Tag: Americana

  • Chanticleer 10 Question Author Interview Series with Thomas Goodman – Award-winning book, The Last Man, Laramie Grand Prize Award, Author Life

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    From the 2023 Laramie Division Grand Prize Winner for Americana and Western for his book The Last Man, we have a brand new Chanticleer Author Interview!

    Thomas Goodman won the Grand Prize in the Laramie Division of the 2023 Chanticleer International Book Awards for his novel, The Last Man. The Laramie Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Americana and Westerns fiction genre. The Laramie Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The Laramie division includes:

     

    Western Romance, Adventure, Caper, Classic  Western Romance, Adventure Caper Classic Western,

    Civil War/Prairie/Pioneer, Contemporary Western, Americana, and First Nation

     Join us in getting to know the thrilling writing of the Western genre’s newest talent, Thomas Goodman!


    Blue and Gold badge recognizing The Last Man by Thomas Goodman for winning the 2023 Laramie Grand Prize

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

    Goodman: I first heard the story of the 1927 Santa Claus Bank Robbery in the 1990s when I lived in the small Texas county where it took place. All the accounts ended with the deaths of three of the four robbers, with little information about the life of the last surviving member of the gang. As it turns out, the details of his spectacular prison escapes and eventual rehabilitation are as fascinating as the violent endings of the other three robbers. By the time he died in his 90s around the same time I learned of the robbery, he had received a full pardon and had been a married model citizen for 50 years. In his honor, I named my book, The Last Man: A Novel of the 1927 Santa Claus Bank Robbery.

    The Last Man, Tom Goodman, green shirt, brown carpet, tripod stand, poster, award
    Thomas Goodman donating his book, The Last Man, to “Books for the Brave,” which stocks military bases with books the troops can read for free.

    Chanti: Let’s talk about genre. What genre best describes your work, and what led you to pick that genre for your writing?

    Goodman: Identifying the genre was a challenge. It’s closely based on a true crime, so it’s non-fiction; but telling the story required some measure of speculation, so it’s fiction. Like any good novel in the crime genre, it’s a grim and violent story; and yet like any compelling novel in the inspirational genre, it’s a redemption story, too. And the story begins in the 1920s with an old-fashioned bank robbery in a small Texas town, which makes it a Western; but the story ends in post-WW2 society, which makes it historical fiction.

    Thankfully, booksellers and libraries allow books to be cataloged in various genres, but my “go-to” answer when asked about the genre is “historical crime fiction.”

    Chanti: What about your own personal writing structure day to day? Do you have a routine?

    Goodman: Since I have a full time job, I write 3 days a week from 6:00-8:30am before the office day begins. Between the 2 approaches to writing–the “plotters,” who create a broad outline of the plot before they begin, and the “pantsers,” who start writing and just see what develops–I am definitely a “plotter.” That said, I’m often surprised at what a character decides to do or what turn my well-planned plot takes when I’m in the middle of writing.

    Book cover, The Last Man, Thomas Goodman, Santa Claus, hangman's noose, western, americana,

     

     Look for the Chanticleer Review of this Laramie Grand Prize Winner! Coming soon and will link to this article! 

    Chanti: It’s difficult finding time to consistently write. How do you approach your writing day to stay consistent?

    Goodman: When I was at a writers conference six years ago, I met an author who had traditionally-published a series of cozy mysteries. She told me she would get up at 5am and write until 7:30am when it was time to go to her “real job” as an assistant elementary school principal. That gave me the idea to write from 6am until 8:30am when my office opened. Once I began to write under that schedule, I completed my book in 2 years.

     

    Chanti: Who are a few of your favorite authors and how have they influenced your work. 

    Goodman: James Wade’s All Things Left Wild gave me the confidence to believe that the Western genre wasn’t a dead genre. 

    Clouds, sunrise, orange, salmon, purple, All Things Left Wild, James Wade

    I also really like Texas author Paulette Jiles (News of the World, Chenneville, and especially Stormy Weather.) She strikes the right balance between situating her story in a world over a 100 years ago without bogging the plot down with a lot of details and explanations of how life used to be—a constant temptation for a historical fiction writer.

    For prose that’s beautiful but not syrupy, I love Marilynne Robinson’s Gilead, Cormac McCarthy’s All the Pretty Horses, and Annie Proulx’s Close Range: Wyoming Stories

    Tom Goodman, peple, green vest, red hair

    Chanti: Reading books in our genre is so crucial to developing voice. What else has helped you grow your author chops?

    Goodman: John Trumby’s The Anatomy of Story is helpful. So is Steven James’s Story Trumps Structure. Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird is next on my list.

    Chanti: Those are both great. Lamott is the starting inspiration for so many wonderful writers. Do you have any books about the business of writing that have helped you?

    Goodman: Ricardo Fayet’s How to Market a Book and Amazon Ads for Authors was helpful. And David Gaughran’s book, Following, Strangers to Superfans, and Let’s Get Digital. Every author should read Tammi Labrecque’s Newsletter Ninja. 

    Chanti: And from that wealth of knowledge, what are your best marketing tips? What’s helped sell more books? How have you gained notoriety? What strategies have you used to expand your literary footprint?

    Goodman: Get a desirable reader magnet and build your newsletter list; sign up for the festivals that fit your genre and engage with customers at your book table; convince customers to leave starred reviews at their favorite online bookstore and review sites, and give them the direct link(s) to those sites.

    sky, rock, cliffs, man, hiking, tom goodman, backpack, clouds
    Author Tom Goodman, hiking McKittrick Canyon in the Guadalupe Mountains National Park.

    Chanti: What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Goodman: I’m writing a novel around a minor character who showed up late in my debut novel. She’s in her 70s when readers meet her as a boardinghouse owner in The Last Man. I go back to 1905 when she was 35. It’s turning out to be a gentler family drama as opposed to the grim and violent story of my first novel. But I’m liking it so far. After that, I’ll probably return to the crime genre. I’ve discovered a true story from the very early 1900s in East Texas about a “pistol-packing preacher” who faced down a violent gang of bootleggers who was shredding his town to bits. Irresistible story!

    Chanti: Before we let you go, who is the perfect reader for your book?

    Goodman: Someone who likes historical fiction that closely tracks with real characters and events.

    Chanti: Thank you, Thomas Goodman, for sharing your author journey with us. I am looking forward to seeing you at the next Chanticleer Authors Conference!

    You can follow Thomas Goodman through his Facebook page here.


     

    Tom Goodman, writer, author, the last man, westerns, black shirt, gotee, grey hair, bald Thomas Goodman won the Laramie 2023 Grand Prize for his amazing true crime/historical fiction novel, The Last Man! And also, because he believed in his work enough to enter it into the Laramie division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards

    In other words, if you don’t enter, you will never know how your work stacks up against the other entries.

    If you want a shot at the HONOR of Laramie Americana & Western Awards  for 2024, don’t delay, enter the Laramie B00k Awards today!

  • THE WAYS Of WATER: A Novel by Teresa H. Janssen – Biographies of Women, Early 20th Century, Coming of Age

     

    In The Ways of Water, a meticulously crafted coming-of-age novel, author Teresa H. Janssen drops the reader a hundred years back in time, into the American southwest where water is scarce and the survival of the fittest is a reality.

    In this place, “Life is a kettle of sadness, but along with it comes lumps of sweetness that are so exquisite… they give a girl courage to dream.”

    Josie Belle Gore was only four when, in 1906, she traveled with her mother and three siblings from Texas to their new home in the Arizona desert to live the life of a railroad family.

    Over time, her family wandered from desert to desert—in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and Mexico—wherever Papa’s job took them. The interplay of those harsh, yet enchanting lands of the American southwest with the human condition during the beginning of the twentieth century molded Josie’s character. Early on, she understood “…nothing on this earth comes easy. You just have to do what needs doing.”

    For Josie, it seems natural and expected that after her mother dies, she, as the eldest daughter in the home, assumes responsibility for her siblings. However, when her father decides to marry her off at age fifteen to a much older man, Josie can do nothing else but run away. Drawing upon her own internal resources and wits, she makes friends, travels to new places, gains useful skills, and ultimately finds her destiny in post-WWI California.

    This story flows with twists and turns much like those of a river.

    Although atypical in regard to story structure, character development, and denouement, it works well. The authentic voice, rich sensory imagery, and often lyrical, poetic language create an emotional and descriptive feast. Inspired by the life of the author’s grandmother, this is a skillfully presented fictional autobiography.

    In many ways, Janssen’s book echoes Mary Antin’s sentiment in The Promised Land (1911) “…We love to read the lives of the great, yet what a broken history of mankind they give, unless supplemented by the lives of the humble…”

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

  • Part Two of The 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

    Part Two of The 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

    We are deeply honored and excited to continue to announce the 2021 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs) with our second of three official postings.

    The winners were recognized at the CIBA ceremony held on June 25th, 2022 In-Person and broadcast live via ZOOM at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

     

    The CIBA announcements were made LIVE with Chanticleerians flying in and watching from around the globe and North America.

    We cheered on the CIBA winners with our drink of choice, whether in-person or Virtual!

    Btw, Kiffer’s favorite Champagne!

    We want to thank all of the CIBA judges who read each and every entry and then comment, rate, and rank within each of the 25 CIBA Divisions. Without your labors of love for books, the Chanticleer International Book Awards would not exist. THANK YOU!

    A pyramid showing the different levels of CIBA Achievement

     

    We want to thank all of the authors and publishers who participated in the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs). Each year, we find the quality of the entries and the competitiveness of the division competitions increasing exponentially. We added a new level to the judging rounds in 2021—the premier Level of FINALIST per each CIBA Division. The CIBA judges wanted to add the Finalist Level of Achievement as a way to recognize and validate the entries that had outstanding merit but were not selected for the very few First Place Award positions within each genre division.

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

    For the Cygnus, Ozma, Paranormal, Global Thrillers, M&M, Clue, Little Peeps, Gertrude Warner, and Dante Rossetti Book Awards, please click here for Part 1.

    For the Journey, Hearten, Nellie Bly, I&I, Mind & Spirit, Harvey Chute, Military & Frontline, Series, and Shorts Book Awards, place click here for Part 3

    Coveted Chanticleer Blue Ribbons!

    We are honored to present the

    2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards

    Grand Prize Winners 

    The 2021 CIBA Winners! 

     


     

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    The LARAMIE Book Awards for

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

    The Grand Prize Winner is

    TOM SAWYER RETURNS by E.E. Burke

     


    The Chaucer Awards for Historical Novels

    The CHAUCER Book Awards for

    Pre-1750s Historical Fiction 

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Too soon the night Grand Prize Badge

     

    TOO SOON THE NIGHT by James Conroyd Martin

    Too soon the night cover

     

    • John A. Martino and Michael P. O’Kane – Olympia: The Birth of the Games
    • Janet Wertman – The Boy King
    • Wendy J. Dunn – Falling Pomegranate Seeds: All Manner of Things
    • Rebecca D’Harlingue – The Lines Between Us: A Novel
    • Patricia Bracewell – The Steel Beneath the Silk
    • James Hutson-Wiley – The Travels of ibn Thomas

    Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

    The GOETHE Book Awards for

    Post-1750’s Historical Fiction 

    Grand Prize Winner is

    After the Rising Goethe Grand Prize Badge

    AFTER THE RISING by Orna Ross

    After the Rising Cover

     

    • Ron Singerton – The Refused
    • Drema Drudge – Victorine
    • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
    • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
    • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
    • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus

    Ernest Hemingway looking off to the right

    The HEMINGWAY Book Awards for

    20th Century Wartime Fiction

    Grand Prize Winner is

    EO-N Hemingway Grand Prize Badge

     

    EO-N by Dave Mason

    EO-N Cover

     

    • Murray Pura & Patrick E. Craig – Far On The Ringing Plains
    • Marian Exall – Daughters of War
    • Marina Osipova – Too Many Wolves in the Local Woods
    • Richard Alan Schwartz – The Soldier: A Novel of the Vietnam War Era
    • Jerena Tobiasen – The Emerald, Book II of The Prophecy    

     

    Romance Fiction Award

    The CHATELAINE Book Awards for

    Romantic Fiction and Women’s Fiction

    Grand Prize Winner is

    The Long Desert Road Chatelaine Grand Prize Award Badge

     

    THE LONG DESERT ROAD by Alex Sirotkin

    The Long Desert Road Cover

     

    • Deborah Swenson – Till My Last Breath, Book One in the Desert Hills Trilogy
    • Valerie Taylor – What’s Not Said — A Novel
    • Evie Alexander – Highland Games
    • Tina Sloan – Chasing Cleopatra
    • Kana Wu – No Secrets Allowed
    • Emma Lombard – Discerning Grace
    • John W. Feist – The Color of Rain

     

    The MARK TWAIN Book Awards

    for Humor and Satire

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Certified Mark Twain Grand Prize Badge

     

    CERTIFIED by Roger Wilson-Crane

    Certified Cover

     

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

    • Charlie Suisman – Hot Air
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Babs and Basil, and the Hounds of the Hollywood Baskervilles
    • Lou Dischler – My Only Sunshine: Getting Straight with the Bomb
    • Andy Becker – The Kissing Rabbi: Lust, Betrayal, and a Community Turned Inside Out
    • Anne Pfeffer – Binge  

    The SOMERSET Book Awards

    for Literary, Contemporary, and Mainstream Fiction

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Lies in Bone

     

    LIES IN BONE by Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

     

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

    • Alex Sirotkin – The Long Desert Road
    • Robert Gwaltney – The Cicada Tree
    • Judy Keeslar Santamaria – Jetty Cat Palace Cafe
    • Kent Politsch – Beebe and Bostelmann, a historical novel
    • Douglas Green – A Dog of Many Names
    • Barbara Linn Probst – The Sound Between the Notes
    • M. J. Simms-Maddox – The Mysterious Affair at the Met

     


    Congratulations to ALL!

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

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

    Not seeing your Division? Try the links below!

    For the Cygnus, Ozma, Paranormal, Global Thrillers, M&M, Clue, Little Peeps, Gertrude Warner, and Dante Rossetti Book Awards, please click here for Part 1.

    For the Journey, Hearten, Nellie Bly, I&I, Mind & Spirit, Harvey Chute, Military & Frontline, Series, and Shorts Book Awards, place click here for Part 3

    And the OVERALL GRAND PRIZE for the 2021 CIBAs!

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

    We are now accepting entries into the 2022 and 2023 Chanticleer International Book Awards.

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

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

    Thank you for joining us in celebrating the 2021 CIBA Winners! – The Chanticleer Team

  • BED of CONSPIRACY by Juliette Douglas – Western, American Historical Fiction, Adventure

    Laramie Western Fiction 1st Place Best in Category CIBA Blue and Gold BadgeGrowing up alone on the streets of Saint Louis in the mid-1870s, nineteen-year-old Samantha Davis has had to fight for everything.

    When she rescues Colonel Brady from armed attackers, she isn’t trying to be a hero or land a dangerous new job, but the moment Brady sees her deadly aim and unparalleled courage, he knows he’s found his new undercover agent. Brady has been tasked with infiltrating the KGC, the Knights of the Golden Circle, a group of Southern sympathizers hellbent on bringing down the government in a Confederate uprising.

    Brady believes Sam will be the perfect partner for Ross Cooper, a veteran agent who spends his off-time as a trail boss in Kansas. However, Ross is less than thrilled with Brady’s choice of the untrained, bad-tempered girl. Despite his misgivings, Ross agrees to team-up with Sam, and the two go undercover as Jim and Virginia Van Meter, a newlywed couple from South Carolina visiting Washington. After being introduced to Adam Mundy, the leader of this cell of the KGC, Ross (aka Jim) agrees to use his shipping business to help the Confederate cause.

    The plot to rise again also means an assassination attempt on President Grant, and Ross must find a way to stop the uprising or see the president killed. Meanwhile, Sam is intent on doing her own investigation. Between the KGC and Sam’s hairbrain attempts, Ross has his hands full. On top of that, the longer the two play the happy couple, the more complicated their feelings become. As the conspiracy heats up so does their relationship, and the two must fight their feelings and the men plotting to plunge Washington into chaos.

    The star of this novel is the courageous protagonist, Sam Davis.

    From the first introduction, Sam bursts onto the scene with fire and gusto. At her young age and in this time period, she should be husband-seeking in layers of petticoats and ribbons. Instead, suspenders and pants are her wardrobe of choice, and finding a husband has never entered her mind. Even though she sometimes second-guesses her new role as the first female secret agent in this newly formed agency, Sam refuses to quit and give up her obligation to a man who plucked her off the streets. Keeping her ragged nails covered with gloves and hiding her omnipresent boots become her priority when she playacts as Ginny Van Meter.

    Even when she must don the garb of a spy, Sam refuses to give up who she really is, and thank goodness she doesn’t! Repeatedly her heroics save the day. Her decidedly unladylike behavior is just what the colonel needs to foil the KGC. This girl is far from the “sit and wait” mentality of many of her contemporary compatriots. From riding into a cowboy camp armed with only her six-shooter and a letter from Colonel Brady to being arrested for trespassing, Sam flourishes on action. At times, Sam is reckless without forethought to what her actions will mean for Ross and his plan to slowly infiltrate the group. With her “peppered” language and the gun hidden in her silk handbags, Sam’s irreverence and fearlessness are endearing while her sass will keep the reader thoroughly entertained.

    The historical context and references within the novel provide insight into a turbulent time in American history.

    The novel’s focus on the Knights of the Golden Circle sheds light on a nearly forgotten society of Confederate sympathizers, a group with infamous members such as outlaws Jesse and Frank James and assassin John Wilkes Booth. Interweaving the truth into a fictional tale is often a daunting and confusing task, but this book seamlessly does exactly that.

    While characters like Adam Mundy are fictitious, the object behind the KGC, overthrowing a government battered by the Civil War and Reconstruction, was a very real threat. Their refusal to acknowledge Lee’s surrender at Appomattox even ten plus years later could easily have created world-changing events. Ross and Sam’s involvement in this fictional assassination attempt on President Grant is a tale that could have been both possible while making an engrossing story. The action is non-stop with believable support characters adding to this captivating plot.

    Bed of Conspiracy by Juliette Douglas won 1st Place in the 2019 CIBA Laramie Book Awards for Western and Americana Fiction.

     

    Laramie Americana Fiction gold foil book sticker image