Tag: book awards

  • The 2020 I & I Book Awards for Instruction and Insight – the Semi-Finalists for the I & I Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    The 2020 I & I Book Awards for Instruction and Insight – the Semi-Finalists for the I & I Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    Instructional & Insightful Book AwardsThe I & I Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in non-fiction that are self-help, how-to, guides, or instructional. In non-fiction works, the author assumes responsibility (in good faith) for the truth, accuracy, people, places, or information presented.  The I & I Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring How-To, Guidance, Travel Guides, Cookbooks, Instruction, Insight, Self-Help, and more. This books have been put to the test and the best will advance to be declared winners of the prestigious I & I Book Awards.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2020 Journey Book Awards LONG LIST to the 2020 SHORT LIST and now have progressed to the 2020 SEMI-FINALISTS. The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the Finalists positions. 

    The 22 divisions of the 2020 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced on Saturday & Sunday, June 5th and 6th at the ONLINE and FREE VIRTUAL Event for the 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Ceremony, will be held in virtually and LIVE Bellingham, Wash. 

    The 2020 Instruction & Insight Book Awards Semi-Finalists:

    • Nancy Pickard – Bigger Better Braver
    • Dr. Donna Marks – Exit the Maze: One Addiction, One Cause, One Cure
    • Jennifer Ankele – Death Less: A Guide Through Grief
    • Krista Nerestant – Indestructible: The Hidden Gifts of Trauma
    • Nina Norstrom – Not a Blueprint It’s the Shoe Prints that Matter with guidebook
    • Tamra McAnally Bolton – The Art of Story Keeping
    • Wendela Whitcomb Marsh and Siobhan Marsh – Homeschooling, Autism Style: Reset for Success
    • Elmore, William “Mecca” & Simone, Susan – Prison From The Inside Out: One Man’s Journey from a Life Sentence to Freedom
    • Judy Taylor – Save That Rug! A How-To Guide for Repairing Hooked Rugs
    • Dennis J Kotchmar – The Joy Of Searching, Buying and Selling, Antiques and Home Decor from France and England
    • Kate Farrell – Story Power: Secrets to Creating, Crafting, and Telling Memorable Stories
    • Peggy Sullivan – Blissfully Single, A Single’s Guide to Finding Happiness
    • Wendela Whitcomb Marsh – Independent Living with Autism: Your Roadmap to Success
    • Carole Bumpus – Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book Two
    • Dr. Margit Gabriele Muller – Your Pet, Your Pill
    • Gigi Berardi – FoodWISE: A Whole Systems Guide to Sustainable and Delicious Food Choices
    • Leslie Bains – Let’s Take A Hike: 7 Family-Friendly Trails of Nantucket
    • Marianne Ingheim – Out of Love: Finding Your Way Back to Self-Compassion
    • Jill Sherer Murray – Big Wild Love: The Unstoppable Power of Letting Go
    • Carole Bumpus – Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book One, Savoring the Olde Ways

    These titles are in the running for the Semi-Finalists of the 2020 I & I Book Awards for Instruction and Insight. 

    Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 I & I Book Awards for Instruction and Insight?

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



    The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    VCAC21 laurel wreath
    Register today!

     

     

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 I & I Awards Book Awards. The deadline for submissions is November 30thth, 2020. The winners will be announced in April 2022.

    Please click here for more information.

    Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at Info@ChantiReviews.com.

  • The 2020 Semi-Finalists Mark Twain Book Awards for Satire and Humor – the Semi-Finalists for the MARK TWAIN Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    Satirical & Allegorical Fiction Book Awards | Chanticleer Book Reviews

    The MARK TWAIN Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of Humor and Satire Fiction. The Mark Twain Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The 2020 Mark Twain Book Awards for Satire Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards is the first year that this division is offered as a book awards competition division in the CIBAs.

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring  satire, humor, political ideology, parody, fantasy, and allegory or fable. These books have advanced to the next judging rounds. The best will advance. Which titles will be declared as winners of the prestigious Somerset Book Awards? (For contemporary and literary fiction see our Somerset Book Awards.)

    I came in with Halley’s Comet in 1835. It is coming again next year, and I expect to go out with it. It will be the greatest disappointment of my life if I don’t go out with Halley’s Comet. The Almighty has said, no doubt: “Now here are these two unaccountable freaks; they came in together, they must go out together.” —​ Mark Twain

    Twain’s prediction was accurate; he died of a heart attack on April 21, 1910, in Stormfield, (Twain’s mansion where he lived from 1908 until his death) one day after the comet’s closest approach to Earth.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2020 Chatelaine Book Awards LONG LIST to the 2020 SHORT LIST and now have progressed to the 2020 SEMI-FINALISTS. 

    The 22 divisions of the 2020 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 25th, 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in LIVE virtually Bellingham, Wash. 

    These titles have advanced to the Semi-Finalists for the 2020 Mark Twain Book Awards for Satire and Humor Fiction

    • Charlie Suisman – Arnold Falls
    • Steven Mayfield – Treasure of the Blue Whale      
    • St John Karp – Quake City
    • Lenore Rowntree – Cluck
    • J.P. Kenna – Toward A Terrible Freedom
    • Wayne Edmiston – UNfatally Dead: to thaw or not to thaw?
    • Haris Orkin – You Only Live Once
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Bernie, I’m Glad You’re Dead
    • Alex J. Tremari – Dragoncast
    • Michael Aloysius O’Reilly – The Billionaire’s Daughter
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Mom, The Killer is Among Us
    • Ivy Cayden – Everything All At Once (Book 1, Chorduroys and Too Many Boys™)
    • Erik Segall – Not Yet
    • Anastasia Fox – Trout Fishing in the Cretaceous
    • K.N. Salustro – Cause of Death: ???
    • Conon Parks – Some Kind of Ending
    • Beth Wareham and Jason Davis – Hair Club Burning
    • Adam Cliff – Exposure
    • David B. Seaburn – Gavin Goode
    • Matt Tompkins – Odsburg
    • Lou Dischler – Too Pretty for a Hit Man

    Good Luck to All! 

    These titles are in the running for the Finalists of the 2020 Mark Twain Book Awards for Satire and Humor Fiction. 

    The 2020 CIBA FINALISTS will be announced during VCAC21 – April 22 – 24, 2021.

    Blue and Gold Finalist Badge for the Mark Twain Awards in Humor and Satire

    Blue and Gold First Place Winner Badge for Mark Twain Awards in Humor and Satire

    The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    VCAC21 laurel wreath
    Register today!

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

    Don’t Delay! Enter Today! 

     Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    We are now accepting entries into the 2021 Mark Twain Book Awards, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards. The deadline for submissions is November 30th, 2021. The winners will be announced in April 2022.

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at info@ChantiReviews.com. 

     

  • The GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards for High Stakes and Lab Lit Novels – Semi-Finalists for the Global Thriller Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    The GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards for High Stakes and Lab Lit Novels – Semi-Finalists for the Global Thriller Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    The GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Lab Lit and Global Thrillers. The GLOBAL  THRILLERS Book Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Book Awards and Writing Competitions.  (The CIBAs)

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring suspense, thrilling stories that put the balance of world power or that will end the world as we know it. We include with Global Thrillers the Lab Lit genre. Lab Lit is when Fiction Meets Real Science and Research or stories that are based on real science and research up to a certain “what if” point.

    The Short Listers’ works will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will compete for FINALISTS positions.

    The CIBA Finalists will be announced at VCAC 21, April 22 – 24, 2021.

    The 23 divisions of the 2020 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the June 5th, 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place after the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in virtually Bellingham, Wash. 

    The 2020 Semi-Finalists for the Global Thriller Book Awards

    Congratulations to the 2020 GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards Semi-Finalists

    • Matt Andrus – UFO
    • Lynn Yvonne Moon – The Agency – Tablet of Destinies
    • Avanti Centrae – Kiss of the Cobra – An M2 Action Thriller
    • Courtney Leigh Pahlke – Life Force Preserve; West End William
    • Rafael Amadeus Hines – Bishop’s Law
    • Marc McGuire – Missions
    • Domenick Venezia – Do No Harm
    • William Maz – A Cure for the Living
    • William Maz – The Bucharest Dossier
    • Erik Foge – One Way Roads
    • David Tunno – Intrepid Spirit
    • Tony Irvin – Waking the Sleepers
    • James G. Skinner – Samaritan Drug Lords
    • Randall Krzak – Colombian Betrayal

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

     

     

    The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    VCAC21 laurel wreath
    Register today!

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is October 21st, 2021. Please click here for more information

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at Info@ChantiReviews.com. 

     

     

  • The 2020 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction – the Semi-Finalists for the CHAUCER Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    The 2020 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction – the Semi-Finalists for the CHAUCER Division of the 2020 CIBAs

    The Chaucer Awards for Historical NovelsThe CHAUCER Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The CHAUCER Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The Chaucer Book Awards competition is named for Geoffrey Chaucer the author of the legendary Canterbury Tales. The work is considered to be one of the greatest works in the English language. It was among the first non-secular books written in Middle English to be printed in 1483.

     

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is seeking for the best books featuring Pre-1750s Historical Fiction, including pre-history, ancient history, Classical, world history (non-western culture), Dark Ages and Medieval Europe, Renaissance, Elizabethan, Tudor, 1600s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from the 2020 LONG LIST to the SHORT LIST and have now progressed to the 2020 SEMI-FINALISTS. 

    These titles are in the running for the Finalist positions of the 2020 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction. Good luck to all as your works move on to the next rounds of judging.

    • James Hutson-Wiley – The Travels of ibn Thomas
    • Patrick E. Craig – The Mennonite Queen
    • Regan Walker – Summer Warrior
    • N.L. Holmes – Bird in a Snare
    •   Thoren Syndergaard – Ripley of Valor
    • Seven Jane – The Isle of Gold
    • Edward Rickford – The Bend of the River: Book Two in the Tenochtitlan Trilogy
    • Helena P. Schrader – The Emperor Strikes Back
    • Dave & Steve Curliss – To Give Thanks – Our Pilgrim Ancestors
    • Brook Allen – Antonius: Son of Rome
    • Sherry V. Ostroff – Caledonia
    • Amy Wolf – A Woman of the Road and Sea
    • Marilyn Pemberton – Song of the Nightingale: a Tale of Two Castrati
    • Wendy J. Dunn – Falling Pomegranate Seeds: The Duty of Daughters
    • Denis Olasehinde Akinmolasire – The Mission to End Slavery
    • Janet Wertman – The Path to Somerset

    Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 Chaucer Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction?

    The 2020 CIBA FINALISTS will be announced at VCAC21 – April 21 – 24, 2021. 

    The 2020 CIBA Finalists for all divisions will be announced at VCAC21 with the First Place and Grand Prize winners announced on Sunday, April 25, 2021. 

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

    The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    VCAC21 laurel wreath

    Register today!

     

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The deadline for submissions is July 31, 2021. The  2021 winners will be announced in April 2022.

    As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions!

    VCAC21 laurel wreath

  • How to Use Book Awards to Promote Your Books – Book Marketing Tips by David Beaumier & Kiffer Brown

    How to Use Book Awards to Promote Your Books – Book Marketing Tips by David Beaumier & Kiffer Brown

    The days of publishers handling all an author’s marketing are looking like a thing of the past, even for traditionally published authors. This means you need to take control of your own marketing strategy for your books’ promotions.

    To begin, list off the places where you imagine people will see information about your book(s). We have some ideas, but you know your community best so trust your expertise there. It’s safe to say you will need to at least look in these places:

    • Your Website!
    • Your Social Media Platforms (that point back to your website — not a selling platform)
    • A Cross-Promotion platform that you share with other authors
    • Bookchain.ca, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, PublishDrive, and as many selling platforms as possible to create streams of revenue/royalties.
    • Independent Bookstores and Retail Outlets (many Chanticleerians join with garden shops, wineries, gift shops, toy stores, etc.) to  sell their books.

    Local Bookstores

    Your local bookstores deserves special attention. There are always loyal readers with a strong preference to shop local, so take some time to show those stores extra love.

    • Shelf-talkers for point of sale displays
    • Small posters (free standing and  flat for windows and bulletin boards
    • Shiny book stickers work! – They make your  books stand out on the shelf.
    • Bookmarks with your WEBSITE and Social Media Handles and your Covers — ask if you may insert them in your books.
    • Make plans to participate in virtual author events – most indie booksellers are hosting these with great success
    • THEN you promote your events every where! (Social Media, email blasts, website, posters, etc.)

    Now let’s put those together for some general recommendations (remember, your situation is unique, so if this advice clearly needs an adjustment for you, go for it).

    [Editor’s Note: David Beaumier has worked with Village Books (Bellingham’s local Independent Bookstore) for several years before rejoining the Chanticleer Team after completing his Master Degree in English, so he knows what he is talking about with how to increase sales at local bookstores.]

    How to Make Your Website More Effective in Promoting Your Books

    We recommend that your website has a tab for Reviews and Awards, in addition to a tab for your books. It can also be good to include your shelf talker blurb after that to showcase a strong hook to bring your reader in. Then, from your Book tab, lead them to your review from there so they can see you have a strong digital base already built up with accolades from an independent and respected reviewer. These nods to your success tell the reader that your book is worthwhile and make it stand out from the thousands of other books they’ll come across.

    Website Checklist

    • Tab for Reviews and Awards
    • Books Tab for more information with links to wear to purchase
    • Feature Your Digital Badges
    • Sign up Page for Announcements, Freebies, Bonuses, Short Stories, News, and Beta Readership Opportunities
    • If your books are available at indie bookstores, or other retail outlets — list where they are and give links!
    • Questions For and How To Connect with Book Clubs (remember — virtual gives you a wider audience span and the benefit of  no travel expenses)

    You can feature your digital sticker in proximity to an image of your cover in both places. It can also be good to include your shelf talker blurb after that to showcase a strong hook to bring your reader in. Then, from your Book tab, lead them to your review from there so they can see you have a strong digital base already built up with accolades from an independent and respected reviewer. These nods to your success tell the reader that your book is worthwhile and make it stand out from the thousands of other books they’ll come across.

    Marketing packages can include an ARC, any swag you have (bookmarks, buttons, wrist bands, quarter sheet advertisements), a one page Sell Sheet (aka a  write up of your book) which should mention your awards and positive reviews (including excerpts). On websites where your book is sold, you can populate their editorial review section of the site with your Chanticleer Editorial Book Review.

    Village Books, Bellingham, Wash. all aglow!

    Village Books at night. A brick cornerstone of the community with light pouring out the windows when it gets to be dark at 4 p.m. Our very own local, Bellingham bookstore. Local bookstores are key for selling your book! 

    That’s David up in the upper left hand corner sans grad school mustache.

    Check to see if they have a regular advertising publication or newsletter and ask about including your review or your shelf talker in it (depending on space). Ask if you can post shelf talkers at their store and what the specifications for talkers are through their store.

    Chanticleer Shelf talker
    Shelf Talkers sell Wine and Books! They work!

    If a bookstore team member says they love the genre you write in, you can even offer them a free copy of your book and ask if they can do a write up for you. They have an abundance of riches when it comes to free books, but they don’t have a personal connection with every author. Only offer if they seem interested. Generally, do remember to always be kind to bookstore employees. They are the people who hand sell your book the most after you.

    If the bookstore does do raffles on sale event days, or if you are having a socially distanced author event perhaps the staff can  offer your swag such lavender sachets to each attendee or purchaser (as Gail Noble Sanderson does with The Lavender Meuse Trilogy or Kizzie Jones offers with coloring sheets for her Tall Tale of Dachsunds children’s book series).

    Here is what Kizzie Jones is doing for her foreign book editions:

    Plan events with your ribbon front and center — even if it is virtual — have your well-earned Chanticleer Blue Ribbon placed where it can be seen — another subtle way of stating that you are an award-winning author without having to say so yourself in your virtual presentation.

    Chanticleer Award for Best Novels

    People know what a blue ribbon means, and it’s a great way to start a conversation about your book. Events are for more than just your local bookstore, but any stores near where you live or other places you think your story might resonate. Ask yourself if you might know special interest groups that would want to read your work that deals with zookeeping, financial advising, or a classic thriller. Reach out and add these places to your tour stops–yes even virtual tours—all small businesses are looking for ways to create virtual events to keep existing customers and find new ones.. Bookstore websites often run reading and writing groups that might connect to the genre you work in, and they love to have published authors stop by to chat with them.

    But what about “virtual events” at your local bookstore? 

    If  this means bookmarks, buttons, stickers, quarter sheets, and remember to put in your winning status and/or a blurb from your review as applicable and as makes sense for fitting the information onto the material. These swag items are a great way to keep the book in people’s mind. Bookstores can drop all of these into customer’s bags, which can really pay off in sales! Especially if the purchase was instigated by a virtual event. These items let your readers know that they are special to YOU! Be sure to invite them to visit your website because you offer readers special prizes and raffles and other fun stuff to readers who subscribed.

    Always be gracious with anyone who might sell or buy your work at an event. There’s no crowd too small, even if it’s just a bookstore employee—remember, that person will hand sell your book and be your representative to customers in the store. 

    The short version of this, as with all the best advice, is to have a plan, reach out to your local community that provides built-in support, and always be kind and gracious to those around you.

    Tweet us @ChantiReviews on Twitter to let us know how you used your marketing materials and award from Chanticleer to help generate interest in your book. We will share and LIKE and Comment.

    Promote your wins by showing off your digital badges (Semi-Finalist, Finalist, First Place, or Grand Prize), book stickers, and reviews!

    Now to start preparing for the HOLIDAY SEASON – Stay tuned for Tips and Tools for Increasing Holiday Book Sales.

     

  • LARAMIE Book Awards – SPOTLIGHT Focus on ALL Works of Western Fiction and Uniquely American Tales

    LARAMIE Book Awards – SPOTLIGHT Focus on ALL Works of Western Fiction and Uniquely American Tales

    Welcome to our SPOTLIGHT on LARAMIE Book Awards, the stories that stick!

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    The Laramie Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Americana / Western, Pioneer, Civil War, Frontier, and First Nations Novels. The Laramie Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    Charles M. Russell painted the cowboy scene on Chanticleer’s very own Laramie Book Awards badge. It is one of many such paintings he did that encompassed the Old American Wild West. He was an advocate for the Northern Plains Indians. Charles M. Russell also helped establish a reservation in Montana for the Chippewa people.

    *More interesting facts about Laramie, Wyoming, and its historical icons are immediately after the Laramie Hall of Fame listing below. A fun read! 

    The Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction Hall of Fame First Place and Grand Prize winners!


    The 2018 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale by Ruth Hull Chatlien

    Laramie Book Awards

     2018 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

     

     


    The 2017 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize Winning Book also won the OVERALL Prize! Best book of 2017:

    HOUR GLASS by Michelle Rene

    2017 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners


    The 2016 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Hot Work in Fry Pan Gulch: Honey Beaulieu – Man Hunter #1
    by Jacquie Rogers

    2016 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

     


    The 2015 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Widow (formerly known as Doctor Kinney’s Housekeeper) by Sara Dahmen

    2015 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners

     


    The 2014 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Not on My Mountain Jared McVay

    Not On My Mountain by Jared McVay

    2014 Laramie Book Awards for American Western Fiction First in Category Winners


    The 2013 Laramie Book Awards Grand Prize:

    Unbroken Horses by Dale B. Jackson

    Unbroke Horses clean

    Congratulations to the Laramie Awards 2013 1st Place Category Winners:

    • Mystery:  Double or Nothing by Meg Mims
    • Action/Adventure:  Haunted Falls by Ken Farmer & Buck Stienke
    • Historical Fiction: Because of the Camels by Brenda Blair
    • Civil War:  Ford at Valverde by Anita Melillo
    • Prairie Pioneer:  They Rode Good Horses by Dale B. Jackson
    • Literary Western:  Unbroke Horses by Dale B. Jackson
    • First Novel:  Confessions of  a Gunfighter by Tell Cotten
    • Best Manuscript: Lick Creek by Deborah Lincoln


    HOW DO YOU HAVE YOUR BOOKS COMPETE? Submit them to the Chanticleer International Book Awards –Click here for more information about The CIBAs! 

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

    Want to be a winner next year? The deadline to submit your book for the 2020 Laramie awards is July 31, 2020. Enter here!

    Grand Prize and First Place Winners for 2019 will be announced during our Virtual Conference in early September 2020.

    Any entries received on or after July 31, 2020, will be entered into the 2021 Laramie Book Awards. The Grand Prize and First Place for 2020 CIBA winners will be held on April 17, 2021.

     As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your American Western readers deserve!  Enter today!

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

    The 2020 winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony, which will take place during the 2020 Live/Online Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Semi-Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the first place winners will be virtually whisked up on “stage” to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. Covid19 has made our celebrations a bit different this year, but we still will celebrate!

    Don’t delay! Enter today!  

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with questions, concerns, or suggestions at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com

    [20] McDougall, Walt, “Pictures in the Papers,” American Mercury, 6:21 (September 1925), 72.


    What’s a Laramie?

    We thought you’d never ask!

    We titled the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs) division for Western American Fiction and all things that gather around the campfire singing a lonesome tune, the Laramie Awards, after the county and city in Wyoming. You know the one, tucked into the lower right-hand corner of the state between the Snowy Mountain Range and the Laramie Mountain Range.

    Yes, but why Laramie? 

    The small outpost was changed almost overnight when the Union Pacific Railroad moved their “Hell on Wheels” tent town from Cheyenne, Wyoming to Laramie after building the rails over the Sherman Summit at an elevation of 8,200 feet all the way to Laramie on May 4, 1868. Lawlessness and the Wild West ruled in Laramie. Luckily, “Hell on Wheels” moved on West as more track was laid down.

    But where did that name Laramie come from? 

    Laramie was named after Jacque LaRamie, a French or French-Canadian trapper who disappeared in the mountain range that was later named for him in the early 1810s. LaRamie was one of the first Europeans to visit the area. Laramie is a French name much like DuBois, Wyoming. And, yes, it is pronounced Doo – Boys (and NOT Du Bwai).

    There are several reasons we chose Laramie for our iconic Americana Book Awards. For us, and those in the know, Laramie, Wyoming immediately calls to mind the image of a Wild West town filled with rough-and-tumble cowboys. At one point, the only law in Laramie was “lawlessness. Wild Bill Hickok was even known to visit from time to time.

    Here’s a picture of the man, himself, on the left with his friends, Texas Jack Omohundro (center), and Buffalo Bill Cody on the right.

    Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch robbed trains and passengers with the first recorded train robbery taking place on June 2, 1899 in Wyoming. Butch was known to be very polite and dislike violence.

    But that’s not the only reason we chose Laramie.

    And, yes, there is yet one more reason we love Laramie! 

    The WOMEN!

    Calamity Jane hails from Laramie, Wyoming – a skilled sharpshooter who was born to a gambler and a prostitute. She cared for her five younger siblings in Utah before traveling on to Wyoming in search of a better life. There she found work as a dance hall girl and then as a prostitute at Fort Laramie. It was there that she reinvented herself by wearing buckskins and dressing like a man. She was also known for her swearing and hard-drinking ways, but Calamity Jane was also known even more for her kind heart and helping folks out of calamities–thus her nickname.

    Calamity Jane — She was the inspiration for Michelle Rene’s HOURGLASS novel.

    While the men were wrestling in the streets and shooting up the place, it was really the women who brought civilization to Laramie and Wyoming Territory. They established the first school in 1869, served on a formal jury in the Spring of 1870,  and were the first to gain the vote; which is exactly what Louisa Swain and 92 of her friends did on September 6, 1870 –150 years ago!

    Louisa Swain, the first woman to cast a ballot and she did it in Laramie, Wyoming!

    Louisa Swain – she was made of stern stuff!

    Early in the morning on September 6, 1870 in Laramie, Wyoming Louisa Swain became the first woman in the world to cast a ballot under democratically enacted laws granting women equal political rights with men. In the fall of 2008, 138 years later, the U.S. Congress passes a resolution proclaiming September 6th as “Louisa Swain Day” in recognition of this historic event.The Louisa Swain Foundation

    In 1870, Esther Hobart Morris (59 years old) became the first female Justice of the Peace. She served in South Pass City, Wyoming, which is to the northwest of Laramie.

    Esther Morris "to pettifoggers she showed no mercy." Wyoming Tribune
    Esther Morris, first female Justice of the Peace — Wyoming

    Esther Morris “to pettifoggers she showed no mercy.” Wyoming Tribune

    The Union’s first all-female jury was assembled in Wyoming in 1870.

    Later, in 1894, Estelle Reel Meyer became Superintendent of Public Instruction, the country’s first female statewide elected official.

    And the grand coup d’etat was when in 1889 when Wyoming vied for statehood—and refused to join the Union if the laws giving equality to women were not upheld, telling Congress (which wanted the suffrage law rescinded) via telegram,

    “We will remain out of the Union 100 years rather than come in without the women.”

    Wyoming is also the first state in the USA to allow women to own property and sign legal documents.

    In 1910, Mary Godat Bellamy became the first woman to be elected to the Wyoming Legislature. Two other western states, Colorado and Idaho, elected women legislators in 1895 and 1899, respectively. Wyoming was third in the nation.

    Quotes are from the Smithsonian Magazine
    Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/women-voting-wyoming-150-years-here-how-state-celebrating-180971263/#6UKzMfMeCQsmbIIQ.99
    Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
    Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

    {https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/brief-history-laramie-wyoming}

     

  • SPOTLIGHT on M&Ms – Mystery & Mayhem AWARDS CIBAs – Cozy Mysteries, Amateur Sleuths, and more!

    SPOTLIGHT on M&Ms – Mystery & Mayhem AWARDS CIBAs – Cozy Mysteries, Amateur Sleuths, and more!

    Welcome to our SPOTLIGHT on the CHANTICLEER INTERNATIONAL BOOK AWARDS (the CIBAs): the MYSTERY & MAYHEM Awards Deadline is upon us!

    We are seeking the best novels featuring “mystery and mayhem,” amateur sleuthing, romantic suspense, light suspense, travel mystery, classic mystery, British cozy, hobby sleuths, senior sleuths, or historical mystery. We will put them to the test and discover the best among them. (For thrillers, action suspense, detective, crime fiction see our Clue Awards)

    The APRIL 30th deadline for the Chanticleer Mystery & Mayhem Awards (aka M&Ms) has been extended until May 31, 2020 due to many requests for an extension due to these unprecedented times of the Covid-19 pandemic.

    In just a few short days, we go to work to uncover the hidden secrets, the lost key, the answer to the question, Whodunit?

    The 2019 Mystery and Mayhem FINALISTS were posted on April 30, 2020.

    Congratulations to these authors whose works have advanced to this new achievement level of the  Chanticleer International Book Awards in the Mystery and Mayhem Book Awards division.


     

    Michelle Cox won the 2018 GRAND PRIZE for Murder and Mystery for A Promise Given (A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Series, Book 3)

     


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2018 are:


     


     

    Carl & Jane Bock are the M&M Grand Prize winners in 2017 for Coronado’s Trail: An Arizona Borderlands Mystery


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2017 are:

     


    Alice K. Boatwright is the MYSTERY & MAYHEM Grand Prize winner in 2016 for Under an English Heaven!


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2016 are:

     


     

    Wendy Delaney is the  2015’s M&M Grand Prize Winner for There’s Something About Marty


    The First in Category, First Place Winners for 2015 are:

     

     

     

     


    Bernadette Pajer of the Professor Bradshaw Series — Fatal Induction took home the 2013 M&M Grand Prize

     

     


    Pamela Beason won GRAND PRIZE in 2012 for The Only Witness 

     

     


     

    Is your amateur sleuth suspicious of the little old lady who lives next door? Is there something wrong in Mayberry and your hero is going to find out what it is – no matter the cost? Are the stakes so high for your heroine, she succumbs to the hot, sexy delivery man who happens to be the guy with forty bodies buried in his basement? Is your character’s cat helping him solve the latest crime?

    If so, have we got the contest for you!

    Mystery & Mayhem

    Your book could earn a place in our M&M hall of fame for 2020!

    All you have to do is enter.

    And due to these unprecedented times, we have extended the deadline from April 30, 2020 to May 31, 2020.

    Unpublished Manuscripts and recently Published (Indie, Traditional, Hybrid) Novels (after Jan. 1, 2018) are accepted.

    Our Mystery & Mayhem Awards are the Chanticleer International Book Awards search for today’s best cozy mystery fiction books!

    Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

    Do not hesitate – or stop to solve a crime –

    the M&M Awards extended deadline is MAY, 31, 2020!

    Click here to enter – and good luck!

     

     

     

  • Links to All 17 Divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2019 Semi-Finalists

    Links to All 17 Divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2019 Semi-Finalists

    Official Announcement of the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2019 Semi-Finalists (the 2019 #CIBAs)

    We have just completed the final sweep of all seventeen divisions of the 2019 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards submissions. All of the divisions’ Semi-Finalists have been announced.

    Each one of the Semi-Finalists has been notified by email from the president of Chanticleer Reviews, Kathryn “Kiffer” Brown at  KBrown@ChantiReviews.com.

    Additionally, all 17 divisions’ Semi-Finalists have been posted on the Chanticleer Reviews website (see links below), have been sent out in  e-newsletters to our entire subscriber list, and have been announced on Chanticleer’s Facebook page and on Twitter social media platforms.

    We always check for stragglers, the inevitable stray, and late ratings coming in from judges (they do this as a labor of love for books and authors), and other anomalies that are just the nature of tracking the thousands of entries that we receive despite our state of the art integrated software program for tracking, DRM, and interactions with the judges.

    The works that made it to the 2019 SEMI-FINALIST are currently in the final rounds of judging to determine which ones will move forward to the limited First Place Categories and the coveted grand prize position for each division. The Overall Grand Prize for Best Book will be determined from the 17 divisions’ grand prize winners.


    An Important Announcement from KIFFER – the Chanticleer Authors Conference has been postponed until September 3 -6, 2020 (from the original date of April 16-19, 2020) due to the Coronavirus (Covid-19) situation. This postponement was decided on March 12, 2020.  Thank you for your patience and understanding as we are scrambling with the rescheduling and the logistics. All registrants have been notified by individual emails. We will post updates as we know more.


    We are currently working on the schedule of CAC events and CIBA announcements for the new dates. Thank you for our patience and understanding during this  unique event that is presenting new challenges on many  fronts for everyone. 

    All Semi-Finalists in attendance at the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference that is scheduled to take place April 16 -19, 2020 will be recognized. CAC 20 is the sponsor of the Chanticleer International Book Awards banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize winners for all seventeen divisions will be announced at the banquet and ceremony that will take place the evening of Saturday, April 18, 2020. The Overall Grand Prize Winner will be announced and presented with the cash prize of $1,000 USD on that exciting evening.

    (We’ve added a division, so standby for the new graphic — thanks!).

    Levels of Achievements for Book Awards

    Here are the links to the 2019 Chanticleer International Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTS for All 17 Divisions.

    These are the OFFICIAL and FINAL LISTINGS for the 2019 CIBAs SEMI-FINALISTS. 


     

     

    The CYGNUS Book Award for Science Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The JOURNEY Book Award for Narrative Non-Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards for Middle-Grade Readers Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

    The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     

     


     

     

    The CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction Semi-Finalist

     

     


     

     

    The LARAMIE Book Awards for Americana Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

    The CLUE Book Awards for Suspense & Thriller Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     

     


     

     

    The LITTLE PEEPS Book Awards for Early Readers and Picture Books Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The OZMA Book Awards for Fantasy Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

     

    The PARANORMAL Book Awards for Supernatural Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

    The GLOBAL THRILLERS Book Awards for High Stakes Suspense Novels Semi-Finalists

     

     

     


     

     

    The SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary, Contemporary, and Satire Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     


     

    The I & I Book Awards for Instruction and Insight Semi-Finalists

     

     

     


     

    The NELLIE BLY Book Awards for Journalistic Non-Fiction Semi-Finalists

     

     

     


    INFORMATION

    Each of the Semi-Finalists has been notified by email from the president of Chanticleer Reviews, Kathryn “Kiffer” Brown at  KBrown@ChantiReviews.com.

    Additionally, all 17 divisions’ Semi-Finalists have been posted on the Chanticleer Reviews website (see above links), sent out in  e-newsletters to our subscriber list, announced on Chanticleer’s Facebook page and on Twitter social media platforms.

    We will send the second and final round of email notifications to the 2019 Semi-Finalists starting before Wednesday, March 11, 2020.

    The email includes links to Semi-Finalists Digital Badges, Semi-Finalists Book Stickers, a discount code for CAC20, and other information along with a significant discount code for CAC20 registration packets.

    The 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference is scheduled to take place on April 17, 18, & 19, 2020.

    The Master Classes taught by Jessica Page Morrell and Robert Dugoni will take place on Thursday, April 16, 2020. Registration is required. 

    There are five different registration packages available for CAC20.  Don’t delay. Register today! 

    The 2019 CIBA Banquet and Ceremony will take place on the evening of April 18th, 2020. For more information, please visit the latest web post for the latest information, status, and updates about timing, photo opportunities, etc.

    Registration is required to attend the CAC20 and the CIBA Banquet and Awards Ceremony* and tickets are required for admittance.

    Good luck to all of the 2019 CIBA Semi-Finalists as their works compete in the final rounds of judging.

    Each of the authors whose works made it into the CIBA Semi-Finalists should be very proud!  Congratulations! You definitely have something to crow about! 

    *And, finally, you do not have to be present at the conference or the awards ceremony to win, but it sure is a lot more fun!

    Btw, the Submissions Deadline for the 2020 CYGNUS, JOURNEY, and M&M Book Awards is April 30, 2020! Don’t delay. Enter today!

  • The Semi-Finalists Announcement for the Goethe Book Awards for post 1750s Historical Fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

    The Semi-Finalists Announcement for the Goethe Book Awards for post 1750s Historical Fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

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

     

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

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

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the LONG LIST to the Goethe Shortlist and have now advanced to the Goethe Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2019 CIBA banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 16 CIBA divisions Semi-Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalist Badge

    Congratulations to the 2019 Goethe Awards for post 1750s Historical Fiction Semi-Finalists

    • James Anderson O’Neal – Riley and the Great War
    • Vanda Writer – Paris, Adrift
    • Kari Bovee – Peccadillo at the Palace
    • Kari Bovee – Girl with a Gun
    • Kari Bovee – Grace in the Wings
    • PJ Devlin – Wissahickon Souls
    • John Hansen – Hard Times
    • Patricia Suprenant – Journey to the Isle of Devils 
    • Lee Hutch – So Others May Live
    • Mike Jordan – The Runner 
    • Lisa Braver Moss – SHRUG: A Novel 
    • Sandra Wagner-Wright – Two Coins: A Biographical Novel
    • J.G. Schwartz – The Pearl Harbor Conspiracy
    • Marina Osipova – How Dare The Birds Sing 
    • Marilyn Pemberton – The Jewel Garden
    • Mary Adler – Shadowed by Death: An Oliver Wright WWII Mystery

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

     

    The 16 divisions of the 2019 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners along with recognizing the Semi-Finalists will be announced at the April 18th, 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash.

     

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2020 Goethe Book Awards for post-1750s Historical Fiction. The deadline for submissions is June 30, 2020. The 2020 winners will be announced in April 2021.

  • The Semi-Finalists Announcement for the CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

    The Semi-Finalists Announcement for the CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

    The Chaucer Awards for Historical NovelsThe CHAUCER Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The CHAUCER Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The Chaucer Book Awards competition is named for Geoffrey Chaucer the author of the legendary Canterbury Tales. The work is considered to be one of the greatest works in the English language. It was among the first non-secular books written in Middle English to be printed in 1483.

     

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is seeking the best books featuring Pre-1750s Historical Fiction, including pre-history, ancient history, Classical, world history (non-western culture), Dark Ages and Medieval Europe, Renaissance, Elizabethan, Tudor, 1600s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the LONG LIST to the CHAUCER Shortlist and have now advanced to the CHAUCER Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2019 CIBA banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 16 CIBA divisions Semi-Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    Congratulations to the 2019 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction Semi-Finalists.

    • James Conroyd Martin – Fortune’s Child: A Novel of Empress Theodora
    • Gail Avery Halverson – The Skeptical Physick
    • Susanne Dunlap – Listen to the Wind
    • E. L. Diamond – The Wolf of God
    • Linda Cardillo – Love That Moves the Sun: Vittoria Colonna and Michelangelo Buonarotti
    • Stephanie Renee dos Santos – Cut from the Earth 
    • Cryssa Bazos – Severed Knot
    • Kate Murdoch – The Orange Grove
    • June Hall McCash – Eleanor’s Daughter: A Novel of Marie de Champagne
    • James Hutson-Wiley – The Sugar Merchant
    • Alexandrea Weis – Realm
    • K.M. Pohlkamp – Shadows of Hemlock
    • Catherine Mathis – Death in Coimbra
    • Patricia J. Boomsma – The Way of Glory
    • A.L. Cleven – 26.2
    • Robert Cole – The Falcons of Gebtu
    • Anna Belfrage – The Cold Light of Dawn
    • Vince Pantalone – Incident on the Road to Canterbury

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

    The 16 divisions of the 2019 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners along with recognizing the Semi-Finalists will be announced at the April 18th, 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2020 CHAUCER Book Awards for pre-1750s Historical Fiction. The deadline for submissions is June 30, 2020. The 2020 winners will be announced in April 2021.

    As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions!