Tag: Book Promotion

  • 10 Question Author Interview with PAULA BUTTERFIELD – Women Artists, Author Interview, Book Discovery, Film, Books

    10 Question Author Interview with PAULA BUTTERFIELD – Women Artists, Author Interview, Book Discovery, Film, Books

     

    Meet the award-winning author, Paula Butterfield!

    Paula taught courses about women artists for twenty years before turning to write about them. La Luministe, her debut novel, earned the Best Historical Fiction Chanticleer Award. Paula lives with her husband and daughter in Portland and on the Oregon coast.

    Paula’s book, La Luministe, won First Place in the Chaucer categories in the 2015 CIBAs for Historical Fiction!

     

     

    Chanticleer: What genre best describes your work? And, what led you to write in this genre?

    La Luministe, 2015 Chaucer First Place Winner for Historical Fiction!

    Butterfield: I write historical fiction, specifically about women artists. For many years, I taught classes that I developed about women artists. As we raced through history, from the Middle Ages to the 21st century, I often thought, someone could write an entire mini-series about this woman! I wished we could slow down and really delve into the lives of artists. More hist-fic books about these women are coming out now—including Lady in Ermine, A Light of Her Own, The Age of Lightand I’m wallowing in them! But all I have to do is leaf through one of my books about women artists to realize how many more stories remain to be written… 

    Chanti: That’s exciting! Perhaps you will write a mini-series about women in art… Do you find yourself following the rules or do you like to make up your own rules?

    Butterfield: I find that you have to pick and choose which rules to follow. Outlining, I have come to believe after years of resistance, is a must. But that outline can take many forms, and you can expect to change it as you go. While a writer shouldn’t lean on adverbs, isn’t it a little crazy to spend time searching your manuscript for one or two errant adverbs?

    Chanti: Good point – outlines do need to be flexible in order to be relevant. And, yes, I certainly agree with your assessment of adverbs! What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Butterfield: I’m a film aficionado (see question 10). This last year, I loved Leave No Trace, Roma, If Beale Street Could Talk, First Reformed, and black klansman. Of course, I LOVE costume dramas like Black Panther or The Favourite, where I can see what life was like in a different place and time. Costume and production designers deserve more credit!

    Chanti: Yes, costume and production designers make the movie, in my humble opinion! Back to writing…How structured are you in your writing work?

    Butterfield: Not structured enough! On a perfect writing day, I’ll wake up with ideas and immediately get to work before my inner-critic wakes up. This is more likely to happen when I have thought about something specific I need to work on, right before I go to sleep. After a couple of hours, I’ll stop to have breakfast, exercise, and shower. Later, I’ll go back and look at what I’ve written that morning, which usually gets me going, either editing or continuing on for a couple of more hours in the afternoon. Social media, emails, reviews, and other commitments get squeezed in throughout the day.

    Chanti: That sounds fairly structured to me! I’ve heard many authors and educators say they begin work before their inner critic wakes up. Tricky! So, tell us, what areas in your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Butterfield: I’m told that descriptions are my strength. I have a degree from the University of Southern California School of Cinema, and I started out writing screenplays. As a visual person, I just write the movie I see in my mind’s eye. I recommend looking, then looking some more. Keep looking, and you’ll notice details that eluded you at first glance. Then describe that picture in words.

    Chanti: That’s great advice. Tell us, which craft books have helped you the most?

    Butterfield: Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird is wonderful, and I also like Stephen King’s On Writing. What kick-started my writing after a years-long hiatus was participating in a small group that read Julia Cameron’s The Artist’s Way. It’s a 12-week program that helps you put art into the center of your life. From scribbling artist’s pages (three pages of free writing each morning) to going on artist dates (doing something that inspires you creatively each week), each member of my group—fiction writer, poet, and painter—benefited from the process.

    Chanti: I’m working through The Artist’s Way. This book has a companion workbook that is most beneficial.  What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Butterfield: With me, it’s always going to be historical fiction about women artists. Artists are considered to be outliers, which makes them interesting to start with. But to be a woman artist, throughout most of history, has been considered doubly radical, so their stories are fascinating. My WIP is about two American artists who are positioned as rivals. I don’t like to talk about my current projects, because it saps some of the energy that’s buzzing around in my brain. So that’s all I can say right now.

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

    Butterfield: Reviews are needed and appreciated, but another very easy, helpful thing a reader can do is request that his or her library purchase a book (if it’s not already in stock). On my library’s website, this entails clicking “Using the Library” on the menu bar, then clicking “Suggest a Purchase” from the drop-down menu. There, you just fill in the title and author of the book. You’d be surprised how receptive libraries are to this input.

    Chanti: That’s really smart. Most of us only focus on reviews. But there is power in the library system. Do you ever experience writer’s block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Berthe Morisot, Figure of a Woman (Before the Theater), PD-US

    Butterfield: I suspect that writers of historical fiction may encounter writer’s block less frequently than do writers of other genres because we can always do more research. This can range from gaining a broad overview of the Franco-Prussian war to seeking more details about the sleeve length or embellishments that would have been popular on a gown Berthe wore to the opera in 1868. New information, especially unexpected tidbits, get me back to the keyboard right away. Sometimes, one detail can change the arc of a subplot or of a minor character.

    Chanti: What excites you most about writing?

    Butterfield: I find out about women in art! Berthe Morisot was a fist in a velvet glove. In the 19th century Paris, an haute-bourgeois woman was expected to be discreet to the point of near-invisibility. But Berthe, forbidden to enter L’École des Beaux-Arts, started the Impressionist movement that broke open the walls of the art establishment. And, unable to marry the love of her life, Édouard Manet, she married his brother. While she epitomized femininity and decorum, Morisot was a quiet revolutionary.

    Chanti: Paula, thank you for spending time with us today. It has truly been a pleasure and an honor. We cannot wait to see what’s next!

     

     


     

    You know what to do! Please check out Paula Butterfield’s work – and remember to recommend her books to your local library.

    Find fun boards and posts of Paula’s inpsiration here:
    https://www.pinterest.com/luministe/ (where I post “illustrations” for La Luministe.)
  • 10 Questions with ELANA MUGDAN – Marketing, Writing, Fantasy Books, Dragons, Author Interview

    10 Questions with ELANA MUGDAN – Marketing, Writing, Fantasy Books, Dragons, Author Interview

    Elana and her Dragon

    UPDATE: Dragon Speaker WON GRAND PRIZE in the CIBA 2018 OZMA Awards for Fantasy Fiction! 


    You may have heard of her. Elana Mugdan, author, director, channeler of all things fabulous – and most recently, the winner in Vitamin Water’s Challenge! What you may not know, Elana is also a Chanticleer-ian! We love her work as much as we love her. And we thought you might like a chance to get to know her a little more, as well.  Click here to follow the link from the Today Show – Alana explaining how the Vitamin Water Challenge works.

    Please enjoy and share our 10 Question Author Interview!

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

    Mugdan: I started writing at a very young age. I always had a wild imagination, and there was always a story to tell. Some of my earliest – and fondest – memories are of me dictating epic fantasy adventures to my father, and him typing them out on the old family computer in the basement (while he was supposed to be doing his own work, no less). I actually wrote my first “novel” when I was just five years old. It was a story about a girl and a dragon going on a quest . . . two decades later, the story hasn’t changed. At least I’m consistent!

    Chanti: That’s pretty sweet! I bet your family is very proud of you. When did you realize you that you were an author?

    Mugdan: Surprisingly, it took me a long time to realize writing was my preferred method of storytelling. I floated through a number of artistic fields when I was younger, including the film industry. I focused my energy on production and worked myself to the bone for years before I realized that every time I stepped foot on someone else’s set, I was really living someone else’s dream. This wasn’t what made my heart beat – I had my own stories to tell. So I redirected my attention to my novels, and that’s when the series really took off. I’m so glad I had that moment of clarity and realized that I wanted to focus on what I truly love, which is writing.

    Chanti: What led you to write in this genre?

    “Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.” Pablo Picasso

    Mugdan: Fantasy. All day, every day. I’ve loved fantasy, magic, and dragons for as long as I can remember. During my formative reading years, all my favorite series were meaty epic fantasy tales. I actually got into the Wheel of Time series even before I discovered Lord of the Rings, and that shaped my style both as a reader and a writer. There’s something beautiful about diving headlong into another world, getting lost there, going on adventures there. Those are the stories I love, and those are the stories I want to tell.

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

    Mugdan: I’ve never been one for rules. Picasso said it best: “Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist.” Rules exist for good reason, but it’s an artist’s job to think outside the box. If you try too hard to conform to others’ ideas of what your work should be, then you stifle your creativity and your truth. There will always be people who tell you your book is too long, or your vocabulary is too advanced for your readers, or your characters should change for the sake of marketability, or something similarly silly. Some of the best and most magical stories were ones that broke traditional boundaries, and I believe you shouldn’t be afraid to tell your tale the way it deserves to be told.

    Chanti: That’s really good advice. How does being an author affect your involvement in your community?

    Mugdan: It has given me a great opportunity to get out and meet new people, not only in my immediate community but across the country. I’ve made so many connections by reading excerpts from my books at local open mic nights, giving presentations at schools, and hosting events at indie bookstores and libraries. Just this past December I was lucky enough to have a stand at my town’s Winter Festival, which was an incredible experience. They invited me to read an excerpt on stage, and I met so many bright, inquisitive young readers who spoke to me about my work. I think I made a good impression on them because I actually sold out of books while there!

    Chanti: Congratulations! Give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Mugdan: I wouldn’t call myself a marketing guru by any stretch of the imagination, but I’ve learned a lot on my journey. I think the most important thing an author can do to gain notoriety is to network. Don’t be afraid to contact your local bookstore or library to see if they want to co-host an event with you – chances are they’ll be thrilled! By putting yourself out there, you get to meet new readers and allies. Try things that are beyond your comfort zone, like offering to speak about writing or publishing at a nearby school.

    You can connect to young audience members this way, and inspire them to keep reading, writing, and dreaming. If you build your foundation brick by brick, one person at a time, soon you’ll start to see the fruits of your labor.

    Of course, once you make these connections, you’ll need to stay in touch! Don’t discount the power of a strong, active social media presence – if people like your work, they want to know what you’re up to. Make sure you have a clean, presentable, informative website and a monthly newsletter to keep your audience up-to-date.

    Chanti: I like what you’re saying. Many of us are self-described introverts. It is a challenge to get ourselves out there. But once we do, it’s so easy to let that slide. Thank you for reminding us that followup is key – and newsletters do make a difference!  What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Mugdan: I’m currently putting the finishing touches on Dragon Child, Book II of The Shadow War Saga, so it’s ready for its release on May 21st of this year. Now that it’s so close to being done, I’ve also set my sights on completing the final round of edits for Book III, Dragon Blood, which will be out in February 2020. And of course, once that’s done I’ll be starting a major round of revisions on Book IV, Dragon War (slated for a tentative release date of April 2021).

    While I’m not writing and editing, I’m organizing my ongoing book tour for my debut novel, Dragon Speaker. So far I’ve held events in Pennsylvania, Vermont, Kansas, Maryland, and my home state of New York. I have a number of events coming up, and I’m hoping that I can continue to gain momentum over the coming months and turn it into a trans-continental adventure!

    This is what we had to say about Dragon Speaker “High fantasy that hits all the marks.” Read the review in its entirety here.

    Dragon Child, Elana’s newest book due out in May has already been reviewed and ready for pre-orders. Here’s a wee glimpse “Mugdan hooks readers and does not let them go! Fantasy brilliantly told, will delight readers in the second book of The Shadow War Saga.”  Read the review right here

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

    Mugdan: I’d recommend my series for anyone who likes epic fantasy and dragons, obviously; but beyond that, anyone who enjoys strong, spirited, and oftentimes deeply flawed characters. One of the things that irks me about traditional fantasy stories is that we see all these beautiful, perfect heroes who effortlessly triumph over their evil foes because they are so Brave and Good. To me, that doesn’t make a relatable – or interesting – character. Our flaws make us interesting, and the way we overcome our flaws is what makes a great story. Many of my characters struggle with self-image, fear, even their own morality. During the course of the series, we see them grow and we see their worldview change as they learn about acceptance, self-love, and forgiveness. These are books for people who love fantasy, but who are tired of the usual fantasy tropes we so often encounter.

    Chanti: And that’s exactly why your books are so highly rated! What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Mugdan: The most important thing? Buy our books! Show your support for artists and their art. The second most important thing? Rate and review! Seriously, you don’t know how much of a difference it makes. Even if it’s a short review, just a couple sentences about what you liked (or didn’t like), it helps us in terms of visibility and credibility. Reviews can be the deciding factor when a reader is deciding to take a chance on a new book. Let the world know what you thought, so you can help others discover something wonderful which they otherwise might never have found!

    Chanti: Well said! What excites you most about writing?

    Mudgan: I love losing myself in my own little world. In writing, you are limited only by your imagination. You can create the most beautiful places and go on the adventures you’ve always wanted to take. If reading is a personal experience, writing is even more so – you pour your heart into your work, and you discover answers to questions you weren’t even aware you’d asked. When things come together and everything in your story finally falls into place, when you finish an action-packed or emotional chapter, or when you unearth a great truth in your writing, then there’s this brilliant moment of clarity. You’re filled with a sense of achievement that you have created something unique and magnificent. And that’s a feeling worth living for.

    Chanti: Elana, it’s been a pleasure. Thank you for sharing your journey and wisdom with us! 

    Now it’s our turn. Do you like what you’ve read? Would you like to follow Elana Mugdan and see how she completes her Vitamin Water Challenge? Or where she’ll be next in her book tour? Please follow these link and sign up for her newsletter.

    Elana Mugdan:

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/dragonspleen

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SilverScreenDragon

  • A New Tool to Improve Performance on  Amazon’s Sponsored Product Ads by Kiffer Brown

    A New Tool to Improve Performance on Amazon’s Sponsored Product Ads by Kiffer Brown

    Finally, a tool that will amplify your marketing efforts on Amazon!

    Amazon’s Sponsored Products ads are among the most powerful marketing strategies for authors who sell ebooks on Amazon.

    However,  the learning curve of how to use Amazon Sponsored Ads prevents many authors from ever taking advantage of this robust and proven advertising strategy.

    What are Amazon Sponsored Product Ads and Why are They Important to Authors?

    Amazon’s Sponsored Products are cost-per-click ads for individual product listings that appear on product pages and search results throughout Amazon’s website. If you’ve ever been browsing for a new book on Amazon, then you’ve seen Sponsored Products. They look like regular book product listings, but they have a little tag that says “Sponsored.”

    Can you see “Sponsored” in the copy and paste below? It is to the left of the blue arrow on the second book listing. In reality on Amazon, there is no blue arrow—just an unassuming Sponsored tag.

    The great thing about Amazon Sponsored Products is that they directly target readers:

    1. who are already fans of the genre that you are promoting
    2. and who are actively looking for their next reads

    OR Let’s Say…

    Someone is browsing for a new sci-fi book, so they type, “scifi space opera” into Amazon’s search bar. Along with the search results, sponsored ebook listings (ads) will appear based on those search terms and related products.

    Product Targeting

    Instead of targeting keywords, you can also target specific products, such as best-selling and/or competing books in your genre. For example, if there’s a great book out there that’s similar to yours in terms of style and content, you can target your competitor’s book in hopes of attracting their readers. Additional functions with this option include targeting specific categories and excluding certain products with negative product targeting.

    With PublishDrive’s Advance Targeting Tool,  authors now have more options and greater control over their campaigns. So do keep on reading and stay with me…

    Another nifty point about Amazon Sponsored Products Ads is that the tool can be easy on your marketing budget. You only pay for clicks. You can budget how much you want to pay per click—so no surprises, and you can measure the results of your campaign along with insights on how to optimize performance by adjusting the AdWords that you select.

    The bottom line:

    You are only charged when your ad receives a click. This amount is deducted from your Amazon seller account.

    How much are Amazon AdWords? 

    Now that is the question, isn’t it?

    Amazon Sponsored Products operate on a cost-per-click, auction-based pricing model. You bid the maximum amount that you are willing to pay when a shopper clicks an ad for your product. The more competitive your bid is, the higher the chances that your ad will be displayed when it matches an Amazon shopper’s search.

    Adwords are determined by selecting keywords for the book that you want to promote on Amazon. Keywords are similar to Metadata. The more popular the keywords are the more expensive your AdWords will be and the more that you must bid to have them associated with your Sponsored Product ad.

    And this is where PublishDrive’s new tool will come in to play.

    The PublishDrive team invested months of research into finding the best ways to simplify this tool for authors, and we are beyond excited to tell you that PublishDrive is the first self-publishing platform to integrate Amazon advertising for ebooks. Now authors can manage global ebook distribution and powerful advertising in a single platform.

    SPECIAL OFFER: 

    LIMITED TIME ONLY – Try it out during the BETA TESTING of the TOOL – Visit PublishDrive

    Until the end of March 2019, beta-testing of this feature is available to all PublishDrive users who sell ebooks on Amazon. This means you can use the tool even if you distribute directly to Amazon rather than going through PublishDrive.

    Publish Drive’s revolutionary tool will help you to:

    • Refine your Amazon ad campaigns
    • Reduce costs associated with irrelevant ad clicks
    • Improve overall ad campaign performance

    PublishDrive offers one of the most robust and flexible distribution networks in the publishing industry that includes Amazon, DangDang (China’s Amazon), GooglePlay, Scribd, Tolino (Germany), Odilo (Spain), Bibliotheca (U.S. Libraries), Apple Books, and dozens more. PublishDrive’s list continues to expand.

    If you haven’t heard of the award-winning international PublishDrive, you will. 

    PublishDrive works with the New York Times and Amazon bestselling authors, niche indie publishers, and #seriousauthors. Read more about PublishDrive at  www.chantireviews.com/2019/02/28/publishdrive-an-international-and-technologically-innovative-publishing-platform/

    PublishDrive will present sessions on their innovative and easy to use digital platform that distributes ebooks on a global reach by using the latest in technology at the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    Next Chanticleer articles:  Read about SAVANT, PublishDrive’s proprietary artificial intelligence program that helps identify the most relevant keywords and target their associated bestselling books for optimal Amazon Sponsored Products Ads to help authors boost their book sales and optimize their AdWords campaigns.

    Also, there will be a third article about the nitty-gritty of AdWords — like how much should you bid, what are the time projections for Amazon AdWords campaigns, and how does an author/publisher bring it all together to optimize book sales.

    At the Chanticleer Authors Conference, we will delve more into detail about promoting on Amazon and other digital book platforms. Have you registered? Hurry!  Seats are limited!

  • The SEMI-FINALISTS for the SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary, Contemporary, and Satire Fiction – the 2018 CIBAs

    The SEMI-FINALISTS for the SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary, Contemporary, and Satire Fiction – the 2018 CIBAs

    The SOMERSET Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of Literary, Contemporary, & Satirical Fiction. The Somerset Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, satire, humor, magic realism or women and family themes. This division of the CIBAs is the SOMERSET Book Awards.  We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    The following titles and their authors have progressed from the ShortList to the Somerset Book Awards Semi-Finalists positions.

    Please click on this link to access the digital badges and for information about Semi-Finalists book stickers.

    Congratulations to the Somerset Book Awards 2018 Semi-Finalists:

    • Nanette Littlestone – Bella Toscana
    • R. J. Hershberger – Kicked by a Sparrow
    • J.P. Kenna – Allurement Westward
    • Debu Majumdar – Night Jasmine Tree
    • Chief John J. Mandeville – Bar Tales  
    • V. & D. POVALL – Jackal in the Mirror
    • V. & D. POVALL – Secrets of Innocence
    • Petra March – A Different Kind of Lovely
    • Patrick M. Garry – In the Shadow of War
    • Tim Gingras – RVN   
    • Barbara Stark-Nemon – Hard Cider- a novel   
    • Joe English – A Place Called Schugara   
    • Donna LeClair – Inch By Inch    
    • Patricia Sands – Drawing Lessons    
    • Edythe Anstey Hanen – Nine Birds Singing   
    • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus 
    • Ellen Notbohm – The River by Starlight  
    • Bob Holt – Cowboy
    • June N. Foster – The Girl and the Golden Leaf   
    • PJ Devlin – Wishes, Sins, and the Wissahickon Creek   
    • Beth Burgmeyer – Silent Echo   
    • Megan A. Clancy – The Burden of a Daughter    
    • Conon Parks – Some Kind of Ending    
    • Lenore Rowntree – Cluck   
    • Tikiri – Disowned   
    • Yorker Keith – Awakening of the Summer  
    • Linda Watkins – Summer Girl, A Novel   
    • John Hansen – Unfortunate Words
    • Diane B. Saxton – Peregrine Island   
    • Susan St. John – Mad Mischief, A Novel     
    • Claire Fullerton – Mourning Dove   

    Information about the #CIBAs Long Lists and Short Lists and Announcement Rounds.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2018 Long List (aka the Slush Pile Survivors) to the Shortlist. We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries have progressed from the  Shortlist to the 2018 SOMERSET SemiFinalist positions.

    These  Semi-Finalists positions will compete for the coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 SOMERSET Book Awards.

    Grand Prize Ribbons!

    The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the SOMERSET GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington during the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference. 

     

    For more information about the submitting to the 2019 Somerset Book Awards or the other 15 divisions of Chanticleer International Book Awards, please click here.

  • 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

     

     

  • OZMA Book Awards 2018 SHORTLIST for Fantasy Fiction – 2018 CIBAs

    OZMA Book Awards 2018 SHORTLIST for Fantasy Fiction – 2018 CIBAs

    The OZMA Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Fantasy Fiction. The OZMA Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).

     

    Information about the #CIBAs Long Lists and Short Lists and Announcement Rounds.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2018 Long List (aka the Slush Pile Survivors) to the Shortlist. We incorporate the Long List when the judges request an additional round of judging to accommodate the number and/or quality of entries received.  These entries are now Shortlisted and are in competition for the 2018 OZMA SemiFinalist positions. The  Semi-Finalists positions will compete for the coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 OZMA Book Awards.

     The 2018  First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize winners will be announced at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony that will be held during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and CIBA Ceremony and Banquet. 

    The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the OZMA GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington.

    The following works have made it to the 2018  OZMA Book Awards Shortlist Long List:

    • Pamela LePage – Virtuous Souls
    • J.V. Rutz – The Illusion Killer
    • Megan Wong – Island Whispers 
    • Allan Batchelder – Steel, Blood & Fire
    • EA Bishop – RAGNAROK: Demon Seed
    • Daryl Ellerbe – The Amazons   
    • Kristin Secorsky – Dragon Chosen: The Dragon Riders of Eryieth
    • Paul E. Vaughn – Luminess Legends: Dragon Ascendants
    • Kathleen Neeley – Master None
    • Paul E. Vaughn – Luminess Legends: Dragon Ascendants
    • Jennifer Allis Provost – Gallowglass
    • T.K. Riggins – Money Jane
    • Susan Faw – Heart Of Shadra
    • Franklin Posner – Suburban Vampire Ragnarok  
    • Nancy Guild Bendall – Nethermost Regained
    • M. K. Wiseman – The Kithseeker
    • Anthony Nordvik-Nash – Hedda Stein-Sun’s UnRemembered Islands
    • Nancy Guild Bendall – Nethermost Regained  
    • Elana A. Mugdan – Dragon Speaker
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Lindsay Schopfer – Into the North: A Keltin Moore Adventure
    • Miriam Cumming – Namesakes  
    • Chris Dews – Antler Jinny and the Raven
    • D.M. Cain – A Chronicle of Chaos

    To view the 2017 OZMA Book Awards winners, please click here.

    To view the 2018 OZMA Book Awards Long List, please click here. 

    Grand Prize Ribbons!

    The OZMA Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 27th, 2019 Chanticleer Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting entries into the 2019 OZMA Book Awards for Fantasy Fiction. For more information, please click here.

  • The SOMERSET Book Awards (CIBAs) for Literary, Contemporary, & Satirical Fiction – the 2018 Long List

    The SOMERSET Book Awards (CIBAs) for Literary, Contemporary, & Satirical Fiction – the 2018 Long List

    The SOMERSET Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of Literary, Contemporary, & Satirical Fiction. The Somerset Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).

     

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, satire, humor, magic realism or women and family themes, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    Information about the #CIBAs Long Lists and Short Lists and Announcement Rounds.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2018 Long List (aka the Slush Pile Survivors).

    These entries are now in competition for the 2018 SOMERSET SHORT LIST. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will receive an email confirmation.

    The coveted First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 SOMERSET Book Awards will be selected from the Semi-Finalists in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category Winners will be announced at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony. 

    The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the SOMERSET GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington.

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2018 SOMERSET Book Awards novel competition for Literary, Contemporary, and Satirical  Fiction.

    The Official  2018  SOMERSET Book Awards Long List:

    • Nanette Littlestone – Bella Toscana
    • R. J. Hershberger – Kicked by a Sparrow
    • Scott M. Madden – The Specter
    • J.P. Kenna – Allurement Westward
    • Heidi M. Thomas – Finding True Home
    • Lee Kaiser – Fairytales of the Unborn/Patna’s Ratcatcher 
    • Debu Majumdar – Night Jasmine Tree
    • Chief John J. Mandeville – Bar Tales
    • V. & D. POVALL – Jackal in the Mirror
    • V. & D. POVALL – Secrets of Innocence
    • Tom Edwards – Undercover: A Jason Franklin Novel
    • Patricia Striar Rohner – Shari’s Secret
    • T. J. Tanksley – Tainted Visions
    • Bob Holt – Cowboy
    • Patrick M. Garry – In the Shadow of War
    • Chynna Laird – Passing Loop
    • Tim Gingras – RVN
    • Barbara Stark-Nemon – Hard Cider- a novel
    • Joe English – A Place Called Schugara
    • Donna LeClair – Inch By Inch
    • J. L. Skirvin – Epitome Place
    • Patricia Sands – Drawing Lessons
    • Edythe Anstey Hanen – Nine Birds Singing
    • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
    • Ellen Notbohm – The River by Starlight
    • June N. Foster – The Girl and the Golden Leaf
    • PJ Devlin – Wishes, Sins and the Wissahickon Creek
    • Beth Burgmeyer – Silent Echo
    • Megan A. Clancy – The Burden of a Daughter
    • Helen Bea Kirk – Done Running
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Bernie, I’m Glad You’re Dead
    • Priscilla Audette – Lost
    • John Stafford – Prayer of Vengeance
    • Conon Parks – Some Kind of Ending
    • Donna LeClair – Fan Fiction Women
    • Lenore Rowntree – Cluck
    • Tikiri – Disowned
    • Claire Fullerton – Little Tea
    • Yorker Keith – Awakening of the Summer
    • Linda Watkins – Summer Girl, A Novel
    • John Hansen – Unfortunate Words
    • Lorenzo Petruzziello – The Love Fool
    • Bob Holt – The Cowboy
    • Diane B. Saxton – Peregrine Island
    • Tom Edwards – If I Should Die 
    • Susan St. John – Mad Mischief, A Novel
    • Petra March – A Different Kind of Lovely: A Novel
    • Claire Fullerton – Mourning Dove
    • Markus McDowell – To and Fro Upon the Earth: A Novel
    • Chad Boles – Blinded Authority

    To view the 2017 Somerset Book Award Winners, please click here.

    The submission deadline for the 2018 Somerset Book Awards was Nov. 30, 2018.

    We are now accepting entries to the 2019 Somerset Book Awards. Please click here for more information and to enter.

  • The SEMI-FINALISTS for the 2018 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction

    The SEMI-FINALISTS for the 2018 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Young Adult Fiction. The Dante Rossetti Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs).

     

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring stories of all shapes and sizes written to an audience between the ages of about twelve to eighteen. Science Fiction, Fantasy, Dystopian, Mystery, Paranormal, Historical, Romance, Literary, we will put them to the test and choose the best Young Adult Books among them.

    These Semi-Finalists will compete for the coveted limited positions of the First  Place Category Winners of the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards in the final rounds of judging.  The First Place Category winners will automatically be entered into the Dante Rossetti GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The 16 CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book and its $1,000 purse. First Place Category and Grand Prize Awards will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 27th, 2019, Bellingham, Washington.

    These titles are in the running for the limited First Place positions of the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards novel competition for Young Adult Fiction.

    All Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference and CIBA Banquet & Ceremony.

    Good luck to all in these next final rounds of judging to see which titles will move forward.

    CONGRATULATIONS to SEMI-FINALISTS for the 2018 DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards:

    • Mara Gan – Joined
    • Dan Morales – The Scouts of St. Michael Operation Archangel
    • Robert Wright Jr – Unwanted
    • Alexander Edlund – Keelic and the Pathfinders
    • KB Shaw – From the Shadows
    • Tom Edwards – The Honourable Catherine
    • Carmela A. Martino – Playing by Heart
    • Gina Detwiler  – Forlorn
    • Cheryl G. Bostrom – Climb, Run, Drown
    • Alex Paul – Tookan Attack
    • Lynn Yvonne Moon – Whispers
    • Tiffany Brooks – Reality Gold
    • Andrea and William Vaughan – 2nd Gen
    • Molly Lazer – Owl Eyes: A Fairy Tale
    • Jacinta Jade – Change of Chaos
    • Chuck Vance – Sneaking Out
    • Andrea Murray – Something New
    • Susan Faw – Soul Sacrifice
    • Sarah Mendivel – Sam’s Theory
    • Christy Nicholas – The Enchanted Swans   
    • Jennifer Alsever – Ember Burning: Trinity Forest Book 1

    All Short Listers and SemiFinalists will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.

    Grand Prize Ribbons!

    Good Luck to each of you as your works competes for the 2018 Dante Rossetti  Book Awards First Place category positions and the Dante Rossetti 2018 Grand Prize.  

    To view the 2017 Rossetti Book Awards winners, please click here.

    The Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Winner and the seven First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 27th, 2019 Chanticleer 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 2019 Dante Rossetti Book Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is May 30th, 2019. 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. 

  • CYBER SALE November 26 ending at Midnight, Saturday, December 1st, 2018 – Six Days only! 

    CYBER SALE November 26 ending at Midnight, Saturday, December 1st, 2018 – Six Days only! 

    We at Chanticleer Reviews are grateful for YOU, our Dear Writers and Readers! 

    Starting on CYBER MONDAY, November 26 ending at Midnight, Saturday, December 1st,  2018 – Six days only! 

    We are offering a $100 discount on ANY 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference package for 6 days only! 

    This is a LIMITED OFFER and will end at Midnight, Saturday, December 1st, 2018. Firm. 

    • This outstanding offer will not be repeated!
    • Seating is Limited for CAC19 and for the Master Class Modules.
    • Don’t delay. Register TODAY and take advantage of this limited offer for a limited time.

     

    J.D. Barker – Master of Suspense, Scott Steindorff  A-List America Film producer, ChrisMottes, Audiobooks & Podcaster expert, Jessica Morrell – Top Tier Editor, and others to present! Click here to read more about CAC19 presenters. 

     


     The FULL All-Inclusive CAC19 Conference Package with Discount Code is $425! WOW!   until December 1st, 2018.

    USE THIS DISCOUNT CODE>>>    BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    • 3 full days of sessions
    • 3 luncheons with keynote presentations
    • KaffeeKlatches
    • 3-month trial from Hindenburg Systems (audiobooks or podcast system) $$
    • CIBA Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday Evening
    • 2 cocktail parties (cash bar, appetizers provided) on Friday and Saturday evenings
    • Coffee and Tea
    • Book Fair participation on Saturday & Sunday
    • Workshops taught by Audiobook and Podcast Expert, Chris Mottes
      • Each workshop attendee will receive a 6-month license from Hindenburg Systems $$$
    • Log-lines and Pitching Sessions on Sunday
    • Networking Opportunities  and Fun Raffles
    • Plus $25 discount on Master Class Modules – $50 discount for both!

    CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER and USE the Thanksgiving Discount Code:  BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    Without Thanksgiving CYBER Discount Code $525 with Discount Code $425 until December 1st, 2018. 

    This is the BEST DEAL! 


    3 Day CAC19 Pass without Banquet and Ceremony with the $100 Discount Code is $325 until December 1st, 2018. 

    USE THIS DISCOUNT CODE>>>    BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    • 3 full days of sessions
    • 3 luncheons with keynote presentations
    • KaffeeKlatches
    • 3-month trial from Hindenburg Systems (audiobooks or podcast system) $$
    • Coffee and Tea
    • Friday Cocktail Party
    • Book Fair participation on Saturday & Sunday
    • Workshops taught by Audiobook and Podcast Expert, Chris Mottes
      • Each workshop attendee will receive a 6-month license from Hindenburg Systems $$$
    • Log-lines and Pitching Sessions on Sunday
    • Networking Opportunities  and Fun Raffles
    • Plus $25 discount on a Master Class Module – $50 discount for both!

    CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER and USE the Thanksgiving Discount Code:  BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    Without Thanksgiving CYBER Discount Code $425with Discount Code $325 until December 1st, 2018. 


    Saturday and Sunday 2-Day Pass – including Awards Banquet and Ceremony and Book Room with the $100 Discount Code is $295.00 until December 1st, 2018. 

    USE THIS DISCOUNT CODE>>>    BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    • 2 full days of sessions
    • 2 luncheons with keynote presentations
    • KaffeeKlatches
    • 3-month trial from Hindenburg Systems (audiobooks or podcast system) $$
    • CIBA Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday Evening
    • 1 cocktail parties (cash bar, appetizers provided) on  Saturday
    • Coffee and Tea
    • Book Fair participation on Saturday & Sunday
    • Workshops taught by Audiobook and Podcast Expert, Chris Mottes
      • Each workshop attendee will receive a 6-month license from Hindenburg Systems $$$
    • Log-lines and Pitching Sessions on Sunday
    • Networking Opportunities  and Fun Raffles
    • Plus $25 discount on Master Class Modules -$50 discount for both!

    CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER and USE the Thanksgiving Discount Code:  BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    Without Thanksgiving CYBER Discount Code $395 — with Discount Code $295 until December 1st, 2018.  


    Saturday and Sunday Pass & Book Room – NO Banquet and Awards Ceremony  with the $100 Discount Code is $250.00 until December 1st, 2018. 

    USE THIS DISCOUNT CODE>>>    BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    • 2 full days of sessions
    • 2 luncheons with keynote presentations
    • KaffeeKlatches
    • 3-month trial from Hindenburg Systems (audiobooks or podcast system) $$
    • Coffee and Tea
    • Book Fair participation on Saturday & Sunday
    • Workshops taught by Audiobook and Podcast Expert, Chris Mottes
      • Each workshop attendee will receive a 6-month license from Hindenburg Systems $$$
    • Log-lines and Pitching Sessions on Sunday
    • Networking Opportunities  and Fun Raffles
    • Plus $25 discount on Master Class Modules -$50 discount for both!

    CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER and USE the Thanksgiving Discount Code:  BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    Without Thanksgiving CYBER Discount Code $350 — with Discount Code$250 until December 1, 2018.


     

    CAC19 SATURDAY Only Pass – including Awards Banquet and Ceremony with the $100 Discount Code is $195 until December 1st, 2018. 

    USE THIS DISCOUNT CODE>>>    BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    • Saturday Sessions
    • 1 luncheon with the keynote presentation
    • KaffeeKlatches
    • 3-month trial from Hindenburg Systems (audiobooks or podcast system) $$
    • CIBA Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday Evening
    • 1 cocktail party (cash bar, appetizers provided) on  Saturday
    • Coffee and Tea
    • Workshops taught by Audiobook and Podcast Expert, Chris Mottes
      • Each workshop attendee will receive a 6-month license from Hindenburg Systems $$$
    • Networking Opportunities  and Fun Raffles
    • Plus $25 discount on Master Class Modules held on Thursday -$50 discount for both!
      • Note: Book Fair participation is not included in the Saturday Only Pass
      • Note: Log-lines and Pitching Sessions are not included.

    CLICK BELOW TO REGISTER and USE the Thanksgiving Discount Code:  BESTCAC19DEALEVER

    Without Thanksgiving CYBER Discount Code $295 — with Discount Code $195 until December 1st, 2018. 


    This outstanding CYBER DISCOUNT OFFER will not be repeated! And is limited.

    Seating is limited for CAC19 and for the Master Class Modules.  When we are out we are out.

    Don’t delay. Register TODAY and take advantage of this limited offer for a limited time.

    Offer ends Saturday, December 1st at Midnight.

    Read what past CAC attendees say about the Chanticleer Authors Conference below.

    I wanted to say thank you for creating such a fabulous event. This was by far the most productive conference I have ever attended! Each workshop was packed with valuable information to help every author on their path to publication, no matter what their genre or where they are in their writing career. I look forward to attending next year! 

    All the best,  Kim Davis A Game of Deceit

    This conference and award dinner is the best I’ve ever attended. The conference showcased well-known authors and editors, and in each session, I learned something new that will help my writing. And the Awards Dinner! I can’t say enough about it. It was fantastic. Like attending the Oscars. Everything – all weekend – was so well done and thought out and ran so smoothly, you’d think Chanticleer had an army of 100 working for them. All of this against a beautiful water view setting in Bellingham, Washington. By far, the most fun I’ve ever had at a conference, and considering all the sessions, lunches, and dinners, etc., a great value.

    Thank you! Elaine Williams Crockett

    Thank you so much for all your work setting up the Chanticleer organization. Winning a Grand prize means more to me than I can express. I feel like a lottery winner. It’s a life-changing award that I expect will propel my new career.

    Again, thank you! Avanti Centrae

    I continue to be thrilled at the support and recognition from Chanticleer Reviews. I made two very good friends at the conference, and I learned valuable information, nitty-gritty stuff, that’s available nowhere else. What a class act! 

    PJ Devlin

    Many thanks for providing this wonderful opportunity to enable one’s book to reach higher in the eyes of the reading public

    Cheers and best, Prue Batten

    You continue to do a massive job so well. Congratulations on the growing success and reputation of the awards. And please extend my appreciation to your team. 

    Warm wishes, Elisabeth Storrs, HNS Australiasia

    Many thanks for the amazing conference, the wonderful sessions and guest speakers and the fabulous awards night. We had such fun, learnt a great deal and made some special friendships. 

    Catherine Wilsons (A & T) – Australia 

    Chanticleer is Awesome! 

    Kari Rhyan 

    I really want to thank you again for the incredible event last month. The Chanticleer community is very welcoming, and I’m happy to be a part of it! 

    TK RIGGINS

    My 10 second elevator pitch for why submit in a Chanticleer contest is quoting from Cool Hand Luke where he says, “Only Bastards and Cream rise to the top.” If you submit to Chanticleer you at least can find out whether your book has the potential of becoming cream. Your contest is open and inclusive, an admirable goal for writers and society as a whole. … And once again, thank you so so much for putting on this conference. I am telling my writer friends to submit and to plan on attending CAC2019.

     Alex Paul

    Thank you so much for this amazing honor! It was truly a surreal and amazing moment to win. Still can barely believe it! Definitely one I’ll never forget! I’m so grateful to you and everyone that makes Chanticleer possible. I’ve never met a more dedicated, supportive group of book lovers. I will happily come to the conference next year to present and participate. Can’t wait.

    Michelle Rene, HOUR GLASS

    and there are more testimonials for CAC!