Tag: Contemporary literature

  • The Somerset Awards for Literary & Mainstream Fiction:  First in Category Winners

    The Somerset Awards for Literary & Mainstream Fiction: First in Category Winners

    The  Somerset Awards  recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Contemporary, Mainstream, and Literary Fiction.

    W.-Somerset-Maugham

    The Somerset Awards is a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions. This contest division is  named after W. Somerset Maugham (1874- 1965), author of “The Moon and Sixpence,” “Of Human Bondage,” “Razor’s Edge,” and other literary masterpieces. Maugham was trained and qualified as a medical doctor. He served in the Red Cross ambulatory corps in WWI, then was recruited in the British Secret Service. During and after the war, he traveled extensively.  

     

     

    We are honored to post the Official List of 1st in Category Winners for the Somerset  Awards 2013.

    These 1st Place Category Winners  have been read cover to cover and have made it through seven rounds of judging. The authors of the winning titles will receive a Chanticleer Editorial Book Review and promotional package.

    First Place Category winners will compete for Overall Best of Somerset Awards for Contemporary, Mainstream, and Literary Fiction 2013.  Overall Best Book for the Somerset  Awards 2013 will win a $250 purse and will compete for the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Awards Grand Prize for Best Book 2013 and a $1,000 purse (U.S. Dollars). Awards will be announced and presented at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet on September 20th, 2014.

    The Overall First Place Category Winner for the Somerset Awards 2013 is:

    Jeremy Bullian, Individually Wrapped

    The First Place Category Winners Titles & Authors of the Somerset Awards 2013  are:

    • Contemporary:  Chocolates on the Pillow by Sean Dwyer
    • Satire:  Brain: The Man Who Wrote the Book that Changed the World by Dermot Davis
    • Mainstream:  The Prodigal by Michael Hurley
    • Speculative Fiction:  Individually Wrapped by Jeremy Bullian
    • Adventure/Suspense:  Tarnished Hero by Jim Gilliam
    • Literary:  The Opposite of Everything by David Kalish
    • Women’s Fiction:  Cheating the Hog by Rae Ellen Lee
    • New Adult:  Saving Faith by Patrick M. Garry

    Congratulations to the Somerset Writing Competition 2013 Finalists and 1st in Category Winners!

    The staff and judges at Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions want to thank everyone who participated in the Somerset Awards Writing Competition 2013.  The selection process was quite competitive. 

    We are now accepting entries into the Somerset Awards for 2014.  Click here for more info.

    CBR — Discovering Today’s Best Books with International Writing Competitions! 

  • The Official List of the Somerset Awards 2013 Finalists

    The Official List of the Somerset Awards 2013 Finalists

    The Somerset Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in Contemporary, Mainstream, and Literary Fiction.

    Finalists will compete for 1st place category positions. 1st Place Category winners will compete for The Somerset Awards Grand Prize for Overall Best Book 2013 and a Chanticleer Book Review and SEO package, a $250 purse, and promotional opportunities. The grand prize winners of ten genres will compete for the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Grand Prize 2013 and a $1,000 purse.

    220px-Maugham_retouchedThe Somerset Awards is a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions. The contest divisions is  named after W. Somerset Maugham, author of The Moon and Sixpence, Of Human Bondage, Razor’s Edge, and other literary masterpieces.

     

     

    These finalists have made it through the first three rounds of competition. The first sixty to ninety pages of each work have been read by CBR judges. They are presently making the next circuit of rounds. From here on out each round is more competitive as the judges determine if works will continue to move forward to best of category.

    We are honored to announce the Official Finalists of the Somerset Awards 2013:

    • Stormy Weather by Dermot Davis
    • Mother Teresa’s Advice for Jilted Lovers by Donna Barker
    • Individually Wrapped by Jeremy Bullian
    • In Search of Sticks by Randy Kaneen
    • Opposite of Everything by David Kalish
    • Cheating the Hog by Rae Ellen Lee
    • The Devil Wears Scrubs by Freida McFadden
    • Morning Star by Roger Schick
    • Surviving 26th Street by Carol June Stover
    • Sparrows Cannot Catch Me by R. Mursell
    • Midlife Fanilow by J. M. Holder
    • The Prodigal by Michael Hurley
    • Chocolates on the Pillow by Sean Dwyer
    • Tarnished Hero by Jim Gilliam
    • How to Make a Pot in 14 Easy Lessons by Nicola Pearson
    • The Botanist’s Daughter by Angela Belcaster
    • Family Bonds by Kate Vale
    • Color of Lies by Abbe Rolnick
    • The Orbiter by Jana Krause
    • The Fosters, a Novel by C. Alease
    • Never Turn Your Back on a Wolf by Jennifer Mueller
    • Take the Pilgrim Road by Frank T. Klus
    • Saving Faith by Patrick M. Garry
    • The Apprentice by Jana Barkley
    • Brain, the Man Who Wrote the Book that Changed the World by Dermot Davis
    • Sacred Mountain by Ken Farmer & Buck Stienke
    • Freak Story by Jim Musgrave

    From the this list, only six First in Category award winners will be chosen.  

    Congratulations to the Finalists and Good Luck in the next rounds of the Somerset 2013 Competition.

    • 1st Place Category winners will be announced in approximately two months.
    • We are now accepting entries into the 2014 Somerset Awards.

     https://www.chantireviews.com/services/#!/~/product/category=5193080&id=21521214

     

     

  • An Editorial Review of “A Simple Soul” by Vadim Babenko

    An Editorial Review of “A Simple Soul” by Vadim Babenko

    In this character-driven novel that delves deeply into the psyches of six flawed individuals seeking life’s meaning in post-Soviet Moscow, the most enigmatic character is Russia itself.

    A Simple Soul begins apparently as a romantic endeavor that turns into an enthralling perilous thriller with plot twists, humor, and retribution.

    Russian-born Babenko’s novel, A Simple Soul, is filled with souls who are anything but simple. They are bored workers and wily entrepreneurs, all hardened to the murky world of Russian commerce, rampant corruption, and the decay of society. Yet each one seeks an elusive truth—happiness, love, the meaning of life. Elizaveta sees herself as a cold Venus, breaking the hearts of the men she dates, only to leap at marrying her long-ago love, Timofey, whose proposal has shady underpinnings. Alexander, her spurned lover, finds contentment in collecting words of wisdom, then loses it to despair. Seeking “his true mission,” Nicolai Kramskoy plans to steal and doctor a historical document to “prove” a connection to folk hero Pugachev, which links him to American Frank White Jr., who’s pursuing Pugachev’s alleged treasure map, along with a connection to his own Russian roots. Eventually joining them is Andrei, Nicolai’s old friend and a writer struggling to find confidence and purpose in his work.

    For much of this complex story, plot is relegated to the background as internal monologues become the focus. Personal histories and meandering thought processes draw the reader into a compelling maze of metaphysics and social commentary. Each character’s life is beset by small mysteries: Elizaveta finds mysterious symbols; Frank studies star signs; even Nicolai, the most cynical of all, once ran a business called the Astro-Occult Parlor. He observes that “people here were too fond of prophets, oracles, soothsayers, and magicians of all kinds,” but it becomes easy to see why even he is drawn to peering into the future.

    One could argue that Babenko’s characters all carry the same voice: intelligent, cynical, questioning, opinionated. What separates them is where that voice takes them: on personal journeys of soul-searching analysis, perhaps best exemplified in Nikolai’s comment while traveling by train:

    “Any country could be proud of its limitless vastness. Any except this one: people here don’t know how to be proud of anything, and perhaps they never did. Where there’s a lot of space, there’s free will and farsightedness, but there’s also no respite and an eternal restlessness, which results in universal sadness.”

    Such observations show the author’s skill in portraying the depths of functional loneliness.

    As Elizaveta sums up:

    “I don’t need this – riddles, higher powers. … – could the issue be with me? Do I have an overly simple soul?”

    After delving into the heart and mind of this postmodern Russian, the answer can only be, not in the least.  A Simple Soul transcends genres and time as its characters move across the vast lands of Russia and its ever-changing socio-economic landscape. Prepare to be transported.

    Vadim Babenko, who has a doctorate in physics from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, has published six books, three are novels.  A Simple Soul was nominated for Russia’s most prestigious literary awards: The Big Book Awards (the Russian equivalent of the Booker Awards) and the Russian Bestseller Awards. His stories are complex with many subtle philosophical questions and dilemmas.  His prestige is sure to follow in North America as well.

     [fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][Reviewer’s Note:  I found A Simple Soul a fascinating and entertaining read. I am fortunate to have been introduced to Babenko’s masterful works as they are still relatively unknown in North America. ]

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