Tag: Goethe

  • The GOETHE 2021 CIBA WINNERS for Late Historical Fiction

    The GOETHE 2021 CIBA WINNERS for Late Historical Fiction

    Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

    The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

    The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    The other three Historical Fiction Genres are the Laramie Awards for Americana Fiction, the Chaucer Awards for Early Historical Fiction, and the Hemingway Awards for 20th c. Wartime Fiction.

    The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards First Place Category Winners and the GOETHE  Grand Prize Winner were announced by David Beaumier on Saturday, June 25, 2022 at the Hotel Bellwether and broadcast via ZOOM webinar.

    This is the OFFICIAL 2021 LIST of the GOETHE BOOK AWARDS First Place Category Winners and the GOETHE Grand Prize Winner.

     

    Join us in celebrating the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

    • Ron Singerton – The Refused
    • Drema Drudge – Victorine
    • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
    • Orna Ross – After the Rising
    • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
    • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
    • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus

      The Grand Prize Winner for the CIBA 2021 GOETHE Awards is:

      After the Rising
      by Orna Ross

      After the Rising Cover

      After the Rising Goethe Grand Prize Badge

        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 Facebookto 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 Twitter’s handle is @ChantiReviews

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

        The 2022 GOETHE Book Awards winners will be announced at CAC23 on April 29, 2023. Save the date for CAC23, scheduled April 27-30, 2023, our 10 year Conference Anniversary!

        Submissions for the 2022 GOETHE Book Awards are open until the end of July. Enter here!

        Don’t delay! Enter today! 

        A Note to ALL the WINNERS: The coveted CIBA Blue Ribbons will be mailed out starting in August. We will contact you with an email to verify your mailing address and other items. We thank you for participating in the 2021 Chanticleer International Book Awards!

      • 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.

      • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Finalists – CIBAs 2021

        The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Finalists – CIBAs 2021

        Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

        The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

        The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

        Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

        These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction Semi-Finalists to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards 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 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

        We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

        These titles are the Finalists of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

        Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

        • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
        • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
        • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
        • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
        • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
        • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
        • Ron Singerton – The Refused
        • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
        • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
        • Drema Drudge – Victorine
        • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
        • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
        • Orna Ross – After the Rising 
        • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
        • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
        • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
        • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
        • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
        • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
        • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus

          Good Luck to All in the next rounds that will determine the which titles advance to the FINALISTS Level. 

          A few entries have been moved to the 2021 Laramie Book Awards as per judges recommendations for Americana, Prairie, and Western literature division.

            MORE PROMOTION! 

            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 2020 Goethe Awards is Linda Ulleseit for The Aloha Spirit

            Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit
            Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

            We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

            Please click here for more information.

            For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

            Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

            VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

            FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

            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 10th annual conference and discover why!

            Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

             

             

             

          • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

            The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Semi-Finalists – CIBAs 2021

            Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

            The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

            The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

            Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

            These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction Short List to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalists. 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 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

            We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

            These titles are the Semi-Finalists of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

            Goethe Book Awards Semi-Finalist Badge

            Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

            • J.G. Schwartz – The Curious Spell of Madam Genova
            • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
            • Leah Angstman – Falcon in the Dive
            • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
            • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
            • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
            • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
            • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
            • Ron Singerton – The Refused
            • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
            • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
            • S. Lee Fisher – Becoming Olive W. – The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga: Book 1
            • Drema Drudge – Victorine
            • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
            • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
            • Orna Ross – After the Rising 
            • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
            • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
            • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
            • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
            • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
            • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
            • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
            • Judith Berlowitz – Home So Far Away
            • Jenni L. Walsh – A Betting Woman: A Novel of Madame Moustache

            Good Luck to All in the next rounds that will determine the which titles advance to the FINALISTS Level. 

            A few entries have been moved to the 2021 Laramie Book Awards as per judges recommendations for Americana, Prairie,

              MORE PROMOTION! 

              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 2020 Goethe Awards is Linda Ulleseit for The Aloha Spirit

              Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit
              Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

              We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

              Please click here for more information.

              For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

              Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

              VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

              FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

              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 10th annual conference and discover why!

              Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

               

               

               

            • The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Short List – CIBAs 2021

              The 2021 GOETHE Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction – The Short List – CIBAs 2021

              Goethe Post 1750s Historical Fiction Award

              The Goethe Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in post-1750s Historical Fiction.  The Goethe Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards (The CIBAs).

              The Goethe Book Awards competition is named for Johann Wolfgang von Goethe who was born at the dawn of the new era of enlightenment on August 28, 1749.

              Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring Late Period Historical Fiction. Regency, Victorian, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, World and other wars before the 20th century, history of non-western cultures, set after the 1750s, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them. For 20th century Wartime Fiction, see our new Hemingway Awards here. 

              These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from all 2021 Goethe Late Historical Fiction Long List to the 2021 Goethe Book Awards 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 24 CIBA divisions’ Finalists.

              We will announce the 1st Place Category winners and Grand Prize Division Winners at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, June 25th, 2022 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash. sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference

              These titles are in the running for the Semi-Finals of the 2021 Goethe Book Awards novel competition for Post-1750s Historical Fiction!

              Short Listed for the 2021 CIBAs

              Join us in cheering on the following authors and their works in the 2021 CIBAs.

              • J.G. Schwartz – The Curious Spell of Madam Genova
              • Andrew Schafer, M.D. – Unclean Hands
              • Leah Angstman – Falcon in the Dive
              • Margaret Rodenberg – Finding Napoleon: A Novel
              • Anna Bullock – The Companion
              • Margaret Porter – The Limits of Limelight
              • Pamela Nowak – Never Let Go
              • Paula Butterfield – The Goddesses of Tenth Street
              • Adele Holmes, M.D. – Winter’s Reckoning
              • Tammy Pasterick – Beneath the Veil of Smoke and Ash
              • Ron Singerton – The Refused
              • Alice McVeigh – Susan: A Jane Austen Prequel
              • Jodi Lea Stewart – Triumph, a Novel of the Human Spirit
              • S. Lee Fisher – Becoming Olive W. – The Women of Campbell County: Family Saga: Book 1
              • Drema Drudge – Victorine
              • Sophia Alexander – Silk: Caroline’s Story
              • Lorelei Brush – Chasing the American Dream
              • Lee Hutch – Molly’s Song
              • Orna Ross – After the Rising 
              • Alfred Nicols – Lost Love’s Return
              • Glen Craney – The Cotillion Brigade: A Novel of the Civil War and the Most Famous Female Militia in American History
              • Bryan Ney – Absaroka War Chief
              • Jenni L. Walsh – A Betting Woman: A Novel of Madame Moustache
              • Dana Mack – All Things That Deserve to Perish
              • Pamela Hamilton – Lady Be Good
              • Lori McMullen – Among the Beautiful Beasts
              • Mike Jordan – The Freedom Song
              • Florence Reiss Kraut – How to Make a Life: a novel
              • Kathleen Williams Renk – Vindicated: A Novel of Mary Shelley
              • Michelle Rene – Maud’s Circus
              • J. E. Dyer – Barons
              • Judith Berlowitz – Home So Far Away

              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 2020 Goethe Awards is Linda Ulleseit for The Aloha Spirit

              Cover of The Aloha Spirit by Linda Ulleseit
              Click here to see the 2020 Goethe Book Award Winners for Late Historical Fiction.

              We are now accepting submissions into the 2022 Goethe Book Awards for Post-1750s Historical Fiction. The 2022 CIBA winners will be announced at CAC 2023. 

              Please click here for more information.

              For our other Historical Fiction Awards, please see the following:

              Winners will be announced at the 2021 CIBA Awards Ceremony that is sponsored by the 2022 Chanticleer Authors Conference.

              VIRTUAL and IN-Person –  June 23 – 26, 2022! Register Today!

              FLEXIBLE REGISTRATIONS ARE AVAILABLE for these challenging times.

              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 10th annual conference and discover why!

              Featuring: International Best Selling Author Cathy Ace along with A+ list film producer Scott Steindorff.

               

               

               

            • A SEEPING WOUND by Darryl Wimberley – Historical Fiction, Literary, Deep South

              A SEEPING WOUND by Darryl Wimberley – Historical Fiction, Literary, Deep South

              Here is a novel of utmost despair, but also the determination of the human spirit to do what is right and survive in the face of grave danger. Set in Northern Florida in the 1920s, A Seeping Wound by Darryl Wimberly centers on the nefarious activities of the Blue Turtle Turpentine Camp, one woman’s life in that camp, and a young veteran’s search for his missing sister.

              Still suffering from wounds inflicted during the Great War, Prescott (Scott) Hampton arrives in Cross City, Florida determined to find his sister Sarah, and her husband Franklin Breaux. The Hampton family has not heard from Sarah in months and Cross City was the last town she posted a letter from. Scott quickly discovers a deeply embedded system of graft involving the Bucknell Timber & Turpentine Company, local law enforcement, and the county judge. Judge Hiram Sheppard runs his courtroom exactly as he sees fit—no defendant is allowed to testify on their own behalf, no written records are taken, and all debtors are sent to the Blue Turtle Turpentine Camp.

              Scott suspects something along these lines may have happened to his sister and questions Judge Sheppard as to whether or not he can recall Sarah passing through his courtroom. The judge merely shrugs and advises Scott not to stick his nose where it doesn’t belong. After all, men have died for lesser things. Scott disregards this barely veiled threat and buys horses and gear to search for his sister himself in the Florida wilderness.

              Sarah Breaux, Scott’s sister, and her husband Frank are indeed at the Blue Turtle Turpentine Camp. They answered a newspaper advertisement and were conned into believing they would be getting involved in honest work, not indentured servitude, and are now suffering horribly. Frank has been thrown into The Box—a four-foot square, four-foot tall prison cell open to the elements and Sarah has no idea when he may be released. The camp is run by some of the foulest, most sadistic men in existence. The captain of the camp, however, is the worst of all.

              Captain Henry Riggs is an evil man. He is a ruthless, vengeful pedophile and he runs his turpentine camp like a cotton plantation in the old Deep South. Whippings are given out with ‘Black Auntie,’ men are forced to drink and gamble away what little wages they’ve made every Sunday, and the women of the camp are put on the ‘schedule.’ The schedule is a euphemistic term for the enforced prostitution almost every woman in the camp must endure. The captain, of course, takes his cut and leaves the women with hardly any money or medical care to see to their injuries or other needs.

              The one person who is able to see to the needs of the sick and injured is Martha LongFoot, the camp’s medicine woman. Half Muscogee, half African, she is a striking woman. She is repeatedly referred to as ‘injun’ and ‘it’ and other harsher epithets. She’s easily taller than most men, with bronze skin and long black hair…on the half of her face and head where she hasn’t been burned. The other side of her profile is horribly mutilated and has never fully healed from when she poured boiling rosin on her own face as a young teenager to avoid being forced into prostitution by Captain Riggs.

              Martha’s oath as the camp medicine woman to do no harm continually comes into conflict with the reality of the world she lives in. She is witness to the greatest atrocities inflicted on those who are forced to live and work in the Blue Turtle Turpentine Camp and she also must care for her jailors when they themselves are sick or injured. She takes her oath as a healer very seriously, despite multiple opportunities to just let the evil men who run the camp die of their wounds and illnesses.

              The fates of the Breaux and Martha connect as Scott circles ever closer to the camp and his sister’s whereabouts. Martha, Sarah, and Scott must each walk a very precarious line if they want to survive and ultimately must depend on each other to get out alive.

              A Seeping Wound is a thoroughly researched work of historical fiction told in alternating viewpoints. There are lush descriptions of the wilderness and the environment and these descriptions succeed in making the setting a character itself. This is a land and an era where black men and women are still viewed as nothing more than property and readers who are sensitive to racism, rape, and epithets may want to pick a different novel. A Seeping Wound represents all these darker issues with stark, unforgiving language.

              As is to be expected with a story as harsh and unrelenting as this one, the ending is bittersweet. Salvation arrives, but whether or not it is too late is up to the reader. This novel is sure to be appreciated by historical fiction fans given the copious and dedicated research that has gone into writing it, the diverse viewpoints, and the unusual setting.

              Reviewers Note: Not suitable for children or teenagers. This novel contains many emotional triggers and depicts graphic violence and rape.

              5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews