Tag: Chanticleer Book Awards

  • Spotlight on the 2021 I&I Book Awards for Instructional & Insightful Non-Fiction

    Spotlight on the 2021 I&I Book Awards for Instructional & Insightful Non-Fiction

    “You should be a teacher!” “You do that so well!”
    “I love how much you know about that!”

    If you hear things like this often, there’s a good chance you should be submitting to our I&I Book Awards! The I&I Awards look at the best Instructional & Insightful work featuring How-To, Guidance, and Self-Help.

    I&I or Instruction & Insight Awards Badge, with lots of symbols of different symbols for work

    You can be the best at How To Succeed with your Self-Help book by submitting to the I&I Awards before the end of November!

    You can see all six of our Non-Fiction Divisions here. While these days, the How-To and Self-Help genres are ubiquitous, what do we really know about their origins?

    A Closer Look at Instructional Literature 

    Image of the Egyptian Ani having his heart weighted before Anubis
    Ani’s Heart is weighed against a feather before Anubis in The Egyptian Book of the Dead

    The first recorded genre that could be described as self-help was called “Sebayt” an Egyptian style of reading that translates as “teaching.” You can even think as far back as The Egyptian Book of the Dead which is an instructional guide for Ani as he begins the journey through the afterlife.

    But do they work?

    Aristotle believed that reading had healing capabilities. While self-help book buyers may not be cured of whatever ails them, feeling better is not to be entirely discounted. People hate their jobs, fail at love, fear getting old, worry about their weight; self-help books address and try to assuage these problems. Life hurts, and the promise that self-help books make is a relief of that hurt. (read more from Publishing Perspectives here)

    Cover of how to Win Friends and Influence people

    The genre was popularized in modern days by the well known work How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie.

    Did you know? An updated version of Carnegie’s book is being release 5/17/22. It’s available for preorder now!

    Carnegie never made it as a fiction writer, and his initial idea to give lectures based on what would become his bestselling work was laughed at by universities. However, he certainly can be said to have succeeded as a writer as people continue to live by his suggestions to this day.

    Why Write an Instructional How-To or Self-Help?

    LitHub has an excellent article about this, and here’s one of the more relevant parts of it.

    The self-improvement industry has been analyzed in a variety of academic disciplines, but its literary import has not received the attention it demands. The omission is even more glaring in light of the fact that self-help guides are among the most lucrative book genres of the past 30 years, with approximately 150 new self-help titles published every week.

    Books stacked to the sky
    The competition for book sales is sky high!

    Like the entire publishing industry since the Kindle came out in 2007, the Self-Help industry is blowing up! With Chanticleer’s goal of Discovering Today’s Best Books, we aim to shine a light on the best How-To books, becoming a link in the circle that helps those books find their way into the hands of readers everywhere! We do this through our Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards and through Editorial Book Reviews.

    I remember when working at Village Books the book that was sold back the most was Marie Kondo’s The Life Changing Magic of Tidying Up. It always came in with at least three other bags full of books from the same household. It seemed to be working! – David

    Marie Kondo is an incredible success story with her lifestyle changes and instructions on organization. She did so well that she had her own Netflix series!

    Marie Kondo standing near the head of a hardwood table
    Kondo recommends keeping 30 books max in your house. We can’t quite bring ourselves to do that at Chanticleer.

    Instructional & Insightful Books That Have Done Well at Chanticleer

    Read on to see what we recommend from books that fit into the I&I Division.

    TEN THINGS EVERY CHILD WITH AUTISM WISHES YOU KNEW
    By Ellen Notbohm
    Grand Prize Winner in I&I Awards

    Renowned author and mother of a son with autism, Ellen Notbohm here writes from both a personal and a studied viewpoint.

    Not so long ago, autism was considered incurable, hopeless, a sort of dead-end diagnosis. But with time and attention to real people on the spectrum, we know now that children with autism can become positive, productive adults. The author’s son, Bryce, decided early on to “be happy” despite his differentness. For parents initially facing the diagnosis, there will undoubtedly be challenges, often on a daily, hourly basis, but Notbohm’s diligent exploration assures us that “autism is not awful.”

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    The SUBURBAN MICRO-FARM
    By Amy Stross
    First Place Winner in I&I Awards

    The Suburban Micro Farm

    Author, educator, and urban farmer Amy Stross offers a comprehensive look at how to repurpose a small yard in the city for basic sustenance and so much more.

    Award-winning writer Stross has composed a thoroughly practical guide to everything a reader would need to know to do what she did: transform a yard into a farm. Acknowledging that the ground surrounding a town dwelling is hardly what one thinks of when one thinks farmland, Stross draws from her personal experience to show precisely how the transformation can take shape. Her colorfully illustrated manual gives the basics for managing an ample garden space, or micro-farm, almost down to the minute (in fact, seven minutes twice a day).

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    The SATISFIED WORKBOOK
    By Dr. Rhona Epstein, PsyD, CAC

    The Satisfied Workbook book cover

    Dr. Rhona Epstein, PsyD, CAC is the leading expert on Food Addiction Recovery.

    She is a therapist who has recovered from the problems she now focuses on, seeking to help those who suffer from food addiction to recognize their problem and solve it with spiritual guidance.

    Epstein has based this manual around the 12 Steps, a program originally geared to alcoholism and based on Christian principles, but gradually secularized to facilitate outreach to a broader group. The 12 Steps take the addict, of whatever sort, through a series of deepening inner questions and resolutions. Initially, the addict must admit he or she has an addiction – in this case, to food and overeating, resulting in bingeing and other disorders such as bulimia. From that point, there will be a diligent search for relief, aided by faith in God’s care, and concluding with the possibility of helping others with the same problems.

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    OVERCOMING The IMPOSTOR
    By Kris Kelso

    Overcoming The Impostor book cover

    Author and entrepreneur Kris Kelso made a discovery about himself that he shares with others in his book, Overcoming The Impostor: Silence Your Inner Critique and Lead with Confidence.

    The author was surprised in a first meeting at a new job to be referred to as an “expert.” It raised doubts in his mind about whether he had earned such a title, but it also forced him to do things he’d never done before and succeed in the process. But the voices in his head persisted, even as he went from accomplishment to accomplishment. His shadow, The Impostor, told him he didn’t know how to do a certain thing; moreover, he was making it up. The Impostor relentlessly mocked him, saying that just been lucky, he wasn’t a “real” businessman at all. When he learned about “Impostor Syndrome” – “a psychological pattern in which people doubt their accomplishments” – he realized that we all have an “Inner Impostor” that needs to be recognized, dealt with, and banished.

    Continue Reading

    SAVORING the OLDE WAYS SERIES
    By Carole Bumpus
    First Place Winner in I&I Awards

    The retired family therapist turned travel writer and culinary memoirist, Carole Bumpus shares the delicious first book in her new series, Savoring the Olde Ways: Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table.

    In this first book, Carole takes readers on an intimate food tour of the Champagne, Alsace, Lorraine, and Paris regions of France. After being introduced by a mutual friend, Carole builds a special friendship with Josiane and her mother. Wanting to understand what brings and keeps European families glued together through generations of happiness and hardship, Bumpus begins by interviewing Josiane’s mother. Hearing about traditions passed down and the challenges of cooking during the war, the plan for a culinary tour of France is born among the women. Unfortunately, after travel delays out of their control, Josiane’s mother passes away before they can make the trip. Determined to make a dream trip a reality, Carole and Josiane set off to start a journey of a lifetime in honor of the woman who inspired it all.

    Continue Reading

    EXPLORE EUROPE on FOOT
    By Cassandra Overby
    Grand Prize Winner in I&I Awards

    Due to COVID-19 sweeping across continents, travel restrictions are at an all-time high. With the general population being placed on lockdown, the need for social distancing, and hunkering down moving towards an indefinite timeframe, some much-needed armchair travel adventures couldn’t come at a better time.

    Here in Cassandra Overby’s encyclopedic guide Explore Europe On Foot, readers are taken through a step-by-step process of dreaming, planning, and hopefully soon experiencing memorable, slow travel ventures of a lifetime. Whether it’s choosing a route and destination, deciding what to pack, finding appropriate accommodations and food options, or dealing with inevitable challenges, Overby supplies a world of information in this informative foot (and bike) travelers’ guide.

    Continue Reading


    Have a How-To or Self Help Instructional Book? Submit by the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    I&I or Instruction & Insight Awards Badge, with lots of symbols of different symbols for work

    See the 2020 I&I Book Award Winners Here!

    Blue and Gold I & I 2020 Grand Prize Winner Badge for Instructional & Insightful Non-Fiction

    Looking to submit to our other Non-Fiction Divisions? See them all here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    • A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.
    • And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.
    • If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

     

    And remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Spotlight Article.

    Important Links from this Article

    A Short History of Self-Help, The World’s Bestselling Genre

    When Did Self-Help Books Become Literary?

    2019 Spotlight on I&I Awards

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • Spotlight on the 2021 Harvey Chute Book Awards for Business & Enterprise Non-Fiction

    Spotlight on the 2021 Harvey Chute Book Awards for Business & Enterprise Non-Fiction

    What’s that note say on your piggy bank?

    A pink piggy bank with change lying outside of it.

    Deadlines aren’t just for taxes, sign up today for the Harvey Chute Awards today!

    Three Black stripes on a yellow badge

    Do you have money on your mind and your mind on money?


    The Origins of the Harvey Chute Awards

    Harvey Chute
    Harvey Chute (1962-2015)

    The Harvey Chute Awards hold a special place in our hearts as Harvey was a presenter at Chanticleer in the past. We named the Awards after him to honor his contributions and the business savvy that he brought to all interactions.

    An author in his own right, Chute wrote Stone and Slit, a cozy historical mystery set during the gold-rush in British Columbia, just across the border. What he was most well know for though were his guides in the For Dummies series.

    A generic, untitled FOr Dummies book
    This is generally what they look like

    For those who might not know: The For Dummies books are a series published by Wiley that break down difficult tasks into approachable, friendly how-to guides. Chute worked on a series detailing how to best use the Amazon Kindle.

    Kiffer and Harvey met just after he founded KBoards.com, a Kindle forum that’s well-known among readers and authors. Harvey Chute passed away in the fall of 2015, but the impression he made remains to this day.

    Let’s take a closer look at KBoards, one of the many legacies left behind by Chute.

    KBoards

    Golden K followed by blue "Boards"

    KBoards.com is a lot like what you’d expect from a Reddit forum, but everything is related to Kindle and Amazon publishing. It reads like a community run FAQ for best practices. And speaking of, they have an FAQ to help use the platform right here. It’s a remarkable tool for any author willing to invest the time into making it work.

    Speaking of authors trying to make it work…

    Business & Finance

    One of the toughest questions facing authors is how to maximize their book sales. Discounting a global pandemic, this was already hard enough to manage between digital sales and physical hand sales, not to mention author websites, social media, online presence, tours, events, and everything else! Writers are entrepreneurs, whether their books are independently or traditionally published.

    If you’re not sure where to get started marketing your book, consider this article here written by Kiffer Brown and Sharon Anderson as your starting point!

    Want to write better about business and finance? The best place to start is by reading what others have already written!

    You can see some of our reviews of entrepreneurial literature below

    RETIRE SECURELY: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist
    By Julie Jason
    First Place Winner in I&I Awards

    If you’re wondering what the difference is between a Roth IRA and a traditional IRA, then you’ll want to pick up Julie Jason’s Retire Securely: Insights on Money Management from an Award-Winning Financial Columnist. You will be treated to a crash course on financial terms like these and get inside information on saving and investing thanks to scores of conversations she’s had with her readers over the years.

    Plenty of titles on financial planning and investing exist on bookstore shelves, but what makes Jason’s compilation different is that hers is culled from more than 1,000 columns she has written over the years for the Connecticut newspapers, Greenwich Time and the Stamford Advocate. In 2013, King Features syndicated her “Retirement Planning and Investment” column, where she explores topics like 401(k) investing, choosing a financial adviser and how to determine if sending your kid to college is a good value. Jason, who worked as a Wall Street lawyer, money manager, and investment counselor, really knows her stuff: whether it’s unraveling the complicated world of market trends or explaining estate planning, her columns are worth reading and applying to your financial life. Her column has recently moved from King Features to Andrews McMeel Syndicate [Chanticleer Reviews was notified about this change on April 3, 2020].

    Continue Reading Here

    PRIVATE MONEY LENDING: How to Consistently Generate a Passive Income Stream
    By Gustavo J. Gomez, Ph.D.

    Are you in retirement, or close to it, wondering how you’re going to make ends meet pulling from your portfolio? Well, you’re not alone if you’re staying up at night thinking about how low-interest rates are killing your investments.

    In a practical and easy to read format, Gomez explains to investors the particulars of a little known, yet potentially lucrative investment technique that can handle the ups and downs of the stock market. Unlike stocks, the underlying security of private money lending is a tangible asset – brick and mortar, so there is another layer of protection for you, the investor.

    But what is Private Money Lending? According to Gomez, it refers to a private individual or organization that lends money. Typically, when you’re looking for financing, you would go to a bank. With private funds, on the other hand, you’re going to an individual or organization that specializes in this type of lending. The upside of private money lending is that it’s less regulated, which means less red tape. The icing on the cake, he says, is that these investments have consistently generated 9 to 12 percent returns* – not bad considering stock market investments have averaged closer to 7 percent, and with much more fluctuations. We can’t forget the economic crash of 2008 when many stock market investments plummeted close to 40 percent.

    Continue Reading Here

    APE: Author, Publisher, Entrepreneur
    By Guy Kawasaki and Shawn Welch

    APE is the how-to compendium for today’s self-publishers.

    Authors will findAPEan indispensable resource. Guy Kawasaki passes along his publishing experience in his “no-shitake,” but affable manner. Imagine having an extremely successful uncle in the publishing biz who also has a tech-wizard pal (co-author Shawn Welch) of digital publishing magic. Fortunately for us, this dynamic duo decided to share their publishing know-how.

    APE’s premise is that publishing is a parallel process “that requires simultaneous progress along multiple fronts.” Hence, self-publishers are challenged with how to: market, brand, design, promote, publish, distribute, and finance a book–all at the same time. Oh, and don’t forget the time required for actually writing the book. Indisputably, each self-publisher is an:Author, Publisher and Entrepreneur.

    Continue Reading Here

    WELFARE CHEESE to FINE CAVIAR
    By Thomas Wideman, MBA, PMP

    Welfare Cheese to Fine Caviar Book Image

    Thomas Wideman, the author of this dynamic self-help manual, Welfare Cheese to Fine Caviar: How to Achieve Your Dreams Despite Your Upbringing, rose from poverty and dismay to a life of security and personal achievement through techniques he shares with readers who can incorporate them into their own life plans.

    Wideman came from an impoverished African American family wracked by confusion, chaos, and, at times, criminality. His mother had three sons by three fathers, and he would come to know his own father only peripherally, eventually learning that the man murdered people and subsequently died in prison. The boy grew up in tough neighborhoods and ate “welfare cheese” (a block of pre-sliced heavy American cheese that supposedly melted well). Every month, making ends meet became more and more difficult. In an early chapter of this finely woven chronology, we see him taking food from trains parked along the railroad tracks and running from the authorities. In this, as in each new chapter, he speaks of confronting severe issues and finding ways to resolve them. In the case of the theft and other childhood incidents of fighting, experiencing bullies, and battling racism, he speaks of making up his mind that “my circumstances need not be my limitation.”

    Continue Reading Here


    Have a book on Business and Enterprise? Submit by the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    Three Black stripes on a yellow badge

    See the 2020 Harvey Chute Award Winners Here!

    Blue and Gold Badge for the 2020 Harvey Chute Grand Prize for Business & Enterprise Edge: Turning Adversity into Advantage by Laura Huang
    The 2020 Harvey Chute Grand Prize Badge

    Looking to submit to our other Non-Fiction Divisions? See them all here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    • A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.
    • And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.
    • If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

    And remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Spotlight Article.

    Important Links from this Article

    Obituary for Harvey Chute

    KBoards.com

    KBoards FAQ

    12 MUST-DO’s for AUTHORS for a Successful and Productive 2020 and Beyond

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • Spotlight on the 2021 Nellie Bly Book Awards for Journalistic Non-Fiction

    Spotlight on the 2021 Nellie Bly Book Awards for Journalistic Non-Fiction

    Your Report is coming due…

    You can hear the clicking of keys as you type up your next report, desperate to make tomorrow’s press.

    You know what’s coming. It’s the Nellie Bly Awards deadline at the end of November, and you have a book that will stop the presses! The Nellie Bly Book Awards for Investigative, Long-form Journalism, and Biographies. 

    Nellie Bly Awards
    Enter Today!

    Who is Nellie Bly?

    The Nellie Bly Awards are named for an American investigative journalist. Born Elizabeth Jane Cochran, Bly launched her career into the spotlight by posing as a mental patient to enter the insane asylum on Blackwell’s island. Writing her exposé on the abuses being committed there cemented her role as a leading name in investigative journalism.

    A charcoal-like drawing of a many leveled institute labeled "Charity Hospital"
    Illustration of Blackwell’s Asylum

    Her work had an immediate effect:

    Approximately one month after her articles ran in print, many of the most glaring problems she reported had improved: better living and sanitary conditions were instituted, more nourishing meals were provided, translators were hired for the foreign born who were not necessarily mentally ill but simply could not understand their keepers, and the most abusive nurses and physicians were fired and replaced (PBS.org).

    Nellie Bly – Early Life and Legacy

    Before that, she began writing under the name Nellie Bly after being invited to write a regular for the Pittsburgh Dispatch. WomensHistory.org lays more of her life out here. One thing noted in several articles is that Nellie Bly chose her name from a song by Stephen Foster. You can listen to the song and see the lyrics here:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOcVjq67CsA

    Bly “became renowned for her investigative and undercover reporting, including posing as a sweatshop worker to expose poor working conditions faced by women” (Biography.com). In addition to her excellent reporting and support for civil rights, Bly was also a bit of an adventurer. Inspired by the book Around the World in Eighty Days, her newspaper, the New York World sent her to see if she could break the fictional record. She succeeded, making the journey in only 72 days! A record that would last until 1890.

    Nellie By wrapping a string around the ruler
    Around the World in 72 Days by Nellie Bly

    Dr. Janice Ellis on The Importance of Journalism

    We’ll link to the review of her book soon, but we thought we would let Janice Ellis, PhD and Nellie Bly Grand Prize winner, talk about the importance of journalism. Here’s what she has to say:

    A Black woman wearing a jacket and a necklace
    Dr. Janice Ellis

    With all of the divisive and false information being communicated, the public needs Real Advocacy Journalism  today more than ever. There is a growing, if not urgent, need to understand the difference between the advocacy journalism being practiced today and Real Advocacy Journalism™. More importantly, we all need to readily recognize when one or the other is at play in trying to influence public opinion, or urge a hopeful, trusting public to take a particular action.

    What is the difference between advocacy journalism as it is practiced today and Real Advocacy Journalism™? Much of the advocacy journalism occurring is partisan, biased, and often blurs the lines between truth and lies, facts and fiction, and often presents fake news as real news. The purpose and objectives of this advocacy journalism constitute propaganda to gain public support for the interest and agenda of a few, a special interest group, or a small constituency rather than for the good of the majority. The public needs Real Advocacy Journalism today to put America back on the right course.

    Read more from her website here

    With all that in mind, let’s dive into some of the best Journalism books reviewed by Chanticleer!


    SHAPING PUBLIC OPINION: How Real Advocacy Journalism™ Should be Practiced
    By Janice Ellis, Ph.D.
    Grand Prize in Nellie Bly Awards

    Shaping Public Opinion Book Cover Image

    Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D., introduces the journalistic theories of Walter Lippmann in her new non-fiction work, Shaping Public Opinion: How Real Advocacy Journalism™ Should be Practiced.

    Walter Lippmann, considered one of the foremost journalists in the field over the last 100 years, was a mentor in absentia of Dr. Ellis in the art of advocacy journalism. During Lippmann’s 40+ year career, his columns were syndicated in over 250 newspapers nationwide and over 25 other international news and information outlets. Lippman focused on the ethical dissemination of information, especially about communities, society, and the world. A theory, which Dr. Ellis calls Real Advocacy Journalism.

    Continue reading here…

    WAKING up DYING
    By Robert A. Duke

    An intensely personal and compelling narrative, Waking Up Dying offers an insider’s perspective of the passage through cancer beginning with Duke’s wife’s diagnosis of stage IV glioblastoma brain cancertypically a fatal condition.

    Duke found the entire caregiving experience an agonizing, non-stop emotional rollercoaster: unbelievably frustrating, emotionally searing and increasingly chaotic.

    The author’s story of his dedicated and loving role as caregiver entails four phases of this tortuous journey: the couple’s daily coping with the disease; the author’s struggle through the health care system; the emotional reality of caregiving his dying wife; and the carefully documented material put forward as a basis for reforming the care system.

    Continue reading here…

    THE WINTER OLYMPICS: An Insider’s Guide to the Legends, Lore, and the Games
    By Ron C. Judd

    Flashbacks, gruesome accounts, victories relived, analysis, and competitors’ profiles of the Winter Olympics are revealed in Ron C. Judd’s captivating compendium titled The Winter Olympics: An Insider’s Guide to the Legends, Lore, and the Games.

    Judd doesn’t just report the scores, the times, the winners and the losers. He relays the human drama that unfolds during the Games—the glorious victories and, yes, the gut-wrenching agonies—the very stuff that becomes tomorrow’s lore and legends.

    Ron C. Judd is like a Joseph Campbell of the Olympic Games. He writes of transcendent experiences, of impossible feats, and, he says, “of moments that are beyond description.”  But describing these moments is exactly what he does. Judd deftly captures and vividly relates the escalation of emotions, the split-second moments that separate the winners from the losers after decades of day-in and day-out grueling training, the sweaty reality of the Olympics along with the heady glory and magic he has witnessed and experienced first-hand.

    Continue reading here…

    FIRE CALL! Sounding the Alarm to Save Our Vanishing Volunteers
    By George DeVault

    In his first job as a newspaper reporter, DeVault attended many emergencies – and firefighters were always on the scene. Gradually he discovered that the vast majority of America’s firefighters are volunteers, often leaving their regular jobs by prearrangement or rushing out from home in the middle of the night to respond to every conceivable crisis, from a simple kitchen fire to a multi-car crash to the cataclysmic events of 9-11-01.

    With the encouragement of empathetic wife Melanie, also a reporter, De Vault joined the firefighting ranks as a volunteer in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, while fully immersed in his journalistic career with Rodale Inc. He answered every call, about 5,000 over a thirty year period, no matter what else was going on in his life – even on a day when Melanie was in the hospital dealing with her own emergency.

    Continue reading here…


    Have a journalistic exploration that needs to be read? Submit by the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    Nellie Bly Awards

    See the 2020 Nellie Bly Award Winners here!

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Nellie Bly Grand Prize Prison from the Inside Out by William 'Mecca' Elmore & Susan Simone

    Looking to submit to our other Non-Fiction Divisions? See them all here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    • A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.
    • And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.
    • If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

    And remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    CAC22 will feature Cathy Ace, Robert Dugoni, Scott Steindorff and more! We are excited!


    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Spotlight article.

    Helpful Writer Links: 

    How Nellie Bly went undercover to expose abuse of the mentally ill

    Nellie Bly (1864-1922)

    “Nellie Bly” by STEPHEN FOSTER

    Nellie Bly Biography

    Public Needs Real Advocacy Journalism Today

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • Somerset Maugham is featured on the Spotlight for 2021 SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    Somerset Maugham is featured on the Spotlight for 2021 SOMERSET Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    The Somerset Awards: Understanding Literary Fiction

    Ah yes, literary fiction, often thought of as the highest form of writing. If only people could define exactly what it means. 

    Here are a few of Somerset Maugham’s work that typify literary fiction:

    • Of Human Bondage
    • The Razor’s Edge
    • The Moon and Sixpence 
    • And far too many to list here.

     

    Let’s start with some writing tips from Somerset Maugham himself. 

    • There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.
    • Every production of an artist should be the expression of an adventure of his soul.
    • I always find it more difficult to say the things I mean than the things I don’t.
    • The fact that a great many people believe something is no guarantee of its truth.
    • To acquire the habit of reading is to construct for yourself a refuge from almost all the miseries of life.
    • Impropriety is the soul of wit.
    • When I read a book I seem to read it with my eyes only, but now and then I come across a passage, perhaps only a phrase, which has a meaning for me, and it becomes part of me.
    • We do not write because we want to; we write because we have to.
    • I write only when inspiration strikes. Fortunately it strikes every morning at nine o’clock sharp.
    • If you can tell stories, create characters, devise incidents, and have sincerity and passion, it doesn’t matter a damn how you write.
    • Submit here to Chanticleer’s Somerset Book Awards before the end of November!

    We may have made one of those up…

    What a start! We still need to figure out this Literary Fiction business though. Before we dive into that, if you want to read more about Somerset Maugham, consider looking out our previous spotlight here where we discuss him at length! 

    To read more about the time he wrote in, click here.

    So What is Literary Fiction?

    The easiest way to attempt to answer this question is to start with what Literary Fiction is being defined in opposition to. Literary Fiction is not Genre Fiction. 

    So what’s Genre Fiction?

    Genre Fiction is written for people to enjoy it generally. It often follows a formula that uses conventional storytelling. The stories are meant to entertain, are plot driven, and they usually have a happy ending. As a result, there’s almost never a question of how to market genre fiction, making it easier to sell.

    So, if we take the opposite of all those and apply them to literary fiction, what do we get? 

    • It doesn’t follow a formula
    • Uses unconventional storytelling
    • Examines what it means to be human
    • It can be difficult to read
    • Character focused (not plot)
    • Endings vary or can even be uncertain
    LIterary Fiction isn’t an exact science

    That’s a tough sell! Of course, not all of these elements need to apply 

    Many literary fiction books are the kinds that stay with us for years after we read them. Chances are the longtime favorite that changed your life is a literary fiction book, or at least possesses some elements of it. 

    Here’s some contemporary Literary Fiction you may have heard of:

    • Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead
    • The Book of Form and Emptiness by Ruth Ozeki
    • Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng
    • A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara
    • Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini
    • Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche 

      

    The NY Book Editors has this to say about Literary Fiction: 

    The term “literary fiction” is controversial and for good reason. As more “literary” writers venture into genre fiction, the lines of distinction have blurred. Sometimes, it’s not always clear. Perhaps, it is genre fiction that’s just pushing its own boundaries.

    It’s clear that Literary Fiction is a complex genre, worthy of being written and read. We’re happy to say that we’ve done our fair share here at Chanticleer! Check it out below!

    HARD CIDER
    By Barbara Stark-Nemon
    Grand Prize Winner in Somerset Awards

    Abbie Rose Stone is a woman determined to follow her newly discovered dream of producing her own craft hard apple cider while navigating the ups and downs of family life with her grown sons and husband.

    Abbie Rose knows how to deal with adversity, and dives headfirst into this new chapter of her life with energy and passion. She describes her early adulthood years of infertility struggles and the hardscrabble way she built her young family through invasive medical procedures, a surrogate attempt, and adoption barriers.

    Continue Reading

    MARTHA
    By Maggie St. Claire
    First Place Winner in Somerset Awards

    In the unique and compelling voice of an aging woman teetering on the edge of financial ruin, Maggie St. Claire’s debut novel, Martha, takes the reader from affluent residential areas of Los Angeles to its urban streets of despair, shadowing a 71-year-old, retired bank teller as she comes to grips with the challenges and adversities that threaten her existence.

    This is the story of Martha Moore, many years divorced, estranged from her only child, and living a lie, as she enters her golden years. The most important things in her life, outside her pride in her desirable Hancock Park bungalow, are her book club friends. She attends their meetings dressed in her finest, projecting what she hopes is the image of a well-educated, well-to-do, Los Angeles dowager. The three wealthy women who comprise the remainder of the group are her best, perhaps only friends, and sometimes that’s a stretch.

    Continue Reading

    MOURNING DOVE
    By Claire Fullerton
    First Place Winner in Somerset Awards

    Camille Crossan appears to be living an idyllic life in Claire Fullerton’s poignant, evocative novel, Mourning Dove.  Living in a superbly appointed mansion in “magnolia-lined and manicured” Memphis during the 1960s and 1970s, Camille’s family life shimmers with Southern charm.  Her mother, Posey, usually outfitted in a Lily Pulitzer shift, Pappagallo shoes, and a signature shade of pink lipstick, is a beauty with the wryest sense of humor and steel determination.

    As a young girl, Camille, known as Millie, sees how those in her mother’s social orbit are captivated by her aura, how men are easily seduced by her flirtatious charm. Society is a game played by those who know its rules, and Posey means to win. Every time.  She, however, isn’t even the charismatic one in the family – that’s Finley, Millie’s older brother, who brims with intelligence, startling good looks, and messianic magnetism. A peek beneath the shiny surface of gracious Southern living, however, reveals enormous cracks in the foundation of the Crossan family.  One of the first things the adult Millie tells us about her brother is that he is dead.  She takes the reader back, though, to their childhood and coming of age, a tumultuous journey that both binds and separates the siblings.

    Continue Reading

    JETTY CAT PALACE CAFÉ
    By Judy Keeslar Santamaria

    Judy Keeslar Santamaria’s skillfully crafted debut novel, Jetty Cat Palace Café, takes the reader from the sophisticated urban areas of Washington state to its remote cranberry coast, accompanying professor Morgen Marín on a life-altering quest.

    Like a present-day recipient of a DNA test gone wrong, when 34-year old Morgen, celebrated pianist and music professor, leaves after visiting her elderly grandmother Eleanor, her mind is spinning. Eleanor, preparing for the inevitable, shared family history, documents, and longstanding questions, which blindsided her granddaughter.

    Continue Reading

    JOEL EMMANUEL
    By J.P. Kenna
    First Place Winner in Somerset and Clue Awards

    Joel Emmanuel Book Cover Image

    Set in the Pacific Northwest in the 1970s, Joel Emmanuel by JP Kenna rewards its readers with the story of a boy coming of age and how he understands the changes around him. Kenna’s style echoes the English novels of the 19th century.

    Young Joel Emmanuel Webber, named for a Wobbly executed long ago in 1915, lives with his mother, Nance Raindance, in a cabin on the Skagit River near Seattle before it was a technopolis. Their world is antiquated even for the 1970s and defined by farming, fishing, and basics like a woodburning cookstove, kerosene lamps, and candles. Joel calls his mother by her given name, doesn’t know his father, and lives an open life free of school and, even occasionally, clothing. He is sensitive and easily succumbs to tears. 

    Continue Reading


    Have a story that breaks the mold? Submit by the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction A Season in Lights By Gregory Erich Phillips

    See the 2020 Somerset Winners here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    • A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.
    • And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.
    • If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

    And remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox article.

    Writers Toolbox Helpful Links: 

    The Prolific Writer W. Somerset Maugham

    Somerset as a Fin de Siècle Author

    What is Literary Fiction?

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • Spotlight on the 2021 MARK TWAIN Book Awards for Satire & Allegory

    Spotlight on the 2021 MARK TWAIN Book Awards for Satire & Allegory

    A cackle, a hoot, a snort

    You wish the group across the room was laughing about your book.

    The Deadline for the Mark Twain Book Awards is fast approaching!

    It might seem odd, but Franz Kafka and his friends reportedly sat around at bars reading excerpts of The Metamorphosis with tears of laughter streaming down their faces.

    Franz Kafka staring seriously into the camera
    Franz Kafka (1883-1924)

    While he might not seem like a natural pairing with Mark Twain, Kafka certainly had a sense of humor. We may not quite understand his early 1900s thought process that would cause him to need to stop in the middle of reading “The Trial” due to laughing so hard (read more from The Guardian here), but we definitely can still appreciate a healthy dose of humor.

    Fun Fact: Franz Kafka’s writing was known to deal with modernism, existentialism, Surrealism, and is considered a precursor to magical realism. Despite his fame, he never finished a single novel (unless you count The Metamorphosis as a short novel).

    The Mark Twain Awards, named after the famous satirist, are still a fairly new division of The Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards. You can see a full write up on Mark Twain’s relationship with Bellingham, WA here.

    Do you have a book that features Humor, Satire, or Allegory? Submit it here before the end of November to be entered into the 2021 Mark Twain Book Awards!

    Let’s do a quick breakdown on the three main categories of Mark Twain books.

    Satire: The Dangerous Tool

    Probably one of the most difficult genres to write in, Satire can have trouble with rubbing people the wrong way. One of the most commonly known pieces of satire is “A Modest Proposal” by Jonathan Swift, made ubiquitous by English courses teaching it for decades. You can read the full essay here.

    Gulliver being held down by the Lilliputians
    Jonathan Swift is best known as the author of Gulliver’s Travels. Above, Gulliver is restrained by the Lilliputians

    The essence of it is that Swift proposes eating Irish children instead of feeding them, as it will save more money for England in the long run, and cause less suffering for the kiddos in the long run. This obvious, garish suggestion highlights the ways in which England may as well be eating the children in a way that both shames those who have acted poorly, and serves as a call to action to offer better care to the poor.

    Of course, MasterClass.com has an excellent definition at the ready for us:

    Satire in literature is a type of social commentary. Writers use exaggeration, irony, and other devices to poke fun of a particular leader, a social custom or tradition, or any other prevalent social figure or practice that they want to comment on and call into question.

    Contemporary writers have used satire to comment on everything from capitalism (like Brett Easton Ellis’s American Psycho, which uses extreme exaggerations of consumption, concern with social status, and masculine anger and violence to skewer American capitalism) to race (Paul Beatty’s The Sellout, for example, features a young black male protagonist in Southern California who ends up before the Supreme Court for trying to reinstate slavery).

    The word Satire filled with newspaper clippings

    As you can see, satire is a sharp tool that must be wielded carefully to avoid cutting yourself on accident. A good rule of thumb when writing satire to always aim at those who are in power. Trying to poke fun or ridicule people who are already disadvantaged or targeted in some way will often leave a bad taste in your audience’s mouth, and that’s the fastest way to have your book closed.

    Here are some classic examples of Satire:

    • Matt Groening – The Simpsons, Futurama
    • David Sedaris – Naked, Me Talk Pretty One Day
    • Chuck Palahniuk – Fight Club
    • Douglas Adams – The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy
    • Kurt Vonnegut – Slaughterhouse-Five
    • Evelyn Waugh – Brideshead Revisited
    Newspaper Clipping of Grandpa Simpson Yelling at a cloud
    “Get outta my sky!”

    Now let’s talk allegory.

    Allegory: Not Just for Kids!

    When you want to talk around something or use a stand in to describe it you might try allegory.

    Margritte's painting of a pipe, appropriately labeled as not a pipe
    What is Allegory? Not quite this…

    Of course, MasterClass.com has yet another definition at the ready for us:

    The word “allegory” comes from the Latin “allegoria,” meaning speaking to imply something else. An allegory is a simple story that represents a larger point about society or human nature, whose different characters may represent real-life figures. Sometimes, situations in the story may echo stories from history or modern-day life, without ever explicitly stating this connection.

    Allegories are similar to metaphors in that both illustrate an idea by making a comparison to something else. However, allegories are complete stories with characters, while metaphors are brief figures of speech.

    Note: We are not affiliated with MasterClass in any way, we simply believe in sharing our sources, and they do great work with genre definitions.

    Cover of Aesop's fables, featuring donkies, mice, lions, and foxes to name a few

    One popular example of allegory is Aesop’s Fables. As you may know, the fables tend to follow animals as they make decisions regarding moral dilemmas, and then face the consequences – whatever those may be. Of course, those moralistic fables directed at children always run the risk of sounding paternalistic. Here are some great examples of allegory:

    Allegory examples

    • Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales
    • George Orwell – Animal Farm, 1984
    • Frank Baum’s – The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
    • Arthur Miller – The Crucible
    • C.S. Lewis – The Chronicles of Narnia

    Finally, we have Humor.

    Humor Writing

    The key to humor writing is simple: it should make you laugh! There are countless different takes on what makes something funny – just try watching someone explain humor to the android Data in Star Trek.

    Data laughing at his ops console
    Data experiencing laughter for the first time as a gift from the omnipotent being Q

    So rather than go on too long, we’ll share our Editorial Reviews of books that make us laugh!

    Arnold Falls
    By Charlie Suisman
    Grand Prize Winner in Mark Twain Awards

    Cover of Arnold Falls by Charlie Suisman

    Charlie Suisman’s debut novel is a wonderful escape to a small fictional community in upstate New York. Here a melting pot of quirky residents brings Arnold Falls to life, a town with a unique history and charming inhabitants whose lives are intimately intertwined.

    Settled in 1803 by the unscrupulous Hezekiah Hesper, the town for unknown reasons was named after Benedict Arnold. Adding to the oddities, the closest waterfall is twenty miles away. The area is known for sudden bursts of crab apple-size hail pelting the landscape without any scientific explanation. Hence the incentive for “Hail Pail Day,” a neighborly tradition surrounding the distribution of galvanized bucket head-coverings.

    Read more here!

     

    My Only Sunshine
    By Lou Dischler

    Lou Dischler delivers an intricately woven story about one well-meaning boy who tries to make sense of the crazy he’s been born into. Get ready for one belly laugh of an adventure in My Only Sunshine.

    Welcome to the Louisiana low country, home of 9-year-old Charlie Boone, a kid growing up in 1962. Charlie, a most unreliable narrator, concerns himself with giant wingless wasps and biting red velvet ants. Combine his critter-concerns with the legend of the giant slugs, the story of his mother taken up by a hurricane, and the episode of the puddle he and his brother dug that grew into a pond, then turned into a lake, and we have one wildly imaginative ride well-worth taking.

    Read more here!

     

    Elephants in my Room
    By Christie Nicholls

    A bitingly funny collection of life-stories from Christie Nicholls – stand-up comedian, actor, and writer – made all the more piquant by her repeated insistence that she has no short-term memory. Fortunately for us, her long-term reminiscences more than make up the deficit.

    Nicholls has divided the book into four parts. In the first, “A Broad Abroad,” she recalls her experiences of traveling to far-flung places, beginning with a summer in Belém, Brazil as a child. She and her brother, for some reason nicknamed Beluga, slept in hammocks and played in a swimming pool, but much of her cherished time involved a German Shepherd named Ferdinand, from whom she learned dog talk. Raucous family bowling in Bologna, Italy, is contrasted with attendance at a staid English wedding. At a later period, Nicholls and her mother went to Sweden, where the budding comic tried her hand at stand-up in newly acquired Swedish, leading to an amusing mix-up of jargon.

    Read more here!

     

    Blazing Bullets in Deadwood
    By Jacquie Rogers

    Honey Beaulieu is going to get her man–no matter how many tries it takes. Determined to capture the elusive Boyce McNitt, Honey is off to Deadwood Gulch despite the warnings that the dangerous road is plagued by thieves and natives.  But before she can pursue the $500 bounty, she needs to take care of issues at home, including finding a shop for a pregnant seamstress, sixteen-year-old Emma, a home for eight-year-old Myles Cavanaugh, his two younger sisters, and their pregnant mother. Between her do-gooding, denying her blossoming feelings for Deputy US Marshal Sam Lancaster, and a run-in with a herd of escaped pigs determined to destroy Fry Pan Gulch, Honey barely has time to get out of town before she gets trapped by winter. Once on the road, she comes face-to-face with Sean Chaney, the Badger Claw Kid, a bounty worth $400, and is intent on capturing him, as well. With a little otherworldly, albeit not entirely helpful, advice from her ghost guide Roscoe, Honey will have to take down two dangerous fugitives. But, when she runs into a fireball-throwing ghost bent on revenge, her real adventure begins.

    Kiffer loves the undercurrent of a Shakespearean slant to Jacquie Rogers’ works. Sublime.

    Read more here!

     

    Ruth 66
    By Elizabeth Barlo

    When a banged-up old bus pulls into his family’s driveway, Charlie has no idea that the rattling junker would be his ride to freedom. For years he’d been suffering under the thumb of a cold-hearted mother and a vindictive twin sister, while his father languished behind bars for tax fraud. The only family member with whom the young man held a loving bond was his grandfather, Opa Bill. Since Bill’s recent death, Charlie has been holding it together by listening to the music he and his grandfather loved. That musical thread weaves its way throughout the story as a sort of narrative jukebox.

    Now Charlie’s respectable Oma Ruth has careened back into his life in a shocking new incarnation: a freewheeling hippie in kaftan and beads, unafraid to swap barbed words with her appalled daughter, nor to insist that Charlie accompany her on her road trip. He’s dead-set against it – he’d just found his dream job at a record store – and is disgusted when his mother dumps him on her mother without hesitation.

    Read more here!


    Have a laugh out loud story? Submit before the end of Novemberfor the 2021 CIBAs! 

    A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Mark Twain Humor and Satire Arnold Falls by Charles Suisman

    See the 2020 Mark Twain Book Award Winners here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.

    And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.  

    If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

    Also remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    Featuring Cathy Ace and Robert Dugoni!

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Writer’s Toolbox article.

    Writers Toolbox Helpful Links: 

    Kafka’s Jovial Side Revealed from The Guardian

    The MARK TWAIN Book Awards for Satire and Allegorical Fiction

    A Modest Proposal by Jonathan Swift

    What Is Satire? by MasterClass

    What Is Allegory? by MasterClass

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • Spotlight on the 2021 HEMINGWAY Book Awards for 20th C. Wartime Fiction

    Spotlight on the 2021 HEMINGWAY Book Awards for 20th C. Wartime Fiction

    Chanticleer’s new Division for 20th Century Wartime Fiction: The Hemingway Awards

    The US fought five wars during the 1900s: World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, and the Gulf War.

    Many of us have deep connections to these wars built into our family trees and history of military service. It’s no surprise that there are so many stories that delve into wartime fiction that we needed to create a new category for it this last year.

    Why Hemingway?

    Ernest Hemingway 1923 passport photo
    Young Hemingway

    Ernest Hemingway was one of the defining voices of his generation, especially in relation to The Great War where so many had to reconcile their lives as they were with the horrors of war they had experienced.

    “When you go to war as a boy you have a great illusion of immortality. Other people get killed; not you… Then when you are badly wounded the first time you lose that illusion and you know it can happen to you.” (read more here)

    While it’s well-known that Hemingway served in WWI and was honored for his bravery by the Italian government as an American Red Cross worker, it is less known that when Hemingway returned to post-war Europe he became a respected war correspondent. His grandson, Seán Hemingway describes the author’s reporting as “written in a new style of reporting that told the public about every facet of the war, especially, and most important, its effects on the common man, woman, and child.”

    Ernest Hemingway looking off to the right

    For those of you who know little about one of the most prolific war writers on the 20th century, he’s well worth a read, and shockingly modern in his thought. He was an early anti-fascist, being one of the first to decry Benito Mussolini.

    For all that Hemingway can dazzle and impress, there is another view of him.

    The Other Side of the Coin

    Despite his excellent writing, Hemingway is reputed to be a terrible person. An article from American Magazine, he’s described as follows:

    He was selfish and egomaniacal, a faithless husband and a treacherous friend. He drank too much, he brawled and bragged too much, he was a thankless son and, at times, a negligent father. He was also a great writer.

    Hemingway’s writing is reported to be the thing that he held above all else. More than his wives or the children he had, his writing and author platform always came first.

    Beyond that, his criticism of other works is scalding and harsh, beyond what anyone would reasonably consider helpful. This flies in direct contrast to a quote from LitHub where Hemingway opens up about the experience of being a new author, trying to break into the literary world:

    “The rejection slip is very hard to take on an empty stomach,” Hemingway later told a friend. “There were times when I’d sit at that old wooden table and read one of those cold slips that had been attached to a story I had loved and worked on very hard and believed in, and I couldn’t help crying.”

    We all know that he was published, many times:

    • The Torrents of Spring (1926)
    • The Sun Also Rises (1926)
    • A Farewell to Arms (1929)
    • Death in the Afternoon (1932)
    • Green Hills of Africa (1935)
    • To Have and Have Not (1937)
    • For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940)
    • Across the River and into the Trees (1950)
    • The Old Man and the Sea (1952)
    • A Moveable Feast (1964)

    Now we’d like to dive into some of the best books we’ve reviewed at Chanticleer with a focus on Wartime Fiction in the 20th Century.

    The QUISLING FACTOR
    By J. L. Oakley
    Grand Prize Winner in Hemingway Awards

    During World War II “quisling” became a byword for a particular type of traitor, one who not only betrays their own country but also actively collaborates with the invaders. The origin of the term was taken from an actual person, a Norwegian named Vidkun Quisling, who didn’t merely cooperate with the Nazis but actually headed a collaborationist regime in his own country.

    The Quisling Factor takes place in the immediate post-war period, as the Nuremberg Trials are gearing up in Germany. Norway is conducting its own post-war legal purge of collaborators at all levels of government.

    Keep Reading Here!

    HEART of the FEW
    By Jon Duncan
    First Place Winner in Hemingway Awards

    It is said that all is fair in love and war. In this wartime historical romance, young love is put to the ultimate test, and the love of family is strained to the breaking point. During World War II, the occupants of a ravaged England understand that all can be lost in a moment’s hesitation or in a hasty decision. Here, love is under attack by enemies seen and unseen. It’s the uncommon courage of many and the Heart of the Few that can hope to turn the fate of England during these dark days.

    Passion drives both sides in this wartime mystery/thriller about people who are determined to make a difference in the outcome of World War II. Like all powerful forces, passion has two sides. It’s a wondrous and beautiful emotion when applied to good purpose, but it becomes horrific and deadly when twisted and corrupt. The question author Jon Duncan asks amidst all the turmoil, treachery, death and desolation of war is: can love find a way?

    Keep Reading Here!

    The ACK-ACK GIRL (Love and War #1)
    By Chris Karlsen

    The Ack Ack Girl book cover

    Chris Karlsen’s new work, The Ack-Ack Girl, is the first in her World War II series, Love and War, and serves up plenty of story on both sides of that equation in its portrayal of Ava Armstrong, the “Ack-Ack” girl of the title. And what a story it is!

    Bombs are dropping on London in the heat and fire of the infamous Blitz. Shells are falling, as are the buildings that surround them, while fires spring up in the wake of the bombs that never seem to end. But when they finally stop, Ava and her friends are determined to get their loved ones somewhere safe and to find a way to serve up some revenge on the Germans.

    Keep Reading Here!

    WHERE EAGLES NEVER FLEW
    By Helena P. Schrader
    First Place Winner in Hemingway Awards

    The Royal Air Force struggles for control of the British sky, facing down the daunting numbers of Luftwaffe aircraft across the English Channel. At the forefront of these battles, the Royal Air Force’s young pilots fight to survive under mounting pressure and deadly German Messerschmitts.

    Where Eagles Never Flew follows the Battle of Britain as squadrons of the RAF must make do with undertrained pilots and little sleep if they want any chance at repelling the Luftwaffe bombing raids that become more and more frequent as the battle rages on. Operations rooms plot and direct the paths of aircraft, with members of the WAAF—Women’s Auxiliary Air Force—fielding waves of communications to and from the skies. Robert “Robin” Priestman flies on the front lines, dedicated to the fight despite weeks of unending tension and the great challenge of keeping his squadron awake and alive despite sortie after sortie.

    Keep Reading Here!

    LOVE OF FINISHED YEARS
    By Gregory Erich Phillips

    An immigrant’s journey, a forbidden love, a war to end all wars collide on the pages of a beautifully written historical fiction, Love of Finished Years by Gregory Erich Phillips.

    At twelve years of age, Elsa Schuller carries no expectations when she reaches Ellis Island in 1905. In fact, she has no idea why her father insists on leaving Germany for this supposed Land of Opportunity. Riddled with nothing less than challenges and hardship working in the sweatshops in lower Manhattan, Elsa’s only ray of hope is learning how to read and write English.

    Keep Reading Here!


    Have you written a 20th Century Wartime Fiction Novel? Submit before the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Hemingway Grand Prize for 20th C. Wartime Fiction The Quisling Factor by J.L. Oakley

    See the 2020 Hemingway Awards Winners Here!

    When you’re ready, did you know that Chanticleer offers editorial services? We do and have been doing so since 2011.

    Our professional editors are top-notch and are experts in the Chicago Manual of Style. They have and are working for the top publishing houses (TOR, McMillian, Thomas Mercer, Penguin Random House, Simon Schuster, etc.).

    If you would like more information, we invite you to email Kiffer or Sharon at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com or SAnderson@ChantiReviews.com for more information, testimonials, and fees.

    We work with a small number of exclusive clients who want to collaborate with our team of top-editors on an on-going basis. Contact us today!

    Chanticleer Editorial Services also offers writing craft sessions and masterclasses. Sign up to find out where, when, and how sessions being held.

    • A great way to get started is with our manuscript evaluation service, with more information available here.
    • And we do editorial consultations for $75. Learn more here.
    • If you’re confident in your book, consider submitting it for a Editorial Book Review here or to one of our Chanticleer International Awards here.

    And remember! Our 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22) will be April 7-10, 2022, where our 2021 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up, so sign up today!  CAC22 and the CIBA Ceremonies will be hosted at the Hotel Bellwether in Beautiful Bellingham, Wash. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

    Writer’s Toolbox

    Thank you for reading this Chanticleer Spotlight article.

    Writers Recommended Helpful Links: 

    Hemingway on War and Its Aftermath

    Ernest Hemingway was a brilliant writer and a terrible person

    How Hemingway’s Bad Behavior Inspired a Generation

    The traditional publishing tool that indie authors can use to propel their writing careers to new levels?  The Seven Must-Haves for Authors – Unlocking the Secrets of Successful Publishing Series by Kiffer Brown

  • The 2021 LITTLE PEEPS Book Awards for Early Readers & Picture Books – CIBAs Long List

    Two little chicks, fresh from their egg

    The Little Peeps Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in Early Readers. The Little Peeps Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring stories of all shapes and sizes written to an audience for Early Readers. Story books, Beginning Chapter Books, Picture Books, Activity Books, and Educational Books. These books have advanced to the Long List for the 2021 CIBAs. (For Young Adult Fiction see our Dante Rossetti Awards, for Middle Grade Readers see our Gertrude Warner Awards.)

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Little Peeps Early Readers entries to the 2021 Little Peeps Book Awards LONG LIST. Entries below are now in competition for 2021 Little Peeps Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalist positions. Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists.  All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person. 

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2021 Little Peeps Book Awards novel competition for Early Readers!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

    • M. Lisa Rinaca – Matt Needs A Werewolf
    • Avril van der Merwe – I Don’t Want To Be a Hyena
    • Linda Harkey – The Remarkable Story of Willie the Crow
    • Once Upon a Dance – Belluna’s Big Adventure in the Sky: A Dance-It-Out Creative Movement Story for Young Movers
    • M. Lisa Rinaca – Just James
    • Susan Faw – Poppy Ogopogo
    • Stephanie Matolyak & Deborah Bailey – A Farm Animals’ Christmas-No Ordinary Farm
    • Brenda Faatz & Peter Trimarco – Now What?
    • Ellie Smith – Tex the Explorer Journey Through Our Solar System
    • Steven Haggard – There’s an Elephant in My Room!
    • Rita M Boehm – Bluebirds in the Garden
    • Zaynab Al-Yassiri – LunchBox Wisdom
    • Cindy A. Bell – I Love You, Fiorella, Flaws and All!
    • Dana Brackob – Molly: A Love Story
    • Carmela Dutra – A Lua
    • David Horn – Eudora Space Kid: The Great Engine Room Takeover
    • Rebecca Dwight Bruff – Stars of Wonder
    • E. Alan Fleischauer – Charlie Lou Goes to the Rodeo
    • Lauren Stockly – Mindful Monsters Therapeutic Workbook
    • Lauren Stockly – Be Mindful of Monsters
    • Cynthia Kern OBrien – I Don’t Want to go to Preschool, the Fairy Queen calls
    • JL Morin & Stephan Theo – Tuck-a-tuck Dragon
    • Denise Ditto – Tooth Fairy Day Celebration
    • Kevin Brougher – Grandpa Kevin’s…Jack and the Bean Stalk
    • Brooks Olbrys – Blue Ocean Bob Discovers His Purpose
    • Katy McQuaid – Everybody Loves Grace: An Amazing True Story of How Grace Brings Love to Everyone She Meets
    • Deborah Serani – Sometimes When I’m Mad
    • Vicky Wu – Patty Panda Gets a Potty!
    • Peggy Sullivan – Shadow Walkers, The Secret Lives of the Shy Sisters
    • Vincent Kelly – All People are Beautiful
    • Kyle Poehls – From Nicholas To Christmas
    • Michael Ferrone – Frankenbots: Sunken City of Scraps
    • Wanda Carter Roush – You Got This – A Tale of Courage
    • Karen B. Kurtz – Sophia’s Gift
    • Amy Leaf – Harry and the Pelican
    • Andrea Vaughan – Victoria and the Big, Brave Breath
    • Megan Herr – Lucas Takes His Food Allergies to Daycare

     

    PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

    This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

    Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

    Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

    Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

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

    Click here to see the 2020 Little Peeps Book Award Winners for Early Readers Fiction.

    Cover for Great as a Button by Masoud Malekyari

     

    A blue and gold badge for the 2020 Grand Prize Winner for Little Peeps Children’s Books Great as a Button by Masoud Malekyari

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Little Peeps Book Awards for Children’s Literature. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

    Please click here for more information.

    For our other Youth Reader Fiction Awards, please see the following:

    Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

    FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

    Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

    Featuring: International Best Selling Authors: Cathy Ace and  Robert Dugoni along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

  • The 2021 CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – The Long List – CIBAs 2021

    The 2021 CHAUCER Book Awards for Pre-1750s Historical Fiction – The Long List – CIBAs 2021

    A picture of Geoffery Chaucer as a white man with a gray goatee with the words "Chaucer Awards" across the bottom

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

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

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

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Chaucer Early Historical Fiction entries to the 2021 Chaucer Book Awards LONG LIST. Entries below are now in competition for 2021 Chaucer Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Finalist positions.  All FINALISTS will be announced and recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC22).

    The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 17 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person. 

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2021 Chaucer Book Awards novel competition for Pre-1750s Early Historical Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

    • John A. Martino and Michael P. O’Kane – Olympia: The Birth of the Games
    • B.L. Smith – The Last Golden Light
    • Alana White – Medici Man: The Hearts of All on Fire
    • Griffin Brady – The Heart of a Hussar
    • Leah Angstman – Out Front the Following Sea
    • James Conroyd Martin – Too Soon the Night: A Novel of Empress Theodora (The Theodora Duology Book 2)
    • David Martyn – The Epistle a Story of the Early Church
    • Vivienne Brereton – The House of the Red Duke. Book One: A Phoenix Rising
    • PJ Devlin – The Chamber
    • Virginia Crow – The Year We Lived
    • David Fitz-Gerald – The Curse of Conchobar: A Prequel to the Adirondack Spirit Series
    • Seven Jane – The Isle of Gold
    • Janet Wertman – The Boy King
    • Wendy J. Dunn – Falling Pomegranate Seeds: All Manner of Things
    • Edward Rickford – The Bend of the River: Book Two in the Tenochtitlan Trilogy
    • Sherry V. Ostroff – Mannahatta, The Sequel
    • James Hutson-Wiley – The Travels of ibn Thomas
    • Tim Schooley – The Wool Translator
    • Patricia Bracewell – The Steel Beneath the Silk
    • Gail Meath – Countess Jacqueline
    • Ron Destro – The Starre, the Moone, the Sunne
    • Rebecca D’Harlingue – The Lines Between Us: A Novel
    • Amy Wolf – A Woman of the Road and Sea
    • Toni Kief – Saints, Strangers and Rosehip Tea
    • Kelly Nichols and Alyn Rockwood – Beyond the Dragonhead

    PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

    This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the FB post. However, for FB to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews. FB rules — not ours.

    Please click here to visit our page to LIKE, COMMENT, and SHARE on Facebook.

    Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

    Or click here to go directly to Chanticleer’s Twitter feed.

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

    Click here to see the 2020 Chaucer Book Award Winners for Early Historical Fiction.

    Cover of Bird in a Snare by N.L. HolmesGold and blue Grand Prize badge for the 2020 Chaucer Awards won by N.L. Holmes' Bird in a Snare

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Chaucer Book Awards for Pre-1750s Early Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

    Please click here for more information.

    For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

    Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

    FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

    Seating is Limited. The  esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887)  has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    Join us for our 10th annual conference and discover why!

    Featuring: International Best Selling Authors: Cathy Ace and  Robert Dugoni along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

  • CIBA Grand Prize, First Place, Short Stories, and Fiction Series 2020 WINNERS Announcement Schedule for Saturday, June 5th , 2021

    CIBA Grand Prize, First Place, Short Stories, and Fiction Series 2020 WINNERS Announcement Schedule for Saturday, June 5th , 2021

    We are honored and excited to announce the Chanticleer International Book Awards 2020 Grand Prize, Division Grand Prize, First Place, Short Stories, and Fiction Series WINNERS on Saturday, June 5, 2021 – LIVE from the Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Washington State.

    The 2020 CIBA announcements will be made LIVE at this hybrid event on ZOOM with our Local Unusual Suspects on Saturday, June 5, 2021! 

    Due to Covid-19 re-opening phase that we are currently in, we are limiting the number of LIVE attendees to twenty-five people including Chanticleer staff. If you would like to attendee in person, and have been vaccinated, please email Kiffer at KBrown@ChantiReviews.com for more information.

    The event will be ZOOMed LIVE and all are welcome to participate. However, registration is required so that we may email you the private ZOOM link.

    chanticleer Int'l book awards image pyramid

    The 2020 CIBA Ceremonies Schedule – Saturday, June 5th, 2021

    Opening Ceremony and Remarks – half past two o’clock in the afternoon Pacific Standard Time (Seattle/LAX/Vancouver)

    All genre division and non-fiction FINALISTS will be recognized at the 2020 CIBA Ceremony and then we announce the First Place Award Winners.

    Celebrate with us and Cheer On Your Favorite Authors with your fav bubbly! As always with our virtual events, we try to make the 2020 CIBAs Ceremonies as interactive as possible.

    Since this is a LIVE event, the rest of the schedule times are approximate but we will follow the order below. Thank you for understanding.

    We look forward to gathering in person for the 2021 CIBAs that will take place at the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference, April 7 – 10, 2022.

    • Please click on the links below to see whose works advanced to the Premier Finalist Level of Achievement for the 2020 CIBAs.
    • Please NOTE:  We are emailing the ZOOM link to all of the Finalists for the 2020 CIBA Ceremonies that will be held on Saturday, June 5, 2021. 
    • If you are not a Finalist in the 2020 CIBAs, but would like to watch the event, please email Chanticleer’s Author Outreach director, David at DBeaumier@ChantiReviews. Please put June 5 CIBA in the Subject Line of your email.
    • Also, please visit our Chanticleer Reviews Facebook webpage for the Facebook Live event.

    3:00 p.mCIBAs for Out of This World Divisions

    3:30 p.m.  Get a CLUE CIBA Divisions

    4:00 p.m. The CIBA Historical Fiction Divisions

    4:30 p.m. The CIBA Young Readers Fiction Divisions 

    5:00 p.m. The CIBA Fiction Awards 

    5:30 p.m. CIBA Non-Fiction Works

    6:00 p.m. CIBA Short Stories & Novellas and the Fiction Series Awards

    Grand Prize Ribbons! and First Place Ribbons

    6:30 p.m. Announcing the 2020 Grand Prize Winners of the 23 Chanticleer International Book Awards and the Overall Grand Prize Winner  of the 2020 CIBAs

    Whose work will take home the Best Book Grand Prize? The excitement builds!

    All of the 2020 CIBA Grand Prize Winners will have a chance to accept their awards virtually if in attendance.

    We look forward to seeing you virtually at 2020 CIBA Ceremonies on Saturday, June 5, 2021

    Welcome and Announcements begin at 2:30 p.m. Pacific Standard Time. Premier Finalists please look for your email with the ZOOM link. 

    Ceremonies will also be on Facebook Live. If you are not a Finalist but would like to attend the ZOOMed event, please email DBeaumier@ChantiReviews.com,  Author Outreach.

    Please click here for more information regarding the 2021 CIBAs. Don’t Delay! Enter Today!

    CAC22 – The Chanticleer Authors Conference and 2021 CIBA Ceremony is scheduled for April 7 -10, 2022! It will be the 10th CAC event!  

    Save the Dates!

  • GIFT CARDS are Experiencing Unprecedented Sales – AUTHORS, are YOUR Selling Platforms Ready? – Kiffer Brown

    GIFT CARDS are Experiencing Unprecedented Sales – AUTHORS, are YOUR Selling Platforms Ready? – Kiffer Brown

    Tis the SEASON for HOLIDAY GIFT CARDS – REDEMPTIONS for ONLINE and BRICK & MORTAR STORES

    Perhaps you are thinking, “But Kiffer, it is December 27th! Isn’t it too late to do anything about this holiday season?”

    And, I would have to reply, “No, it isn’t dear Chanticleerian. It is is just in the nick of time because of GIFT CARDS!”

    And I think that is why this fellow is named Ol’ Saint Nick—not for Nicholas but for JUST IN THE NICK OF TIME! 

    What is the Market Size of GIFT CARDS?

    • AMAZON has almost 60% of the market share. Walmart comes in next at 15%.  *Of course, we hope that many people purchased gift cards from their local independent bookstores and local community stores.

    And we know who the biggest bookseller on this planet is—digital or print! —Amazon.

    • The Global Gift Card market size was valued at 619.25 billion USD in 2019. It is much higher this year. See *
    • The USA Gift Card market size was estimated to be 160 billion USD in 2018. It is projected to be approximately 400 billion dollars in 2020.

    COVID-19 will bring healthy holiday web sales for Gift Cards and e-Gift Cards.*

    Software provider Salesforce.com Inc. says holiday sales in the U.S. will rise 34% year over year for the 2020 season. That’s a major jump from the estimated 13.6% growth in November and December 2019.

    2020 News

    Amazon announced plans to hire 100,000 seasonal workers for its fulfillment center on top of the 75,000 it hired in April and the 100,000 it brought on in September. Meanwhile, FedEx is hiring 75,000 seasonal employees for this holiday season, an increase of 27% over 2019. And, Walmart Inc. (No. 3) hired 20,000 seasonal workers this holiday season after hiring more than 500,000 workers since the beginning of COVID-19. DigitalCommerce360.com

    What are the Top Driving Factors of Sales Growth of Gift Cards?

    • The Pandemic Fuels Gift Card Sales – Gift Card Sales were up by 50% by September 2020.*
    • The High Adoption Rate of Smartphones

    Gift cards have become more innovative with rapid evolution of smart phones. Use of modern technology and marketing strategies has created different ways for gift card lovers and smartphone users to integrate everything into one convenient package. Rise in adoption of smart phones is expected to boost the gift cards market by offering flexible & convenient ways of payment for customers. Allied Market Research

    The first annual National Use Your Gift Card Day is Saturday, January 18, 2021—an extra prompt for consumers to use their gift cards to buy something they didn’t get for the holidays, take advantage of post-holiday sales or to treat themselves.

    • Gift cards topped all other potential presents, including jewelry, clothing, books, movies, music, electronics and sporting goods. National Retail Federation report. 
    • Gift cards are the most popular items on wish lists — 14 years straight.
    • The majority of recipients of these GIFT CARDS do not begin shopping with them until late December at the earliest! 
    • Gift Cards have extended the Holiday Buying Season all the way through the month of January into the end of February. 

    INCREASING ONLINE BOOK SALES

    When was the last time that you checked out your Amazon, Kobo, B&N, Bookchain, Smashwords, etc. page(s)? 

    Visit your Selling Platform Pages and Tidy Them and Add some SPARKLE! 

    • Most importantly, do you have the latest cover of your title uploaded?
      • I see this all the time, the author sends me her latest cover (because as you know, I am all about the cover!) but then for some reason fails to upload the dazzling new cover to the title’s selling pages on the different platforms.
    • Update your selling pages with the latest tweaks to the title’s description. Is the description as compelling as it can possibly be? Amp it up! 
      • Make sure that every word of your book’s introduction/marketing blurb (that first paragraph that comes after the title and to the right of the cover) is effective—especially the first ten introductory words. These first ten words are “crawled” by the online sales platform’s search engine whenever a reader does “a search.” If it is a series or you are planning to make the work a series, then be sure to conclude the book’s marketing blurb with this information.
    • Have you listed the title’s latest awards and kudos near the end of the description to seal the deal?
    • Have you updated the reviews in the Editorial Reviews section? Add new ones and author blurbs (recommendations) in the Editorial Reviews section.
      • Sixty-one percent of customers read Editorial Reviews before making an online purchase (Harvard Business Review)
      • Editorial/Trade Reviews set the tone for Customer Reviews – which is (from what I hear) quantity is more important that than quality (number of stars). 100 customer reviews tend to be the magical number.
    • The Editorial Reviews section is where blurbs of reviews from Chanticleer, Kirkus, Publisher’s Weekly should be posted along with VIP Author Blurbs.
    • Or to that matter, do you have anything in the Editorial Reviews section? If not, you are missing some SEO goodness. In fact, each of Chanticleer Reviews come with a turbo-charged SEO package and Meta-Data built in to help your book’s digital footprint populate the internet.
    • If your books are available in other languages besides English, list the languages in this section.
    • Is it time to liven up your author bio? Does it reflect the latest YOU? Does it make the reader want to meet you (like at your next book event?) as someone who he/she would enjoy meeting at a cocktail party?
      • Make sure that your photo resonates with readers’ expectations. A great example of this is Diana Gabaldon’s Amazon photo; it is one of her standing in front of the Stonehenge monument with a timeless black shawl wrapped around her. The Stonehenge background hints at the historical/fantastical nature of her works and the opening of her series.

    Author Photos

      • Take a close look at your Author Central photo. If it doesn’t move your author brand forward, take a look through your photographs for one that does. It doesn’t have to be a photo taken by a professional photographer. It does have to have a layering effect and convey your author branding/personality. If you have a photograph that does convey elements of your author branding and is taken by a professional photographer, then that is even better. Here is an example of a professionally taken author photograph that exudes the author’s branding as a post-apocalyptic fiction writer. Notice that the setting and outfit exude the dystopian aspects of his Deserted Lands series:Robert Slater author of ALL IS SILENCE
    • In your Author Information section, list any other published works that are related to this particular selling page–especially if you have series or multiple titles in the related genre.
    • While you are on the title’s selling pages, double-check that all the different formats that your title is available on in any given platform are available and ready for sale!
      • Print? e-pub? combo — purchase a print book and receive the digital e-pub version for a discount or for free? (Amazon used to call this package “matchstick” )
    • Make sure that the links to purchase books from your website work and do not go off into cyberspace.
    • Test your “Look Inside” feature on Amazon and make sure that it works and that it isn’t just opening to the Table of Contents or the front matter of the book.
    • Double-check your pricing on each selling platform that the title is available for sale on. Really. 

    OVERALL

    Make sure that your information is up-to-date, fresh and relevant!

    Like a well-written book plot,  make sure that each piece of information on your title’s selling platform moves your book and author branding forward and into the hands and minds of eager book buyers? 

    Handy Amazon Links

    Holiday Book Buying Online

    BUT WAIT, WE LOVE LOVE LOVE Independent Booksellers!

    So make sure that you help them sell your books! Win-Win!

    Make sure that YOUR BOOKS get some of that Gift Card LOVE!

    Quick and Easy Tips to Get Your Books Ready for the Biggest Book Buying Season of the Year

    Here is a Handy Checklist for Brick and Mortar Stores Where Your Books Are for Sale.

    Help Your Booksellers Sell Your Books! 

    These Point of Sale items can make a huge difference in book sales!

    Shelf talkers are proven to increase book sales!
    • It seems obvious, but make sure that wherever you have your books for sale or on consignment have them IN-STOCK. (yes, I am yelling here)
    • NEXT — make sure to promote in social media wherever your books are for sale and TAG the store/shop/bookseller. Be sure to use a photo of the shop and its location.
    • Promote your book’s cover and genre and tag the merchant again on social media.
    • If you can, make sure that your books have book stickers on them for any awards or kudos.
    • Don’t forget SHELF-TALKERS
    Chanticleer Shelf talker
    • If you have a series or other books, does each one of your books have a “bookmark” inside with all of your books listed?
      Does this bookmark have your website and social media handles printed on it? If not, get on it — you can print your own at your local copy shop.
      You can even add an invite to visit your website/blog to win prizes
      In your next printing, make sure that at the end of your book that  you include an invitation to visit your website/blogpost/social media posts for:

      • more information
      • a chance to win free prizes
      • for advance notifications of your next book
      • to have a character named after the reader
      • Book Club Benefits (ZOOM – Virtual Visits and Discussions)
      • You can have these printed off and slip them into the books — they should not be bigger than the book. Remember, this is a surprise for the reader to find and must not add to “clutter” the book.
    Your Books at Indie Booksellers

    If you don’t live close to the booksellers selling your books, see if any of your street team members, family, friends, or other authors (you know, the ones that you are cross-promoting with) if they would stop by the shops in their neighborhoods and help implement the P-O-S plan. Of course, make sure that they utilize all safety and health pandemic protocols. Make sure that they have a letter from you (they can print it out if you email it to them). Have your “street team” introduce themselves to the shop’s staff and explain what is going on.

    We all have to PIVOT, PIVOT, PIVOT in these unprecedented times.

    AND now is a good time to schedule your VIRTUAL Author Events and Book Club Meetings for 2021!

    And add the events to your website and social media platforms.

    Good Manners for Point of Sale Tips

    • Use magic tape (and carry it with you) so that you will not gum up the store’s shelves with shelf-talkers — and you don’t have to ask the staff to take time to look for some for you.
    • If the staff is busy, consider coming back at a later time. The holidays are a “make or break” season for most small brick and mortar stores so you don’t want to impede the staff from making sales and helping customers during this crucial time. [This is a pet peeve with booksellers about authors #justsaying]
    • If your books are “shop-worn” ask about exchanging them out for fresh new books.
    • Offer to help out-of-the-area authors with the books that are for sale in your neighborhood. Connect and reach out!

    REPEAT. RESTOCK. RE-POST. REMIND.
    Remember the GIFT CARD buying season stretches into the end of February.

    Take advantage of this busiest season of the year and help your bookseller sell more of your books.

    Now make sure that some of those  billion dollars on Holiday Gift Cards are used to purchase YOUR BOOKS!


    That would be me, Kiffer Brown–Mother Hen and Head Hen at Chanticleer Reviews.

    Happy Holidays from the Chanticleer Team!