Category: News

  • 10 QUESTION INTERVIEW WITH MULTI-AWARD WINNING AUTHOR JANET OAKLEY – Author Interview, Historical Fiction, Award-Winner

    10 QUESTION INTERVIEW WITH MULTI-AWARD WINNING AUTHOR JANET OAKLEY – Author Interview, Historical Fiction, Award-Winner

    Janet Oakley is one of those authors who seems to show up everywhere – all at once! She’s won multiple awards and rightly so. Her novels and short stories are compelling, rich, and historically precise. She is a generous author and committed to her work. She knows what it takes to succeed in this business.

    Ladies and gentlemen, I give you multi-award winning author, Janet Oakley.

    Chanticleer: Tell us a little about yourself: How did you start writing?

    Oakley: I was born in D.C. and grew up Pittsburgh. It was a creative house with my mother a pianist, my dad a physicist. There was no TV in the house, so we pretty much used our imaginations. My parents both loved books and read to my brothers and I every night. The original Carnegie Library in downtown Pittsburgh was my haunt.

    Like many published authors, I started writing early—in second grade. My oeuvre was a series, illustrated by myself, called Funny Bunny.

     

    In fifth grade, I wrote my first historical fiction, with questionable historical facts. In college when I majored in history, my writing became more serious as I learned to do research and write essays and articles. In my sophomore year, I got an internship at the Smithsonian Institute. I was given an office in the annex of the Library of Congress and spent a whole quarter going through early 19th century magazines and newspapers looking for images of Native Americans. I returned to D.C. my senior year to research my thesis on the Comanche Indians as Prisoners of War and after graduation, I was awarded a stipend to work in the Smithsonian’s Anthropology Archives. I worked there until I left for Hawaii the following year. This experience of doing research and writing in my early years led to writing my first novel, The Jossing Affair. I haven’t looked back.

    Chanticleer: That’s quite a rich growing up there, Janet.  When did you realize you that you were an author and not only a historian?

    Oakley: I spent nearly ten years pitching and query Jøssing and the other novels I was developing with little success but it wasn’t until I took a writing intensive class in 1999 at UW that I found a different way to publish and expressed myself– the personal essay. Though not one of my assignments at UW, the first thing I ever had published, other than some letters to the editor at my local newspaper, was an essay in Rugby Magazine, entitled, “On Being Rugby Mom.” I had started the essay on lunch break at UW. That success led to sending in essays to the Cup of Comfort series (part of the Writer’s Digest publishing house) I had five essays published in anthologies with titles like A Cup of Comfort for Women, A Cup of Comfort for Mothers and Sons and others. In 2006, I won first place at Surrey International Writers for my essay, “Drywall in the Time of Grief.”  I realized then that I could write material acceptable for publication and get edited by a great editor. (We’re still friends) Then I could say I was an author. When indie publishing came into being, I was ready to publish my novels.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Chanticleer What genre best describes your work?

    Oakley: Historical fiction, for sure. I love history and those little known, often forgotten events in both local and international history. Like Hawaiians in the Pacific Northwest in the 19th century (Oakley’s novel Mist-Chi-Mas: A Novel of Captivity is a timeless and important story that addresses what life was like for Pacific Islanders in the PNW). Women climbing mountains in skirts in 1907 (Timber Rose is Oakley’s novel about the first women’s hiking club). These historical tidbits have become the background for several of my historical novels. Historical fiction, however, has many aspects to it and can fit into thrillers and mysteries.  My WWII novel, The Jøssing Affair, has been called a historical thriller and for the past three years, I have been writing mysteries set in Hawaii—a place I love—with some history in them. The Jøssing Affair was awarded the Goethe Book Awards Grand Prize  for Historical Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards.

    Coconut Island for one. Its historical background rests on the 1946 April Fools Day tsunami that wiped out Hilo. I got an inkling of its destruction and loss of life while teaching at Hilo Adult School—one of my students, a 4th-grade teacher, was a survivor. It wasn’t until I researched the tsunami for Coconut Island, did I learn its full impact: 96 people lost, homes and businesses destroyed. The tsunami arrived from the Aleutian Islands in under 5 hours. History has its own compelling storyline which I love to set my characters in and see how they do. Even in a mystery. I can’t seem to get history out of anything I write!

    Chanticleer:  So even your mysteries have a strong vein of historical running through them. Can you tell us a little more about that? 

    Oakley: Curiosity and family stories of homesteading in Kansas, Indian Territory and the NW in the late 1800s got me hooked on history. I grew up on stories of one great-grandfather who was a Union surgeon at the Battle of Gettysburg, another great-grandfather in the 1870s Hayden expedition to Yellowstone. My great-grandmother saw Lincoln on his way to his inauguration, then later went out to Kansas where her parents taught at Shawnee Mission. I’ve always wondered about people who lived in different times. What type of technology did they have available? How did they manage with their technology? What their lives were like without our modern conveniences. What made them succeed, be happy in life? My mom also influenced me as she loved history and love historical fiction herself.

    Chanticleer: How does being an author affect your involvement in your community?

    Oakley: Writing historical fiction has opened opportunities to talk about the history behind my novels. The Jøssing Affair, set in Norway during WWII, has been a popular book club choice as we have a large community of Scandinavians in the state, but I think my first published novel, Tree Soldier, has a more important impact.

    Janet Oakley at Village Books with her Chanticleer Grand Prize Ribbon

    I grew up listening to my mother’s stories of the Civilian Conservation Corps boys from New Jersey who showed up at Lowman, ID in 1933. Part of the New Deal was to put young men back to work in environmental projects, these young men had been lifted out of their block in Jersey City and sent West. Tree Soldier came as a result of my need for a history paper for my Master’s in Elementary Education. I interviewed five gentlemen who had been in the CCC. I began to present talks on the CCC and in 2013 was accepted into the Washington Humanities program. For two years, I went around Washington State talking about the CCC in Washington State (1933-1941) each time before I went to a new community, I researched the camps in their area and added the findings to my talk. Then Tree Soldier was awarded the Chanticleer Grand Prize for Best Book. A presentation in Clarkston, WA led to an invitation to have Tree Soldier be selected as an Everybody Read for the Palouse area in both Washington and Idaho. What an honor! And a learning experience on how to present and engage with readers in the libraries. Not much later, Tree Soldier was again a book read for four libraries on the Olympic Peninsula.

    I think the thing I am most proud of is being behind the installation of a CCC worker statue at Glacier Washington ranger station. As an educator, for me, this statue from a national CCC program, helps visitors to the Mount Baker National Forest learn and appreciate the work of out-of-work boys from long ago. When we dedicated the statue on June 16th, a 98-year-old CCC boy from Camp Glacier came. It was so wonderful to see the attention he received. Since then a 96-year-old CCC boy has contacted me through his granddaughter. I hope to meet him soon.

    Chanticleer: Good work, Janet! What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Oakley: I’m working on the sequel to The Jøssing Affair, set in Norway a year after WWII. Rewriting my Kindle World mystery novellas and publishing them as Hilo Bay Mysteries. Once the third book is complete, I plan to do a boxset both in ebook and paperback.

    Chanticleer: Can’t wait to see where this book takes you. It’s important to work on your craft. What do you do to grow your author chops?

    Oakley: I write every day, usually in the morning starting at 8:00 AM. I belong to several writers groups, including a critique (going for 16 years now) and I am a member of the Independent Writers Studio where I work on WIPs with a wonderful editor and other members.

    Chanticleer: That seems to be more than a simple commitment – it’s a way of life! Good for you. What craft books have helped you the most?

    Oakley: Better than craft books, I have been taking classes from the authors and well-writing teachers such as Donald Maas on and off for over 25 years, Diana Gabaldon, Robert Dugoni and many other fine writers and teachers. Usually at conferences.

    Chanticleer: What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Oakley: Write a review on Amazon. It carries more weight than any other review site. Books need reviews in this crowded publishing world.

    Chanticleer: Good point. What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Oakley: For the past 35 years, I have researched and then taught hands-on history workshops to at schools children through Allied Arts and on my own and at a county museum. I wrote several social studies curriculum for Whatcom County schools and a national park. Following the publication of the curriculum for the San Juan Island National Historical Park in 1995, I began to give demonstrations on 19th-century foodways there. Soon I joined English Encampment, an annual gathering of reenactors at the national park as Miss Libby, an 1860 schoolmarm. Great fun! I also garden. Like words, the flowers and veggies need nurturing.

    Chanticleer: Thank you for being with us, Janet Oakley. You are an inspiration and your passion is contagious!


    Now, it’s your turn to show your support! Please find and follow Janet as she shares her writing, life, and insight into living a successful author-life.

    You can find her here:

    Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/janet.oakley.12

    Website: https://www.jloakleyauthor.com/ 

    If you would like to read Oakley’s books, here is a list of her titles can be found at Village Books, Barnes Nobles, or by clicking on the Amazon links below:

    Timber Rose

    Tree Soldier

    Mist-chi-mas: A Novel of Captivity

    The Jossing Affair

    The Hilo Bay Mysteries:

    Coconut Island

    Hilina Pali

    Volcano House

     

     

  • Connect with  Chanticleer! Our Events Calendar

    Connect with Chanticleer! Our Events Calendar

    If you are planning on attending any of the following events or are just in the area, please do send us an email, a Tweet, or Facebook message if you would like to contact us about getting together.  Our contact information will be listed at the end of this blog post.

     

    Of course, what tops our list is the Chanticleer Authors Conference and CIBA Banquet & Ceremony that will take place in Bellingham, Wash. 

    Unlock the Secrets of Successful Publishing at CAC19! Featuring sessions on audiobooks, podcasts, marketing & branding, distribution, metadata, Scribd (the Netflix of Publishing), and much more.

     

    ALA Midwinter Convention – Seattle, Wash.  January 25 – 28, 2019     #ALA2019

    Chanticleer Reviews is exhibiting at the American Library Association Mid-Winter Convention Table 613. Do stop by to enter our raffle for a Chanticleer Thermal Mug ($28 value) and Show Specials. And also to find out where Chanticleer is “Happy Hour-ing”  in Seattle.

    London Book Fair, Olympia London, U.K.   March 12-14, 2019     #LBF19

    The London Book Fair is the global marketplace for rights negotiation and the sale and distribution of content across print, audio, TV, film and digital channels. We are collaborating with Alliance of Independent Authors, so you can find us under their moniker. 

    LBF expects more than 25,000 attendees and 1,500 exhibitors. We are #EXCITED!

    Olympia London, Hammersmith Road, Kensington, London.  Andy and Kiffer will be in London for a couple of days before LBF. We would be thrilled if you stop by to see us or connected with us if you are in London.

     

     

    Left Coast Crime  Conference, Vancouver, British Columbia;  March 29 – 31, 2019.

    Left Coast Crime is an annual mystery convention sponsored by mystery fans, both readers and authors. LCC is held during the first quarter of the year in Western North America. We’ve participated in LCC events in the past at Colorado Springs, Colo., Portland, Oregon, and this year in Vancouver, B.C. 

    Sisters in Crime is the major sponsor of Left Coast Crime.  Chanticleer Reviews is a proud members of SiNC.

     

    IBPA Independent Book Publishers Association Conference, Chicago, IL   April 5 & 6, 2019.   

    Kiffer Brown will participate on a panel discussing book reviews along with Michelle Schlinger of Foreword Reviews and Corrin Foster of Greenleaf Book Group.

    Sharon Anderson, Chanticleer’s Editor-in-Chief of Reviews, will also be in attendance.

    Please do stop by our booth and/or give us a ping if you are in the Chicago area. We’d love to connect!

    The Chanticleer Authors Conference and CIBA Banquet & Ceremony that will take place in Bellingham, Wash. 

    Unlock the Secrets of Successful Publishing at CAC19! Featuring sessions on audiobooks, podcasts, marketing & branding, distribution, metadata, Scribd (the Netflix of Publishing), and much more. J.D. Barker to keynote and A-List Film producer, Scott Steindorf to participate.

     

     

    Writer’s Digest New York Conference, New York City, New York,  August 23 – 25, 2019. 

    Chanticleer Reviews is honored to be an affiliate of Writer’s Digest. We look forward to going to the East Coast to meet new authors and reconnect with Chanticleerians.

    Digital Book World, September 10 – 12, 2019 – Nashville, Tenn. 

    Thought leadership, best practices, and the gathering of community across the wide world of publishing across multiple platforms and forms of content.

    Kiffer Brown moderated a panel on Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning at DBW 2018. We are looking forward to participating at DBW 2019.

    PNWA

    PNWA Annual Conference, Seattle, Wash.  September 13 – 15, 2019

    We exhibited for the first time at PNWA back in 2010 and look forward to exhibiting and participating each year. PNWA has always been very supportive of Chanticleer Reviews from the very beginning. And we are honored.

    Since 1955, writers in the NW have been dedicated to helping writers connect to other writers, publishers, agents, and editors across the country. Zola Helen Ross and Lucille McDonald came together to form the Pacific Northwest Writers Association and since the beginning, many people have dedicated their time to ensure its continuation. Over the years we have expanded our efforts so that writers receive a trusted resource within this ever-changing publishing industry while staying true to our mission of helping writers carve out their place and provide them with a platform for their literary voice. – PNWA.

     

    And probably a few more will be added the Chanticleer Reviews Event Calendar, so do check back.

    How to Contact Us to Connect with Chanticleer Reviews at Events?

    There are three ways:

    1. Email us at Info@ChantiReviews.com or KBrown@ChantiReviews.com
    2. Message us on Facebook at Chanticleer Reviews
    3. Direct Message us on Twitter:  https://twitter.com/ChantiReviews

    Tell us who you are, which event that you will be attending,  and the title(s) of your works in your message and we will contact you.

    Looking forward to seeing you!

     

     

     

  • What Goes Bump in the Night? October Spotlight on the PARANORMAL Awards, of course…by Sharon Anderson, Horror Writer

    What Goes Bump in the Night? October Spotlight on the PARANORMAL Awards, of course…by Sharon Anderson, Horror Writer

    October isn’t just for OZMA Book Awards for Fantasy Fiction

    … October helps us answer the burning questions, What’s under the bed? Who’s hiding in the closet? Is our house built on a graveyard? Is that a ghost or did you just poke holes in the new set of sheets? Did you just say ‘ALIEN’

    Paranormal Fiction Awards

     

    Here we settle in on my favorite time of the year.

    Every October, poor Ichabod Crane races through Sleepy Hollow, fearing for his head. We carve out Jack O’Lanterns and set them burning on our porches to light the way for trick or treaters. We decorate our homes in spider webs and skeletons and all sorts of creepy crawlies. Now is the time of year we binge on all things haunted, possessed, inexplicable, unseen.

    Why?

    Because we are thrilled by the experience of riding high on candied apples and candy corn and relish being frightened – just a little – especially when we know the thing we’re frightened of is just a story, some tale we tell over and over at this time of year. Because this is the season when it’s perfectly acceptable to scream.

    We’re ready. Are you?

    Welcome to the PARANORMAL Book Awards!

    Send us your stories of dark places, alien abductions, magic and magical beings, the supernatural, vampires & werewolves, angels & demons, fairies & mythological beings, weird otherworldly tales… and gothic horror stories. We will put them to the test and discover the best among them for the 2018 Paranormal Book Awards, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards – the CIBAs.

    But don’t wait too long. The deadline for the Paranormal Awards is October 31, 2018. Enter here, and don’t say we didn’t warn you.

     

     

    Travel with me through the Paranormal Awards Hall of Fame…

    The 2017 PARANORMAL Book Awards Grand Prize for Supernatural Fiction is awarded to:

    Van Ops – The Lost Power is a story in which “Alexander the Great’s obscure Egyptian weapon has been lost for eons. Can Maddy Marshall and covert agent Bear Thorenson find the ancient weapon in time to stop fragile post-Cold War peace from being forever shattered?”

    Avanti Centrae is the author of the international award-winning VanOps thriller series. Her work has been compared to that of James Rollins, Steve Berry, Dan Brown, and Preston/Child’s Pendergast series.

     

     

     

     

     

     

    2017 Paranormal Book Awards First Place Winners for Supernatural Fiction Novels are:

    • Willow’s Discovery by Joanne Jaytanie
    • Virtuous Souls by Pamela LePage
    • Rea by Lydia Staggs
    • A Pocketful of Lodestones, Time Traveler Professor Book 2 by Elizabeth Crowens
    • Dark Water by Chynna Laird

     

    The 2016 PARANORMAL Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Almost Mortal “Blending the high-octane thrust of a contemporary legal thriller with the magical realism of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, “Almost Mortal” cleaves a new, inventive niche in the legal thriller genre. This fast-paced legal thriller will leave the reader hungering for more. A terrific read!”

    Christopher Leibig is a novelist and a criminal defense attorney. He thinks about Fiction like this…”Fiction, while by its definition invented, need not tell that lie. In fiction, the devil is everywhere. And everyone has their story.”

     

     

     

    2016 Paranormal Book Awards First Place Winners for Supernatural Fiction Novels are:

     

    The 2015 PARANORMAL Book Awards Grand Prize:

    The Aurora Affair (retitled as Mobius) “… is a story about a skeptical heroine who discovers that her love affairs
    are the key to harnessing her own power to influence the world—for better if she does it right, or for worse if she fails.”

    Carolyn Haley “… is a freelance writer and editor who lives in rural Vermont. I write a mix of commercial copy, articles for regional and national publications, and edits diverse projects in fiction and nonfiction.” She writes award-winning novels in her spare time.

     

     

    2015 Paranormal Book Awards First Place Winners for Supernatural Fiction Novels are:

     

    The 2014 PARANORMAL Book Awards Grand Prize:

     An Ex to Grind in Deadwood is a wickedly funny paranormal mystery romance series that takes place in its namesake city in South Dakota.

     

    Ann Charles, USA Bestselling Author

    Ann Charles “…lives in the beautiful Northern Arizona mountains with her clever husband, charming kids, and an incredibly sassy cat. After many years and several colleges, she managed to obtain her Bachelor’s Degree in English with an emphasis on creative writing from the University of Washington.”

    2014 Paranormal Book Awards First Place Winners for Supernatural Fiction Novels are:

     

    The 2013 PARANORMAL Book Awards Grand Prize:

    The Watcher is a story where “…ancient history is only the beginning.”

     

     

    Lisa Voisin “… spent her childhood daydreaming and making up stories, but it was my love of reading and writing in her teens that drew her to Young Adult fiction.” 

     

     

    2013 Paranormal Book Awards First Place Winners for Supernatural Fiction Novels are:

    • Spirit Legacy by E.E. Holmes
    • Poe, Nevermore by Rachel M. Martens
    • The Immortal American by L. B. Joramo
    • The Dream Jumper’s Promise by Kim Hornsby
    • Montana Mustangs by Danica Winters
    • The Third Option by Ben A. Sharpton
    • Witch’s Malice by David Hutchison
    • Dancing on the Dark Side by Mairin Fisher-Fleming

     

    2012 1st Place Winner in the Paranormal Awards,

    Sacred Fires is a well written and crafted romantic paranormal novel with elements of intrigue and suspense along with a story set in a lush locale with mystic Aztec undercurrents. Greenfeder has succeeded in writing a fast-paced romantic suspense novel that is refreshingly different.

     

    Catherine Greenfeder “… continues to pursue her dream of getting her work published. To date, she has had five novels including a western historical, two adult paranormal novels, and two young adult paranormal novels published. She anticipates a few short stories and another young adult novel published in the near future.”

    Who will win the PARANORMAL Book Awards Blue Ribbons for 2018?

    Submit your works today!

    The last day for submissions into the 2018 Paranormal Book Awards is August 31, 2018.

    Click here for more information and submission form! 

    Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

  • 10 Questions Author Interview with KEITH TITTLE – 2016 CLUE Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER

    10 Questions Author Interview with KEITH TITTLE – 2016 CLUE Awards GRAND PRIZE WINNER

    Meet Keith Tittle! 

    Keith took home the 2016 Grand Prize in the CIBA CLUE category for A Matter of Justice.  He’s a quiet man whose chosen genre, Mystery/Thriller, fits well. He’s a baseball fan who writes with clarity and fleshes out his lead characters with believable determination and grit.

     

    Chanticleer: Tell us a little about yourself, Keith, how did you start writing?

    Tittle: I have been writing creatively for most of my life. In fact, there is a picture of four-year-old me sitting in front of my dad’s old portable typewriter, probably caught in the throes of my first case of writer’s block. But I never seriously considered the possibility of doing something with my writing until I took an Introduction to Writing Fiction course — taught by Sheila Simonson, the author of the Lark Dodge and Latouche County Mystery series — and came away with a much better sense of my abilities.

    Chanticleer: That’s a good way to start! When did you realize you that you were indeed an author?

    Tittle: I don’t think the transition from writer to author happened for me until I held the proof copy of my first mystery, Drawn Back. It’s an amazing feeling to see your name on the cover of a book but, until that moment, I still harbored nagging self-doubts about my ability to see a novel through from beginning to end.

    Chanticleer: That’s a big fear for many authors. How to get from Beginning to End. But once you start writing, the answer comes. What genre best describes your work?

    Tittle: This should be a far easier question for me to answer than it is. I would classify both Drawn Back and A Matter of Justice as Mystery/Suspense at their core, and yet they are as different from each other as they are alike. A Matter of Justice dances on the edge of being a thriller. Drawn Back is a little more character-driven, and has elements of romance and time travel. But if you’re going to hold my feet to the fire, I’ll say I write Mystery/Suspense.

    Chanti: What led you to write in this genre?

    Tittle: I like to tell people that I wrote my first novel for a demographic of one; the only person I could be sure would buy my book was my mother, and she loved both mysteries and stories of time travel. But it’s also true that the plot for Drawn Back chose me, rather than the other way around. As the story unfolded for me I found that I loved the challenge of writing a complex mystery with so many moving parts. I also enjoyed the opportunities the genre offered to explore my characters’ motivations and morality in the darkest of circumstances.

    Chanti: Do you find yourself following the rules or do you like to make up your own rules?

    Tittle: Rules regarding genre make excellent guidelines, especially for new writers, but I think if you adhere to them too closely you risk being formulaic. My writing always begins with a basic premise, a general idea of where the story begins and where I think it will end. In the back of my mind, I have the details of the crimes being solved, the why and the how and the who. How the story then unfolds after that is dictated almost entirely by the characters I’ve put in place. There is no outline, no formula … and no rules.

    Chanti: That is fascinating. It takes a lot of trust in your author abilities to be able to do that. Give us some of your favorite authors and describe how they influence your work.

    Tittle: My approach to storytelling and dialogue has probably been more strongly influenced by my love of movies — particularly those of the 1930s and 40s — than by any specific author, but there are a few I would love to be favorable compared to.

    I’ve always been drawn to the humor and versatility of Terry Pratchett and Christopher Moore. Both excel at creating characters who are intensely human, entirely relatable, and completely individual. I certainly strive for that in my own books. Within my genre, I think Dashiell Hammett should be a required read for any writer who wants to join the ‘murder and mayhem’ club. From Red Harvest and The Maltese Falcon to the Continental Op short stories, Hammett was an absolute master. Another mystery writer I’m addicted to is Timothy Hallinan. I love the wit and humanity he instills into his revolving cast of characters, and his Junior Bender series is about as much fun as you can have in the world of crime fiction.

    Chanti: Love those authors. Good choices! You mentioned that you were influenced by the movies of the 30’s and 40’s; why that period, specifically?

    Tittle: I think it has to do with the Production Code that was in place at the time. The strict rules regarding sexuality, language and violence forced writers and directors to be more creative and subtle in their storytelling. The best of them, people like Preston Sturges and Howard Hawks, were geniuses at providing just enough detail for the audience to fill in the more salacious — or graphic — blanks for themselves. Moviegoers, as well as readers, are far more intuitive than they are sometimes given credit for.

    Chanti: Right. Good point. What areas in your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Tittle: My approach to storytelling tends to be more cinematic, with multiple viewpoints and quick cuts. Because of that, I think I’ve had to become fairly adept at creating, and then inhabiting, a diverse cast of characters in each of my books. Male and female, Irish, Russian … I work hard to make each voice distinct and consistent, without seeming like a cliché or caricature.

    As for advice, I encourage new writers to become more active observers of the people around them. Tune into the way people speak, which words they emphasize, their cadence and inflection, their body language. Then, as an exercise, challenge yourself to write something — anything — from that person’s viewpoint. Try to capture their internal thoughts and spoken dialogue, as well as the physical ‘beats.’ To improve your dialogue, flip that exercise completely and write an entire scene with absolutely no physical beats or attributions. If you can still easily differentiate between your characters, you’re that much closer to writing tight scenes without all the unnecessary ‘he said/she said.’

    Chanti: That’s brilliant! And a great way to further character development. Thanks for that. What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Tittle: I love exploring old crimes, and how they continue to affect people years later. The second book in the Jefferson Dawes series, The War on Cain, revolves around a decades-old, race-related murder in Portland that resurfaces. With current racial tensions running high, the DA’s office is reluctant to reopen the investigation, so it falls to Jeff to find the people responsible.

    Chanti: Sounds good! Who’s the perfect reader for your book?

    Tittle: Readers of mystery and suspense, certainly, but I think anyone who enjoys losing themselves in the characters they’re reading about — regardless of the genre — will probably enjoy the ride.

     


    You know what to do now, right? If you’ve enjoyed this 10 Question Interview with Keith Tittle, please “like” & “share” it!

    Check out Keith’s website at https://www.keithtittle.com/

    And check out his books

  • September Spotlight is on the CLUE Awards – Mysteries, Thrillers/Suspense, Detective Novels

    September Spotlight is on the CLUE Awards – Mysteries, Thrillers/Suspense, Detective Novels

    [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_text]September brings countless clues and unsolved mysteries! Who will crack the case and emerge a winner? Stay tuned…

    Thriller Suspense Fiction Award

    The game’s afoot this September with thrilling adventure, nail-biting suspense, keen detective work, and more. Perhaps you’ll need a private eye on the case or follow police procedural to the letter. What’s certain, while authors work hard at crime solving, when September draws to an end, all of our cases will be closed! 

    What are the CLUE Awards? Thrillers, Suspense, the grip of Mystery. CLUE is all about the uncertain– detectives and private eyes, cops and criminals; those who have something to hide and those who hunt to bring those dark secrets to light. CLUE novels thrive on questions and build suspense with each turning of the page. For writers who scatter pieces of a mystery throughout their stories, and readers who enjoy putting those pieces together, CLUE is the genre of choice.

     

    The deadline is just around the corner! Who will survive the Slush? Who will be Longlisted and Shortlisted?
    Who will take home the prize at CAC19 on April 27th?

    Kaylin McFarren, CLUE Grand Prize Winner

    Avoid the crime of letting this deadline slip by! Send in your stories of thrilling detectives, super sleuths, daring and flawed police detectives today. We will put them to the test and choose the best among them. 

     As the September 30th deadline for submissions draws closer, don’t miss this opportunity to earn distinction for your novel. Enter today!

    All category winners have the opportunity to attend our Awards Ceremony on April 27, 2019,  that will take place during the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference. First Place category winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and await to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting and electrifying evening of dinner, networking, and celebrations! 

    First Place category winners and Grand Prize winners will each receive a stunning awards package well worth the price of entry into the CLUE Awards competitions.


    The CLUE Awards for the best Thriller & Suspense Fiction novels

    HALL of FAME

     The Grand Prize CLUE Winner in 2017:

    Twisted Threads by Kaylin McFarren won the “Suspense/Thriller” category in the Clue Awards and then took home the Clue Grand Prize! Twisted Threads  is the fourth book in her Threads Series set on a cruise ship, “With killers on the loose and no avenue for escape, tension is ratcheted to a breaking point, forcing everyone to choose between love and loyalty – or deeply held honor – in order to survive.” 

     

    Kaylin McFarren photo

    Kaylin McFarren is a multi-award winning author who has earned more than forty national literary awards. “She keeps a glass of wine close by while writing love scenes, Kleenex on her desk while writing heartbreakers, and has been known to empty a box of chocolates when she’s completely stumped.

     

    1st Place Category Winners in 2017:

    • Do Not Ask by Elaine Williams Crockett
    • 100 Days of Terror by Larry Temple
    • The Butcher’s Bill by SMartin Roy Hill
    • The Criminalist: A Novel of Forensic Science Suspense by John Houde
    • Aged in Charcoal by Jeffrey Ridenour

    Grand Prize Winner of 2016:

    A Matter of Justice by Keith Tittle won the “Suspense/Thriller” category in the 2016 Clue Awards and went on to win the Grand Prize! “Author Keith Tittle rings all the challenges in this complex, gripping mystery. His story combines diverse elements lending the story opportunity for multiple mayhems. Jeff Dawes is a believable hero – determined, diligent, dogged by past failures that spur him to try harder. The setting – Portland, Oregon, with its scenic natural environs makes for a variety of well-staged scenarios.

     

    Keith Tittle's Profile Photo, Image may contain: 1 person, beard, eyeglasses and outdoor

    Keith Tittle is “…a lifelong history buff, baseball fan, and resident of the Pacific Northwest, and lives with his wife in southwest Washington.” Keith is working on the second novel in this series.

     

     

    1st Place Category Winners in 2016:

     

     


    Grand Prize CLUE Winner in 2015:

    Blood Relations by Lonna EnoxIn 2015, Lonna Enox’s Blood Relations won the CLUE Grand Prize. This is the second book in Lonna’s Sorrel Janes Mysteries series set in the contemporary Southwest. In Blood Relations, “… a tangled web of mystery and lies, [proves that] the truth can only be discovered if the seeker can survive.

     

    Lonna Enox says this about herself, “I’m a ‘what if’ person. I’m also curious, and ask lots of questions, read about things, try things, & always investigate.”

     

     

     

    1st Place Category Winners in 2015:


    Grand Prize CLUE Winner in 2014:

    The Red Ribbon by Rachel B. LedgeThe Red Ribbon by Rachel B. Ledge won the 2014 Clue Grand Prize. This historical fiction thriller set in London 1773 about a young woman who struggles to adjust to life after witnessing the murder of her closest friend by the man she loves.

    Rachel B. Ledge is an award-winning author of historical novels with elements of suspense, romance, and time travel. She grew up in Idaho, Texas, Utah and California due to circumstances that didn’t involve the military. An expat since 2008, she and her husband lived in Sydney for five years before sailing to Singapore, where they lived on a boat for a while before transitioning onto terra firma. She can be found sitting up late at night, reading anything with a compelling storyline.”

    1st Place Category Winners in 2014:

    • Historical: Rachel B. Ledge for The Red Ribbon  
    • Romantic Suspense: Mimi Barbour for Special Agent Francesca  
    • International Intrigue/World Events: Lawrence Verigin for The Dark Seed
    • Contemporary Mystery/Suspense: Pamela Beason for The Only Clue
    • Private Eye/Noir:  Keith Dixon for The Bleak
    • Police Procedural: Jode Susan Millman for The Midnight Call
    • Spy/Espionage: Michelle Daniel for The Red Circle
    • Psychological Thriller: Rebecca Nolen for Deadly Thyme
    • Cozy/Amateur Sleuth: JoAnn Basset for I’m Kona Love You Forever
    • True Crime: Gayle Nix Jackson for Orville Nix: The Missing JFK Assassination Film 

     


    Grand Prize CLUE Winner in 2013:

    Raggedy Man by Clyde CurleyIn 2013, Clyde Curley took home the Grand Prize for his novel Raggedy Man, the first in the Detective Toussaint Novels.  Here’s a top-notch detective murder mystery set in the Pacific Northwest, Portland Oregon, to be exact. “His novels are prodigious—yes they come in at more than 500 pages, but you will be wishing it were longer—and are page-turners that tackle and explore the big ethical and societal issues of today.  Curley’s deft use of murder mysteries to microscopically explore society’s ethical issues is nothing short of brilliant.” – Chanticleer Reviews

     

    Clyde Curley tells us “…this is all that matters: I’ve grown up and now I’m an author. For me, the permanence of art stands as a bulwark against the slings and arrows of outrageous real life. The highest, richest form of art is that which is formed from words—the first and most important attribute of humans striving to behave less like animals and more like gods.

     

     

    1st Place Category Winners in 2013: 

    • Romantic Suspense: Small Town Storm by Elise K. Ackers
    • Steamy/Action/Thriller: Buried Threads by Kaylin McFarren
    • Debut Novel: The Last Dance by Lonna Enox
    • Historical Mystery: Forevermore by Jim Musgrave
    • Caper/Adventure: Too Many Violins by Mark Reutlinger
    • Private Eye: Fire Trap by Richard Mann
    • Police Procedural: Eleven by Carolyn Arnold
    • Classic Detective: Raggedy Man by Clyde Curley
    • Mystery/Crime: Deadly Recall by Donnell Ann Bell
    • Amateur Sleuth: Death Over Easy by Toby Speed
    • Thriller/Suspense: Grind His Bones by Richard Newell Smith
    • Medical: Without Consent by Bev Irwin
    • Psychological Thriller: The Grave Blogger by Donna Fontenot


    The Grand Prize CLUE Winner in 2012:

    Pamela Beason’s Mystery/Thriller, The Only Witness tied for Grand Prize in 2012. The Only Witness is a marvel of story-telling. Pamela Beason’s novel is one of those rare gems that is intelligent and informative but also embracing and charmingly accessible. 

     

    A former private investigator, Pamela Beason “…lives in the Pacific Northwest. Pam challenges the human assumption that we are the superior species. Each of her titles takes readers on an adventure while reminding us that drifting through life is not enough; you have to live it…”

     

     

    1st Place Category Winners in 2012: 

    • Shadow Games by Jeanette-Marie Mirich
    • Corporate Insanity by Tom Pors
    • New Smyrna Swing by D.D. Queens
    • Made in China by Mark Reutlinger
    • Mrs. Kaplan in the Soup; The Matzoh Ball of Death by Mark Reutlinger
    • Murder Strikes a Pose, A Downward Dog Mystery by Tracy Weber

     

     


    Your book could earn a place in our CLUE hall of fame for the CIBA 2018 Best Books.

    All you have to do is to enter your manuscript or published novel.

    [/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container][fusion_builder_container backgroundcolor=”” backgroundimage=”” backgroundrepeat=”no-repeat” backgroundposition=”left top” backgroundattachment=”scroll” video_webm=”” video_mp4=”” video_ogv=”” video_preview_image=”” overlay_color=”” overlay_opacity=”0.5″ video_mute=”yes” video_loop=”yes” fade=”no” bordersize=”0px” bordercolor=”” borderstyle=”” paddingtop=”20px” paddingbottom=”20px” paddingleft=”0px” paddingright=”0px” menu_anchor=”” equal_height_columns=”no” hundred_percent=”no” class=”” id=””][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_title size=”2″ content_align=”left” style_type=”single solid” sep_color=”transparent” class=”” id=””]What are the Clue Awards?[/fusion_title][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”3_5″ last=”no” spacing=”yes” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” class=”” id=””][fusion_text]Thriller Suspense Fiction AwardOur Clue Awards are Chanticleer Reviews search for the best mystery, suspense, and thriller fiction novels of 2018!

    We are looking for the best books featuring suspense, thrilling adventure, detective work, private eye, police procedural, and crime solving, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. (For light-hearted Mystery and Suspense entries see our Mystery & Mayhem Awards[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”2_5″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” border_size=”1px” border_color=”#606060″ border_style=”solid” padding=”10px” class=”” id=””][fusion_text]

    Our Chanticleer Review Writing Contests feature more than $30,000.00 worth of cash and prizes each year! 

    • All First in Category Winning Titles will be placed in the queue to receive a coveted Chanticleer Book Review Package (value $395) for the winning title (reviews are non-transferable)  and go on to compete for the genre Grand Prize and the Overall Grand Prize.
    • The Overall Grand Prize Winner is named Chanticleer Reviews Best Book of the Year and awarded the $1000 prize
    • All Winners receive a Chanticleer Prize Package which includes a digital badge, a ribbon and a whole assortment of goodies

     

    [/fusion_text][fusion_button link=”/services#!/Mystery-Thriller-Suspense-Writing-Contest/p/21521209/category=5193080″ color=”darkgray” size=”” type=”” shape=”” target=”_blank” title=”” gradient_colors=”|” gradient_hover_colors=”|” accent_color=”” accent_hover_color=”” bevel_color=”” border_width=”1px” shadow=”” icon=”” icon_position=”left” icon_divider=”no” modal=”” animation_type=”0″ animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”1″ alignment=”center” class=”” id=””]Enter Now![/fusion_button][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • AUGUST’s SPOTLIGHT is on the CHATELAINE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

    AUGUST’s SPOTLIGHT is on the CHATELAINE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is seeking today’s best books featuring romantic themes and adventures of the heart, historical love affairs, perhaps a little steamy romance, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    A little information about the Chatelaine Book Awards icon:

    We feel that Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s Pre-Raphaelite painting of Jane Morris (muse and wife of William Morris) in a Blue Silk Dress captures the many moods of the Chatelaine division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.  Jane Morris (nee Jane Burden—little is known about her childhood but that it was poor and deprived) was known for her keen intelligence. William Morris fell in love with her when she sat for him as a model. She was privately tutored to become a gentleman’s wife upon their engagement. It is said that she was the inspiration for George Bernard Shaw’s character Eliza Dolittle of My Fair Lady fame. The Blue Silk Dress was painted in 1868 by Rossetti and it currently resides in the Society for Antiquaries of London.  She was 29 when Rossetti painted it. Rossetti and Jane Morris became closely attached until his death in 1882. To read more about the fascinating Jane Morris, click on this Wikipedia page.

    Please join us in congratulating and reading these top works in this diverse range of all reads Chatelaine: Romance, Chick-Lit,  Women’s Fiction, Inspirational, Suspenseful, and, of course, Steamy and Sensual.

    Leigh Grant’s MASK OF DREAMS  took home the Chatelaine Grand Prize Ribbon for 2017. Congratulations!

      

    Mask of Dreams is a love story, enhanced by the literature of the Renaissance, in particular, Petrarch. This carefully researched historical fiction takes time to develop; Caterina and Rade have their own stories until the letter stitches them together. A tale of sacrifice and honor, violence and fear of conquest, the plight of women in a patriarchal society, immigration and outsiders, Mask of Dreams has resonance in today’s world. And occasionally, even a sense of humor.

    Join us in wishing Leigh Grant the very best luck in her publishing adventure! Leigh submitted her unpublished manuscript to the 2017 Chatelaine Book Awards competition.

    Leigh Grant has this to say about winning the Chatelaine Grand Prize Book Award for 2017, “I wanted to let you know that the award got me something that I had really wanted: an agent. She is talking (insert top traditional publishing house here), I should be so lucky…Chanticleer’s contest has been a very good thing for me. Best, Leigh Grant

    CHATELAINE BOOK AWARD WINNERS for 2017, a division of the CIBA.

    Cheri Champagne, Gail Noble-Sanderson, Elizabeth Crowens, Eileen Charbonneau

    The 2017 books have all won a Chanticleer Book Reviews package!

    • Magic of the Pentacle by Diane Wylie
    • Dear Mr. Hitchcock by Elizabeth Crowens
    • Watch Over Me by Eileen Charbonneau
    • Mask of Dreams by Leigh Grant ***CHATELAINE 2017 GRAND PRIZE WINNER*** 
    • The Passage Home to Meuse by Gail Noble-Sanderson
    • Love’s Misadventures by Cheri Champagne   

     

      M.A. Clarke Scott’s The ART of ENCHANTMENT took home the 2016 Chatelaine Grand Prize.

    The Art of Enchantment, M.A. Clarke Scott’s 2016 Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner
    Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner M. A. Clarke Scott

    First Place Category Winners for 2016 are: 

    The Chatelaine Award-Winning Authors of 2016: M.A. Clarke Scott, Diana Forbes, and Gail Avery Halverson

    Click on the hyperlinks to read their Chanticleer awarded reviews:

     

     

    Nicole Evelina’s DAUGHTER of DESTINY took both the Chatelaine Grand Prize and the OVERALL Grand Prize winner for 2015.

    Nicole proudly displayed her Overall Grand Prize Ribbon

     

    • Historical Romance: The Particular Appeal of Gilliane Pugsley by Susan Örnbratt
    • Regency: Once Upon a Scandal by Julie Le Mens
    • Women’s Fiction-Short Story Collection:  Ladies in Low Places by Mary Ann Henry
    • Women’s Fiction: In a Vertigo of Silence by Miriam Polli  
    • Adventure/Suspense: Banished Threads by Kaylin McFarren
    • Mystery/Suspense: A Season for Killing Blondes by Joanne Guidoccio 
    • Inspirational/Restorative:  A Foolish Consistency by Andrea Weir
    • Young Adult/New Adult: Deep Blue Eternity by Natasha Boyd 
      • Daughter of Destiny by Nicole Evelina***CHATELAINE 2015 Grand Prize Winner & OVERALL Winner***
      • Honorable Mentions:
      • Danica Winters – Smoke and Ashes
      • Belangela G. Tarazona – Hiatus
      • J.L Oakley  Mist-shi-mus: A Novel of Captivity
      • John Herman – The Counting of the Coup

       

      Janet Shawgo’s FIND ME AGAIN won the 2014 Chatelaine Grand Prize.

      Janet Shawgo Won the Chatelaine Grand Prize

      Find Me Again Janet Shawgo

      • Historical: Catherine A. Wilson and Catherine T. Wilson  for The Order of the Lily  
      • Romance Regency: Kerryn Reid for Learning to Waltz 
      • International Intrigue/World Events: Kristine Cayne for Deadly Betrayal
      • Contemporary: Kim Sanders for The Ex Lottery
      • Mystery/Suspense/Thriller Romance: Donna Barker for Mother Teresa’s Advice for Jilted Lovers
      • Inspirational/Restorative: Peggy Patrick for Surrendered II: Pride 
      • Romance & Adventure: Martha Rather for Kismet or Kamasutra
      • Fantasy/Mythological: Danica Winters for Montana Mustangs
      • Jane Austen Inspired: Betty Codd for Eleanor Grace 
      • Debut Novel: Julie LeMense for Once Upon a Wager
      • YA: M.A. Clarke Scott for The Dissimulation of Doves 
      • Women’s Fiction: Kate Vale for Destiny’s Second Chance
      • Women’s Fiction/Humorous: Lisa Souza for  Beauty and the Bridesmaid 
      • First Loves: Jennifer Snow for The Trouble with Mistletoe
      • Blended Genre:  Janet Shawgo for Find Me Again ***CHATELAINE 2014 GRAND PRIZE WINNER***

       

      Kate Vale’s CHOICES was awarded the 2013 Chatelaine Grand Prize

      • Historical Romance: The Lily and the Lion by Catherine T. Wilson & Catherine A. Wilson
      • Southern Romance: Swamp Secret by Eleanor Tatum
      • Mystery: The Hourglass by Sharon Struth
      • Jane Austen Inspired: Pulse and Prejudice by Colette Saucier
      • Paranormal: Crimson Flames by Ashley Robertson
      • Christian Inspirational Romance: Chasing Charlie by C. M. Newman
      • Restorative: A Path through the Garden by Nancy LaPonzina
      • Classic Bodice Ripper: To Dare the Duke of Dangerfield by Bronwen Evans
      • Contemporary: Choices by Kate Vale ***CHATELAINE 2013 GRAND PRIZE WINNER***

       Who will win the CHATELAINE Book Awards Blue Ribbons for 2018?

      The judging rounds will commence in August! Submit your works today!

      The last day for submissions into the 2018 Chatelaine Book Awards is August 31, 2018.

      Click here for more information and submission form! 

      Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

      Insiders’ Tip: Other genre divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards have romance categories as well. Multiple submissions of the same work to a variety of  CIBA writing competitions divisions are accepted. 

    • JULY’s SPOTLIGHT is on the LARAMIE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

      JULY’s SPOTLIGHT is on the LARAMIE PRIZE WINNERS of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

      Please join us in congratulating and (reading) these top works in this classic American genre—the Western.  

      Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardChanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring cowboys, the wild west, pioneering, civil war, early North American History, and the Contemporary West! Submit your works today and we will put them to the test and choose the best among them in the LARAMIE BOOK AWARDS, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBA). 

      Michelle Rene’s HOUR GLASS  took home the Laramie Grand Prize Ribbon for 2017 and the OVERALL Grand Prize Ribbon for the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards

      CIBA Overall Grand Prize Winner and Laramie Grand Prize, Michelle Rene
      Click on the cover for the Amazon link.

      Click on the Hour Glass book to order from Amazon

      LARAMIE BOOK AWARD WINNERS for 2017, a division of the CIBA.

      LARAMIE BOOK AWARDS Winners T.K. Conklin, Nick K Adams, J.L. Oakley, Michelle Rene, Kiki Watkins

      The 2017 books have all won a Chanticleer Book Reviews package!

      • Grasshoppers at Dusk by Kiki Watkins
      • Mist-chi-mus: A Novel of Captivity by J.L. Oakley
      • Sacrificial Lions by John Simons/David Simons
      • The Hour Glass by Michelle Rene ***LARAMIE GRAND PRIZE WINNER*** and OVERALL BEST BOOK Chanticleer Reviews
      • Away at War: A Civil War Story of the Family Left Behind by Nick K. Adams
      • Threads of Passion by T.K. Conklin
      • Desertion by Michael Aloysius O’Reilly
      • Death in the Black Patch by Bruce Wilson      

      Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardJacquie Roger’s HOT WORK IN FRY PAN GULCH: Honey Beaulieu Man Hunter Series took home the 2016 Laramie Grand Prize. Click on the cover for the Amazon link:

      Laramie Grand Prize – JACQUIE ROGERS

      First Place Category Winners for 2016 are: 

      Click on the hyperlinks to read their Chanticleer awarded reviews

      Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

      The Laramie Grand Prize Winner for 2015 was WIDOW: Flats Junction Series by Sara Dahmen (Originally titled Doctor Kinney’s Housekeeper)

      Sara Dahmen awarded Laramie Grand Prize for DR. KINNEY’S HOUSEKEEPER — now WIDOW 1881 (Book One of the Flats Junction Series)
      WIDOW: Flats Junction, Book One – Click on the cover for the link to Amazon

      The Laramie Grand Prize Winner for 2014 was NOT ON MY MOUNTAIN by Jared McVay

       

      Jared McVay the Laramie Grand Prize Winner

      Dale B. Jackson’s UNBROKE HORSES was awarded the 2013 Laramie Grand Prize

      • Mystery:  Double or Nothing by Meg Mims
      • Historical Fiction:  Because of the Camels by Brenda Blair
      • Civil War:  Ford at Valverde by Anita Melillo (ms)
      • Prairie Pioneer:  They Rode Good Horses by Dale B. Jackson (ms)
      • Literary Western:  Unbroke Horses by Dale B. Jackson
      • First Novel:  Confessions of  a Gunfighter by Tell Cotten (ms)
      • Best Manuscript: Lick Creek by Deborah Lincoln (ms)

      Janet K. Shawgo’s LOOK FOR ME was awarded the 2012 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize.

      Who will win the LARAMIE Book Awards Blue Ribbons for 2018?

      The judging rounds will commence in August! Submit your works today!

      The last day for submissions into the 2018 Laramie Book Awards is July 31, 2018.

      Click here for more information and submission form! 

      Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

       

    • ADVENTURES in SELF-PUBLISHING, #1: VANQUISHING the FEAR by Gail Noble-Sanderson – Self Publishing, Marketing, Moving Beyond Fear

      ADVENTURES in SELF-PUBLISHING, #1: VANQUISHING the FEAR by Gail Noble-Sanderson – Self Publishing, Marketing, Moving Beyond Fear

      We can do nothing, including taking risks, if fear is our overriding emotion. Fear is paralyzing and certainly, there are many of us who write that feel fear around the edges of our egos and emotions as we put pen to paper, share our work with others, send a letter to an agent, speak with a publisher or, even vaguely consider self-publishing our own work.

      You’ve GOT THIS!

      Moving through our fears is the only way to the other side where we can step fully forward making choices true to who we are.

      Many years ago, on Sunday afternoons when living in Maryland, I would pack up my two young daughters and, along with my guitar, we would visit with the very elderly in a nearby long-term care facility.  Although these senior folks could no longer carry on conversations regarding the present, they could remember the words to the old hymns, singing along as I strummed my guitar and my small girls dispensed hugs all around.

      I continued these weekly visits over several years becoming familiar with the relatives of these precious people and much about the lives they had lived.  I became especially close to a woman of 80 years named Calle.  Fragile of body, but sharp of mind, displaying a caustic wit and a no-nonsense approach to all of life, she was the last person whom we visited on those Sundays.  Calle was not especially social and did not attend the hymn singing as she was still living in the present and very conversive. All her friends had passed on and her two sons lived quite a distance away, seldom visiting their mother. We became fast friends.

      Calle was a woman ahead of her time.  She went to university and studied nursing and radiology. Radiology technology in the early 1900’s was a field in which she worked for over forty years.  She would tell me of the challenges of working in a profession primarily occupied by men and how her fiercely competitive nature and desire to constantly learn, often got her “into trouble.”

      She was never afraid to pursue excellence, never afraid to take risks.

      Calle thought me a fine young woman but extremely meek.  She persisted in challenging me to think about my own future.  What were my dreams and aspirations in addition to being a mother? I told her I loved playing music, writing songs, poetry, and stories.  And that because I stuttered, I wanted to someday go to college and become a Speech-Language Pathologist. She told me that “someday was here” and I was to plot a plan for how my future dreams were to be accomplished.  I told her I was afraid.  Afraid my husband would object to my going to university, afraid I would be seen as a negligent mother, afraid I wasn’t intelligent enough, afraid my music and writing would be found wanting by everyone – especially me.  With a great sigh, Calle asked me what I was NOT afraid of and I should start there.

      • Can you identify your fears related to your writing?
      • Where, as a writer, does your confidence lie?
      • Do you aspire to self-publish your stories, poems, novel, memoir, non-fiction – whatever you are wanting to publish?

      It is important first to recognize all your strengths and make them work for you.

      Gail Noble-Sanderson

      If you have entertained the thought that you might want to self-publish, I am here to tell you it is not rocket science (although I’m sure you could do that as well).  If you have done all the hard work of research, writing, and editing and are ready to send your work out into the world, then you can certainly self-publish.  Especially if you have attempted over some time to find an agent and/or publisher and there has been no forward movement. Or if you have spoken with other self-published writers, some of whom were published with a publishing house and later decided to self-publish, or if you feel strongly that you want to retain control of and manage your work from the beginning and thinking self-publishing is best for your vision.

      A few days before we moved to Washington state, I said my good-byes to Calle. I asked her if she had to live her life over what would she do differently.  She fiercely took hold of my hands and said, “I would have vanquished fear and taken more risks.”

      So, if you are considering the option of self-publishing your work, walk through the fear because, truly, it is not the difficult, frightening process some would lead writers to believe.  The next article in this series will look at where to begin and how to proceed when you decide to publish your own work.  Remember, “keep falling in love with the potential of what you are doing” and move you and your work forward without fear.

      Read the follow up to this article here.

       


      Gail Noble-Sanderson is the author of two works of historical fiction, both of which are self-published under her own Noble Press.  The Lavender House in Meuse is an emotional, intriguing, and sensitive account of the crises of World War I and one woman’s journey towards recovery and growth. Her second novel, The Passage Home to Meuse 

      won 1st Place in the 2017 Chatelaine Awards, the Chanticleer International Writing Competition for romantic fiction.

      Both books are available through Amazon and Village Books.

      Visit Gail’s homepage at http://gailnoblesanderson.com/ and follow her on social media.

    • Sally DeSipio –  Creative Director

      Sally DeSipio – Creative Director

      #CAC18 Story. Production. Beyond.

      We apologize. Sally DiSipio had to cancel due to a scheduling conflict. Scott Steindorff, American Film Director/Producer with Stone Village Productions is graciously presenting in her stead.

      Thank you for your patience and understanding. Kiffer Brown

      Sally DeSipio

      We are excited, nay thrilled, to announce Sally DeSipio as a keynote presenter at the 2018 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

      Sally DiSipio is an award-winning executive producer and  director, content creator, filmmaker and has developed long-form content for both television and the web, branded and original. She has produced both scripted and non-scripted dramas and comedies.

      As a marketing strategist and head of entertainment,  she developed branded content and strategies for global brands. Her experience allows her to approach a project as Creative Director, Strategist and Executive Producer with a critical eye for what is viable in the market.

      Sally DiSipio was head of entertainment for a global marketing strategy company, Wieden + Kennedy, whose client list includes airbnb, Coca Cola, Nike, Procter & Gamble, Samsung, and others. She began her career at MTV and moved on to develop series with such luminaries as J.J. Abrams, Aaron Sorkin, Brian Grazer, Ron Howard, and others. She was an executive director for Imagine Entertainment (Ron Howard’s company that is a global leader in TV programming and film production).

      She now runs her own consulting company out of Portland, Oregon.

      Sally will present workshops on the Art of the Pitch and Branding for the Entertainment Industry at the 2018 Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. April 20th – 22nd. This year’s conference theme is Story. Production. Beyond. 

    • KATHY MURPHY the PULPWOOD QUEEN is Coming to Bellingham, Wash!

      KATHY MURPHY the PULPWOOD QUEEN is Coming to Bellingham, Wash!

      It will be Kathy L. Murphy, the Pulpwood Queen herself, all the time — at least in Bellingham, Wash. from Thursday, July 13th through July 15th, 2017.

      Kathy is headlining the following three events, along with some surprise ones, when she visits the Pacific Northwest this summer for a long weekend sponsored by Chanticleer Book Reviews.

       

       

      1. The TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of The Pulpwood Queens International Book Club will meet on Thursday, July 13th. Check out the chapter’s Facebook event page 
      2. An Evening with Kathy L. Murphy at Village Books, Saturday, July 15th at 7 p.m. All Book Groups and Clubs are welcome!
      3. A Very Special WORKSHOP Creating Book Buzz and Building Your Author Brand – Saturday, July 15th, Kathy will present a three hour workshop and share her secrets of success from 9:30 in the morning until 12:30 in the afternoon. $55 per seat. Reservations required. Click here for more info and to register.

      TimberRose Queens and Timber Guys Chapter of the Pulpwood Queens Book Club

      We are pleased as punch to announce The TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of Kathy Murphy’s The Pulpwood Queen’s Tiara-Wearing, Book-Sharing Guide to Life Book Club is welcoming the Queen, herself, to the club’s first-ever meeting to discuss the books of the month and other important news on Thursday, July 13, 2017.

      The Pulpwood Queen Book Club began when Kathy Murphy wanted a seat in a local book club, but alas, there was no room. And apparently, there would not be one available for some time….

      Did that stop her?

      No way, no how! Kathy L. Murphy created her own book club – a fun, tiara wearing, book loving, festival of reading called The Pulpwood Queens, which now spans the continental United States plus Alaska and 15 foreign countries!

      Meet the Queen and become a member of the TimberRose and Timber Guys Chapter of the Pulpwood Queens at Nikki’s Bella Marina Bar & Restaurant from 7 – 8:30 pm.  Of course, there will be food and drink available for purchase. New members are always welcome!

      Seating is limited for the chapter meeting. Members who  have made reservations via the Facebook page will be given priority upon check-in. Reserve your seat today!