Tag: Chanticleer Authors Conference

  • The LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction AwardWe are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 Laramie Book Awards at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 Laramie Book Awards for Western Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    Michelle Rene, the author of Hour Glass announced the Grand Prize Winner of the 2017 Laramie Book Awards for Western  Fiction (CIBAs),  announced the 2018 Laramie Award Winners at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony.

     PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 Laramie Book Award winners. Thank you!

    Congratulations to the 2018 Laramie Book Awards for Laramie Book Awards Western Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Living Where the Rabbits Dance by Jr. R. Collins
    • Promise of Tomorrow  by TK Conklin
    • Chasing Demons   by John Hansen
    • A Female Doctor in the Civil War Richard Alan
    • Splintered by Curt Locklear   

    And now for the LARAMIE Book Awards  GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Western Fiction

                                                   

    Blood Moon: A Captive’s Tale by Ruth Hull Chatlien took home the Laramie Grand Prize Ribbon. 

     

     

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the Laramie award winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the  LARAMIE Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions into the 2019 Laramie Book Awards is July 31, 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    As always, please contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions.

     

  • The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction – Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionWe are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    Jesikah Sundin, the author of the Legacy: Biodome Chronicles the Grand Prize Winner of the 2015  Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction (CIBAs),  announced the First Place Award Winners at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony.

     PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 Gertrude Warner Book Award winners. Thank you!

    Congratulations to the 2018 Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Climb, Run, Drown by Cheryl G. Bostrom
    • Tookan Attack by Alex Paul
    • Reality Gold by Tiffany Brooks
    • 2nd Gen by Andrea and William Vaughan
    • Change of Chaos by Jacinta Jade
    • Sneaking Out by Chuck Vance
    • Soul Sacrifice by Susan Faw     

    And now for the Dante Rossetti Book Awards  GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Young Adult Fiction

    WHISPERS by Lynn Yvonne Moon took home the Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Young Adult  Fiction

     

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the Dante Rossetti  Warner award winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the 2018 Dante Rossetti Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions into the 2019 Dante Rossetti Book Awards is May 31, 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    As always, please contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions.

     

  • The M&M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem – Grand Prize Division Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The M&M Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem – Grand Prize Division Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    Cozy Mystery Fiction AwardM&M BOOK AWARDS for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs)

    We are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 M&M Book Awards at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    Lawrence Verigin, the author of the Dark Seed thriller series and winner of CLUE and Global Thriller awards (CIBA),  announced the First Place Award Winners and the Grand Prize Winner for the 2018 M&M Book Awards at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony. PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 M&M Book Award winners. Thank you!

    2018 M&M  Book Awards for Mystery and Mayhem  Fiction First in Category Winners

    • Bert Mintenko and the Minor Misdemeanors by B.L. Smith
    • Fiction Can Be Murder by Becky Clark
    • A Promise Given by Michelle Cox
    • Campari Crimson by Traci Andrighetti
    • Evil Under The Stars: The Agatha Christie Book Club 3 by C.A. Larmer
    • Hair Brained by Nancy J. Cohen
    • Blood on a Blue Moon:  A Sheaffer Blue Mystery by Jessica H. Stone / Stone Winkler  
    • Moriarty Takes His Medicine by Anna Castle     

    Congratulations to the First Place Category Winners of the 2018 M&M Book Awards! 

    And now for the M&M BOOK AWARDS GRAND PRIZE WINNER for Mystery & Mayhem Fiction

     

            A PROMISE GIVEN by Michelle Cox took home the M&M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Grand Prize Ribbon

     

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the M&M award winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the 2018 M&M Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions into the 2019 M&M Book Awards has been extended to May 15. 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    As always, please contact me directly at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions.

  • 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards Update for the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference & CIBAs

    2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards Update for the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference & CIBAs

    The 2019  Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC) and the Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBAs) for 2018 wrapped up on Sunday, April 28th at five o’clock in the afternoon. Attendees and presenters began arriving on Wednesday, April 24th to participate in the Master Writing Craft workshops presented by the internationally bestselling author—Master of Suspense J.D. Barker and Top Senior Editor, Jessica Page Morrell.

    This unique and progressive conference was jammed packed with sessions serious authors featured sessions and workshops on the business, marketing, and technologies of publishing and of being an author. CAC19 attendees were also offered advance writing craft sessions and workshops. Hollywood was also represented at #CAC19 with Scott Steindorff, the ‘Hollywood Bookman’ and Major A-list Film Producer – and president of Stone Village Productions shared with us in his sessions and interviews his knowledge about  “What Hollywood Wants,”  “How to Construct Big Ideas,” “How Storytelling is Changing,” and more.

    2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards

    The 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards winners for sixteen divisions were announced on Saturday evening at the CIBA banquet and awards ceremony along with the 2018 Overall CIBA Grand Prize in conjunction with the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference. The ceremony was held at the ballroom of the luxurious Hotel Bellwether on the waterfront of  Bellingham, Wash.

    The CIBA celebration began at six o’clock in the evening with a cocktail party. Hindenburg Systems out of Denmark had a drawing for three excellent prizes that included a 2-year subscription to their state-of-the-art audiobook and podcast software systems,  a one-year subscription, and a really cool Hindenburg computer/commuter bag during the cocktail party.

    A coveted Chanticleer Blue Ribbon—You know you want one! 

    The Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony

    The CIBA Banquet and Ceremony began at seven-thirty in the evening with the banquet catered by the Hotel Bellwether and the Executive Chef Peter Birk. We began the CIBA announcements at eight o’clock with an explanation of the judging rounds and process. There were sixteen presenters who individually recognized all of the CIBA Semi-Finalists who were in attendance before announcing his or her division’s First Place Category winners for each of the sixteen divisions. PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems presented each CIBA Blue Ribbon Award Winner with a prize certificate. After a short intermission, the awards presenters announced and recognized each divisions’ grand prize winners. Each one of the CIBA Grand Prize Award Winners was presented with a grand prize package from PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems along with the coveted grand prize ribbons. The 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony concluded with the announcement of the 2018 Overall Chanticleer Book Awards Grand Prize winner.

    Professional photographer Dwayne Rogge of Bellingham based Photo Treehouse was available during the cocktail hour to take headshots and souvenir photos. He and his assistant also took photographs to record the award winners and division grand prize winners. These photos will be for digital download available by May 20, 2019. The link to the website for the complimentary digital photos will be emailed to all of the conference attendees. Printed photos will also be available for purchase on the website.

    The CIBA winners will be revealed—please standby…

    2018 CIBA Award Winners Announcements

    We will begin creating the website posting that recognizes the First Place Award Winners and the Grand Prize Winners of the sixteen divisions of the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards starting today, April 29, 2019. We appreciate your patience with us as it takes time to double-check, create the links,  recognize the winners and create the website posts. The CIBA website postings announcements will be in the order of the sixteen divisions’ submission deadlines starting with the Cygnus Book Awards for Science Fiction moving on to the last submission date for the Instruction & Insight Book Awards. We appreciate your patience as we move through the list.

    Each of the 2018 CIBA divisions winners will be posted on the homepage of the Chanticleer website under WRITING CONTEST NEWS.

    Please visit the Chanticleer Reviews’ website for more of our exciting updates and CIBA announcements! We will also post to our social media platforms:

    Twitter:  @ChantiReviews

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/chantireviews/    @ChanticleerBookReviews & Media

    Instagram: @ChantiReviews

    Hashtags:  #CAC19   #CIBAs

    We thank you for your patience!

    SAVE the DATE:  The next Chanticleer Authors Conference is scheduled for April 17 – 19, 2020 with Master Classes held on Thursday,  April 16, 2020. We will announce the 2019 Chanticleer International Book Award Winners on April 18, 2020. 

  • Creative Tools for Gaining Media Attention by Allison Vborva, Publicist

    Creative Tools for Gaining Media Attention by Allison Vborva, Publicist

    Pitching Your Book Release to the Press: Creative Tools for Gaining Media Attention

    “Is it even worth my time to send out a press release for my book launch?”

    This question came up during a kaffeeklatsch at last year’s Chanticleer Authors Conference and judging by the lively discussion at the table, it was a dilemma on the minds of many participants that weekend. In today’s flooded media landscape, is it still possible for small press and indie authors to get press for their book releases? And if so, how?

    My answer that day? Yes, but…

    As an indie or small press author, you can still gain earned media attention (print and digital) for your book launch. But if you think you’re going to get there with a run-of-the-mill press release, think again.

    In preparation for this year’s conference, I want to expand on the answer I gave that day, along with a few new pieces of advice to help authors gain earned media attention with a little luck and a whole lot of creativity.

    There are four to seven thousand new titles released daily. Your book release is not the headline.

    Your Book Release Is Not the Headline

    When I sit down to work with an author on a press release or an earned media package, here is the first thing I tell them: your book release is not the headline. To get the attention of the press, we need to hand them news that goes beyond “Author Releases New Book.”

    Think about it: editors and bloggers get sent dozens of press releases every day. Unless you’ve just written the sequel to a New York Times bestseller, you need to give them a reason to care about you and your book above all the others. In other words, you need to present them with an angle that will help them place your book release as part of a larger story. What makes you stand out and why will their readers care?

    Brainstorming Your Media Angle

    It can be difficult to step back from your book and look at the bigger picture. But that’s what you have to do if you want to create a human interest story around your book release.

    Here are a few questions to get you brainstorming:

    • What compelled you to write this book?
    • How is it different from other books in your genre?
    • Was your process for writing or researching the book unusual? If so, how?
    • Is the subject of your story particularly relevant to current events?
    • Is the subject or setting of your book particularly relevant to a niche group of people?
    • Is there anything about your personal story that would interest readers? For example are there obstacles you’ve overcome, or an unusual current or former profession?

    Targeting Your Message to Your Audience or Come Up  “Crickets”

    Once you’ve brainstormed all of the things that make your book release unique, it’s time to dial down and refine your message.

     Remember though: when it comes to media pitches, one size doesn’t fit all. The surest way to guarantee zero response for your news is to send a blanket email to the media that contains a formulaic press release. I can promise, you’ll hear crickets in return. 

     

    Your media pitch should change depending on the outlet and the intended audience. For example, a regional print magazine featuring notable women might be interested in how your memoir ties to current events or why your novel is set in a particular location. A book blogger, on the other hand, will probably care more about the background story of how you became an author or the quirky methods you use when you research historical fiction.

     I usually recommend writing two or three different press releases — one for industry-specific press like book blogs; one for local and one for regional presses; and if it applies, one for a niche audience. The more targeted you get — both in your press release and in the personalized emails you send to the media — the better your chances of getting your news featured.

      Don’t come up “crickets”  in your press releases and book launch strategy.

    More Tips On Getting Media Attention – Session at Chanticleer Authors Conference

    If you plan to attend the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference, I will have even more tips and plenty of time for questions during my session, “Getting Media Attention as a Small Press or Indie Author.” You’ll walk away with concrete tools for writing press releases, pitching to the media, and preparing for press interviews.

    Allison Vrbova, Two Willows PR & Marketing

     

    Publicity and marketing consultant Allison Vrbova has helped countless small press authors, independent artists, and entrepreneurs beat the odds to gain media attention in regional and national publications. You can learn more about her consulting work at www.twowillowseditorial.com

     

  • Ronald E. Yates, Award-winning Author, Professor, & Foreign Correspondent  — Panel Moderator and Interviewer at CAC19

    Ronald E. Yates, Award-winning Author, Professor, & Foreign Correspondent — Panel Moderator and Interviewer at CAC19

    Ronald E. Yates is an award-winning author of historical fiction and action/adventure novels, including the popular and highly-acclaimed Finding Billy Battles trilogy. His extraordinarily accurate books have captivated fans from around the world who applaud his ability to blend fact and fiction.

    Ron is a former foreign correspondent for the Chicago Tribune and Professor Emeritus of Journalism at the University of Illinois where he was also the Dean of the College of Media.

    His award-winning book, The Improbable Journeys of Billy Battles,” is the second in his Finding Billy Battles trilogy of novels and was published in June 2016. The first book in the trilogy, “Finding Billy Battles,” was published in 2014. Book #3 in the trilogy (The Lost Years of Billy Battles) was published by Mill City Press in June 2018. All three books have placed in the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    He is also the author of The Kikkoman Chronicles: A Global Company with A Japanese Soul, published by McGraw-Hill. Other books include Aboard the Tokyo Express: A Foreign Correspondent’s Journey through Japan, a collection of columns translated into Japanese, as well as three journalism textbooks: The Journalist’s Handbook, International Reporting and Foreign Correspondents, and Business and Financial Reporting in a Global Economy.

    Ron lived and worked in Japan, Southeast Asia, and both Central and South America where he covered several history-making events including the fall of South Vietnam and Cambodia; the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing; and wars and revolutions in Afghanistan, the Philippines, Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Guatemala, among other places.

    His work as a war correspondent resulted in several awards, including the Inter-American Press Association’s Tom Wallace Award for coverage of Central and South America; the Peter Lisagor Award from the Society of Professional Journalists; three Edward Scott Beck Awards for International Reporting, and three Pulitzer nominations. Ron is a proud graduate of the William Allen White School of Journalism at the University of Kansas and a veteran of the U.S. Army where he served in the Army Security Agency.

    Ron Yates will moderate panels and conduct interviews at the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference. 

  • TAPPING the EXPERTS – Researching for Your Works in Progress by Carol M. Cram

    TAPPING the EXPERTS – Researching for Your Works in Progress by Carol M. Cram

    Guidelines for Connecting with Sources and Experts While Researching Novels

    Editor’s Note: Whether or not you write Thrillers, Science Fiction, Mysteries, Contemporary Social Themes, YA,  Historical, or any genre, these guidelines for connecting with sources and tapping experts will come in handy.

    One of the questions I get asked frequently when people discover I like to write historical novels is “How do you do your research?” I don’t have a pat answer (I wish I did!). The reality is that I “do my research” as I’m writing a novel and that, for me, it’s my least favorite part of the process. There, I said it!

    I know many historical novelists who adore research, who like it even more than writing, but I’m not one of them. I like research. I enjoy prowling through dusty libraries and doing endless Internet searches and reading stacks of books, but most of the time I’d rather be writing my story.

    That said, I have picked up some techniques over the past few years that I’ll share in this blog to help you find your feet when you’re researching and writing a novel set in the past. Getting the facts right is very important. You discover that the first time a reader finds a mistake (and tells you about it).

    In my novel set in early 19th Century London, I had a character refer to the third season of the year as “Fall.” A British reader set me straight, in no uncertain terms. Thank goodness she was a Beta reader and I was able to catch the error before the novel was published!

    Books are great, the Internet can’t be beaten for looking up and verifying facts quickly, and libraries are awesome. But even better are the academics who write all those books and articles. In other words, the experts. Many experts are happy and eager to share what they know with you. And many go well beyond just answering questions.

    Following are some tips and advice for reaching out and working with subject matter experts.

    Do your homework before contacting a subject matter expert. You don’t want to waste an expert’s time asking questions that you could easily answer yourself with a bit of reading. Consult books and articles to become as conversant as you can with the subject and then prepare a list of specific questions to focus the discussion. Experts who see that you’ve made an effort to understand their field are usually very generous with their time and interested to hear about your Work in Progress.

    Keep the number of questions reasonable. A half-hour interview is about right, although if your expert wants to go on longer, sit back and enjoy! You never know what great information you’ll get—often on a subject you weren’t looking for but that will fit beautifully into some part of your story. Experts are often fascinated by the creative process and may suggest plot ideas based on their more in-depth understanding of the period. When an expert says something like “What if you have your character do such and such…”, listen up!

    Experts care a great deal about their fields of expertise and as a result, most welcome the opportunity to work with a novelist to bring their knowledge to a wider audience. An academic I consulted for The Muse of Fire told me how thrilled he was that someone apart from his students was interested in early 19th Century British theater.

    Make sure you end an interview with a request for additional book and research recommendations. Most experts are happy to provide you with more references than you’ll probably have time to read.

    Find experts by looking up faculty lists at universities, consulting bibliographies, conducting searches for specialist groups, and asking for recommendations. You can click the Ask a Librarian link on any Library website to get all sorts of academic questions answered. Before contacting experts—generally by email—familiarize yourself with their credentials and read at least some of their articles and books. When you take the time to read their writing, you’re more likely to ask intelligent questions.

    Photo Credit: Myrabella / Wikimedia Commons
    Soldiers in front of the wood of Hougoumont during the reenactment of the battle of Waterloo (1815)

    Another place to find experts, particularly in specific historical eras, is to seek out re-enactment groups and themed events such as Renaissance Fairs. Here you’ll find experts who have really steeped themselves in your period and are eager to share what they know.

    Approach experts with a polite email that includes a short description of your Work in Progress and a few sample chapters. In my experience, experts are most eager to help when I give them an opportunity to first read my work. Many want to be sure they are associating their names with writing that they personally like.

    For all three of my novels, I’ve been fortunate to have experts give me advice during the writing process and then to read drafts of my novel to catch stray errors. Several of them became almost as invested in the accuracy of my novel as I was and are now fans!

    In your introductory email to an expert, make sure you include your own web address in your signature line and a short summary of your own background and credentials. I know that several of the experts I’ve reached out to told me they checked out my website before replying to my request. They understandably wanted to verify my background and learn about my books before connecting with me.

    Thank experts in your acknowledgments. I always include historical notes at the end of my novels to cite books I consulted while writing. I also personally thank experts with whom I’ve connected personally. Everyone appreciates being thanked.

    Send complimentary copies of your novels to experts who have provided you with significant help. I think it’s money well spent to let the people who have helped me know how much I appreciate them.

    We are incredibly fortunate as novelists to be able to easily connect worldwide with experts in a dizzying array of subjects. I’ve visited with the curator of the Narrenturm—an anatomical museum housed in Europe’s first insane asylum in Vienna; taken tea in London with an expert on 19th Century women composers; become good friends with a professor of medieval art history, and connected with several wonderful specialists in early 19th Century British theater. Each of them did much more than just answer my questions. They actively contributed ideas about plot and character motivation appropriate to the era I was writing in and inspired me to explore all sorts of new ideas.

    You never know what might come from your interactions with experts once you get the nerve to approach them – respectfully and after having done your homework.

    And then all you need to do is weave what you’ve learned into a compelling novel that people will not want to put down. Easy, right?

     


    Carol M. Cram, CIBA Award-Winning Author (both Goethe and Chaucer Historical Book Awards) for these outstanding novels:

    Carol M. Cram will announce the new CHAUCER Book Awards winners on Saturday, April 27, 2019, at the Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. She is also presenting at the sixth annual Chanticleer Authors Conference. Her award-winning historical fiction books will be available in the CAC19 Books By the Bay Book Fair hosted by Village Books on April 27 & 28, 2019.

     

  • ELEMENTS of SUCCESSFUL FICTION – Writing Fiction Guidelines by Jessica Morrell – Writers Toolbox Series

    ELEMENTS of SUCCESSFUL FICTION – Writing Fiction Guidelines by Jessica Morrell – Writers Toolbox Series

    The best fiction touches the deep layers in us. A writer achieves this effect by embedding dozens of techniques into his or her story. – Jessica Page Morrell

    Dramatic Question 

    Compelling fiction is based on a single, powerful question that must be answered by the story climax. This question will be dramatized chiefly via action in a series of events or scenes. If you are writing a romance, the question always involves whether the couple will resolve their differences and declare their love. In a mystery the dramatic question might be will Detective Smith find the serial killer in time to prevent another senseless death? In The Old Man and Seathe dramatic question is will Santiago catch the big fish and thus restore his pride and reputation?

    An Intimate, Simmering World 

    An intimate world isn’t created by merely piling on details. It means your story world has the resonance of childhood memories, the vividness of a dream, and the power of a movie. It’s filled in with shadows and corners and dogs and ice cubes and the sounds and smells of a dryer humming on wash day and a car blaring past, rap music shaking the windows. These details lend it authority, potency, and a palpable physical existence.

    An intimate story takes us to a specific place and coaxes us to remain there. An intimate story is lifelike and feels as real and complicated as the world the reader inhabits. When he finishes the final pages and leaves the story world, he should feel the satisfaction of the ending, but also a huge sense of loss. Like a friend has moved to another town just when the friendship had reached a level of closeness and trust.

    Characters Built from Dominant Traits

    Create main characters with dominant and unforgettable traits as a foundation of personality. These traits will be showcased in the story events, will help him achieve or fail at goals, and will make the story person consistent. For example, Sherlock Holmes’ dominant traits are that he is analytical, Bohemian, opinionated and intelligent. These traits are showcased in every story he appears in along with secondary and contrasting traits. When the character first appears in the first scene, he arrives in the story with his dominant traits intact.

    Emotional Needs

    Protagonists and the main characters are people with baggage and emotional needs stemming from their pasts. These needs, coupled with motivation cause characters to act as they do. For example, in Silence of the Lambs Clarisse  Starling is propelled by childhood traumas to both succeed and heal the wounds caused by the death of her father.

    Significance 

    The storyline focuses on the most significant events in the protagonist’s life.

    Motivation Entwined with Backstory 

    Motivation, the why? of fiction, is at the heart of every scene, fueling your character’s desires and driving him to accomplish goals. It provides a solid foundation for the often complicated reasons for your character’s behaviors choices, actions,  and blunders.  Motivating factors provide trajectories for character development, as a character’s past inevitably intersects with his present. Your character’s motivations must be in sync with his core personality traits and realistically linked to goals so that readers can take on these goals as their own.

    Desire 

    Desire is the lifeblood of fictional characters. Not only do your characters want something, but they also want something badly. Santiago, in The Old Man and the Sea desperately wants to restore his reputation and also wants his friendship and partnership with the boy to resume. And in the lonely hours when he is far out at sea, desperately struggling to hang on to the fish and fighting off sharks, we see his fierce desire acted out and the price he pays for it.

    You can bestow on your character flaming red hair, an endearing, crooked grin and a penchant for chocolate and noir movies, but if she doesn’t want something badly, she’s merely a prop in your story, not a driving force. But if she wants to win the Miss Florida contest, take over her boss’ job, or become the first female shortstop for the Atlanta Braves, then you’ve got a character who will make things happen and a story that will be propelled by desire.

    Threat

    Fiction is based on a series of threatening changes inflicted on the protagonist. In many stories, these threats force him or her to change or act in ways he or she needs to change or act. Often too, what the protagonist fears most is what is showcased in a novel or short story. It can be fear of losing his family, job, or health with this dreaded outcome providing interest, action, and conflict.

    Causality 

    Events in fiction are never random or unconnected. They are always linked by causality with one event causing more events later in the story, which in turn causes complications, which cause more events, which cause bad decisions, etc.

    Inner Conflict 

    A fictional character doesn’t arrive at easy decisions or choices. Instead, he is burdened by difficult or impossible choices, particularly moral choices, that often make him doubt himself and question his actions. Inner conflict works in tandem with outer conflict—an physical obstacle, villain or antagonist–to make the story more involving, dramatic, and events more meaningful.

     Complications   A story builds and deepens by adding complications, twists, reversals, and surprises that add tension and forward motion. Plots don’t follow a straight path, instead, there are zigzags, dead ends, and sidetracks. Complications create obstacles and conflict, cause decisions to be made, paths to be chosen.

     Midpoint Reversal 

    The middle of a novel comprises more than half its length. At about the midpoint of most novels, a dramatic reversal occurs. The hunter becomes the hunted; a second murder occurs proving the detective has been wrong in his suspicions; a former lover arrives in town to complicate a budding romance. This reversal keeps the middle from bogging down and becoming predictable and also breathes new life and often a new direction into the story.

    Satisfying Ending 

    every story needs an ending that satisfies the reader while concluding the plot. The final scenes, when the tensions are red hot and the character has reached a point of no return, must deliver drama, emotion, yet a logical conclusion. This is not to suggest that every plot ends with a shoot-out or physical confrontation because some endings are quieter, more thoughtful. Some endings are ambivalent, some a dramatic or a violent clash of wills. But there is always a sense that all the forces that have been operating in your story world have finally come to a head and the protagonist’s world is forever changed.

    The end is just the beginning…

    A Note from the Editor: A satisfying ending is one of the top, if not the top, reasons why books go viral and what will make your reader want to read your next work. Make sure that the you put as much effort in to a satisfying ending as you do into your opening hook—if not more. Kiffer Brown

    Jessica Morrell is a top-tier developmental editor and a contributor to Writer’s Digest magazine, and she teaches Master Writing Craft Classes at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that is held annually along with teaching at Chanticleer writing workshops.

    Jessica Page Morrell

    Jessica will teach a Master Class and advanced writing craft sessions at CAC19

    Workshops and Sessions Jessica will teach at the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference: 

    Immersive Fiction: Writing Fiction so Readers Land Amid Your Story and Don’t Want to Leave. Ever.

     

    We live in a clattering, distracting world that pulls at readers’ attention and senses. To compete your fiction needs be immersive, as in an alternate reality that your reader can enter into. Thus your readers are experiencing it, not simply reading it. An immersive story is an intimate, sensory story. It takes place in a world that a reader can see, smell, feel, and hear and it’s based on characters readers come to know and care deeply about. With the opening pages, readers are swept into a world that is so resoundingly real and intricately constructed that they leave their ordinary lives to venture forth and live daily along with the characters.

    Immersive Fiction Part 1:  Atmospherics

    Readers want to feel as if they’re part of a story world interacting with viewpoint characters. Fictional worlds that are immersive are nuanced, intricate, and alive with significant details. We’ll sort through what makes details significant and necessary. Plan to delve into atmosphere and tone, often under-appreciated techniques in a writer’s toolbox, yet they can be so effective to heighten suspense, create reality, and underline emotions and key moments. We’ll highlight how to use weather, lighting, interiors, unsafe places, and what I call “surround sound.” Finally, we’ll also discuss the key elements needed of world build in realistic genre fiction such as historical, sci-fi, and fantasy, and to make your stories memorable and immersive.

    Immersive Fiction Part 2: Your Sometimes Heart-breaking, Sometimes Messed-up, Sometimes Heroic Fictional Cast

    For many writers, the most fun of creating a story is fleshing out characters who battle, grow, and plop into heaps of trouble. Because readers need relatable, yet irksome, yet potent story people to follow and fret over. Their flaws and mistakes drive us crazy, their choices and moral dilemmas worry us sick, their triumphs feel as sweet as our own.
    Characters first need to be intriguing and readers need to meet them at a pivotal, irreversible moment. From there they’ll tread where we dare not, fall in love with losers and sometimes winners, and take on monsters when we’d be cowering. But still characters, including secondary characters, need a vivid essence and need to be bigger than life. And by story’s end they need to grow, also called an arc. This workshop will delve into the more intricate aspects of character building and creating arcs, the art of creating characters who will live in the reader’s heart and memory.

    Immersive Fiction Part 3: Stakes and Motivations

    One major reason that people ‘buy into’ storytelling of all types is that there are serious stakes involved. Readers need to feel as if they also have a stake in the story. Stakes create tension, but most of all dread in a story because a character’s happiness, perhaps even his life, depends on them. The stakes might mean saving a vulnerable child snatched by a creepy predator, or saving the galaxy, or defeating Voldemort and his Deatheater.

    Motivations are the reason characters attempt any action in a story. You’ll learn that motivations are deeply felt, drive a story, and will require a character’s chief personality traits to fulfill. We’ll discuss how motivations reveal backstory and a character’s inner world, create goals, and will exact a cost as the story progresses. We’ll discuss a variety of stakes, motivations, and goals so that you’ll learn clear examples of how all are entwined with plot and character.

    If you would like to learn more about the sessions and Master Writing Craft Workshops please click on this link that goes to https://www.chantireviews.com/chanticleer-conference/

  • Links to All 16 Divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2018 Semi-Finalists

    Links to All 16 Divisions of the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2018 Semi-Finalists

    STATUS of the Judging Rounds for all Sixteen Divisions of the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards – the 2018 CIBAs – Official Notification to the CIBA 2018 Semi-Finalists

     

    We have just completed the final sweep of all of the 2018 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards submissions. All of the divisions have announced the authors and titles that have moved forward to the SEMI-FINALIST positions.

    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 interaction with the judges.

    The works that made it to the 2018 SEMI-FINALIST are currently in the final rounds of judging to discover 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 16 divisions’ grand prize winners.

     

    Here are the links to the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTS for All 16 Divisions. The CIBA ceremony and banquet will take place on Saturday evening of the 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference that will take place April 25 – 28, 2019 in Bellingham, Wash.

    These are the OFFICIAL and FINAL LISTINGS for the 2018 CIBAs SEMI-FINALISTS. The next notification will announce the First Place Category Winners and the Grand Prize Winners and will go out on April 30, 2019.


    Cygnus Award for Science Fiction

     

    The CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction Semi-Finalists

     


     

    The JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction Semi-Finalists

     


    Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

     

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

     


    Gertrude Warner Children's Chapter Books

     

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

     


    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

     

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

     


    Pre 1750 Historical Fiction Award

     

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

     


    Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

     

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

     


    Western Pioneeer Civil War Fiction Award

     

    The LARAMIE Book Awards for Western, Prairie, & Civil War Fiction Semi-finalists

     


    Romance Fiction Award

     

    The CHATELAINE Book Awards for Romantic Fiction Semi-Finalists

     


    Thriller Suspense Fiction Award

     

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

     


    Early Readers and Picture books

     

    The Little Peeps Book Awards for Picture Books and Early Readers Semi-Finalists

     


     

     The OZMA Book Awards for Fantasy Fiction Semi-Finalists 

     


     

    The PARANORMAL Book Awards for Supernatural and Paranormal Fiction Semi-Finalists

     


     

    The GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards for Lit Lab and Global Thrillers Semi-Finalists

     


    Mainstream Contemporary Fiction Awards

     

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

     


     

    The I & I Book Awards for Instructional and Insightful Non-Fiction Works Semi-Finalists

     


    INFORMATION

    Each of the Semi-Finalists has been notified individual by email from the president of Chanticleer Reviews, Kathryn “Kiffer” Brown at  KBrown@ChantiReviews.com We will send the second and final round of email notifications to the 2018 Semi-Finalists starting on Monday, March 25, 2019.

    The email includes links to Semi-Finalists Digital Badges, Semi-Finalists Book Stickers, a discount code for CAC19, and other information along with a significant discount code for CAC19 registration packets.

    The 2019 Chanticleer Authors Conference will take place on April 26, 27, & 28, 2019.

    The Master Classes taught by J.D. Barker and Jessica Morrell will take place on Thursday, April 25, 2019. Registration is required. 

    The Books By the Bay Book Room will be managed by Village Books and will be open to the general public on Saturday and Sunday. Sunday will be the Book Fair day with author signings.

    There are six different registration packages available for CAC19.

    The 2018 CIBA Banquet and Ceremony will take place on the evening of April 27, 2019. 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 CAC19 and the CIBA Banquet and Awards Ceremony* and tickets are required for admittance.

    Good luck to all of the 2018 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 2019 CYGNUS, JOURNEY, and M&M Book Awards is April 30, 2019! Don’t delay. Enter today!

     

  • 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!