Author: sean-p-mahoney

  • HAPPY St. PATRICK’s DAY from CHANTICLEER! Visiting those Irish Stories We Love!

    HAPPY St. PATRICK’s DAY from CHANTICLEER! Visiting those Irish Stories We Love!

    Happy St. Patrick’s Day my dear Chanticleerians! We love all the myriad topics that this holiday brings to mind, Irish History, Mystery, Magic, Romance, and maybe a little beer!

    A few fun facts about the holiday:

    St Patrick’s is held on the traditional Day of Death, not St. Patrick’s Birthday

    Singing happy birthday to St. Patrick is a great idea, but the actual date of his birth is unknown?

    St Patrick's modern green color layered over blue
    Interestingly enough, the color associated with St. Patrick used to be blue!

    Why all the beer?

    St. Patrick’s Day is often seen as a religious tradition, but a holiday in the middle of Lent can be a little prohibitive in terms of how it’s celebrated. So, the Church would actually lift the restriction on alcohol consumption and meat for the day, so bring on the green beer and Rueben sandwiches!

    Three beer glasses at different shades of green

    Why the clover?

    The supposed history of the shamrock is that St. Patrick used the three leaves of the clover to explain the Holy Trinity when he preached.

    Closer to Home

    The US hosts the largest St Patrick’s Day Parade in the World in New York City, though of course that is postponed due to the pandemic. Oddly though, St. Patrick’s Day is only recognized as an official holiday in Suffolk County, Massachusetts, despite people all around the country choosing to celebrate it. However, we have declared March Irish Heritage Month since 1991.

    It’s not easy being Green

    Kermit the Frog

    Maybe skip the leprechaun outfits—no one likes to be a stereotype. Many Irish people, when they first migrated to the US during the potato famine of 1845-49, faced discrimination like most new arrivals here do to this day. They fought for both cultural and religious acceptance.

    And Now!

    Some of our favorite books we like to curl up with before the weather truly transitions to Spring.

    Historical Fiction

    To submit to one of our Historical Fiction Awards see the Chaucer Awards (pre-1750s Historical Fiction) here, the Goethe Awards (post-1750s Historical Fiction) here, and the Laramie Awards for Western Fiction here.

    I’ll TAKE YOU HOME KATHLEEN by J.P. Kenna
    Grand Prize Winner in the Goethe Awards

    I'll Take You Home Kathleen by J.P. Kenna

    The 1800s was the age of expansion in the United States, and railroads played a major part in the efforts to move Americans and industry to the Western shores. By the 1860s, this great country, the American experiment as it was called, became engulfed in a brother versus brother bloody Civil War. As the century drew to a close in the late 1880s and early 1890s, America was still reeling from the emotional and economic damage the war had caused. J.P. Kenna uses this struggle as the backdrop for his book I’ll Take You Home Kathleen, the second in his series titled Beyond the Divide.

    Kenna’s novel captures the years 1882 to 1898 with its focal point being the Irish immigrants who were seeking to escape famine, lack of land reform along with desiring religious freedom, came to America seeking a better life and more opportunity. The first wave of immigrants were seeking escape from one of the grimmest periods in Irish history–the Great Famine from 1845 to 1852. Author Kenna follows this hard-working group of immigrants who helped lead America into a post-Civil War, industrial, and economic boom that some have called the Second Industrial Revolution.

    Continue Reading here

    SHAME the DEVIL by Donna Scott
    First Place Winner in the Chaucer Awards

    Colin and Roddy Blackburne are sent into indentured servitude in England in 1643 with their father. Gavan Blackburne supported the divine right of King Charles I. Still, after the tragic death of his wife that both Colin and Roddy witnessed, he relinquishes his efforts to protect the remainder of his family.

    The Blackburnes become stable hands at Appleton Hall, where the viscount’s daughter Emma quickly catches the eye of young Colin. Emma is curious about the young Scots in the stable and drags along Alston, the son of Lord Stillingfleet. The four children start a friendship that intertwines their lives forever.

    Continue Reading here

    FENIAN’S TRACE by Sean P. Mahoney
    First Place Winner in the Goethe Awards

    Rory McCabe and Conor O’Neill are hard-working 12-year-olds, whose exploits and progress are narrated by the namesake of Clancy’s Pub who’s taken a liking to them. At times, he rewards the boys’ efforts with tales of their shared Irish heritage, its heroes and its glories. The boys have very different personalities, as Clancy discerns from their reactions to his lore. Rory is outraged as he hears of Ireland’s treatment by the British, while Conor accepts the information more quietly, studiously.

    The two boys will soon meet a beautiful girl, Maria, the daughter of a well-to-do neighbor secretly aligned with a revolutionary resistance movement. Both will fall in love, but of the two, Rory will be the more open about his interest, while Conor will hold back, respectful but clearly smitten.

    Continue Reading here

    Mystery and Thrillers

    To submit to one of our Mystery or Thriller Fiction Awards see the Mystery & Mayhem Awards here, the Clue Awards here, and the Global Thriller Awards here.

    EVIL UNDER the STARS: The Agatha Christie Book Club (Book 3) by C.A. Larmer
    First Place Winner in the Mystery & Mayhem Awards

    Who commits a murder in a crowd of a hundred people relaxing in a park, and how did the Agatha Christie Book Club miss the entire thing from only a few feet away? In the trendy Sydney suburb of Balmain, Kat Mumford, social media interior design star, has been murdered during the inaugural Cinema Under the Stars. Her distraught husband, Eliot, is clearly the prime suspect, but at the time of Kat’s strangulation, he is nowhere near her. In fact, no one was sitting near Kat, and the crowd seems to have been so absorbed by the movie, Agatha Christie’s Evil Under Sun, that no one saw a thing out of the ordinary.

    Continue Reading here

    LEGACY of LIES by Janet K. Shawgo

    The question is not if history will catch up with you but instead, when will it attack with a vengeance. Characters with a Legacy of Lies discover they can run, but they can’t hide from past actions. When Caren Johnson sees her family and life literally explode in flames, her uncertain future falls into the hands of a mysterious Irishman. His name is Declan Malone, and he claims he’s been sent by her brother to save her from assassins determined to kill her too. How can that be when her brother’s death was reported ten years ago? Declan’s reasons for a hasty departure from Ireland appear suspect and put a target on his back too.

    Continue Reading here

    Romance

    To submit to one of our Romance or Contemporary Fiction Awards see the Chatelaine Awards here and the Somerset Awards here.

    The PARTICULAR APPEAL of GILLIAN PUGSLEY by Susan Örnbratt
    First Place Winner in the Chatelaine Awards

    Irish-born Gillian McAllister knew she was meant for bigger things than a quiet life among her large extended family. Leaving home at seventeen against her protective father’s wishes, Gillian is looking for adventure – and that’s exactly what she finds. She was a nanny for a maharaja, a caretaker for WWII internees, and a nurse on the Isle of Man before finally becoming a wife, mother, and grandmother in London, Canada, where she spent the majority of her eighty-nine years.

    However, with only weeks to live after being stricken by cancer, she knows her time with her beloved granddaughter and namesake is truly precious. Before she goes, she wants to pass on the poems that capture her long, adventurous life to the junior Gilly in hopes the girl will use the poems to write about her adventure – her hidden love story.

    Continue Reading here

    BLAME it on the BET (Whiskey Sisters, Book 1) by L.E. Rico
    First Place Winner in the Chatelaine Awards

    Twenty-six-year-old Hennessy O’Halloran should have it all. She should be enjoying her overpriced apartment in St. Paul, Minnesota, her successful legal career, and her “friends with benefits” neighbor, but in the month since her father’s sudden death, all of those things have become unimportant.

    She thought she and her sisters had some time to figure out what to do with Jack’s legacy, an Irish pub he and their deceased mother built from scratch. Still, when they discover a substantial loan agreement secreted away in Jack’s belongings, they realize they only have six weeks to come up with over $100,000, money he borrowed against the business to help finance various expenses on his daughters’ behalves. She finds herself back home in Mayhem, Minnesota, living above the pub and trying desperately to find the funds to save the business.

    Continue Reading here

    Choileach, Chanticleer’s Irish cousin, wishes you this:  

    May your heart be light and happy, may your smile be big and wide, and may your pockets always have a coin or two inside!

    Happy St. Patrick’s Day from Sharon & Kiffer & David and the whole Chanticleer Team!

    And Remember! You can join the Chanticleer Family Anytime!

    Sign up for our Newsletter here! Join our online community, The Roost, here for discounts and special offers!

    Join us at our (Virtual) Chanticleer Authors Conference April 21-25, 2021. Read more about our headliners and workshops for that here!

    VCAC 21  will feature Bestselling Crime Author Cathy Ace, J.D. Barker – Master of Suspense, C.C. Humphreys – Historical Fiction with a twist,  Jessica Morrell – Top-tiered Developmental Editor,  and more!

    Check out our Editorial Services here and our Manuscript Overviews here, OR, if your work is already polished to a fine shine, it’s time to submit to our Editorial Reviews here and our Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs) here!

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

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

    Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

     

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

     

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


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

     

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

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

    Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalist Badge


    Now, Welcome to the GOETHE Hall of Fame!

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

    The Lost Years of Billy Battles by Ronald E. Yates

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

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

     

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

     

     

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

     

     

     

     

     


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

     

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

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

     

     

     

     

     

     


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

    The Jøssing Affair by J.L. Oakley

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

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

     

     

     

     

     

     


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

    For more information, please click here!

     

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

     

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The 2020 winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony during #CAC20. All Semi-Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the first-place winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of dinner, networking, and celebrations! 


    Goethe

    Some events that occurred during  Goethe’s lifetime:

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

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

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

     

    Resources 

    *Britannica Encyclopedia 

    ** Oxford Reference

    ***New Yorker Magazine

  • FENIAN’S TRACE by Sean P. Mahoney – Historical Fiction, British & Irish Literary Fiction, Irish Historical Fiction

    FENIAN’S TRACE by Sean P. Mahoney – Historical Fiction, British & Irish Literary Fiction, Irish Historical Fiction

    Rory McCabe and Conor O’Neill are hard-working 12-year-olds, whose exploits and progress are narrated by the namesake of Clancy’s Pub who’s taken a liking to them. At times, he rewards the boys’ efforts with tales of their shared Irish heritage, its heroes and its glories. The boys have very different personalities, as Clancy discerns from their reactions to his lore. Rory is outraged as he hears of Ireland’s treatment by the British, while Conor accepts the information more quietly, studiously.

    The two boys will soon meet a beautiful girl, Maria, the daughter of a well-to-do neighbor secretly aligned with a revolutionary resistance movement. Both will fall in love, but of the two, Rory will be the more open about his interest, while Conor will hold back, respectful but clearly smitten.

    When the deep divide between Ireland and its oppressors begins to heat up, the boys, older now and more independent, again respond differently. Rory wants to join in and even die, if need be, for freedom, while Conor takes a more practical path. Then circumstances force both of them to the test, to demonstrate their deepest loyalties.

    Author Sean P. Mahoney has won a prestigious Nicholl Fellowship for his screenplay version of Fenian’s Trace, which he subsequently adapted to the novelThe story focuses on the Easter Rising of 1916, when Irish patriots rose up, incensed by fighting alongside the British in World War I, while Britain continued the suppression of Irish rights. It is into this hotbed of revolutionary fervor that Rory and Conor, along with many others, are swept up.

    Mahoney peppers his narrative with atmospheric touches, including many Irish words and speech cadences (captured wonderfully in the audiobook narration of Liam Carney) along with the fabled legacy of Fenian’s Trace, a patriot’s gravesite. It is on those grounds that the boys establish their chosen fortress, with significant consequences.

    This wide-ranging panorama is a rich mix of folklore and fact, heroism during warfare, politics, and a star-crossed youthful love affair that will take on increasingly deeper meaning and, in the end, call for the ultimate sacrifice. Fenian’s Trace will appeal to readers across several genres, and as one might expect from Mahoney’s success in screenwriting, readers will delight in this colorful tale that begs for a cinematic version.

    Fenian’s Trace won 1st Place in the 2017 Goethe Awards for Historical Fiction (post-1750s).