Tag: contemporary

  • Discover your next great read with the 2023 Somerset Awards Hall of Fame

    Discover your next great read with the 2023 Somerset Awards Hall of Fame

    Contemporary tales of literary proportions?

    Submit to the Somerset Awards by October 31st!

    ***Submit Your Novel Today!***

    The Badge for the Somerset Awards for Literary and Contemporary Literature

    Are the pages of your book full of rich literary themes, captivating contemporary narratives, a touch of magical realism, or heartfelt explorations of family dynamics? If so, it’s time to put your work to the test by submitting it to the Somerset Awards! These awards seek to celebrate and honor books that shine with literary brilliance, offering a platform for those that delve into the complexities of human existence through the written word. Whether your work weaves enchanting tales of magical realism, delves into the intricacies of modern life, or delves deep into the bonds that tie families together, the Somerset Awards is your chance to gain recognition and acclaim for your extraordinary storytelling.

    For Humor, Satire, or Allegorical works, we suggest that you consider the Mark Twain Book Awards division of the CIBAs.

    Lets take a look at the Grand Prize Winners of the Somerset Awards!

    Everything That Was Cover

    Everything That Was
    By Conon Parks, Chris Sempek, Mike MacNeil and Larry Knight

    Everything That Was echoes myriad broken emotions born of the world in turmoil after 9/11, intricate and politically bold, and as disturbing in its brutal humanity as it is satisfying with witty jests.

    The 9/11 terrorist attack has shattered the psyche of the American people. A volcanic eruption of questions demands the whys and hows of the attack. From this anger, a massive war on terror begins. This historical fiction reflects the chaos of 9/11 and its ensuing global chaos – resulting in a series of violent endeavors and events. Throughout Everything That Was, one can find a swarm of fragmented ideologies, mini memoirs of war veterans, and witness accounts – all screeching reasons for the attack, the ensuing war, and its consequences: political, ideological, and theological.

    Read More Here

     

    Lies in Bone Cover

    Lies In Bone
    By Natalie Symons

    From the first paragraph of Lies in Bone, Natalie Symons’ debut novel delves into human darkness.

    Lies in Bone, set in a factory town in 1986 Pennsylvania after its industrial boom faded, is told from the point of view of a girl who struggles with more than usual teenage angst. Symons relentlessly reveals the fear, ignorance, and poverty which often suffuse a community left behind.

    The residents of Slippery Elm, Pennsylvania, were bewildered and ill-equipped to deal with their new reality when the steel mill shut down seven years before, leaving many unemployed and discouraged.

    Frances Coolidge, known as Frank, knows the struggle of being left behind.

    Read More Here

    A Season in Lights Cover

    A Season in Lights
    By Gregory Erich Phillips

    Gregory Erich Phillips’ A Season in Lights is a well-crafted, engaging exploration of creatives, each following their heart and trying to reach their dream.

    Against backdrops of the 1980s AIDS crisis and the more recent COVID-19 pandemic, the story entwines the lives of a 30-something dancer and an older musician as they strive to make their artistic mark in the cultural capital of New York City.

    Here in a two-fold unveiling, the story comes to life from the first-person perspective of Cammie, a starry-eyed aspiring dancer from Lancaster, PA, and the third-person reveal of Tom, a more seasoned black pianist. He longs for a classical career but is too often labeled a jazz musician. Cammie first encounters Tom in a studio dance class where he’s taken a job as the musical accompanist. Befriended by the gay dance instructor, Tom heeds the worldly advice offered about surviving in the Big Apple. “All you’ve got to do is convince people that you belong. You’ve got to tell them who you are before they tell you.”

    Read More Here

    Hard Cider
    By Barbara Stark-Nemon

    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.

    After finishing a successful career in education and raising her three sons, Abbie Rose now sees an opportunity to create a new segment of her life’s work in a blossoming business venture. She’s set to take on this new venture by herself, determined to succeed, with or without her husband’s support. Yet, while she lays out her meticulous plans for her cider business, life keeps happening around her, attempting to derail Abbie Rose at every turn.

    Read More Here


    Now that you’re set on your next reads, what are you waiting for? The only way to join this amazing list of Somerset Winners is to submit today!

    Those who submit and advance will have the chance to win the Overall Grand Prize of the CIBAs and $1000!

    Submit to the CIBAs Today!

    Now is your chance to touch the hearts of readers everywhere. Your Contemporary story deserves to be discovered, and you can submit to the 2023 Somerset Awards by the end of the month. Don’t miss this chance to give your book the recognition it deserves.

    The Somerset Awards is your chance to shine!

    And remember! Our 12th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference (CAC24) will be April 18-21, 2024, where our 2023 CIBA winners will be announced. Space is limited and seats are already filling up. Sign up and see the latest updates here!

  • IF YOU FIND ME WORTHY By Pam Landen – Contemporary Romance, Women’s Fiction

    IF YOU FIND ME WORTHY By Pam Landen – Contemporary Romance, Women’s Fiction

     

    If You Find Me Worthy introduces forty-six-year-old Kate Baker, a woman who knows her own mind. As the former owner of a million-dollar private jet charter service, Kate is well established in the world of aviation as well as the world of CEOs.

    Having started her career in the technology field, Kate is returning to her roots when her friend and former business partner asks her to use her technical expertise to assess the disaster recovery plan of North American Bank. She negotiates to exchange her assistance for a look into the bank’s lending practices for her study on the prejudice against female business owners.

    Kate is certainly not looking for love. Having lost her husband to ALS years previously, she is focused only on her work, her son Stuart, and golf. However, when she meets Curtis Michaels, the CEO of North American Bank for the last seven years, she immediately feels an unfamiliar, and unwelcome, attraction. So begins If you Find Me Worthy by Pam Landen.

    Curtis finds Kate exceptionally intriguing. He can’t help but constantly challenge the beautiful blonde.

    A widower himself, Curtis has raised his daughter Sarah alone and carries the scars of his former bad relationship. He knows he shouldn’t even think about approaching Kate since she is temporarily working for his bank, but he can’t help himself.

    The more Kate learns about Curtis, the more she realizes their similarities in the business and personal worlds, but Curtis’s demons threaten their fledgling relationship before it has a chance to truly blossom. She questions her ability to maintain her distance from the man who so clearly needs her help, but will the two be able to defeat the memories of his former life?

    This novel’s greatest strength is character development.

    Both Kate and Curtis have extreme depth. The pain from their former spouses has created a pain simultaneously unique to the characters while bearing striking similarities. Kate’s husband, Sam, left Kate with extreme feelings of inadequacy despite her running a successful business and caring for him during his illness. Their story is one Kate is embarrassed to admit to Curtis.

    Unbeknownst to Kate, Curtis has his own shameful secret concerning his dead wife Carol. His trauma is, perhaps, the most critical to the novel’s plot as it keeps him from seeking future happiness with Kate. Though perfect for each other, the two have a chasm of hurt between them. The strength Kate has found through therapy and self-actualization won’t allow her to settle for less than Curtis’s full heart, but finding the patience to help him get the counseling he needs proves difficult. Numerous times, their relationship stands on shaky ground, but the growth of their love is endearing.

    A major theme of the novel revolves around Kate’s research project – the treatment of women in business.

    Kate must repeatedly prove herself in this “man’s world.” She faces extreme sexism from Jake, the lead marketing representative for the bank. His constant berating, questioning, and name-calling push Kate to her limit, but she refuses to allow Curtis to step in on her behalf. With few women in positions of power within the bank, Kate’s journey is entirely uphill with Curtis often throwing roadblocks in her path as well to test her business acumen.

    An interesting twist is Kate’s acceptance of Curtis’s behavior. She sees Curtis as a flirt rather than an opponent. Though Curtis has macho-man control issues, his treatment of Kate is chivalrous and giving. She willingly gives up power to him on occasion, and she seems mostly unbothered by that power release. His validation of her feminism makes her feel like a beautiful, treasured woman for the first time in her life, and, in some way, actually accentuates her feminine power.

    Behind the details of business and technology lies a touching romance. Recommended!

  • A WILD REGION: Tales and Stories from the Heartland by Robin Lee Lovelace – Contemporary American Gothic, Short Story Collections, Weird Fiction

    A WILD REGION: Tales and Stories from the Heartland by Robin Lee Lovelace – Contemporary American Gothic, Short Story Collections, Weird Fiction

     

    A Wild Region: Tales and Stories from the Heartland by Robin Lee Lovelace is a wonderful collection of Weird fiction (emphasis on Weird), showcasing the oddities and fantastic adventures which hide among the everyday people of the midwestern United States.

    Lovelace opens with ‘Virgie’s Headless Chicken’, setting the tone for the full collection as Virgie attempts to reproduce a circus sideshow act. Lovelace shares her familial inspiration for this story in a fascinating preface.

    From there she gifts readers with the award-winning novella, Savonne, Not Vonny, a coming-of-age story of a little girl involving brothels, voodoo, and displaced gods. Savonne faces trial after trial as she grows up in different environments, all while she tries to understand her place in the world. This setting is particularly well-developed, leaving readers wanting more from even the secondary characters. Readers who loved Neil Gaiman’s American Gods will enjoy every page of Savonne’s adventures.

    Varying in emotion and impact, all of these tales will grab a reader’s attention. In every story of A Wild Region, fully-realized characters deal with important problems, approaching them with their own strange solutions.

    A Wild Region, as a whole, deals with themes of belonging. Some stories explore belonging to a family, be it blood or found. Others in relation to society. No matter how strange and fantastic the setting and circumstances, the characters drive each story. Even the most bizarre elements are secondary to the characters, enhancing their journey. Readers will feel for each protagonist, rooting for them to the end.

    This collection will help readers see their own surroundings with a new curiosity.

    Every one of these stories takes place in the mundane, real world, tucked away somewhere at the edges of daily life with ties to the South and Midwest United states. From a southern Indiana farmhouse in the 1940s on to an abandoned mansion in a virus-ravaged Memphis in 2041, readers will look twice at roadside attractions and dusty drives which lead into the unmitigated wilds of this continent, questioning their hidden mysteries.

    Lovelace is a strong voice in contemporary Weird and Southern Gothic fiction whom readers should continue to watch for. Hopefully, she has many more fantastic scenarios and characters yet to share with the world.

    Included in this collection, Uncle won the 2021 Marguerite McGlinn short story competition and Savonne, Not Vonny by Robin Lee Lovelace won Grand Prize in the 2020 CIBA Shorts Awards for Short Stories, Novellas, and Collections.

     

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • The SOMERSET 2022 CIBA WINNERS for Literary & Contemporary Fiction

    The SOMERSET 2022 CIBA WINNERS for Literary & Contemporary Fiction

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

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, magical realism, or women and family themes. These books have advanced to the final judging rounds.

     1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners were announced at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony by Donna LeClair on Saturday, April 29th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    This is the OFFICIAL 2022 LIST of the SOMERSET BOOK AWARDS First Place Category Winners and the SOMERSET Grand Prize Winner.

    Somerset Blue and Gold First Place Badge

    Join us in celebrating the following award-winning authors and their works in the 2022 CIBAs.

    • Jo Deniau – Stiff Hearts

    • Datta Groover – The Reluctant Visionary

    • Conon Parks – Everything That Was

    • John Hansen – Hired Hands

    • Linda Moore – Attribution

    • Morgan Sloan – Scars and Honey

    The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2022 SOMERSET Awards is:

    Everything That Was 

    by Conon Parks 

    Everything That Was CoverThe Grand Prize Somerset Badge for Everything That Was by Conon Parks

    PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

    Attn CIBA Winners: More goodies and prizes will be coming your way along with promotion in our magazine, website, and advertisements in Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards long-tail marketing strategy. Welcome to the CIBA Hall of Fame for Award Winners!

    This post has been posted on the Chanticleer Facebook Page. We try to tag all authors listed here in the Facebook post. However, for Facebook to allow us to tag an author, that author must LIKE our page and Follow Chanticleer Reviews.

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

    Additionally, we also post on Twitter. Chanticleer Facebook and Twitter handle is @ChantiReviews

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

    A Note to ALL the WINNERS: The coveted CIBA Blue Ribbons will be mailed out starting in June. We will contact you with an email to verify your mailing address and other items.

    To ALL the WINNERS: You will receive an OFFICIAL EMAIL NOTIFICATION with Digital Badges and more information.

    Grand Prize Division Winners will receive a customized digital badge. When we receive it from our graphic artist, we will also post here and in the Grand Prize Division Winners Official Posting.

    Thank you for participating in the 2022 CIBAs! We are looking forward to reading your future entries.

     Team Chanticleer

  • The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Finalists for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Finalists for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

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

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, magical realism, or women and family themes. These books have advanced to the next judging rounds. We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2022 Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction Semi-Finalists to the 2022 Somerset Book Awards FINALISTS. Winners will be selected from the 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 25 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 29th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    These titles are in the running for the First Place and Grand Prize Winner of the 2022 Somerset Book Awards novel competition for Literary and Contemporary Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2022 CIBAs.

    • Conon Parks – Everything That Was
    • Michael Richard – Chosen’s Beautiful Heart
    • Linda Moore – Attribution
    • Datta Groover – The Reluctant Visionary
    • Robert Tucker – The Discontent of Mary Wenger, Paper Dolls, Book 1
    • Patricia Sands – The Secrets We Hide
    • Julia Tvardovskaya – Identifiable
    • Ellen Sherman – Into the Attic
    • Fran Hawthorne – I Meant to Tell You
    • Leslie Kain – Secrets In The Mirror
    • Patricia Averbach – Dreams of Drowning
    • Tom Stewart – Immortal North
    • Jeffrey Dale Lofton – Red Clay Suzie
    • John Hansen – Hired Hand
    • Jo Deniau – Stiff Hearts
    • Dianne C. Braley – The Silence in the Sound
    • Maggie Smith – Truth and Other Lies
    • Susan Lynn Solomon – Raising Kane
    • Lynn Byk – The Fearless Moral Inventory of Elsie Finch
    • Morgan Sloan – Scars and Honey
    • Harriet Cannon – Exiled South
    • Ann Marie Stewart – Out of the Water

    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.

    The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2021 Somerset Awards is Lies in Bone by Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Somerset Awards Grand Prize won by Natalie Symons for Lies in Bone

    Click here to see the 2021 Somerset Book Award Winners for Literary and Contemporary Fiction.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2023 Somerset Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction. The 2023 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2024. 

    Please click here for more information.

    Winners will be announced at the 2022 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    April 27-30, 2023! Register Today!

    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 11th annual conference and discover why!

    A Collage of Speakers and Blue Ribbon Winners for CAC23

  • The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Semi-Finalists for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Semi-Finalists for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

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

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, magical realism, or women and family themes. These books have advanced to the next judging rounds. We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2022 Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction Short List to the 2022 Somerset Book Awards SEMI-FINALISTS. Entries below are now in competition for 2022 Somerset Finalists. The Semi-Finalists will compete for the Finalist positions. Winners will be selected from the 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 25 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 29th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    These titles are in the running for the FINALISTS of the 2022 Somerset Book Awards novel competition for Literary and Contemporary Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2022 CIBAs.

    • Conon Parks – Everything That Was
    • Michael Richard – Chosen’s Beautiful Heart
    • Karla Huebner – In Search of the Magic Theater
    • Maggie St. Claire – Into the Wind
    • Vee Kumari – ANKANAM
    • Linda Moore – Attribution
    • Kathleen Stone – Tell Me You Love Me
    • Datta Groover – The Reluctant Visionary
    • Rebecca Miller – Touch
    • Robert Tucker – The Discontent of Mary Wenger, Paper Dolls, Book 1
    • Patricia Sands – The Secrets We Hide
    • Meredith Berlin – Friends with Issues
    • Frances Howard-Snyder – A Willow Cabin at Your Gate
    • Julia Tvardovskaya – Identifiable
    • Michael Chatlien – Northern Lights
    • Julia Brewer Daily – The Fifth Daughter of Thorn Ranch: A Modern Ranch with an Ancient Secret
    • Ellen Sherman – Into the Attic
    • Fran Hawthorne – I Meant to Tell You
    • Jeff Hartman – The End Of The War
    • Leslie Kain – Secrets In The Mirror
    • Patricia Averbach – Dreams of Drowning
    • Tom Stewart – Immortal North
    • Jeffrey Dale Lofton – Red Clay Suzie
    • Brenda Stanley – The Still Small Voice
    • John Hansen – Hired Hand
    • Jo Deniau – Stiff Hearts
    • Dianne C. Braley – The Silence in the Sound
    • Maggie Smith – Truth and Other Lies
    • Susan Lynn Solomon – Raising Kane
    • Lynn Byk – The Fearless Moral Inventory of Elsie Finch
    • Edward Pontacoloni – The Rookery
    • Lee Bukowski – A Week of Warm Weather
    • Betsy Withycombe – The Murder of Sarah Grosvenor
    • Morgan Sloan – Scars and Honey
    • Harriet Cannon – Exiled South
    • Ann Marie Stewart – Out of the Water

    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.

    The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2021 Somerset Awards is Lies in Bone by Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Somerset Awards Grand Prize won by Natalie Symons for Lies in Bone

    Click here to see the 2021 Somerset Book Award Winners for Literary and Contemporary Fiction.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2023 Somerset Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction. The 2023 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2024. 

    Please click here for more information.

    Winners will be announced at the 2022 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    April 27-30, 2023! Register Today!

    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 11th annual conference and discover why!

    A Collage of Speakers and Blue Ribbon Winners for CAC23

  • The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Short List for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Short List for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

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

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, magical realism, or women and family themes. These books have advanced to the next judging rounds. We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2022 Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction Long List to the 2022 Somerset Book Awards SHORT LIST. Entries below are now in competition for 2022 Somerset Semi-Finalist. The Semi-Finalists will compete for the Finalist positions. Winners will be selected from the 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 25 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 29th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    These titles are in the running for the SEMI-FINALISTS of the 2022 Somerset Book Awards novel competition for Literary and Contemporary Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2022 CIBAs.

    • Conon Parks – Everything That Was
    • Michael Richard – Chosen’s Beautiful Heart
    • Karla Huebner – In Search of the Magic Theater
    • Maggie St. Claire – Into the Wind
    • Vee Kumari – ANKANAM
    • Linda Moore – Attribution
    • Kathleen Stone – Tell Me You Love Me
    • Datta Groover – The Reluctant Visionary
    • Ja-ne de Abreu – The Energy Inside Valsin’s Choices
    • Rebecca Miller – Touch
    • Grace Marcus – Visible Signs
    • Robert Tucker – The Discontent of Mary Wenger, Paper Dolls, Book 1
    • Patricia Sands – The Secrets We Hide
    • Meredith Berlin – Friends with Issues
    • Frances Howard-Snyder – A Willow Cabin at Your Gate
    • Julia Tvardovskaya – Identifiable
    • David B. Seaburn – Give Me Shelter
    • Michael Chatlien – Northern Lights
    • Julia Brewer Daily – The Fifth Daughter of Thorn Ranch: A Modern Ranch with an Ancient Secret
    • Ellen Sherman – Into the Attic
    • Fran Hawthorne – I Meant to Tell You
    • Antonia Gavrihel – Back to One: Take 2 Ambient Light
    • Karen Heenan – Coming Apart: A Novel of the Great Depression
    • Jeff Hartman – The End Of The War
    • Leslie Kain – Secrets In The Mirror
    • Patricia Averbach – Dreams of Drowning
    • Tom Stewart – Immortal North
    • Jeffrey Dale Lofton – Red Clay Suzie
    • Brenda Stanley – The Still Small Voice
    • John Hansen – Hired Hand
    • Jo Deniau – Stiff Hearts
    • Drema Drudge – Southern-Fried Woolf
    • Dianne C. Braley – The Silence in the Sound
    • Maggie Smith – Truth and Other Lies
    • Susan Lynn Solomon – Raising Kane
    • Barbara Francesca Murphy – Lucina’s Letters
    • Lynn Byk – The Fearless Moral Inventory of Elsie Finch
    • Peter McDade – Songs By Honeybird
    • Edward Pontacoloni – The Rookery
    • Lee Bukowski – A Week of Warm Weather
    • Betsy Withycombe – The Murder of Sarah Grosvenor
    • Gloria Mattioni – California Sister
    • Morgan Sloan – Scars and Honey
    • Harriet Cannon – Exiled South
    • Ann Marie Stewart – Out of the Water

    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.

    The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2021 Somerset Awards is Lies in Bone by Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Somerset Awards Grand Prize won by Natalie Symons for Lies in Bone

    Click here to see the 2021 Somerset Book Award Winners for Literary and Contemporary Fiction.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2023 Somerset Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction. The 2023 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2024. 

    Please click here for more information.

    Winners will be announced at the 2022 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    April 27-30, 2023! Register Today!

    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 11th annual conference and discover why!

    A Collage of Speakers and Blue Ribbon Winners for CAC23

  • The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Long List for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    The 2022 SOMERSET CIBAs Long List for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

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

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, magical realism, or women and family themes. These books have advanced to the next judging rounds. We will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2022 Somerset Literary and Contemporary Fiction entries to the 2022 Somerset Book Awards LONG LIST. Entries below are now in competition for 2022 Somerset Short List. 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 25 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

    We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 29th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference

    These titles are in the running for the SHORT LIST of the 2022 Somerset Book Awards novel competition for Literary and Contemporary Fiction!

    Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2022 CIBAs.

    • Conon Parks – Everything That Was
    • Michael Richard – Chosen’s Beautiful Heart
    • Karla Huebner – In Search of the Magic Theater
    • Maggie St. Claire – Into the Wind
    • Vee Kumari – ANKANAM
    • Linda Moore – Attribution
    • Kathleen Stone – Tell Me You Love Me
    • Datta Groover – The Reluctant Visionary
    • Theresa Griffin Kennedy – Talionic Night in Portland
    • Ja-ne de Abreu – The Energy Inside Valsin’s Choices
    • Rebecca Miller – Touch
    • Grace Marcus – Visible Signs
    • Robert Tucker – The Discontent of Mary Wenger, Paper Dolls, Book 1
    • Patricia Sands – The Secrets We Hide
    • Meredith Berlin – Friends with Issues
    • Frances Howard-Snyder – A Willow Cabin at Your Gate
    • Zubin Aibara – Gulliver’s Tramps
    • J. F. Alexandria – Children of the Sun
    • Julia Tvardovskaya – Identifiable
    • David B. Seaburn – Give Me Shelter
    • Michael Chatlien – Northern Lights
    • Julia Brewer Daily – The Fifth Daughter of Thorn Ranch: A Modern Ranch with an Ancient Secret
    • Ellen Sherman – Into the Attic
    • Fran Hawthorne – I Meant to Tell You
    • Antonia Gavrihel – Back to One: Take 2 Ambient Light
    • Karen Heenan – Coming Apart: A Novel of the Great Depression
    • John Nicholson – The Parables of Chance
    • Terry Tierney – Lucky Ride
    • Jeff Hartman – The End Of The War
    • Leslie Kain – Secrets In The Mirror
    • Patricia Averbach – Dreams of Drowning
    • Tom Stewart – Immortal North
    • Jeffrey Dale Lofton – Red Clay Suzie
    • Brenda Stanley – The Still Small Voice
    • John Hansen – Hired Hand
    • Jo Deniau – Stiff Hearts
    • Drema Drudge – Southern-Fried Woolf
    • Dianne C. Braley – The Silence in the Sound
    • Maggie Smith – Truth and Other Lies
    • Susan Lynn Solomon – Raising Kane
    • Barbara Francesca Murphy – Lucina’s Letters
    • Lynn Byk – The Fearless Moral Inventory of Elsie Finch
    • Peter McDade – Songs By Honeybird
    • Edward Pontacoloni – The Rookery
    • Lee Bukowski – A Week of Warm Weather
    • Betsy Withycombe – The Murder of Sarah Grosvenor
    • Gloria Mattioni – California Sister
    • Morgan Sloan – Scars and Honey
    • Matthew Marullo – Welcome To Opine
    • Robert Steven Goldstein – Will’s Surreal Period
    • Karen S. Bell – Like a Lily Among the Thorns
    • Harriet Cannon – Exiled South
    • Ann Marie Stewart – Out of the Water

    PROMOTING OUR AUTHORS! 

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

    The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2021 Somerset Awards is Lies in Bone by Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

    Blue and Gold Badge for the Somerset Awards Grand Prize won by Natalie Symons for Lies in Bone

    Click here to see the 2021 Somerset Book Award Winners for Literary and Contemporary Fiction.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2023 Somerset Book Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction. The 2023 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2024. 

    Please click here for more information.

    Winners will be announced at the 2022 Chanticleer In’tl Book Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

    IN-Person – April 27-30, 2023! Register Today!

    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 11th annual conference and discover why!

    A Collage of Speakers and Blue Ribbon Winners for CAC23

  • November SPOTLIGHT on the 2022 Somerset Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    November SPOTLIGHT on the 2022 Somerset Awards for Literary and Contemporary Fiction

    November brings insight, reflection, and contemplation of the state of affairs in which we find ourselves. As the year winds down, so, too, we reflect and ponder what we have done, who we are, and who we would like to be.

    It’s a perfect time to curl up with a good novel, you know, the type that grabs you and lives with you long after you put it down.

    This is why we celebrate novels that are literary, satirical, and contemporary. This is why we celebrate the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards – Somerset Literary Novels Writing Competitions. 

    We chose William Somerset Maugham because we love his work and love what he has to say about it:

    “I am a made writer. I do not write as I want to; I write as I can… I have had small power of imagination… no lyrical quality… little gift of metaphor I had an acute power of observation, and it seemed to me that I could see a great many things that other people missed.” W. Somerset Maugham

    W. Somerset Maugham was a British author who wrote plays and short stories and novels. He was a dashing and daring man who did not wish to follow the other men in his family to practice law. Imagine, an individual in the Victorian Era… He was born on January 25, 1874, in Paris (at the British Embassy) and died on December 16th, 1965, in Nice, France. 

    During the First World War, our Somerset proved his valor by serving with the Red Cross in the ambulance corps (remember his earlier medical training) and was recruited by the British Secret Intelligence Service right before the October Revolution in 1917.

    Somerset dove into medicine and was fairly good at it until he wrote his first novel, Liza of Lambeth (1897) and all bets were off. The book flew off the shelves and people were reportedly wrestling in the streets for copies to gift their loved ones. (*Creative license at work – however, you don’t know that this did not happen…) He was known to say, “I took to it (writing) as a duck takes to water.”

    At the age of sixty-six, he had to flee with only a suitcase from the encroaching Nazis as they advanced across Europe. He escaped to England and then on to South Carolina, in the U.S. where he continued to work on the screenplay for Razor’s Edge. He moved to Hollywood and then eventually back to France.

    Did we mention that W. Somerset Maugham was repudiated to be the highest-paid author of the 1930s?

    It’s obvious why we chose Somerset to represent our Literary & Contemporary Fiction Awards!

    Submit your novel or manuscript to our Somerset Awards today! 


    Here is a listing of the Somerset Book Awards Hall of Fame Winners!

    The 2018 Somerset Award Grand Prize Winner was:

    Hard Cider – a novel by Barbara A. Stark-Nemon

    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.

    The 2019 Somerset Award Grand Prize Winner was:

    The Proprietor of Theatre Life by Donna LeClair

    Still in progress, we’re excited to review Donna’s book when it comes out!

    The 2020 Somerset Award Grand Prize Winner was:

    Gregory Erich Phillips for A Season in Lights

    Cover for A Season in Lights by Gregory Erich Phillips

    Gregory Erich Phillips’ A Season in Lights is a well-crafted, engaging exploration of creatives, each following their heart and trying to reach their dream.

    Against backdrops of the 1980s AIDS crisis and the more recent COVID-19 pandemic, the story entwines the lives of a 30-something dancer and an older musician as they strive to make their artistic mark in the cultural capital of New York City.

    Here in a two-fold unveiling, the story comes to life from the first-person perspective of Cammie, a starry-eyed aspiring dancer from Lancaster, PA, and the third-person reveal of Tom, a more seasoned black pianist. He longs for a classical career but is too often labeled a jazz musician. Cammie first encounters Tom in a studio dance class where he’s taken a job as the musical accompanist. Befriended by the gay dance instructor, Tom heeds the worldly advice offered about surviving in the Big Apple. “All you’ve got to do is convince people that you belong. You’ve got to tell them who you are before they tell you.”

    The 2021 Somerset Award Grand Prize Winner was:

    Lies in Bone Natalie Symons

    Lies in Bone Cover

    A review of Lies in Bone is forthcoming. However, we know you’ll love this intricate story told with beautifully tight control. A mystery lies at the heart of this book that has the feeling of a grown-up To Kill a Mockingbird meets Serial Production’s S-Town Podcast. Highly Recommended.


    Will your novel be recognized as the best of the best in the Somerset Awards for 2022? Find out!

    Submit your work to the Chanticleer International Book Awards – today!

    The last day to submit your work is November 30, 2022. We invite you to join us, tell us your stories, and find out who will take home the prize at CAC23 on April 29th.

     As our deadline draws near, don’t miss this opportunity to earn the distinction your literary novel deserves!  Enter today!

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

    The winners will be announced at the CIBA  Awards Ceremony on April 29, 2023, which will take place during the 2023 Chanticleer Authors Conference. All Finalists and First Place category winners will be recognized, the First Place Winners will be whisked up on stage to receive their custom ribbon and wait to see who among them will take home the Grand Prize. It’s an exciting evening of dinner, networking, and celebrations! 

    First Place Winners and Grand Prize winners will each receive an awards package. Whose works will be chosen?

    The excitement builds for the 2022 SOMERSET Book Awards competitions.

  • DELPHIC ORACLE, U.S.A. by Steven Mayfield – Small Town Fiction, Family Saga, Contemporary Fiction

    DELPHIC ORACLE, U.S.A. by Steven Mayfield – Small Town Fiction, Family Saga, Contemporary Fiction

    The Mark Twain Grand Prize for Steven Mayfield and his book Delphic Oracle U.S.A.The Coen Brothers meet Garrison Keillor in Steven Mayfield’s quirky, offbeat, and often hilarious Delphic Oracle, U.S.A.

    One June afternoon in 1925, seventeen-year-old Maggie Westinghouse, out walking alone as was her custom, comes upon a stranger in a railroad switch-house asleep on a pile of gunnysacks. Maggie, who has always stood a little apart from the town, has recently begun to experience visions that come upon her “in a leisurely way,” ending in a swoon and a restless sleep filled with exotic talk of which she later has no memory. No one knows what to make of it, but they soon will. After this afternoon’s chance encounter with July Pennybaker, a charming grifter on the lam, her world will never be the same. Neither will the town of Miagrammesto Station.

    Eighty-nine years later, in the days leading up to and following the July 4th weekend, domestic dramas are playing out across Delphic Oracle, Nebraska (nee Miagrammesto Station).

    Teddy Goodfellow, given to periodic fits of restlessness, has done a runner only days before the Fourth of July parade. Francis Wounded Arrow, attempting to change the battery in his nearly cherry 1929 Chevy pickup, has gotten his arm stuck and remains there at Peaseblossom Implement & Auto Parts throughout the afternoon, chatting nonchalantly with the various townsfolk, some of them family who wander by. Beagle Gibbs embarks upon his Religious Period and begins interviewing the different denominations in the town, to see which might suit.

    When Teddy bolts, the town responds as it always does. They hold a pool, friends and neighbors, and family each predicting a date and time for his return. The countdown begins. When Francis holds court in Big Bob’s garage, pretending that nothing is amiss—and after he’s privately called upon the Great Father and several of the pantheon of Blessed Uncles to no avail—the entire Delphic Oracle Fire Department is galvanized into action and very nearly saves the day. And Beagle, after a tour of all that the different churches in town have to offer, loses his religious ardor in an unfortunate and rather painful mishap with a nail-gun on the roof of his mother’s house.

    But what happens is only part of the fun. It’s how it all happens—the droll language, the turns of phrase, the reactions of the townspeople—that makes the story.

    This is not a novel to be rushed. This is a novel for those who love tall tales, yarns, sitting on a summer evening on the wide porch, fanning against the heat, and passing the time telling stories. It’s a novel of reflection and escapade. A novel to be savored.

    Structurally, the story is a twist of two timeframes, two narratives. In one, a story that began three generations in the past unfolds. In the other, a bustling town is brought to life through the concurrent stories of several members of the same extended family. The historical strand drives relentlessly forward, those two lives unfurling and intertwining, time passing. The contemporary strand ripples outward, taking in the town and its inhabitants in a luxurious and unhurried manner over a period that encompasses, in storytime, only a few weeks, but that covers, in reflective time, much more than that.

    Time, too, is in a twist.

    It sieves back and forth and collapses in on itself. The past informs the present; and the present (for us readers), the past. Most of our primary present-day characters, the ones we live with over the course of a few weeks in July and August of 2014, remain anchored solidly in time. But the many characters who move like constellations about those steady poles—those we often encounter plucked out of their own timelines—are typically out of sequence.

    This is a novel where a child new to the world, a toddler wailing in a crib, is elsewhere in the tale of the grandfather, long deceased. The stalwart man remembered in the present as the founder of the town puts in an appearance in the past, sixty-odd years after that founding, as a doddering grandfather who’s soiled himself. Another of those long-ago individuals was the flesh and blood precursor to the decades-old human skeleton partially unearthed by Regretful Peasebottom’s dog in a nearby vacant lot two days before the parade.

    The same events sometimes reappear from different perspectives, and we put the full stories together like puzzle pieces, fitting now a future piece, now a past. A prism-puzzle, these pieces twirl and refract the light off themselves and one another, until we understand that the story of one forms a part of the story of all and the story of all reaches into the story of each.

    The effect is a fully fleshed-out town of long acquaintance, filled with people who seem to live and breathe on the page. The author becomes not so much a novelist, as through his narrator an amanuensis. And to spend time with this novel is not so much to read a story as to take up residence in the town for several madcap weeks, every bit at home as though, like the narrator, you’d never truly lived anywhere else.

    Delphic Oracle U.S.A won Grand Prize in the 2022 CIBA Mark Twain Book Awards for Humor and Satire.

     

    5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews