn Probst – Queen of the Owls
      • Jennifer Gold – Keep Me Afloat
      • Lainey Cameron – The Exit Strategy
      • Susan Wingate – How the Deer Moon Hungers  

       


      Congratulations to ALL!

      We will email each winner with more information about their prize packages and more information.

      Be sure to FOLLOW and LIKE us Facebook and on Twitter @ChantiReviews

      Please standby for our next post ( that will honor:

      • Journey Book Award Winners
      • Hearten Book Award Winners
      • Harvey Chute Book Award Winners
      • Mind and Spirit Book Award Winners
      • Nellie Bly Book Award Winners
      • Instructional and Insight Book Award Winners
      • Short Story Book Award Winners
      • Book Series Book Award Winners

      And the OVERALL GRAND PRIZE for the 2020 CIBAs!

      Stay Tuned for Part 3 that will announce the Overall Grand Prize Winner!

      We are now accepting entries into the 2021 and 2022 Chanticleer International Book Awards.

      Click here for more information and submission deadlines: https://www.chantireviews.com/contests/

      As always, if you have any questions, concerns, or suggestions, please email us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com   We will try our best to respond within 3 business days.

      Thank you for joining us in celebrating the 2020 CIBA Winners! – The Chanticleer Team