The Cygnus Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Science Fiction, Steampunk, Alternative History, and Speculative Fiction. The Cygnus Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (The CIBAs).
Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring space, time travel, life on other planets, parallel universes, alternate reality, and all the science, technology, major social or environmental changes of the future that author imaginations can dream up for the CYGNUS Book Awards division. Hard Science Fiction, Soft Science Fiction, Apocalyptic Fiction, Cyberpunk, Time Travel, Genetic Modification, Aliens, Super Humans, Interplanetary Travel, and Settlers on the Galactic Frontier, Dystopian, our judges from across North America and the U.K. will put them to the test and choose the best among them.
The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the Finalists positions. Finalists will be announced and recognized at the CAC21 banquet and ceremony. The Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists.
The 22 divisions of the 2020 CIBAs’ Grand Prize Winners and the Five First Place Category Position award winners will be announced at the April 25th, 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in virtually Bellingham, Wash.
Congratulations to the 2020 Cygnus Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTS!
Brent Golembiewski –Flat Earth
Jonas Saul –The Immortal Gene
Mark T. Sneed – Bully Nation
Brooke Skipstone – Some Laneys Died
B.T. Keaton – Transference
Mark D. Owen – Impact
JL Morin – Loveoid
Charis Himeda – CRISPR Evolution
Bryan K. Prosek – Paradoxal
R.S. Harmon – Captain’sCovenant
Jim and Stephanie Kroepfl – Merged
Timothy S. Johnston – The Savage Deeps
Alex McIntosh – Upstream Revolt
Mike Meier – JoinWith.Me
Palmer Pickering – Moon Deeds
Ted Neill – Reaper Moon: Race War in the Post Apocalypse
Dr. Anay Ayarovu – STAZR the World Of Z: The Dawn of Athir
PA Vasey – Trinity’s Fall
Rhett C. Bruno & Jaime Castle – The Luna Missile Crisis
Denis Olasehinde Akinmolasire – The Mission to End Slavery
J.T. Blossom – Lenore and the Problem With Love – When You Go to College Save the Planet
Russ Colson – The Arasmith Certainty Principle
Zach Fortier – Volk: Book one of The Overseer series
Cary Allen Stone – SEEDS: The Journey Begins
Susan Wingate – The Lesser Witness
Dennis M. Clausen – The Accountant’s Apprentice
Courtney Leigh Pahlke – Life Force Preserve
Marc Corwin – The Optical Lasso
Alan J. Steinberg – To be Enlightened
Good luck to all as your works compete on the next rounds of judging.
The next round of judging will decide which books move on to the Finalist positions for the 2020 CYGNUS Book Awards for Science Fiction novels.
The Semi-Finalists’ works will compete for the First Place Winner positions, and then all will be recognized in the evenings at VCAC21 April 22-24th from 6-8 p.m. PST.
The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 23 CIBA divisions Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Division Winners the CIBAs Ceremonies June 5th, 2021 virtually (Free) and LIVE at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.
Register Today!
We are now accepting submissions into the 2021 CYGNUS Awards writing competition. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2021. The winners will be announced in April 2022.
The CLUE Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Suspense and Thriller Fiction. The Clue Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).
Chanticleer International Book Awards is seeking the best books featuring suspense, thrilling adventure, detective work, private eye, police procedural, and crime-solving, we will put them to the test to discover the best! (For lighter-hearted Mystery and Classic Cozy Mysteries please check out our Mystery & Mayhem Awards). We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremonies April 21-25th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
These works have survived the infamous slush pile and have advanced to the 2020 CLUE Book Awards Long List. They will compete in the next rounds of judging for the CLUE 2020 Short List.
Chuck Morgan – Crime Denied, A Buck Taylor Novel
Toni Bird Jones – The Measure of Ella
E. Alan Fleischauer – Just Die
Grahame Shannon – Bay of Devils
Mike Langan – North Country
Kari Bovee – Bones of the Redeemed
Blaise Ramsay – BloodLaw
Elizabeth Lewes – Little Falls
Hal Malchow – 42 Million to One
Avanti Centrae – Kiss of the Cobra – An M2 Action Thriller
Kari Bovee – Folly at the Fair
Dana J. Summers – Downhill Fast
Rafael Amadeus Hines – Bishop’s Law
Ken Farmer – Three Creeks
Kevin G. Chapman – Lethal Voyage (Mike Stoneman Thriller)
J.P. Kenna – The Anarchist Girl’s Confession
John Danenbarger – Entanglement: Quantum and Otherwise
Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Mom, The Killer is Among Us
Ronald Lamont – Post-Mortem Narrative
Chuck Morgan – Crime Conspiracy: A Buck Taylor Novel
J. L. Oakley – The Quisling Factor
Charles Evans – Love Minefields
Sheila McGraw – The Knife Thrower’s Wife
Martin Roy Hill – The Fourth Rising
Chris Karlsen – A Venomous Love
Christopher Leibig – Almost Damned
Brooke Skipstone – Someone To Kiss My Scars
Brooke Skipstone – Some Laneys Died
J.J. Clarke – Dared to Run
Laura Wolfe – Top Producer
James B. Cohoon – Do No Harm
Megan Allen – The Slave Players
Megan Allen – The Meat Hunter
Michelle Cox – A Child Lost
Valerie J. Brooks – Revenge in 3 Parts
Corey Lynn Fayman – Ballast Point Breakdown
Kevin G. Chapman – Deadly Enterprise (Mike Stoneman Thriller)
Shanessa Gluhm – Enemies of Doves
Chris Karlsen – A Venomous Love
C.L. Stuart – Raven’s Grave
Chuck Morgan – Crime Denied, A Buck Taylor Novel
Suanne Schafer – Hunting the Devil
E. Alan Fleischauer – Sherlock & Tiger
Steve Bassett – Payback: Tales of Love, Hate and Revenge
Tina Sloan – Chasing Cleopatra
John DeDakis – Fake
Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 CLUE Book Awards?
Good Luck to All!
Congratulations to Joanne Jaytaine whose work Salvaging Truthtook home the Grand Prize for the 2019 CLUE Book Awards.
The PARANORMAL Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of Paranormal and Supernatural Fiction. The Paranormal Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).
Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs) is looking for the best books featuring magic, the supernatural, weird otherworldly stories, superhumans (ex. Jessica Jones, Wonder Woman), magical beings & supernatural entities (ex. Harry Potter), vampires & werewolves (ex. Twilight), angels & demons, fairies & mythological beings, magical systems and elements. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremonies April 21-25th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
The following fantasy fiction works have moved forward from the infamous Slush Pile to the Long List of the 2020 Paranormal Book Awards:
Christopher Leibig – Almost Damned
K.A. Banks – Seven Sisters Road
E. Alan Fleischauer – Just Die
Lydia Staggs – Azrael
Christine Mager Wevik – Borrowed Memories
Brooke Skipstone – Someone To Kiss My Scars
James Kirst – Magic Once Removed
Meg Evans – Enthrallment
Blaise Ramsay – Blood Law
Endy Wright – The Omicron Six
Claudia Herring – Shimmers of Truth
Kaylin McFarren – Soul Seeker
Joy Ross Davis – The Magnificent Celestine
Stephanie Alexander – Charleston Green
Lindy Ryan – Throw Me to the Wolves
Franklin Posner – Boston Betty
R.B. Woodstone – Chains of Time
Sheryl M. Frazer – When She Touches
Ryan Young – The Shepherd’s Burden
David W. Thompson – ‘Possum Stew
Carissa Andrews – Secret Legacy
Shane Boulware – Soulstealer
Neil Chase – Iron Dogs
S.K. Andrews – Bay of Darkness
Matt Tompkins – Odsburg
James Gish, Jr. – Snake Prayers
Randy Overbeck – Blood on the Chesapeake
TK Lawyer – Serenade
Nellie H. Steele – Shadows of the Past: A Shadow Slayers Story
Sarah Lampkin – To Dream is to Die (Dead Dreamer #1)
T. L. Augury – What’s Brewing Now? (Witches Brew Series)
Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 Paranormal Book Awards?
Good Luck to All!
Congratulations to Susan Lynn Solomon whose work Abigail’s Window took home the Grand Prize for the 2019 Paranormal Book Awards.
The OZMA Book Awards recognize emerging talent and outstanding works in the genre of Fantasy Fiction. The OZMA Book Awards is a genre division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The #CIBAs).
Chanticleer International Book Awards discovers the best books featuring magic, the supernatural, imaginary worlds, fantastical creatures, legendary beasts, mythical beings, or inventions of fancy that author imaginations dream up without a basis in science as we know it. Epic Fantasy, High Fantasy, Sword and Sorcery, Dragons, Unicorns, Steampunk, Dieselpunk, Gaslight Fantasy, Urban Fantasy, or other out of this world fiction, they will be put to the test and the best selected as winners of the prestigious CIBAs. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremonies April 21-25th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
The following fantasy fiction works have moved forward from all entries to the Long List of the 2020 OZMA Book Awards:
Christopher Leibig – Almost Damned
Manuel Rodville – Keres: The Unseen City
Susannah Dawn – Battle for the Armor of God
Christopher Russell – Divinity’s Twilight: Rebirth
T. Cook – Shin
Brooke Skipstone – Someone To Kiss My Scars
Eric McBurney – You Only Die Once
David Fitz-Gerald – She Sees Ghosts: The Story of a Woman Who Rescues Lost Souls
Julia Dent – The Love of Mother Nature
Michelle Rene – The Canyon Cathedral: The Witches of Tanglewood, Book Two
Amy Wolf – The Twelve Labors of Nick
Robert C. Feol – A Journey to Mouseling Hollow
Alan Frost – The Slayer, the Seer, and the Dream Stealer
MG Wilson and Phil Elmore – Ninja Girl Adventures
J. Nell Brown – Orphan Tree and the Vanishing Skeleton Key
Glen Dahlgren – The Child of Chaos
Gordon Preston – Zendragon
H.J. Ramsay – Ever Alice
Alison Levy – Gatekeeper: Book One in the Daemon Collecting Series
Jeny Heckman – The Warrior’s Progeny
Sandra A. Hunter – Daughter of Earth & Fire, The Fledgling
James G. Robertson – Afterworld (Next Life, #1)
LaVerne Thompson – Wild Child
D.L. Jennings – Awaken the Three
Derrick Smythe – The Other Magic
Brian Phillips – A Necromancer’s Apprentice
K.N. Salustro – Cause of Death
KC Cowan & Sara Cole – Everfire
Jacob Andrew Emrey – Inferno Dawn
Dr. Anay Ayarovu – STAZR The World Of Z: The Dawn Of Athir
Glenn Searfoss – Cycles of Norse Mythology: Tales of the AEsir Gods
T. K. Thorne – House of Rose
Lee Hunt – Dynamicist
T. L. Augury – What’s Brewing Now?
Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 OZMA Book Awards for Fantasy Fiction?
Good Luck to All!
Congratulations to Michelle Rene whose work Manufactured Witches took home the Grand Prize for the 2019 Ozma Book Awards.
The LITTLE PEEPS Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Early Reader Fiction. The Gertrude Warner Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (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. Storybooks, Beginning Chapter Books, Picture Books, Activity Books & Educational Books we will put them to the test to discover today’s best children’s books. Looking for Young Adult Fiction? Check out our Dante Rossetti contest! Looking for Middle Grade Fiction? Check out our Gertrude Warner contest!
These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2020 Little Peeps entries to the 2020 Gertrude Warner Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2020 Little Peeps Shortlist. The Long Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Finalists will be selected from the Semi-Finalists and will be announced and recognized at the CAC21 banquet and ceremony. 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 Sunday, April 25th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
These titles are in the running for the Semi-Finalist Positions of the 2020 Little Peeps Book Awards for Early Readers.
Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.
Ellie Smith – Tex the Explorer Journey Through the Alphabet
M. Lisa Rinaca – P Mind Your Q’s
M. Lisa Rinaca – The Missing Punctuation Box
M. Lisa Rinaca – Two Different Princesses
Courtney Shannon Strand – Hollyhock Hill
Robert Cole – Sollie
Masoud Malekyari – Great As A Button
Susan Faw – Poppy Ogopogo
George M. Johnson – How Hope Became An Activist
D.K. Brantley – Every Mummy Has a Mommy
Carmela Dutra – Little Katie and the STEAM Team
Carmela Dutra – Little Katie Explores the Coral Reefs
Carmela Dutra – Little Katie Goes to the Moon
Carmela Dutra – Little Katie How to Talk to Your Robot
Dr. Justine Green – Completely Me
Lisa Rojany – Tutusaurua Rex
Courtney Shannon Strand – Ella’s Umbrella
Lindy Ryan – Trick or Treat, Alistair Gray
Peter R. Fernandez – Pia and The Trolls
Dawn Marie Thompson – Sedwick the Seagull
Mercy Hansen Mize – Samson’s Tail
Stephanie Ryan – Let’s Learn about Chemistry
Pamela Tomlin – My Truly Most Favorite Fluffy Friend
Pamela Tomlin – Our Wounded Little Chickadee
Alycyn Culbertson – Look What Happened While I Was Sleeping
Raven Howell – So You Want a Puppy?
Pj McIlvaine – Little Lena and The Big Table
Dianne Moritz – Hey Little Beachcomber
Savannah Hendricks – The Book Who Lost Its Title
Mark Richardson – The Christmas War
Teal Blake – J is for Jackalope
Congratulations to Trevor Young & Eleanor Long whose work Galdo’s Gift: The Boovie took home the Grand Prize for the 2019 Little Peeps Book Awards
The LARAMIE Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the Americana / Western, Pioneer, Civil War, Frontier, and First Nations Novels. The Laramie Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.
Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring cowboys, & cowgirls the Wild West, pioneering, Civil War, Native American stories, and early North American History, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.
These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2020 Laramie Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2020 Laramie Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be announced and recognized at the CAC21 banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 17 CIBA divisions Semi-Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremonies April 21-25th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2020 LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction. Good luck to all as your works move on to the next rounds of judging.
2020 Laramie Book Awards Long Listers
Fred Dickey – Days of Hope, Miles of Misery
David Fitz-Gerald – She Sees Ghosts? The Story of a Woman Who Rescues Lost Souls
Clay Houston Shivers – The Marauders of Pitchfork Pass
DL Fowler – The Turn
JR Collins – Legend of Swell Branch
John W. Bebout – The Cause of Darkness- A Story of the Civil War
Eileen Charbonneau – Mercies of the Fallen
James Kahn – Matamoros
Gerry Robinson – The Cheyenne Story
J. Palma – The Chaffee Sisters
Susan Higginbotham – The First Lady and the Rebel
Barbara Salvatore – Magghie
Michael D. Abbott – Wyoming Wind
J.C. Graves – Death is a Sharpshooter
J.B. Richard – Jesse
Terry D. Heflin – Scarlet Hem
Mike Shellenbergar – Quail Creek Ranch
Mike Shellenbergar – Four-Flusher
Mike Shellenbergar – Refuge
T.K. Conklin – Promise of Spring
Elizabeth St. Michel – Surrender to Honor
Gail Meath – Fire Blossom
Van Temple – Whisperwood: A Confederate Soldier’s Struggle
Michael T. Tusa Jr. – And Trouble Followed
Rebecca Dwight Bruff – Trouble the Water, a Novel
John Hansen – Elk Meadows
Roger Newman – Will O’ the Wisp: Madness, War and Recompense
E. Alan Fleischauer – Hunted
T.J. Johnston – Lockett’s Crucible
Daniel Greene – Northern Wolf
W. Hock Hochheim – Rio Grande Black Magic
Which of these works will move forward in the judging rounds for the 2020 LARAMIE Book Awards for Western Fiction?
Congratulations to Eileen Charbonneau whose work Seven Aprils took home the Grand Prize for the 2019 Laramie Book Awards.
The days of publishers handling all an author’s marketing are looking like a thing of the past, even for traditionally published authors. This means you need to take control of your own marketing strategy for your books’ promotions.
To begin, list off the places where you imagine people will see information about your book(s). We have some ideas, but you know your community best so trust your expertise there. It’s safe to say you will need to at least look in these places:
Your Website!
Your Social Media Platforms (that point back to your website — not a selling platform)
A Cross-Promotion platform that you share with other authors
Bookchain.ca, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Apple, Kobo, PublishDrive, and as many selling platforms as possible to create streams of revenue/royalties.
Independent Bookstores and Retail Outlets (many Chanticleerians join with garden shops, wineries, gift shops, toy stores, etc.) to sell their books.
Local Bookstores
Your local bookstores deserves special attention. There are always loyal readers with a strong preference to shop local, so take some time to show those stores extra love.
Shelf-talkers for point of sale displays
Small posters (free standing and flat for windows and bulletin boards
Shiny book stickers work! – They make your books stand out on the shelf.
Bookmarks with your WEBSITE and Social Media Handles and your Covers — ask if you may insert them in your books.
Make plans to participate in virtual author events – most indie booksellers are hosting these with great success
THEN you promote your events every where! (Social Media, email blasts, website, posters, etc.)
Now let’s put those together for some general recommendations (remember, your situation is unique, so if this advice clearly needs an adjustment for you, go for it).
[Editor’s Note: David Beaumier has worked with Village Books (Bellingham’s local Independent Bookstore) for several years before rejoining the Chanticleer Team after completing his Master Degree in English, so he knows what he is talking about with how to increase sales at local bookstores.]
How to Make Your Website More Effective in Promoting Your Books
We recommend that your website has a tab for Reviews and Awards, in addition to a tab for your books. It can also be good to include your shelf talker blurb after that to showcase a strong hook to bring your reader in. Then, from your Book tab, lead them to your review from there so they can see you have a strong digital base already built up with accolades from an independent and respected reviewer. These nods to your success tell the reader that your book is worthwhile and make it stand out from the thousands of other books they’ll come across.
Website Checklist
Tab for Reviews and Awards
Books Tab for more information with links to wear to purchase
Feature Your Digital Badges
Sign up Page for Announcements, Freebies, Bonuses, Short Stories, News, and Beta Readership Opportunities
If your books are available at indie bookstores, or other retail outlets — list where they are and give links!
Questions For and How To Connect with Book Clubs (remember — virtual gives you a wider audience span and the benefit of no travel expenses)
You can feature your digital sticker in proximity to an image of your cover in both places. It can also be good to include your shelf talker blurb after that to showcase a strong hook to bring your reader in. Then, from your Book tab, lead them to your review from there so they can see you have a strong digital base already built up with accolades from an independent and respected reviewer. These nods to your success tell the reader that your book is worthwhile and make it stand out from the thousands of other books they’ll come across.
Marketing packages can include an ARC, any swag you have (bookmarks, buttons, wrist bands, quarter sheet advertisements), a one page Sell Sheet (aka a write up of your book) which should mention your awards and positive reviews (including excerpts). On websites where your book is sold, you can populate their editorial review section of the site with your Chanticleer Editorial Book Review.
Village Books, Bellingham, Wash. all aglow!
Village Books at night. A brick cornerstone of the community with light pouring out the windows when it gets to be dark at 4 p.m. Our very own local, Bellingham bookstore. Local bookstores are key for selling your book!
That’s David up in the upper left hand corner sans grad school mustache.
Check to see if they have a regular advertising publication or newsletter and ask about including your review or your shelf talker in it (depending on space). Ask if you can post shelf talkers at their store and what the specifications for talkers are through their store.
Chanticleer Shelf talkerShelf Talkers sell Wine and Books! They work!
If a bookstore team member says they love the genre you write in, you can even offer them a free copy of your book and ask if they can do a write up for you. They have an abundance of riches when it comes to free books, but they don’t have a personal connection with every author. Only offer if they seem interested. Generally, do remember to always be kind to bookstore employees. They are the people who hand sell your book the most after you.
If the bookstore does do raffles on sale event days, or if you are having a socially distanced author event perhaps the staff can offer your swag such lavender sachets to each attendee or purchaser (as Gail Noble Sanderson does with The Lavender Meuse Trilogy or Kizzie Jones offers with coloring sheets for her Tall Tale of Dachsunds children’s book series).
Here is what Kizzie Jones is doing for her foreign book editions:
Plan events with your ribbon front and center — even if it is virtual — have your well-earned Chanticleer Blue Ribbon placed where it can be seen — another subtle way of stating that you are an award-winning author without having to say so yourself in your virtual presentation.
People know what a blue ribbon means, and it’s a great way to start a conversation about your book. Events are for more than just your local bookstore, but any stores near where you live or other places you think your story might resonate. Ask yourself if you might know special interest groups that would want to read your work that deals with zookeeping, financial advising, or a classic thriller. Reach out and add these places to your tour stops–yes even virtual tours—all small businesses are looking for ways to create virtual events to keep existing customers and find new ones.. Bookstore websites often run reading and writing groups that might connect to the genre you work in, and they love to have published authors stop by to chat with them.
But what about “virtual events” at your local bookstore?
If this means bookmarks, buttons, stickers, quarter sheets, and remember to put in your winning status and/or a blurb from your review as applicable and as makes sense for fitting the information onto the material. These swag items are a great way to keep the book in people’s mind. Bookstores can drop all of these into customer’s bags, which can really pay off in sales! Especially if the purchase was instigated by a virtual event. These items let your readers know that they are special to YOU! Be sure to invite them to visit your website because you offer readers special prizes and raffles and other fun stuff to readers who subscribed.
Always be gracious with anyone who might sell or buy your work at an event. There’s no crowd too small, even if it’s just a bookstore employee—remember, that person will hand sell your book and be your representative to customers in the store.
The short version of this, as with all the best advice, is to have a plan, reach out to your local community that provides built-in support, and always be kind and gracious to those around you.
Tweet us @ChantiReviews on Twitter to let us know how you used your marketing materials and award from Chanticleer to help generate interest in your book. We will share and LIKE and Comment.
Promote your wins by showing off your digital badges (Semi-Finalist, Finalist, First Place, or Grand Prize), book stickers, and reviews!
Now to start preparing for the HOLIDAY SEASON – Stay tuned for Tips and Tools for Increasing Holiday Book Sales.
The Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).
Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. We will put books about true and inspiring stories to the test and choose the best among them.
These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2020 JOURNEY entries to the 2020 Journey Book Awards LONG LIST. These entries are now in competition for 2020 Journey Shortlist. The Short Listers will compete for the Semi-Finalists positions. Semi-Finalists will be announced and recognized at the CAC21 banquet and ceremony. The First Place Category Winners, along with the CIBA Division Grand Prize winners, will be selected from the 17 CIBA divisions Semi-Finalists. We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2021 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. at the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference–whether virtual, hybrid, or in-person.
These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2020 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction
Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging.
Terry A. Repak – What You Learn By Living Elsewhere
Marilea C. Rabasa – Stepping Stones: A Memoir of Addiction, Loss, and Transformation
Ashley Conner and Cierra Camper – Memoirs of Michael: The Hurricane Project
Christine Ristaino – All the Silent Spaces
Linda Bledsoe – Rhea and Jeremiah Zeus: An Appalachian Family’s Story of Drugs and Abuse
Leslie Bains – Let’s Take A Hike: 7 Family-Friendly Trails of Nantucket
Susan E Casey – Rock On: Mining for Joy in the Deep River of Sibling Grief
Patricia Eagle – Being Mean–A Memoir of Sexual Abuse and Survival
Annerose D. Watts – Blue Plate Journey
Susan E. Greisen – In Search of Pink Flamingos: A Woman’s Quest for Forgiveness & Unconditional Love
Carole Bumpus – Searching for Family and Traditions at the French Table, Book One, Savoring the Olde Ways Series
Janice Morgan – Suspended Sentence
Esta G. Bernstein – Changing Horses
Mendek Rubin & Myra Goodman – Quest for Eternal Sunshine
Katherine Snow Smith – Rules for the Southern Rulebreaker, Missteps and Lessons Learned
Marianne Ingheim – Out of Love: Finding Your Way Back to Self-Compassion
Cerridwen Fallingstar – Broth from the Cauldron; A Wisdom Journey through Everyday Magic
Sharon Dukett – No Rules
Judy Gaman – Love, Life, and Lucille
Laila Tarraf – Strong Like Water: Lessons Learned from Leading with Love
Keturah Kendrick – No Thanks: Black, Female, And Living in the Martyr-Free Zone
Patricia Martin Holt – EMPOWER A REFUGEE, Peace of Thread and the Background Humanity Movement
David Crow – The Pale-Faced Lie: A True Story
Evelyn Kohl LaTorre – Between Inca Walls
Cindy Rasicot – Finding Venerable Mother: A Daughter’s Spiritual Quest to Thailand
Christine Nicolette-Gonzalez – My Mother’s Curse: A Journey Beyond Childhood Trauma
Nan Sanders Pokerwinski – Mango Rash: Coming of Age in the Land of Frangipani and Fanta
Scott Hunter – And the Monkey Lets Go: Memoirs Through Illusion and Doubt
Mary Charity Kruger Stein – Fatherless, Fearless, Female: A Memoir
Ilene English – Hippie Chick
Barbara Clarke – The Red Kitchen
Bill Pullen – It Started at The Savoy
Deborah Tobola – Hummingbird in Underworld: Teaching in a Men’s Prison
Amy Byer Shainman – Resurrection Lily: The BRCA Gene, Hereditary Cancer & Lifesaving Whispers from the Grandmother I Never Knew
Tamra McAnally Bolton – A Blessed Life: One World War II Seabee’s Story
Suzanne Kamata – Squeaky Wheels: Travels with My Daughter by Train, Plane, Metro, Tuk-tuk and Wheelchair
T.D. Arkenberg – Trials & Truffles: Expats in Brussels
Steve Mariotti – Goodbye Homeboy
Steve Rochinski – A Man of His Time: Secrets from a Halfway World
Barbara Clarke – The Red Kitchen
Tiffani Goff – Loving Tiara
Frank Ball – Ball of Yarns
Kathleen Pooler – Just the Way He Walked: A Mother’s Story of Healing and Hope
Julie Tate Libby – The Good Way, a Himalayan Journey
Isaac Alexis M.D. – The Seductive Pink Crystal
Michael M. Van Ness – General In Command: The Life of Major General John B. Anderson, World War II
Lilly A Gwilliam – Generations of Motherhood: A Changing Story
Renee Hodges – Saving Bobby: Heroes and Heroin in One Small Community
Ted Neill – Two Years of Wonder
Jennifer B. Monahan – Where To? How I Shed My Baggage and Learned to Live Free
Karen Keilt – The Parrot’s Perch
Brant Vickers – Chucky’s in Tucson
Deborah Burns – Saturday’s Child
Betty Theiler – Beyond Borders
Stefanie Naumann – How Languages Saved Me: A Polish Story of Survival
Jules Hannaford – Fool Me Twice
Lydia Ola Taiwo – A Broken Childhood: How To Overcome Abuse: A Recovery Guide
Miguel A. Aguilo – Pencils in the Hand of God: Two Heavenly Adoption Stories
Who will be awarded the 2020 Journey Book Awards Grand Prize? Stay tuned!
Congratulations to John Hoyte whose work Persistence of Light took home the Grand Prize for the 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards
John Hoyte author of The Persistence of Light, 2019 Journey Grand Prize Winner
“When Gandalf said to Frodo, ‘All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given us.” (J.R.R. Tolkien), surely John Hoyte was listening. Starting early and without choice, he and his siblings are interned in a Japanese prison camp, afterwards, he follows along Hannibal’s elephant trail over the French Alps. .” – Chanticleer Reviews
Donna LeClair for The PROPRIETOR of the THEATRE of LIFE
A MANUSCRIPT
This is no ordinary book and the word “extraordinary” can’t begin to do it justice. It’s a gift for anyone fortunate enough to read it and libraries around the globe should add it to their collections. It should be available to everyone. Emma is a highly sympathetic character, an everywoman, in need of answers. The reader learns as much as she does about individual and universal struggles on earth, the lessons to be gleaned from suffering, and the value of sharing our stories. ~ Carrie M., Chanticleer Editorial Team
The 2019 Somerset First in Category Winners are:
Carl RobertsforThe Trial of ConnorPadget
Judith Kirscht forEnd of the Race
Patrick Finegan forCooperative Lives
Santiago Xaman forAfter Olympus
Claire Fullerton forLittle Tea
Maggie St. Claire forMartha
Jamie Zerndt forJerkwater
R. Barber Anderson forThe Sunken Forest, Where the Forest Came out of the Earth
Here is a listing of the Somerset Book Awards Hall of Fame Grand Prize winners!
Stay at home mom turns entrepreneur, but without her husband’s support, and continunually needing to manage her three adult sons, Abbie Rose Stone’s dream of producing her own craft hard apple cider faces a world of adversity in Barbara A. Stark-Nemon’s Hard Cider.
Babylonian astrology and Jewish mysticism combine with Roman history to create a timeless story of passion and fate in Chuck Gould’s The Rabbi’s Gift. Babylonian astrology and Jewish mysticism combine with Roman history to create a timeless story of passion and fate in Chuck Gould’s The Rabbi’s Gift.
Words thrown as hard as boulders are easy to catch – if you’ve had practice. Just ask our hero, Muzhduk the Ugli the Fourth…In the great tradition of existentialism, Boldizar brings us a book that is hard to classify. It has aspects of the existential with a fair amount of satirical wordplay and a bit of theater of the absurd thrown in.
With a fast-paced storyline and a rich cast of characters, this award-winning winning novel offers a uniquely hilarious, but scary, perspective on the how the businesses of public relations and marketing can take technology to its precipice to take advantage of a media addicted public.
Individually Wrapped tells us the bizarre tale of Sam Gregory’s descent over the condensed course of a couple of days. Set in a 21st-century futuristic city, technology has permeated every aspect of the city dwellers’ lives… Self-delusion is an interesting state of mind because everyone can see it except yourself, as it propels you ever deeper into oblivion, where not even technology can save you.
We would be amiss by not featuring and recognizing Judith Kirscht, our very own Pacific Northwest Somerset inspired author. Judith specializes in family sagas and societal issues.
Judith Kirscht – Somerset Hall of Fame Author
Judith was born and educated in Chicago during the Great Depression and then WWII. She taught school during the upheavals of the Vietnam protests and the Civil Rights movement. Later in life, she found herself in California, divorced and with two daughters. Judith taught creative writing at universities of very different cultures: University of Michigan and U of California, Santa Monica. Her novels continuously are awarded CIBA First Place Category ribbons for the Somerset Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction.
In a world where too many rocks are thrown at those who represent anything other than the norm in middle-class white America, two friends decide to take matters into their own hands and stand up to the hatred with which they are targeted in order to save their home and ultimately their lives.
Hawkins Lane is excellent and, ultimately, a redemptive story about the heart-wrenching tragedies a family can survive, and about the healing powers of nature and friendship. The characters and the story will linger long after the last page is read and you will be captivated from the first page.
“The Inheritors” by Judith Kirscht is a novel of one woman grappling to find her cultural and personal identity. Tolerance of others and the need for communication is required from each of us is an overriding theme in this latest work of Kirscht that explores the complexities of human nature and family bonds.
“Home Fires” is an intelligently written, fast-paced family drama that unfolds into a suspenseful page-turner. Although this novel masterfully renders the emotional hardships and tragedies that are sometimes part of dysfunctional relationships, it is not a depressing read.
The last day to submit your work is November 30, 2020. We invite you to join us, to tell us your stories, and to find out who will take home the prize at CAC21 in April.
As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your literary novel deserves! Enter today!
The winners will be announced at the CIBA Awards Ceremony on April 19, 2021, that will take place during the 2021 Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Semi-Finalists and Finalists will be recognized. The first place winners will be recognized and receive their custom ribbon, and then we will see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of networking and celebration!
CIBA Ribbons!
First Place category winners and Grand Prize winners will each receive an awards package. Whose works will be chosen? The excitement builds for the 2020 SOMERSET Book Awards competitions and now for the Mark Twain Book Awards.
Our Chanticleer Review Writing Contests feature more than $30,000.00 worth of cash and prizes each year!
~$1000 Overall Grand Prize Winner ~$30,000views, prizes, and promotional opportunities awarded to Category Winners
You might say we like Samuel L. Clemens, better known as Mark Twain, just a little bit here in Bellingham. We only put a statue of him right out front of our flagship local bookstore Village Books.
Samuel Clemons writing as Mark Twain statue in front of Village Books, Fairhaven (Bellingham, Wash.)
But why? Well, Bellingham was one of the stops on his world tour to inspire himself to write and hopefully pay off some of the massive debt he had accrued from bad business investments. The tour proved to be successful: 122 shows in 71 cities around the world.
Twain came to Bellingham (aka Fairhaven currently – aka at that time as New Whatcom) in August of 1895 , and he lectured under smoky skies (they had a fire season that summer, too).
The fires caused the visit to Whatcom County to look like it wasn’t going to work out, as he arrived to see a spare audience, and unfriendly skies. Just read the description written by his manager, Major JD Pond:
Wednesday, August 14th, Seattle to Whatcom.
“Mark’s” cold is getting worse (the first cold he ever had). He worried and fretted all day; two swearing fits under his breath, with a short interval between them, they lasted from our arrival in town until he went to sleep after midnight. It was with great difficulty that he got through the lecture. The crowd, which kept stringing in at long intervals until half-past nine, made him so nervous that he left the stage for a time. I thought he was ill, and rushed back of the scenes, only to meet him in a white rage. He looked daggers at me, and remarked:
“You’ll never play a trick like this on me again. Look at that audience. It isn’t half in yet.”
I explained that many of the people came from long distances, and that the cars ran only every half hour, the entire country on fire causing delays, and that was why the last installment came so late. He cooled down and went at it again. He captured the crowd. He had a good time and an encore, and was obliged to give an additional story.
And his trip had the added effect of reinvigorating his writing and his bank account, both vital for him. Luckily, with prohibition twenty years down the line, he managed to find some liquor and cigars to round out the successful night at what is now Sycamore Square, just down the road from where he was staying.
As a well-known humorist, Mark Twain employed satire to gently rib his audience and point out inconsistencies in the world as it appeared then, such as when Huck wonders why he would go to Hell for helping his friend Jim escape slavery.
One of Twain’s more well-known sayings is “Better to remain silent and thought a fool than to open one’s mouth & remove all doubt.”
BRAND NEW FOR 2020
The Mark Twain Book Awards
for Satirical and Allegorical Fiction
With our Somerset Awards having grown beyond capacity with literary fiction and satire, we decided to name the new division for satire and allegory for Mark Twain, for both his excellence in writing and our connection to him here in Bellingham. And, of course for his excellent works in satire and allegory.
The incomparable The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
The Innocents Abroad
Modern Satire examples:
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
Allegory examples
Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales
George Orwell – Animal Farm, Nineteen Eighty-Four
L. Frank Baum’s – The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
Arthur Miller – The Crucible
C.S. Lewis – The Chronicles of Narnia
If your work is literary or contemporary, but not quite satire or allegory, check out our Somerset Awards!
The last day to submit your work is November 30, 2018. We invite you to join us, to tell us your stories, and to find out who will take home the prize ribbons at CAC21 in April.
As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your literary novel deserves! Enter today!
The MARK TWAIN Book Awards for Satirical and Allegorical fiction is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards – the CIBAs.