Tag: Deadline

  • Spotlight on the 2022 Short Story Awards

    Celebrating the Art of the Short but Spectacular Writing

    “A good [short story] would take me out of myself and then stuff me back in, outsized, now, and uneasy with the fit.” ― David Sedaris

    The Short Story Book Awards is a new and fast-growing Chanticleer Book Award Division. Featuring any of our 23 Fiction or Non-Fiction genres, these Awards are different from our other programs in that they have two tracks: One that features Individual Works and another that features Collected Works.

    Short Story Book Awards Deadline is 12/31/22
    Open until 12/31/22!

    Generally, we announce 5 First Place Winners and 1 Grand Prize Winner for Individual Works and the same for Collected Works. This lets each type of work shine. You can see the Grand Prize Winners and Finalists of our 2020 inaugural Short Story Awards here and the 2021 Winners here for collected works and here for individual works.

    Short Stories and Essays stand well apart from their 50,000+ word counterparts in both Fiction and Non-Fiction. N.K. Jemisin, three-time Hugo Award Winner for her brilliant Broken Earth Trilogy, credits writing short stories as the method by which she learned how to create tightly written stories with no fluff. Her talent shines in her collection How Long ’til Black Future Month?

    NK Jemisin's Short Story Collection How Long Til Black Future Month features a Black Woman with beautifully styled hair in profile and large round jewelry

    In working with a shorter format, a writer must commit to only putting in what matters to their story. This is true of longer formats, but readers are much less forgiving when a short story or essay feels trivial.

    “A short story must have a single mood and every sentence must build towards it.” ― Edgar Allan Poe

    The Shorts Hall of Fame from Chanticleer

    We’re honored to have received so many excellent submissions in the past. Is your story the next one we’ll discover? Check out these Best Books from Chanticleer.

    A Week at Surf Side Beach
    By Pierce Koslosky Jr.
    2020 Shorts Grand Prize Winner for Collections

    A Week at Surfside Beach

    Vacationers from all walks of life converge on Portofino II-317C, South Carolina, a quaint blue beach house, in Pierce Koslosky Jr.’s short story collection, A Week at Surfside Beach.

    From May 30th-December 26th each group of people comes to stay one week at a time, to forget their cares of the big city, to work, to celebrate, or to simply get away. Surfside Beach has much to show them, including temperamental weather.

    The small town itself offers a charming supermarket where fishing supplies, whoopie pies, and local southern favorites can be found. The Christmas vacationers, the final of the thirteen beach house renters, struggle to find a tree in time; a real tree simply wouldn’t allow enough space for the family to sleep, and the fake tree would cost too much. But they find arts and crafts supplies in town, to fashion a paper Christmas tree during a day of rainy weather.

    Continue Reading here

    Savonne, not Vonny
    By Robin Lee Lovelace
    2020 Shorts Grand Prize for Novellas

    Savonne, Not Vonny Cover

    Robin Lee Lovelace evokes a world in which the mystical intertwines with the everyday in Savonne, Not Vonny, a coming-of-age story set in rural Louisiana.

    Nine-year-old Savonne lives in a small room at the back of Mama Gwen’s whorehouse, in Indianapolis in the ’60s. Her mama is one of the working girls, and her father is Mama Gwen’s own son. Savonne’s daddy dotes on her, and Mama Gwen loves Savonne like the daughter she never had; the two of them together make a loving home for Savonne, in the midst of their raucous brothel.

    By contrast, Savonne’s birth mother rarely pays her any mind. A “crazy-ass woman” with a temper “as hot as a Mississippi afternoon,” Coco is not at all opposed to beating the bejesus out of someone. In a fury one night, she does something that cannot be undone, and in her headlong flight out of town, she takes Savonne with her.

    See the novella here.

    Note: Savonne, Not Vonny, is due to be released as part of Lovelace’s collection, A Wild Region. Keep an eye on her website here for the latest updates. The collection is expected to be published on April 28, 2023.

    New York, Give Me Your Best or Your Worst
    By Elizabeth Crowens
    2021 Shorts Grand Prize Winner for Collections

    New York Give me your best or your worst cover

     

    A strong collection of work and art, powered by inspiration and the beauty of New York.

    The Review for New York: Give Me Your Best or Your Worst is still forthcoming, but we featured author Elizabeth Crowens’ accomplishment in putting together this unique anthology here.

    See Crowens’ website here.

    Homegoing
    By Toni Ann Johnson
    2021 Shorts Grand Prize Winner for Novellas

    Homegoing Cover

    Homegoing by Toni Ann Johnson is an intimate portrait of a middle-aged African-American woman dragging herself hand over hand out of grief and despair.

    This story begins with her aching, echoing pain after the one-two punch of a miscarriage and the dissolution of her marriage. Her journey takes her back to the upper-middle-class white suburb where she grew up, through childhood memories that refuse to be denied and to, of all times and places, a funeral.

    Something and someone is supposed to be buried. Certainly the deceased. But quite possibly the woman who has held on to her losses and her grudges long enough to poison her own future.

    Continue Reading here


    Thank you for celebrating these Shorts Awards Grand Prize Winners with us!

    Have a Short piece of Fiction, Non-Fiction, or a Collection? Your work deserves to be discovered. Submit today!

    At the End: “Write a short story every week. It’s not possible to write 52 bad short stories in a row.” ― Ray Bradbury

    IN-Person Registration for the Chanticleer Authors Conference is Open
    – 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!

     

     

  • Spotlight on the 2021 Hearten Book Awards for Uplifting and Inspiring Non-Fiction

    Spotlight on the 2021 Hearten Book Awards for Uplifting and Inspiring Non-Fiction

    Hearten – “To Make More Cheerful or Confident”

    Life is full of ups and downs, but you know that it’s those things that inspire and uplift us, that hearten us so we can make it through each day and onto the next. This doesn’t mean every day is easy, but it does follow the idea that every cloud has a silver lining.

    You can do it! Submit to the Hearten Awards before the end of November!

    The Hearten Awards came into existence thanks to the Journey Awards. In addition to burgeoning submissions of narrative Non-Fiction and Memoirs, our six Non-Fiction Awards have been exploding in popularity. The competition has never been steeper, and the time to submit has never been better. You can see the full list of Non-Fiction Awards here.

    The words "Non-Fiction CIBA Divisions Because truth Matters" over the pages of a book

    We saw the Hearten Awards as a necessary addition due to the high number of stories we receive that inspire us to live a life full of love and joy as best we can. These stories are heartwarming, empowering, and help show us a world where we are our best selves.

    Tenets of Uplifting Fiction

    While this fiction often has religious undertones, that isn’t alway the case, and even when there is religious inspiration at work in the text, it doesn’t proselytize or distract from the narrative at hand. The work is still meant to engage and delight readers with or without a faith background.

    Two light-skinned brown people holding hands
    Handholding is a-okay in Heartwarming Non-Fiction

    What the work does not include is violence, profanity, or explicit sexual content. Despite this, the emotional impact and journey taken in most inspirational texts can often lead the reader to tears, so don’t take that light-heartedness lightly. Also, don’t count out romance! Inspirational fiction has it all!

    Tastes Like Chicken

    white hands holding a white egg with a black heart and arrow drawn on it.

    Part of the inspiration for this Awards Division was the Chicken Soup for the Soul series. Other popular examples are Eat, Pray, Love by Elizabeth Gilbert, You are a Badass by Jen Sincero, or The Secret by Rhonda Byrne. Interested in reading more about the ins and outs of inspirational fiction? Check out this article from DIYMFA.

    If you love writing inspirational fiction or are interested in learning to write more of it, reading it is a great way to learn more. Here are heartwarming books that we’ve read and would recommend!

    A YEAR of LIVING KINDLY
    By Donna Cameron
    First Place Winner in I&I Awards

    A Year of Living Kindly by Donna Cameron Book Image

    Donna Cameron’s guide, A Year of Living Kindly: Choices That Will Change Your Life and the World Around You, invites readers to live more richly, thoroughly, and fruitfully.

    Perhaps the best way to enjoy Cameron’s guide to kindness is to drink it in slowly, for a year, as its structure suggests. Savoring one of its 52 meditations – thoughtful, introspective, resonate, and wide-ranging discussions – each week. She turns to a new topic grouping with the advent of each new month, traversing the four parts, the “seasons,” as the year progresses.

    Keep reading here

    WALTZING A TWO-STEP
    By Dan Juday

    Waltzing A Two-Step Book cover image

    Dan Juday’s memoir Waltzing A Two-Step is a humble and compassionate look at his formative years.

    Born a few years after the second world war, Dan experiences a peaceful and happy childhood in rural Indiana, moving frequently before the family settles on a rural area of land named Springwood in Clinton County, Indiana. The Juday family were devout Catholics and enrolled Dan and his siblings in Catholic schools until the family moved to Springwood. Public school became the only option for the siblings. There Dan does his best to fit in but his status as a minority Catholic in a mostly Protestant community in the 1950s brings its own challenges.

    Keep reading here

    THE BREAST IS HISTORY
    By Bronwyn Hope

    A realistic, up-close look at life as a cancer patient and survivor. The Breast Is History is a strong tool of hope and humor in the darkest days of any woman’s life.  

    In September 2011, Bronwyn Hope received her initial diagnosis of breast cancer; by March 2013 she had had both breasts removed, had gone through numerous chemo and radiation treatments, taken thousands of pills, and come out of it with a gritty, positive philosophy.

    Keep reading here

    ODYSSEY of LOVE
    By Linda Jämsén

    Odyssey of Love : A Memoir of Seeking and Finding Book Cover

    Odyssey of Love: A Memoir of Seeking and Finding by Linda Jämsén is an utterly charming Eastern European take on Eat – Pray – Love

    This odyssey begins with its 40-something author exchanging her job and dead-end relationship in Boston for two years in Budapest. The goal? To explore new career opportunities, live an adventurous life as an American expat in Europe, and, possibly, hopefully, find her soulmate.

    Keep reading here

     


    Have a book that Inspires and Uplifts? Submit by the end of November for the 2021 CIBAs! 

    See the 2020 Hearten Award Winners Here!

    Blue and Gold 2020 Badge for the Hearten Grand Prize for Inspiring & Uplifting Non-Fiction Love, Life, and Lucille by Judy Gaman

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Writer’s Toolbox

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    Beyond Janette Oke: A Look at Inspirational Fiction

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