Author: sandra-bowman

  • The Historical Resonance of Banned Books Week

    The Historical Resonance of Banned Books Week

    Banned Books Week

    Two men watching as a book burns from the movie Fahrenheit 451
    From left to right we have Michael Shannon as Captain Beatty and Michael B. Jordan as Guy Montag in the screen adaptation of Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451

    It’s still here because it still happens

    Banned Books Week, celebrated during the last full week of September, brings authors, publishers, readers, educators, and activists together to underscore the importance of intellectual freedom and our constitutional right to access information. It’s an event that serves as a platform to advocate for free expression and to highlight the detrimental effects of censorship.books, banned, stamp, pile

    The Effects of Banning Books

    Banning books not only limits access to diverse perspectives but also stifles critical thinking and discussion. When we silence voices, we miss out on the chance to engage with different experiences and viewpoints and leaves underrepresented people isolated and oftentimes ostracized due to a lack of understanding and empathy for the struggles, triumphs, and complexities of others.

    Banned Books Week is an annual event first organized by the American Library Association (ALA) in 1982. It shines a light on the many books that have been challenged or banned in schools and libraries, and it reminds us of the vital role literature plays in shaping our understanding of the world and who we are as people. We are still advocating for these rights forty-two years later.

    People, library, books, reading, shelves

    Fighting Book Bans in the Golden Age of Russian Literature

    Bans have been used put into place since Biblical times, but a more modern version is found in Imperial Russia. It’s an interesting point in history when skilled authors used fiction as a way to subvert censors and challenge the structure of their societies through the written word.

    Russian writers, the great storytellers of the “Golden Age” of literature (18th & 19th century), were masters of observation during a time when their society was rapidly changing. Western ideas brought back with soldiers from the Napoleonic Wars provided Russian citizens the freedom of thought for the first time in their long history as a monarchy. In a matter of a few years the Russian intelligentsia absorbed the knowledge of over three hundred years of Western Enlightenment and became the catalyst for conversations on the rights of man and the role of church and state in the lives of their citizens. Suddenly, a feudal society’s eyes popped open from a deep sleep and they realized their dreams of freedom were real and within reach.

    A black and white photo of seven Russian men, all of whom wrote banned books.
    The great Russian writers–top row from left: Stepan Skitalets, Fyodor Chaliapin, Yevgeny Chirikov; bottom row from left: Maxim Gorky, Leonid Andreyev, Ivan Bunin, Nikolay Teleshov.

    The Russian people were in a position to expand their knowledge base exponentially and soon conversations heard in the salons and receiving rooms of St. Petersburg, Russia’s cultural capital at the time, had become passionate with talk of the “rights of man”. Influence the church and state had over the middle class decreased and their power over the people began slipping away. The common man gained the ability to ask his own questions and decide his own fate for the first time in Russian history, and as they sipped their vodka they began to speak of revolution.

    And a few wrote.

    Government censors, focused solely on traditional news sources, weren’t quick enough to pick up on the messages behind fictional plots and this gave writers a way to move the private conversations they were having out into the mainstream. As a result, Russian literature stands to this day as some of the most important novels in our society, regardless of where your origins lie. By examining the human condition with compelling narratives these great Russian writers succeeded in questioning the way we live and think about our lives, and all under the watchful eyes of those who would have banned those same ideas if presented as non-fiction.

    boy, reading, book, lightbulb, question mark

    Celebrating the Freedom to Read and Write

    During Banned Books Week, libraries, schools, and bookstores host a variety of events to celebrate the freedom to read. Read-alouds and panel discussions highlight the significance banned books, and social media campaigns are now engaging audiences online, encouraging them to share their favorite banned books, quotes, and personal stories.

    How You Can Get Involved

    1. Read a Banned Book: Pick up a book from the list of frequently challenged titles. Some notable examples include To Kill a Mockingbird, The Catcher in the Rye, and The Hate U Give.
    2. Support Your Local Library: Visit your local library and participate in Banned Books Week events. Libraries often provide resources and information about the challenges they face.
    3. Raise Awareness: Use your social media platforms to spread the word. Share posts about your favorite banned books and why they matter to you.
    4. Engage in Conversations: Discuss the importance of free expression with friends, family, and colleagues. Encourage open dialogue about challenging topics often found in literature.
    5. Advocate for Change: Get involved with local advocacy groups that support intellectual freedom. Attend school board meetings to voice your support for diverse literature in schools.

    hand, book, bookshelves, blue

    Banned Books Week serves as a powerful reminder of the importance of free expression and the need to protect the right to read whatever we want to read. By celebrating literature that has been challenged or banned, we reaffirm our commitment to fostering an inclusive society that values diverse perspectives. So, let’s turn the page, open our minds, and embrace the stories that challenge us to think critically and compassionately about the world around us.


    If you are interested in reading books that challenge beliefs and ideas, we suggest these title:

    Tsarina's Crown Cover

    Tsarina’s Crown

    Jerena Tobiasen delivers a sharp, first-rate novel in Tsarina’s Crown,first installment in TheNightingale and Sparrow Chronicles,capturing a precise panorama of Russian politics and British espionage during a delicate period in time.

    The year is 1915 and Simon Temple, a young naval officer aboard the RMS Guardian— a British Royal Navy Ship— patrols the North Sea for questionable communications and marine activity. Months later, he is entrusted by the British crown to serve as a liaison on a covert mission in Petrograd, Russia. Simon is careful not to blow his cover as a young aristocrat while he is thrust into the world of international politics, the ruthless Russian Revolution, and becomes caught right in the middle of two powerful royal families.

    Read More here…

    Remedy for a Broken Angel

    Remedy for a Broken Angel by Toni Ann Johnson is an intense examination of the troubled personal histories of two beautiful and talented women of color.

    Their stories are told in alternating chapters which reveal the mother’s and her daughter’s attempts to reclaim and understand their broken pasts. Each chapter is a revelation into the pain and damage caused by unknown family secrets. Both women struggle with a legacy of shame and self-blame for the price they’re paying for never hearing the truth. Each must learn the lessons found in past years of failure to communicate.

    Read More here…

    America's Forgotten Suffragists Cover

    America’s Forgotten Suffragists
    Nellie Bly Awards Grand Prize Winner

    Comprehensive in its own right, America’s Forgotten Suffragists by Nicole Evelina is an essential addition to the canon of women’s suffrage and first-wave feminism.

    Equal parts local history of women’s right to vote in the nineteenth century and biography of Virginia and Francis Minor, America’s Forgotten Suffragists illuminates the story of a wife-and-husband feminist duo who were the first to fight for women’s suffrage at the Supreme Court level.

    Read More here…

    Seeing Glory

    Seeing Glory by Bruce Gardner is a sweeping, thought-provoking Christian historical novel of the American Civil War. The novel portrays the critical roles of family ties and religious faith in shaping personal attitudes and actions towards the horrors of slavery and the war itself.

    Spanning the era from the famous abolitionist John Brown’s Pottawatomie Massacre in 1856 through the end of the war nine years later, Seeing Glory focuses on the gut-wrenching conflicts over slavery and the southern way of life faced by David, Emma, and Catherine Hodge, fictional siblings, raised on a wealthy plantation in Virginia.

    She Had Been a Tomboy Cover

    She Had Been a Tomboy

    She Had Been a Tomboy: Raising a Transgender Child, a Mother’s Journey by Sandra Bowman is a deeply revealing memoir about a protective mother who watches her sensitive child grow into someone who is familiar, yet new.

    This moving narrative tells the story of her two children: how they were born and how they grew. She Had Been a Tomboy hops from one period of the children’s lives to another, showing how the elder child matures and how the female within slowly blooms into being, little by little revealing herself.

    But the long journey to realization and understanding of self was not easy, nor was it gentle.

    Read More here…


    Open a banned book this week and prove you are a champion for the freedom of thought during Banned Books Week! 

    book, reading, cup, desk, bracelets, pages, hands


    Thank you for joining us for this Writer Toolbox Article

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    There is so much to learn and do with Chanticleer!

    From our Book Award Program that has Discovered the Best Books since the early 2010s to our Editorial Book Reviews recognizing and promoting indie and traditional authors, Chanticleer knows your books are worth the effort to market professionally!

    Helpful Toolbox Articles:

    When you’re ready,did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services?We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email us at info@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.

    And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.

  • The Colorful History of the Rainbow Flag; Celebrating Pride Month and LGBTQ+ Writers with Chanticleer

    The Colorful History of the Rainbow Flag; Celebrating Pride Month and LGBTQ+ Writers with Chanticleer

    Pride Month is back, and it’s time to celebrate the beautiful diversity of the people of the LGBTQ+ community!

    Pride Week Gay Pride Harvey Milk Lesbian Trans Bi Sexual

    Over the last few decades, the LGBTQ+ community has made significant progress in legitimizing their cultural significance in the literary world. A 2022 report from NPD BookScan shows that print book sales of U.S. LGBTQ+ fiction are continuing to surge in the adult, children’s, and YA categories, and in 2021, sales reached 5 million units, more than double than in 2020!

    There is no question that representation of the LGBTQ+ community is a vital asset to the writing community, and we want to celebrate their contributions by examining one of their most notable symbols; the rainbow flag!

    First Gay Pride flag
    The original 1978 Pride Flag as designed by Gilbert Baker.

    The LGBTQ+ Rainbow Flag

    In 1978, gay rights activist Harvey Milk asked Gilbert Baker, an openly gay artist and a drag queen, to design a symbol of pride for the gay community to promote their cause and have a unifying symbol for the many diverse cultures that are part of the LGBTQ+ community.

    When asked later in an interview, Baker said, “Our job as gay people was to come out, to be visible, to live in the truth, as I say, to get out of the lie. A flag really fit that mission, because that’s a way of proclaiming your visibility or saying, ‘This is who I am!’” Viewing rainbows as natural flags found in the sky, he adopted eight colors for the stripes, with each color representing a specific aspect of gay life; pink for sex, red for life, orange for healing, yellow for sunlight, green for nature, turquoise for art, indigo for harmony, and violet for spirit.

    LGBTQ+ Pride Flag Rainbow Flag
    The most recent version of the Intersex Equality Rights pride flag, as designed by Valentine Vecchietti.

    Intersex-Inclusive Progress Pride Flag

    After a number of redesigns, a new flag was commissioned in 2021 to fully represent the growing diversity of the LGBTQ+ community. Called the Intersex-Inclusive Progress Pride Flag, it was created by Valentino Vecchietti of the UK’s Intersex Equality Rights organization and is now universally recognized as the flag that represents the larger LGBTQ+ community.

    The new flag was designed to represent the many groups of people fighting for inclusivity within their community, incorporating the original colors of the pride flag and adding six more colors. Along with the original six colors, it now sports a chevron with colors to represent the marginalized LGBTQ+ communities of color, HIV/AIDS patients, and trans and non-binary persons. A purple circle on a yellow background is representative of the belief that all people, regardless of sexual orientation, are unbroken, whole, and have the right to make decisions about their own bodies.

     

    The evolution of the LGBTQ+ rainbow flag is a visual record of the gay pride movement as well as the community’s growing diversity and its goal of inclusivity. We salute all those who fight for the rights of the LGBTQ+ community and wish them a great Pride Week as they celebrate the advances they’ve made in being seen!


    The LGBTQ+ writing community is thriving in 2024, and Chanticleer is proud of the many great authors we get to work with throughout the year! 

    We invite you to take a look at the work of just a few of the amazing authors we’ve worked with and their writing that touches on the LGBTQ+ community!

    ABOMINATION CHILD
    By Erika Shepard

    Abomination Child Cover

    Abomination Child is a coming-of-age novel, a piece of historical fiction, and a lesson to us all. Erika Shepard tells the story of Brianna, a young girl growing up in Missouri during the 1960s, struggling to be accepted.

    Within her community, Brianna is seen on the outside as a boy, and everyone knows her as Brian. She confides in her older sister Liz, who supports her and helps her face a world that doesn’t understand. Spanning many years, Abomination Child follows Brianna’s journey of survival, hoping that one day she’ll be able to live freely as herself.

    Brianna’s – known then as Brian – troubles start after his father learns that he dressed in girl’s clothes at a school Halloween dance. Deeply conservative and religious, Brian’s father hits him for what he believes is an abominable perversion caused by the Devil. For Brian, it’s as simple as knowing he is really a girl, a girl named Brianna.

    Continue Reading here…

    SHE HAD BEEN A TOMBOY
    By 

    She Had Been a Tomboy Cover

    She Had Been a Tomboy: Raising a Transgender Child, a Mother’s Journey by Sandra Bowman is a deeply revealing memoir about a protective mother who watches her sensitive child grow into someone who is familiar, yet new.

    This moving narrative tells the story of her two children: how they were born and how they grew. She Had Been a Tomboy hops from one period of the children’s lives to another, showing how the elder child matures and how the female within slowly blooms into being, little by little revealing herself.

    But the long journey to realization and understanding of self was not easy, nor was it gentle.

    Continue Reading here…

    THE MOONSTONE GIRLS
    By Brooke Skipstone

    Moonstone Girls Book Cover Image

    In The Moonstone Girls, award-winning author Brooke Skipstone unravels a story about seventeen-year-old Tracy Franks. Tracy has a secret that in 1968 could have deadly consequences. You see, Tracy is gay.

    In her hometown of San Antonio, Tracy is forced to hide behind the “girl next door” facade, never allowing her true identity to emerge. Her only confidante is her brother, Spencer. He understands her turmoil exactly because Spencer is also gay.

    Neither teenager feels free to talk about their true feelings with their family, especially their father, Art. Art constantly scolds his son for his feminine behavior, his desire to become a pianist instead of joining the military. Though he also shows his displeasure with Tracy, she, unlike her brother, fights back, but only in the privacy of their home.

    Continue Reading here…

    WALTZING A TWO-STEP
    By Dan Juday

    Waltzing A Two-Step Book cover image

    Dan Juday’s memoir Waltzing A Two-Step is a humble and compassionate look at his formative years.

    Born a few years after the second world war, Dan experiences a peaceful and happy childhood in rural Indiana, moving frequently before the family settles on a rural area of land named Springwood in Clinton County, Indiana. The Juday family were devout Catholics and enrolled Dan and his siblings in Catholic schools until the family moved to Springwood. Public school became the only option for the siblings. There Dan does his best to fit in but his status as a minority Catholic in a mostly Protestant community in the 1950s brings its own challenges.

    For Dan, his struggles don’t stop there.

    Continue Reading here…

    UNANIMITY: Spiral Worlds Book 1
    By Alexandra Almeida

    Alexandra Almeida probes the philosophical and ethical depths of wealth, technology, pop culture, and religion in a world ravaged by global warming through her sci-fi adventure,Unanimity: Spiral Worlds #1.

    Readers will delight in the gradual reveal of both the technology within the story and the dramatic history between many of those involved with the creation and evolution of that technology.

    Tom, a screenwriter, works with Harry, the genius inventor of the world’s most popular AI (artificial intelligence) app, to create a simulation that will nudge people toward acting morally.

    Continue Reading here…

    UNSIGHTLY BULGES (A Trailer Park Princess Cozy Mystery, Book 2)
    By Kim Hunt Harris 

    Salem Grimes has a lot of goals – lose more weight than her friend Trisha, find a dress for the upcoming date she doesn’t really want to go on, and keep her dog, Stump, from throwing up on the kitchen floor. Unfortunately, solving a murder (again) isn’t on her to-do list, but Salem is thrown into another mystery completely against her will when she sees a body in a Sonic dumpster.

    When her BFF Viv, an 80-ish firecracker of a woman with a penchant for expensive shoes, hears about it, she can’t wait to get started cracking the case. After all, she and Viv have already solved one mystery, and Viv is convinced their unofficial PI firm, Discreet Investigations, can find the murderer. But the ladies quickly realize they have their work cut out for them when the victim is identified as CJ Hardin, golden boy physician and local Hope for Homes organizer who recently “came out” in a very public way and stirred up a huge controversy in Lubbock, Texas.

    Controversy and theories swirl since CJ was thought to have run off days earlier with the $200K in funds from a recent Hope for Homes fundraising effort. When the murder is labeled a hate crime, Salem, Viv, and their newest partner Dale find themselves in some scary situations, including an altercation with Rambo the fighting rooster. Between being laughed at by one hot police detective she’s had crushed on since fourth grade, fighting her urge to drink herself “cool” in order to keep from throat-punching Dale, Salem has to find a killer before the community implodes.

    Continue Reading here…

    Pride week LGBTQ+ ally

    We would like to wish all the people of the LGBTQ+ community, and those who love and care for them, a very Happy Pride Week! 


    Thank you for joining us in celebrating the people of the LGBTQ+ community!

    Do you have a LGBTQ+ themed book that deserves to be discovered? You can always submit your book for an Editorial Review with Chanticleer!

    Chanticleer Editorial Review Packages are optimized to maximize your digital footprint. Reviews are one of the most powerful tools available to authors to help sell and market their books. Find out what all the buzz is about here.

    Have an Award Winner?

    The tiers of achievement for the CIBAs

    Submitting to Book Awards is a great way to get your book discovered! Anytime you advance in the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards, your name and book are promoted right here on our website, through our newsletter, and across social media. One of the best ways to engage in long tail marketing!

    Thank you again to the authors who wrote these wonderful books, and to the LGTBQ+ people around the world! You are so loved and appreciated!

  • SHE HAD BEEN A TOMBOY: Raising a Transgender Child, a Mother’s Journey by Sandra Bowman – Family Memoirs, Parenting, LGBTQ+

    SHE HAD BEEN A TOMBOY: Raising a Transgender Child, a Mother’s Journey by Sandra Bowman – Family Memoirs, Parenting, LGBTQ+

     

    She Had Been a Tomboy: Raising a Transgender Child, a Mother’s Journey by Sandra Bowman is a deeply revealing memoir about a protective mother who watches her sensitive child grow into someone who is familiar, yet new.

    This moving narrative tells the story of her two children: how they were born and how they grew. She Had Been a Tomboy hops from one period of the children’s lives to another, showing how the elder child matures and how the female within slowly blooms into being, little by little revealing herself.

    But the long journey to realization and understanding of self was not easy, nor was it gentle.

    There were numerous hurdles to be crossed, not only for the transgender girl, then young woman, but the rest of her family.

    Author Bowman writes about the challenges for the younger child as well, who feels overlooked so often as his older sibling takes precedence. He overachieves in order to make up for the pains suffered by his parents, such as his father’s frequent work-driven absences that leave his mother, the narrator, isolated and struggling.

    “Robert flies here, he travels there. He works hard. I am alone.”

    Once they learn to work together, the family struggles to understand how they can help both children.

    They wrestle with emotional highs and lows, including those of the mother-narrator herself.

    “I hurt profoundly. Again I cry. I sit and I stare. At absolutely nothing.”

    Despite going through so many trials, the daughter slowly grows to understand herself and her role in the world.

    “Because again, she must raise herself up. … She will raise herself, by herselfshe will get herself to a state of autonomy.”

    As her daughter matures and eventually flourishes, the mother-narrator slowly adjusts to her new reality, as do the father and the younger child, learning about themselves, the world, and their family.

    Author Bowman’s highly stylized writing flows, serving the story she tells of her daughter’s coming-of-age. The reader empathizes with the family’s effort to grow.

    Overall, Bowman’s memoir about her transgender daughter is an emotional, forceful tale about discovery, illumination, and eventual understanding.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews