Tag: Dante Rossetti

  • M.J. EVANS 10 Question Author Interview Series – Middle Grade Fiction, Book Discovery, Horseback Riding

    CHANTICLEER 10 Question Author Interview Series with
    M.J. Evans

    Image of Award Winning Author MJ Evans standing behind a table full of her books
    M.J. Evans Author!

    We met M.J. Evans a little while ago, not far off the beaten path. I would love to tell you that we met on the trail, and honestly, now that I think about it, I suppose we can say that. The author trail, that is.

    We were delighted to connect through our global CIBAs where M.J. won First in Category in our 2019 Gertrude Warner Book Awards for Middle Grade!

    What’s that? You don’t know what our CIBAs are nor how they can help enlarge the digital footprint of your novel? Where have you been? I mean, it’s not  a secret! Check out more about the CIBAs here.

    I found M.J. to be engaging, vivacious, and an all-around talent in so many ways. I’m so very excited to introduce you to our friend and Chanticleerian, M.J. Evans.

    Chanti: Tell us a little about yourself: How did you start writing?

    Evans: Most important to know about me is that I am a mother of five and a grandmother of twelve. My family is my world. I am also a former teacher of middle school and high school so you can know that I love being with teenagers. I have been a horse-lover since birth…I call it “being born with manure in my blood!” I started taking riding lessons when I was eight. When I wasn’t on a horse, I was reading both fiction and non-fiction books about them. Thus, I developed a love of reading as well.

    Chanti: That’s funny. Manure in the blood. Actually, as a kiddo who grew up on a farm, I totally get that. Talk about genre. What genre best describes your work?

    Pinto!
    PINTO! by M.J. Evans

    Evans: Fantasy has always been a favorite genre of mine so combining fantasy and horses seemed like the perfect fit. I have expanded my horse stories into “coming-of-age” and “historical fiction” to challenge myself. PINTO! Based Upon the True Story of the Longest Horseback Ride in History won me the Chanticleer Gertrude Warner Book Award! I have written four non-fiction books, one coming-of-age novel, one picture book, and nine fantasies for middle-grade readers and young adults.  You can probably guess that my favorite genre is fantasy. I love reading fantasy and I love writing fantasy. It is so much fun creating worlds and characters. I love to let my imagination run away with me. Regardless of the genre, because of my love for horses, most of my books are about horses or horse-based fantasy creatures.

     

    The-Sand-Pounder-by-M.J.-Evans
    The Sand Pounder by M.J. Evans

    I had so much fun doing research for PINTO! Based Upon the True Story of the Longest Horseback Ride in History, that I decided to do another historical fiction. It is called Sand Pounder and is about the Coast Guard’s mounted beach patrol during WW2. I love this story.

    The Stallion and His Peculiar Boy by M.J. Evans
    The Stallion and His Peculiar Boy by M.J. Evans

    I am now just publishing my THIRD Historical fiction about a little-known horse story. The Stallion and His Peculiar Boy is based on the life of the famous Arabian Stallion Witez II. It will be released on Feb. 28th.

    Chanti: This release is just around the corner! Best of luck, Margi! What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies. (I think I know the answer…)

    Evans: I am a serious equestrian. I love to compete in Dressage. I currently have two horses right in my backyard. If I am not in the arena working on dressage, I am on the trails in the beautiful Rocky Mountains of Colorado. I do a lot of story creating in my head while riding on those trails.

    Serious Equestrian! M.J. and Jazz taking it home!

    Chanti: That’s cool. And is there a blue ribbon around Amara’s shoulders? Lovely! Okay, back to the interview… What areas in your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Evans: One of my strengths is dialogue. I think I am good at it as a result of all the theater I have done. I always recommend to other authors who are struggling with this to read it out loud as though you are on a stage. Does it make sense? Does it flow logically? Does it fit the characters’ personalities and situations?

    Chanti: Great advice.

    Evans: My other strength is world building. This is important for fantasy books. I have a sticky note on my computer with the words: Smell, Sight, Sound, Touch, Taste. This reminds me to include as many of the senses in my descriptive narrative as I can so the reader can feel like they are there with the characters. This creates a world the reader can both picture and experience.

    Chanti: Oh, I love how you include the senses! This is a great way to elevate your writing to the next level – keep it relatable, engaging, and hard to put down. It’s important to work on your craft. What do you do to grow your author chops?

    Evans: I am always taking classes to improve my writing. Lately they have all been webinars! I am not a “formula” writer so the creative writing classes that I have taken that just focus on a certain formula are not helpful to me. I also don’t outline or do storyboards. I create the entire story in my head before I start writing. Once I start writing, I don’t look back until I get the story out of my head and onto the computer. That first draft is my foundation.

    “Until you have the foundation, you only have an idea! Once I get the foundation, I can go back and embellish and edit…two, three, four, five times, however many revisions it takes.” – M.J. Evans

    Just to give you an example: since I write for Middle-Grade and Young Adult, I need to hit the industry standard for length (word count). Take YA for example. Those books need to be 60,000 to 80,000 words. My Centaur Chronicles series is four books that are all about 65,000 words in length when they are finished. But the first draft is only about 45,000 words. So, you see, I do a lot of enhancing and building upon that foundation.

    Chanti: You are such a professional! No wonder your works are doing so well. What craft books have helped you the most?

    Emotional-Thesaurus-by-Angela-Ackerman-and-Becca-Puglisi“My favorite craft book is The Emotion Thesaurus: A Writer’s Guide to Character Expression by Angela Ackerman and Becca Puglisi. I use it all the time!” M.J. Evans

    Chanti: That’s a good book. What do you do in your community to improve/promote literacy?

    Evans: For seventeen years now I have been donating my time to dozens of Odyssey of the Mind and Destination Imagination teams at the elementary, middle school, and high school levels. As such, I guided the students as they wrote their one-act plays for competitions. Over those years, I took all of my teams to the state finals and seven teams to the world finals. I also donated my time to speak to dozens of upper elementary and middle school students in both public and private schools. I teach them my favorite writing tips to get them excited about both writing and reading. I have been a volunteer writing mentor for Denver Public Schools, and volunteered to speak at the Jefferson County Public Schools writing workshops. I also donate my time to promote literacy at public libraries and independent bookstores as a guest speaker.

    Chanti: I love that about you. Good job! Give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Evans: You must know who your audience is. Most of my books are about horses. I know where to reach horse people. My Colorado trail guidebooks are in tack and feed stores in the Denver area. That is where horse people go on a regular basis! I also sign books at horse events such as the National Western Stock Show and The Rocky Mountain Horse Expo. I find that “hand-selling” is both fun and profitable because I love being with and talking to people and I love making connections with my readers.

    I have also found that submitting my books to literary award competitions and then having the bonus of winning adds credibility to my books. I have those beautiful stickers that I can put on the cover that catches the eye of prospective buyers. I also love attending award ceremonies and meeting other authors. I have made some great friends that way and we help each other with our books.

    I enjoy doing author visits at schools. Of course, as a former teacher, I feel very comfortable in the classroom. But this is part of knowing who my audience is and going to them.

    Chanti: Those are all good things to do that are proven to pay off. What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Evans: I am now just publishing my THIRD Historical fiction about a little-known horse story. The Stallion and His Peculiar Boy is based on the life of the famous Arabian Stallion Witez II. It will be released on Feb. 28th.

    Chanti: Now, M.J., do you ever experience writer’s block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Evans: No. Because I have the story worked out in my head before I start to write I always know where I am going. The key is to set the time each day to write and stick to it! However, I do have one trick that works. Never stop writing at the end of a paragraph. Always quit right in the middle of a paragraph or even in the middle of a sentence. Then, when you return, you already have a start.

    Chanti: What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Evans: First: If you like a book PLEASE POST A REVIEW ON AMAZON, GOODREADS, and BARNES & NOBLE. Of those, the most important is Amazon as all their algorithms for promoting a book are based on reviews. Second: TELL YOUR FRIENDS! Third: GIVE BOOKS FOR GIFTS!

    Chanti: Don’t you wish that was just an automatic thing people did? Reading is great – don’t get me wrong, but if you truly love something, take that extra step and share your thought, thumbs up, 5-star ratings… Doing so does more for an author than you can possibly imagine.


    If you liked this interview, please give it a thumbs up and share it with your friends. And don’t forget to check out M.J. Evan’s books! You will be happy you did.

    Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mjevansbooks/?hl=en

    Website http://www.dancinghorsepress.com/

     

  • Part Three of Three Official Postings of the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners

    We are deeply honored and excited to continue to announce the 2021 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs) with our third and final of three official postings.

    CIBA Grand Prize Ribbons!

    The winners were recognized at the CIBA ceremonies held on June 25th, 2022 in-person and by ZOOM webinars  at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

     

    The CIBA announcements were made LIVE with Chanticleerians participating and interacting from around the globe and North America.

    Raising our glasses to cheer the CIBA Winners!

    We want to thank all of the CIBA judges who read each and every entry and then comment, rate, and rank within each of the 25 CIBA Divisions. Without your labors of love for books, the Chanticleer International Book Awards would not exist. THANK YOU!

    A pyramid showing the different levels of CIBA Achievement

     

    We want to thank all of the authors and publishers who participated in the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs). Each year, we find the quality of the entries and the competitiveness of the division competitions increasing exponentially. We added a new level to the judging rounds in 2019—the premier Level of FINALIST per each CIBA Division. The CIBA judges wanted to add the Finalist Level of Achievement as a way to recognize and validate the entries that had outstanding merit but were not selected for the very few First Place Award positions within each genre division.

    This post will recognize the First Place and Grand Prize Winners for the

    Seven Non-Fiction Divisions:

    Journey, Hearten, Harvey Chute, Mind and Spirit, I & I, Military & Frontline and Nellie Bly

    along with the FIRST Winners for the 

    Short Story, and Book Series Awards,

    and concluding with the 

     OVERALL 2021 GRAND PRIZE WINNER 

    for the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards 

    For the Cygnus, Ozma, Paranormal, Global Thrillers, M&M, Clue, Little Peeps, Gertrude Warner, and Dante Rossetti Book Awards, please click here for Part 1.

    For the Laramie, Chaucer, Goethe, Hemingway, Chatelaine, Mark Twain, and Somerset Awards, click here for Part 2.


    Journey Narrative Non-Fiction

    The JOURNEY Book Awards for

    Narrative Non-Fiction, Memoirs, and Biographies 

    Grand Prize Winner is

     

    BETTER OFF BALD: A Life in 147 Days

     

    The Journey First Place Category Winners are:

    • Rosie McMahan – Fortunate Daughter: A Memoir of Reconciliation
    • Rosemary Keevil – The Art of Losing It: A Memoir of Grief and Addiction
    • Heather Haldeman – Kids and Cocktails Don’t Mix: A Memoir
    • Kathleen Lockyer – The Broken Wing Dance — Love, loss, trauma and how nature led me back to my wild self
    • C.L. Olsen – The Home for Friendless Children  

    I&I or Instruction & Insight Awards CIBA Badge

     

    The INSTRUCTION and INSIGHT Book Awards

    for How-To Guides, Travel Guides, Cook Books, Self-Help, and Enlightenment

    Grand Prize Winner is 

     

    THE BLACK FOSTER YOUTH HANDBOOK by Angela Quijada-BanksBlack Foster Youth Handbook Cover

    The I & I  First Place Category Winners are:

    • Wendela Whitcomb Marsh – Recognizing Autism in Women and Girls
    • Geraldine Clouston and Susan Weintrob – indieBRAG Eat, Read & Dream Cookbook
    • Jim & Jessica Braz – Baby Out of Wedlock
    • Phoebe Walker – Freedom Found – Productive and Joyful Living In Spite of Chronic Pain
    • M. J. Simms-Maddox, Ph.D. – A Handbook for Emerging and Seasoned Authors        

    Congratulations to the Inaugural 

    AWARD WINNERS for the

    Military and Front Line Book Awards

    of the CIBAs

    The MILITARY & FRONT LINE Book Awards

    for Service to Others Non-Fiction 

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Dear Bob Military & Front Line Grand Prize Badge

    DEAR BOB: Bob Hope’s Wartime Correspondance with the G.I.s of World War II by Martha Bolten with Linda Hope

    Dear Bob Cover

    The Military & Front Line  First Place Category Winners are:

    • Vicki Cody – Fly Safe: Letters from the Gulf War and Reflections From Back Home
    • Grover Nicodemus Street RN, Sandra de Abreu Guidry-Street MD, & Ja-ne de Abreu – Chasing the Surge: Life as a Travel Nurse in a Global Pandemic
    • Margaret Thomson – The World Looks Different Now
    • Burl Harmon – Combat Missions
    • George Farag – Unbecoming My Father’s Son: A Memoir

    Nellie Bly Awards

    The NELLIE BLY Book Awards

    for Investigative and Long Form Journalism Non-Fiction 

    Grand Prize Winner is

    America's Forgotten Suffragists Virginia and Francis Minor Nellie Bly Grand Prize Badge

     

    AMERICA’S FORGOTTEN SUFFRAGISTS: Virginia and Francis Minor
    by Nicole Evelina

    America's Forgotten Suffragists Virginia and Francis Minor Cover

    The Nellie Bly First Place Category Winners are:

    • Dori Jones Yang – When the Red Gates Opened
    • Dr. Kate Dolan – Beating Drug Addiction in Tehran: a Women’s Clinic
    • Abe Streep – Brothers on Three: A True Story of Family, Resistance, and Hope on a Reservation in Montana
    • Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D. – Advancing the Good Society:  Real Advocacy Journalism in Action

    Three Black stripes on a yellow badge CIBA Badge

    The HARVEY CHUTE Book Awards

    for Business & Enterprise Non-Fiction 

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Beyond Balancing the Books Harvey Chute Grand Prize Badge

    BEYOND BALANCING THE BOOKS by George Marino

    Balancing the Books Cover Image

     

    The Harvey Chute First Place Category Winners are:

    • Stan Bernard, MD, MBA – Brands Don’t Win: How Transcenders Change Games
    • Thomas Wideman – Welfare Cheese to Fine Caviar: How to Achieve Your Dreams Despite Your Upbringing
    • Kate Dixon – Pay Up! Unlocking Insider Secrets of Salary Negotiation
    • Cash Nickerson – Negotiating As a Martial Art

    Mind and Spirit Non-Fiction Awards

    The MIND & SPIRIT Book Awards

    for Spirituality and Enlightenment Non-Fiction

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Grand Prize Badge for Enlighten Up by Beth Gibbs

    ENLIGHTEN UP! by Beth Gibbs

     

    The Mind and Spirit First Place Category Winners are:

    • Mike Lutz – Jesus Speaking
    • Reagan J. Pasternak – Griffin’s Heart: Mourning Your Pet With No Apologies
    • Tammy Green – Living Without Skin: Everything I Never Knew About Fierce Vulnerability
    • Starr Regan DiCiurcio – Divine Sparks: Interfaith Wisdom for a Postmodern World    

    The HEARTEN Book Awards

    for Uplifting and Inspiring Non-Fiction

    Grand Prize Winner is

    2021 Heart Grand Prize Badge for DAWGS by Diane Trull and Meredith Wargo

     

    DAWGS: A True Story of Lost Animals and the Kids Who Rescued Them
    By Diane Trull and Meredith Wargo

    Cover of DAWGS

     

    The Hearten First Place Category Winners are:

     


    The SHORT STORY Book Awards

    for the CIBA Short Story Collections

    Grand Prize Winner is

    New York Give me your best or your worst Shorts (collections) Grand Prize Badge

    NEW YORK: Give Me Your Best or Your Worst by Elizabeth Crowens

    New York Give me your best or your worst cover

     

    The Shorts First Place Category Winners are:

     

    • Leah Angstman – Shoot the Horses First
    • Susannah Dawn – I’m Not What I Used To Be, Yet I Am Who I’ve Always Been – Excerpts From My Journey
    • Domenick Venezia – The Edwerd Chronicles
    • Frances Howard-Snyder – Through a Glass Darkly 
    • Helena P. Schrader – Grounded Eagles 

    The SHORT STORY Book Awards

    for Short Stories, Novelettes, and Novellas

    Grand Prize Winner is

    Grand Prize Badge for Toni Ann Johnson's Homegoing

     

    HOMEGOING by Toni Ann Johnson

    Homegoing Cover

    The Shorts First Place Category Winners are:

     

     

    • Gina Detwiler – Before: Jared’s Story
    • M. K. Wiseman – Sherlock Holmes & the Ripper of Whitechapel
    • Elizabeth Wolf – The Royal Foetus: A very short novel based on the very short life of King Louis XVII
    • Lindy Miller – Sleigh Bells on Bread Loaf Mountain
    • Vicky Oliver – A Valentine to my Mothers and Other Dubious Role Models
    • Kourtney Spadoni – In The Underwood

     

    The BOOK SERIES Book Awards

    for Fiction Series

    Grand Prize Winner is

    THE GUINEVERE’S TALE TRILOGY by Nicole Evelina

    The three books in the Guinevere's Tale Trilogy

    Daughter of Destiny, Camelot’s Queen, and Mistress of Legend

     

    The Series First Place Category Winners are:

     

    Ozma Book Awards for Series – Fantasy Fiction

    • M. K. Wiseman – The Bookminder series

    Dante Rossetti Book Awards for Series – Young Adult

    • Pamela Beason – Run for Your Life

    Chatelaine Book Awards for Series – Romantic Fiction

    • Janet K. Shawgo – Look For Me Series

    CLUE Book Awards for Series – Thriller/Suspense

    • Kaylin McFarren – Threads

    Mystery & Mayhem Book Awards for Series – Mysteries / Cozy and Not-so-Cozy

    • Amy S. Peele – A Transplant Medical Murder Mystery series

      Laramie Book Awards for Series – Americana / Western Fiction

      • E. Alan Fleischauer – JT Thomas’s Series – Western series

       


      CONGRATULATIONS to ALL! 

      The 2021 CIBA Overall Grand Prize Winner

      And NOW for the 

      2021 CHANTICLEER INT’L BOOK AWARDS

      BEST BOOK

      and

      OVERALL GRAND PRIZE WINNER

      The Devil Pulls the Strings Book Cover

      THE DEVIL PULLS THE STRINGS

      by J.W. Zarek

      J.W. Zarek will also be awarded $1,000 USD in recognition of her 2021 BEST BOOK of the YEAR – Chanticleer International Book Awards – Sponsored by Chanticleer Reviews & Media. 

      A Chanticleer Review of The Devil Pulls the Strings will be featured in the in the Chanticleer Reviews OnWord Magazine (print and epub) along with other promotional and marketing opportunities along with an interview with the author, J.W. Zarek.

      Thank you J.W. Zarek for participating in the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards. We look forward to receiving future work in our CIBAs.

      CONGRATULATIONS J.W. Zarek! 

      Six Grand Prize Winners with J.W. Zarek, the 2021 Overall Grand Prize Winner!

      From all of us at Chanticleer International Book Awards and Chanticleer Reviews. 

      Looking for your Division? Check out our previous posts:

      For the Cygnus, Ozma, Paranormal, Global Thrillers, M&M, Clue, Little Peeps, Gertrude Warner, and Dante Rossetti Book Awards, please click here for Part 1.

      For the Laramie, Chaucer, Goethe, Hemingway, Chatelaine, Mark Twain, and Somerset Awards, click here for Part 2.


      THANK YOU to VCAC21 SPONSORS and FRIENDS

       

      And to FRIENDS of CHANTICLEER REVIEWS:

      Cathy Ace, J.D. Barker, Robert Dugoni, Chris Humphreys, Bradley Metrock, Jessica Morrell, Scott Steindorff, and Paul Hanson of Village Books


       

      We will post more photographs and information. Do check back and subscribe to the Chanticleer Reviews e-news letter.

      We have exciting news for the Chanticleer Community on the horizon so do stay tuned!  

      You know you want a coveted Chanticleer Reviews Blue Ribbon! 

      Submit your works (manuscripts or novels published after or on January 1, 2019, are accepted) to the prestigious Chanticleer International Book Awards today! Entries are being accepted into the 2022 CIBAs in all 18 fiction divisions and seven non-fiction divisions. 

      Be sure to register early for the 11th Chanticleer Authors Conference that will start on April 23rd, 2023 with the 2022 CIBA banquet and ceremony scheduled to take place on Saturday, April 25th, 2023 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

      Be well. Stay Healthy. Take Care!

      An email will go out to all 2021 CIBA award winners prior to October 30, 2022, with instructions, links, and more information about the awards packages. We appreciate your patience. As stated many times before “One does not need to be present at the CIBA ceremony and banquet to win. But it sure is a lot more fun!”

      As always, please contact us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com with any questions, concerns, or suggestions!

      We need good books, now more than ever!

      The Chanticleer Reviews Team

    • The 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (#CIBAs) Overall Grand Prize and Division Grand Prize and First Place Category Winners | Part One of Three

      We are deeply honored and excited to announce the 2021 Winners of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs). The Finalists were recognized at the Virtual Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Ceremonies, and the First Place Category and Grand Prize Winners were announced June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether, Bellingham, Wash.

       

       

      The 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2021 Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards Banquet and Ceremony took place over June 23-26,  2022, with the CIBA Banquet happening on June 25th. Each year, Chanticleerians from around the globe come together to celebrate and cheer each other on at the annual CIBA banquet and awards evening at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether that is situated on beautiful Bellingham Bay, Washington State.

      Meeting in-person for the first time since lockdown began brought such joy into our lives. The ability to celebrate, hug, and learn together with the extra space provided by the Hotel Bellwether made this a truly unforgettable experience. Champagne was poured and shared as the 2021 CIBA Grand Prize Division Award Winners were announced. Thank you to all who joined us in-person and virtually to make the CIBA Ceremonies a success!

      The 2021 Grand Prize Winners in attendance!

      After two virtual conferences, it was a joy and pleasure to feel the energy of an in-person crowd! It was amazing to have such a marvelous event with presenters like Cathy Ace, Judy Gaman, Betsy Graziani Fasbinder, Jessica Morrell, Nicole Evelina, Jodé Millman, Oriana Leckhert, Diane Garland, and more!

      We are already excited and gearing up for our next conference in nine short months! Save the date for CAC23 April 27-30, 2023.

      At the June 25th, 2021 Ceremonies, we were overjoyed to recognize the 18 Fiction and 7 Non-Fiction CIBA Divisions for the First Place Category and Grand Prize Winners!

      First of all, we want to thank all of the CIBA judges who read each and every entry and then comment, rate, and rank within each of the 25 CIBA Divisions. Without your labors of love for books, the Chanticleer International Book Awards would not exist. THANK YOU!

      A pyramid showing the different levels of CIBA Achievement

       

      We want to thank all of the authors and publishers who participated in the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards (the CIBAs). Each year, we find the quality of the entries and the competitiveness of the division competitions increases exponentially. We added a new level to the judging rounds in 2019—the premier Level of FINALIST per each CIBA Division.

      The CIBA judges wanted to add the Finalist Level of Achievement as a way to recognize and validate the entries that had outstanding merit but were not selected for the very few First Place Award positions within each genre division. Promotional Stickers are available to those who have advanced in the CIBA Tiers of Achievement here

      A Recap of the CIBA Selection Process

      • The 2021 CIBAs have 18 Fiction Divisions and 7 Non-fiction Divisions.
      • First Place Category award winners were selected for each one of the 25 divisions from an overall field of titles that progressed to the Premier FINALIST Division Level from the Division Semi-Finalists positions from the Shortlists, the Long List, and the infamous beginning slush pile rounds.
      • One Grand Prize award winner was selected from the First Place Category Award Winners for the 25 CIBA divisions.
      • One Overall Grand Prize award winner was selected from the 25 divisions of Grand Prize Award Winners

      This post will recognize the First Place and Grand Prize Winners for Cygnus, Ozma, Paranormal, Global Thrillers, M&M, Clue, Little Peeps, Gertrude Warner, and Dante Rossetti Book Awards.

      For the Laramie, Chaucer, Goethe, Hemingway, Chatelaine, Mark Twain, and Somerset Awards, click here for Part 2.

      For the Journey, Hearten, Nellie Bly, I&I, Mind & Spirit, Harvey Chute, Military & Frontline, Series, and Shorts Awards, click here for Part 3

      THANK YOU to CAC22 SPONSORS and FRIENDS

       

       

      CIBA Grand Prize Ribbons!

      We are honored to present the

      2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards

      Grand Prize Winners 

      The 2021 CIBA Winners! 


      Cygnus Award for Science Fiction

      The CYGNUS Book Awards

      for Science Fiction Novels

      Grand Prize Winner is 

       

      A WAR IN TOO MANY WORLDS by Elizabeth Crowens

       

      • J.W. Zarek – The Devil Pulls the Strings 
      • Sarah Lahey – Nostalgia Is Heartless, Book Two 
      • Akosua Sankofa – Monmouth Deep
      • Rhett C. Bruno – Vicarious  
      • Steven Seril – The Destroyer of Worlds: ‘An Answer to Every Question’
      • Charlene Newcomb – Echoes of the Storm    

       


      The OZMA Book Awards

      for Fantasy Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is 

      Plague of Flies Grand Prize Badge

       

      PLAGUE OF FLIES: Revolt of the Spirits by Laurel Anne Hill

      Plague of Flies Cover

       

      • David Fitz-Gerald – Waking Up Lost
      • Allegra Pescatore – Where Shadows Lie
      • L. A. Thompson – Isle of Dragons
      • J.W. Zarek – The Devil Pulls the Strings
      • KC Cowan – Asa’s Redemption             

      Paranormal Fiction Awards

       

      The Paranormal Book Awards

      for Supernatural Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is

      The Devil Pulls the Strings Paranormal Grand Prize Badge

      THE DEVIL PULLS THE STRINGS by J.W. Zarek

      The Devil Pulls the Strings Book Cover


      The GLOBAL THRILLER Book Awards

      for High Stakes Thrillers, Lab Lit, and Suspense Novels

      Grand Prize Winner is

      Grand Prize Badge for Ron McManus The Chameleon

      THE CHAMELEON by Ron McManus

      • Timothy S. Johnston – Fatal Depth
      • J Lawrence Matthews – One Must Tell The Bees
      • Norman M. Jacobs, MD – A Divine Wind
      • Randall Krzak – Mission: Angola (Xavier Sear Thriller Book 1)
      • Andrew Kaplan – Blue Madagascar 

      Clue Awards for Suspense Thriller Novels

      The CLUE Book Awards

      for Thrillers, Suspense, Legal, Detective, and Procedural Crime Novels

      Grand Prize Winner is 

      Grand Prize Badge for Shelley Nolden The Vines

       

      THE VINES by Shelley Nolden

      The Vines Cover

       


      Cozy Mystery Fiction Award

      The M & M Book Awards for Mystery & Mayhem

      for Cozy and Not-So-Cozy Mysteries

      Grand Prize Winner is

      Ophelia's Room M&M Grand Prize Badge

      OPHELIA’S ROOM by Michael Scott Garvin

       

      Ophelia's Room Cover

      • Lori Roberts Herbst – Double Exposure
      • Cam Lang – The Concrete Vineyard
      • Eileen Charbonneau – Death at Little Mound
      • Codi Schneider – Cold Snap: A Viking Cat Mystery
      • Darryl Wimberley – A Star in her CrownChasing Cleopatra 

      Two little chicks, fresh from their egg

      LITTLE PEEPS Book Awards for

      Early Readers and Picture Books

      Grand Prize Winner is 

      VICTORIA AND THE BIG BRAVE BREATH by Andrea Vaughan


       

      The Boxcar Children from the famed series by Gertrude Warner

      GERTRUDE WARNER Book Awards

      for Middle Grade Fiction

      Grand Prize is

      FISHING FOR LUCK by Murray Richter

      Fishing for Luck Cover

       

      • Sean March – Little Wade and Watchtower: Abigail and the Great Gang Trap
      • J. B. Spector – The Sunlit Curse, The Mer-Prince Adventures
      • Ben Gartner – Sol Invictus
      • Jay Spenser – The Barn Owl Mystery
      • Gloria Two-Feathers – Buck: Keeper of the Meadow
      • Didem Saracel – Story of Carbon            

      Dante Rossetti Awards for YA Fiction

      The DANTE ROSSETTI Book Awards

      for Young Adult Fiction

      Grand Prize Winner is

      TARO Legendary Boy Hero of Japan Dante Rossetti Grand Prize Badge

      TARO: Legendary Boy Hero of Japan by Blue Spruell

      TARO Legendary Boy Hero of Japan Cover

       

      • P.H.C. Marchesi – Florissant
      • Blue Spruell – TARO: Legendary Boy Hero of Japan
      • Rektok Ross – Ski Weekend
      • Nancy Thorne – The Somewhere I See You Again
      • Mark Wakely – A Friend Like Filby
      • Glen Dahlgren – The Game of War: The Trials of Dantess, Warrior Priest  

      Congratulations to ALL!

      We will email each winner with more information about their prize packages and more information.

      Be sure to FOLLOW and LIKE us Facebook and on Twitter @ChantiReviews

      Not seeing your Awards Division? Check out the links below!

      For the Laramie, Chaucer, Goethe, Hemingway, Chatelaine, Mark Twain, and Somerset Awards, click here for Part 2.

      For the Journey, Hearten, Nellie Bly, I&I, Mind & Spirit, Harvey Chute, Military & Frontline, Series, and Shorts Awards, click here for Part 3

      And the OVERALL GRAND PRIZE for the 2021 CIBAs!

      We are now accepting entries into the 2022 Chanticleer International Book Awards.

      Click here for more information and submission deadlines: https://test.chantireviews.com/contests/

      As always, if you have any questions, concerns, or suggestions, please email us at Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com — We will try to respond within 3 business days.

      Thank you for joining us in celebrating the 2021 CIBA Winners! – The Chanticleer Team

    • The 2021 CIBAs Finalists for Fiction!

      A Huge Congratulations to all of the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards (CIBAs) Finalists!

      Every tier of the CIBAs is an important one, though few manage to rise this far in the ranks.

      For our Fiction Authors, this post has links to all of the Finalist Awards for the 16 CIBA Divisions we have for fiction. We will have a separate post for Non-Fiction and one more post for the Shorts Awards for both Individual Works and Collected Works, as well as the Series Book Awards.

      All Finalists in attendance will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference, and we will announce the Winners at the CIBAs Ceremonies on Saturday, June 25th at the Chanticleer Banquet. We can’t express how excited we are to be able to do this in person with our fully vaccinated and boosted staff in a healthy metro area.

      Now let’s take a step back and look at where we came from to make this happen.

      A pyramid showing the different levels of CIBA Achievement

      The remaining tiers are the First Place Winner, the Grand Prize Winners, and finally, the coveted Overall Grand Prize Winners. The Overall Grand Prize Winner takes home the $1000 and more! See the Book Award details here.

      Now, presenting the links to the Fiction Awards Finalists

      The Official 2021 CIBA Lists of the First Place and Grand Prize Winners for all Divisions of the CIBAs will start to be posted June 29th, 2022.

      Now Accepting Entries into the 2022 CIBAs.

      If you don’t submit, you can’t win!

      We have badges available starting with the Short List. If you need a digital badge reflecting your tier level, please email info@ChantiReviews.com with your division and rank, and we will send you one as soon as possible.

      The 10th Anniversary Chanticleer Authors Conference is June 23-26, 2022

      Don’t Delay, Register Today!


      Goodreads Icon

      Make sure your Award gets the attention it deserves on Goodreads.com 

      In the Librarian Manual on Goodreads, you can go to your Book Edit Page — Literary Awards.

      You want to list the Award for Chanticleer International Book Awards (CIBA) Winners, and be sure to include the year and what place you received. For example:

      The year Long List, Short List, Semi-Finalist, or Finalist.

      Note from Goodreads: “To add a new award or edit an existing award, you’ll need help from one of our volunteer librarians or a staff member.” For assistance, post in the Goodreads Librarians Group.

      Always double check that you’ve written everything correctly before posting it. The search function for Awards on Goodreads is both case and punctuation sensitive.


      The Overall Grand Prize Winner for the 2020 CIBAs was Rebeca Dwight Bruff’s book Trouble the Water

      Cover of Trouble The Water by Rebecca Dwight Bruff

      The 202 Best Book Grand Prize Badge for Trouble the Water by Rebecca Dwight Bruff

      This year  we introduced the Non-Fiction Division for Military and Front Line Book Awards. These books focus on Narrative Non-Fiction that highlights the lives of service members, medical workers, and generally those who engage in public service. This is a division we’ve been waiting to launch for years, and we felt this was the year to make it happen. While we still are updating our site for this division, all 24 of our other CIBAs are now accepting entries for 2022.

      The competition is already heating up!

      Submit today!

      Remember, you don’t have to be present to win, but it sure is a lot more fun! The CIBAs Ceremonies will also be livestreamed for those who can’t attend in person. Information about how to watch will be sent out by the week of the Conference to all finalists.

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

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

      Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with experts in the business and marketing and promotion for authors from Kickstarter to Hindenburg.

    • REALITY GOLD by Tiffany Brooks – YA, Action/Adventure, Family & Social Issues

      REALITY GOLD by Tiffany Brooks – YA, Action/Adventure, Family & Social Issues

      Riley Ozaki is eighteen and trying desperately to find a way out of her reality as a recent social pariah. With her reputation at rock bottom, she decides that only a huge gesture can repair her social standing, win back her father’s approval, and gain her some new friends. She decides to participate in a reality tv show. What could go wrong?

      Reality Gold by Tiffany Brooks features the behind the scenes reality of reality tv—everything from love triangles and mind games to real life buried treasure and murder. This novel is a fast-paced romp through tropical jungles and into deep, dark caverns where allies may not be who they say they are and legends abound.

      Riley arrives at Black Rock Island off the coast of Brazil, her home for the next few weeks, ready to put in the work needed to repair her reputation. But there is a darker side to the reality show that Riley wasn’t expecting. When cameras turn up destroyed and fellow castmates suffer injuries, Riley quickly realizes the mind games began the minute the cast landed on the beach.

      Not only will the group of contestants be competing for a cash prize, but the producers of the show have added an extra challenge—whoever can find the hidden treasure rumored to be on the island will receive an additional cash prize—and it soon becomes clear that the games may turn deadly. Legend has it that seven must die before the island reveals the treasure. Six have died in the past, including Riley’s close family friend, Miles Kroger.

      Tiffany Brooks has crafted an incredibly readable, fast-paced, YA coming of age adventure novel where everyone has a secret, and no one is who they seem. The first-person narration and short chapters make this a compelling read, one where readers will find themselves thinking ‘just one more chapter.’ The setting is lush and captivating, the characters are intriguing, and Riley Ozaki is a protagonist for today’s readers—she’s smart and resourceful, and smack in the middle of a journey to self-discovery. She must embrace life’s realities, including loss and deceit, to discover for herself what she truly wants in life and who she is.

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • DARK SIGHT by Christopher Allan Poe – YA Thriller, Horror, Occult

      DARK SIGHT by Christopher Allan Poe – YA Thriller, Horror, Occult

      A strong-willed, gutsy teenager, Monique is one of two African American students in her white, uppity high school. Victoria, Monique’s white bestie since Kindergarten, may come from wealthy means, but her life is riddled with her own set of familial issues. All in all, the girls get along like sisters. They attend rally revival at Awakeners, a cult compound, and an argument ensues, leading to a car accident that leaves Victoria comatose and on life support. Ethan, the cult group’s son, gives Monique a talisman-looking necklace, which she uses to spark Victoria back to life.

      Victoria, who is an artist savant, may be riddled with quirks, but her resurrection proves differently: she is not herself, especially when she feeds off the critters in the neighborhood. Based on “the new Victoria,” her friends deduce Victoria now bears the characteristics of a psychic vampire, or in layman’s terms—an energy-sucker.

      Monique believes there’s a connection between Victoria’s altered condition and the cult group and seeks out Ethan for answers. Ethan responds with enough chilling information to indicate that Victoria’s life may be in danger. The only problem is, Victoria doesn’t see it that way—at all. To her, dead is just the beginning.

      Rising paranormal author Christopher Allan Poe spins a wickedly twisted tale in his YA horror novel. Front and center of his tightly knit and well-rounded cast is a middle-class gal with plenty of moxie.

      Besides creating a host of colorful characters—many of which are teens, Poe is a superb raconteur. He not only has a firm handle on defining his characters but also relaying a chilling tale. Poe’s writing style, which is both crisp and punchy, provides him the opportunity to state what he has to say, and at the same time suggestively highlight the plight of women, children, and racism.

      Edgy dialogue scenes are the driving force behind Poe’s non-stop tension-filled chapters. Scenes are replete with a continual string of twists and turns, teen angst, and sexual lust. Poe provides light relief with Monique’s waggish tongue-in-cheek comments, as well as her sexually-laced similes and metaphors punctuated with infamous factual and fictional figures (i.e., Caligula, Jason Voorhees) and horror movies (i.e., Nightmare on Elm StreetDark City).

      Offering high appeal for YA and adult audiences, Dark Sight is a first-rate paranormal thriller with enormous Silver Screen potential.

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

       

    • SOULS UNTETHERED SAGA, Book 1 by K.J. McPike – YA Metaphysical, Contemporary, Action/Adventure

      SOULS UNTETHERED SAGA, Book 1 by K.J. McPike – YA Metaphysical, Contemporary, Action/Adventure

      Lali Yavari has her hands full. She’s the oldest of five siblings, a bright, sensitive daughter of a scientist (her father) and a loving mother. Except, her mother up and abandoned the family leaving only a cryptic note behind. And now Lali’s having strange visions of things and people she does not know coupled with the disturbing ability to astral project her consciousness to another place—another dark and beautiful place.

      Imagine her surprise when one of the people from her visions shows up as the new kid (#hottie_alert) at school! The surrounding cast includes her boy-crazy best friend, Paisley (and Paisley’s new annoying side-kick), and Nelson, a buddy Lali has grown up with since pre-school. Just to be clear: Nelson is not fond of NewBoy, Kai. In fact, Nelson is downright irritated over all the attention Lali is suddenly giving to the new boy. But Kai’s arrival at school is no accident. He knows more about Lali than she does—why she’s having visions and, perhaps more importantly, what the visions mean. He may even be able to help Lali decipher her mother’s note, thus solving the puzzle of her whereabouts.

      But his assistance comes with a price. Kai’s baby sister also disappeared shortly after she was born, and Kai wants Lali to find her. Kai knows something no one else does: Lali is the only person who can astral project to the alternate reality of Alea.

      Alea is filled with thick white trees and grass that’s red and yellow. Beautiful or not, Lali soon learns that Alea is a dangerous place whose citizens are watched by a controlling government with a police force known as the “Eyes and Ears.” Could this surveillance operation have something to do with Lali’s mother’s disappearance? If so, what has her mother done to earn their wrath—and how is her mother connected to Alea in the first place? Past and current events collide in a deeply suspenseful narrative that will have readers turning page after page to determine which characters are good and which are evil. Fittingly, Lali’s brothers and sisters get in on the action and the adventure ramps up in nail-biting intensity.

      McPike gives us a strong family full of teasing, quarreling and sarcasm, yet indisputable evidence of a deep and abiding trust between brothers and sisters alike. The dialogue is fast-paced, witty, and wholly believable throughout the book. Here we have a splendid contemporary metaphysical young adult novel that deserves a place alongside our beloved Ursala Le Quin.

      Souls Untethered is the story of an endearing, resourceful teenager who will stop at nothing to reunite her family.

      *Note: Souls Untethered original title, Xodus, won first place in the 2016 Dante Rossetti Awards for Paranormal Y/A Fiction.

      • Writing: Excellent
      • Sex: None
      • Violence: Some physical combat, nothing graphic
      • Narration: Prologue is in 3rd person; the main novel is in 1st person; Epilogue is in 3rd
      • Tense: Past
      • Mood: Suspenseful with comedic moments

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • LOVE and THE ARTS, a Blog-post from Kiffer Brown

      LOVE and THE ARTS, a Blog-post from Kiffer Brown

      Edward_Burne-Jones_Le_Chant_d_Amour_(Song_of_Love) (1)The Love Song by Sir Edward Burne-Jones portrays each of the three young people alone with their thoughts and dreams, but gathered together, as the sheep are in the distance, for comfort and support.

      Sir Burne-Jones was forty years-old when he painted this, perhaps remembering the daydreaming times and wistfulness of his youth.

      Sir Burne-Jones was mentored and influenced by Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Rossetti was one of Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood founders who, in 1848, sought to create works of art that conjured a realm of heightened emotions, aspirations, and visual splendor that would elevate a modern society beset by change.1 

      These are apt words for today’s hyper-charged digital age.

      Sir Burne-Jones own words asserted, “Only this is true, that beauty is very beautiful, and softens, and comforts, and inspires, and rouses, and lifts up, and never fails.”  And this sentiment  is where the Pre-Ralphaelite movement artists of poets, novelists, painters, music composers, and craftsmen found connection and inspiration for their collaborations and works. 2

       

      The Dante Gabriel Rossetti Influence

      We have chosen Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s work to symbolize several of our writing competitions logos. We feel that the sentiment expressed by the Pre-Raphaelite movement exemplifies what inspires many authors to pick up their  proverbial pens to express their emotions and their observations of the visceral dynamics of living.

      Dante Gabriel Rossetti: artist, poet, and scholar of Italian Medieval art

      Dante Rossetti images

      Imagine nineteen-year-old Dante Rossetti looking at himself in a mirror as he is drawing his self-portrait in 1847.

      As a young man, Rossetti was known to be confident, articulate, and charming as he was zealous, emotional, and irresponsible.  His contemporaries called this a “poetic nature,” which drove him to combine the “human with the divine” in his art. His  self-portrait captures these many traits. 1

       

      We felt this portrait of  Rossetti would be perfect to represent Chanticleer’s novel competition for young adult fiction as it deftly embodies the flashing range of emotions that young people from any era have experienced, and probably will continue to experience in the future, as they encounter the crossroads of adulthood.

      Jane Burden Morris: muse, artist’s model, wife, and paramour

      The Chatelaine Awards

      Twenty years later Rossetti painted Jane Morris in a “Blue Silk Dress” in 1868. She was twenty-nine.

      He sublimely captures the many nuances of romance, love, and longing. Did a lover give her the flower tucked into her sash? What is she wistfully looking up from reading? What is on the other side of the drapery? Where did the flowers in the vase come from? Did she cut them or are they from a different suitor? As  many find with Rossetti’s work, there are endless possibilities for story ideas when viewing his art.

      Rossetti was a scholar of Medieval Art and Letters, along with pursuing knowledge of Arthurian Legend. He was profoundly influenced by his namesake, Dante Alighieri, and the English poet John Keats.

      Rossetti’s portrayal of Jane Burden Morris in the “Blue Silk Dress” (to me) is an ethereal image of women–a perfect image for the Chatelaine Awards for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction.

      An Arthurian Legend Comes True in the Victorian Era?

      Jane Burden (Morris),  known as the Pre-Raphaelite ideal of beauty, came from an impoverished background, her father a stable-hand and her mother an illiterate domestic servant. Rossetti and Burne-Jones were struck by her beauty when they saw her when she and her sister attended a play in Oxford in 1857.  The artists asked her to model for them. She was eighteen and destined for a life as a domestic servant. The rest is history in this fairy-tale-come-true story–essentially Arthurian legend come to life.

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      Jane Morris as Guinevere
      “Guinevere” by William Morris. Artist’s model is Jane Burden, 18)

       

      Morris fell in love with Jane when she was modeling for his “Guinevere” painting and he asked her to marry him.  After they were engaged, she was privately educated to become a suitable wife for a gentleman of high society standing such as he was. They married on April 26, 1859; she was twenty, Morris was twenty-five.

      Apparently, she was quite intelligent, as she quickly took to her lessons and became fluent in French and Italian, became an accomplished pianist, and was known for her refined manners and eloquent  speech.

      Jane Burden Morris is considered to be the woman who inspired Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, more currently known as My Fair Lady of Audrey Hepburn fame. 1

       

      After her marriage to William Morris, she continued to model for Rossetti, which is another story unto itself. Jane Morris is said to have “consumed and obsessed him (Rossetti) in paint, poetry, and life.”4

      Was Morris Rossetti’s King Arthur? Was Rossetti Morris’s Lancelot? And Jane, was she Morris’s Guinevere?  Does life imitate art? 

      Love and the Arts during the Victorian Era in England

      If you ever get the opportunity to view the works of the Pre-Raphaelites, I urge you to do so! I have had the pleasure of viewing them at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and at a touring exhibit at the Rijkesmuseum in Amsterdam.  An interesting note is that the Rijkesmuseum titled the Pre-Raphaelite exhibit unabashedly as “Wives and Stunners.”  The artists and their wives must have been the subject of many a gossip column in the newspapers and scandal broadsheets as well as inspiration for the contemporary authors of that era: Oscar Wilde, Charles Dickens, the Brontë sisters,  Alfred Tennyson, Rudyard Kipling, and other notables.

      The Pre-Raphaelite art movement is one that has resonated with me since I was teenage girl. And now that I am a woman of a “certain age,” I find that it still does, increasingly so–especially now that I have come to know more about the artists and their muses.

       

       Background Information:
      • Sir Edward Burne-Jones, 1833–1898.
      • Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1828-1882.
      • Jane Burden Morris, 1839-1914.
      • William Morris, 1834-1896.
      Citing and Acknowledgments
      1. Wikipedia Commons. 
      2. Metropolitan Museum of Art
      3. All art images via Wikipedia Commons. 
      4. Pamela Todd, "Pre-Raphaelites at Home," New York (2001).

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