Tag: Narrative Non-Fiction Awards

  • HENRY: A Polish Swimmer’s True Story of Friendship from Auschwitz to America by Katrina Shawver – Jewish Holocaust History, Historical German Biographies, Jewish History

    HENRY: A Polish Swimmer’s True Story of Friendship from Auschwitz to America by Katrina Shawver – Jewish Holocaust History, Historical German Biographies, Jewish History

    Katrina Shawver, a journalist for a Phoenix newspaper, was seeking a story for her weekly column. She had heard from a friend that a Holocaust survivor named Henry Zguda and his American wife, Nancy, lived in Phoenix. She called Zguda and was invited to come to his home, only a few blocks from her own. Shawver quickly bonded with both Henry and Nancy. Then she and Henry decided to have a series of weekly interviews, which she would draw on for her column and, later, for a book—this biography.

    The horror story of Henry Zguda, a Catholic Pole born and raised in Krakow, Poland, begins with Henry walking down the street toward the YMCA for swim practice in 1942. A Gestapo car screeches to a stop beside him. Two men leap out, arrest Henry on the spot, throw him into the car, and take him to prison. After several days of torture, a practice used by the Gestapo to obtain information (of which Henry had little), he is taken to the train station and shoved into a cattle car so filled with people that it is impossible to do anything but stand, shoulder to shoulder. The door is slammed shut, and the train pulls out of the station. Henry has no idea what fate awaits him.

    Most of his fellow passengers were Jews, which Henry was not, but under these circumstances, it made no difference. They did what they could to accommodate each other over days of travel, until they reached their final destination, Auschwitz. Many of the Jews would find themselves in the gas chamber in short order. Only those strong enough to work were allowed to live—at least long enough to finish building the camp.

    His story covers more than two years in Auschwitz and Buchenwald. As a young man, he is characterized by his courage and tenacity to live under the most horrendous circumstances and his valor and compassion in helping his fellow prisoners—most of whom he met there, and some who had been childhood friends in Krakow. Somehow, Henry never lost hope, which would have been a death knell…as it was for many prisoners. He characterizes himself as lucky, very lucky.

    Henry tells Shawver about his youth in Krakow. Most of all, his love for swimming. Henry was a member of the swim team at the YMCA founded and built by Americans. Despite the German presence, he had fun with his family and friends.

    It is with some reluctance that he begins to give her details of his years in the concentration camps, but that is what she needs to know. Supporting his memories are photographs obtained after the war as well as official cards recording his Auschwitz registration, train passenger lists, personal effects inventories, and records of money sent to him by his family. These offer interesting details of life in the camps, as do some of Henry’s more pleasant memories. Prisoners participated in theater performances and concerts for the prison staff and their families as audiences.

    As the interviews proceed, Henry intuits when it is time for him to tell Shawver what transpired as the camps’ main objective—killing Jews—was fulfilled. He explains how Jewish prisoners met their fate through such horrible means as being left, still alive, hanging from hooks in dark basements; being lined up in rows and shot to death in view of other prisoners, including family members; being told they must remove their clothing to have showers, only to be herded naked into the gas chambers (their clothing left behind as booty for the guards who led them to their fate); or being tortured to death by nonchalant Germans.

    But in 1944, WWII finally drew to a close. As American forces approached the concentration camps, the Germans fled. The prisoners were free! Some prisoners left on their own, while others awaited the Americans bringing food, clothes, medical care, and the means to go home. Henry returned to Krakow, to spend time with his mother and earn money for her to continue living there and for him to emigrate to America.

    It was difficult for Henry to relate his story, and it is difficult for us to read it. Still, both Henry and Shawver saw in this effort a purpose—to warn all people that they must do everything possible to ensure that the atrocities of WWII never occur again.

    Henry: A Polish Swimmer’s True Story of Friendship from Auschwitz to America won First Place in the CIBA 2018 Journey Awards for Memoir.

     

  • The FINALISTS Announcement for the JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

    The FINALISTS Announcement for the JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction – a division of the 2019 CIBAs

    Journey Narrative Non-FictionThe Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. Our judges will put books about true and inspiring stories to the test and choose the best among them. 

    Editor’s Note: Some works have been moved to the new non-fiction division titled the Nellie Bly Book Awards. This new division is in response to the request from the Chanticleer International Book Awards judges to acknowledge the many outstanding works that were entered into the Instruction & Insight Book Awards and the Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction. The Nellie Bly Book Awards recognize outstanding journalistic works and investigative pieces.  After reviewing the comments from the judges along with their suggestions, we decided to recognize these works and create a more fitting division in the CIBAs — the Nellie Bly Book Awards

    The 2019 CIBAs received an unprecedented number of entries making this book awards program even more competitive. More entries along with more competitive works makes the final rounds of judging even more demanding. The judges have requested a new level of achievement to be added to the rounds to acknowledge the entries that they deemed should receive a high level of recognition.

    We decided that this was the time to incorporate the new level – The FINALISTS – as requested by the CIBA judges. This new level will be incorporated into the 2019 CIBAs Levels of Achievement.  The FINALISTS were selected from the entries that advanced to the 2019 JOURNEY Semi-Finalists level. 

    The following works have advanced to the FINALIST position of the 2019 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction & Memoirs!

    Congratulations to:

    • Anna Carner – Blossom ~ The Wild Ambassador of Tewksbury
    • Linda Gartz – Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
    • Julie MacNeil – The 50-Year Secret
    • Steffanie Strathdee and Thomas Patterson – The Perfect Predator: A Scientist’s Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug
    • Lance Brewer – Back Story Alaska
    • Eva Doherty Gremmert – Our Time To Dance
    • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
    • Nikki West – The Odyssey of the Chameleon
    • Nancy Canyon – STRUCK: A Memoir
    • Rebecca Faye Smith Galli – Rethinking Possible: A Memoir of Resilience
    • J. Bronson Haley – The Depth of Grace: Finding Hope at Rock Bottom    
    • Julie L. Seely – Skinny House -A Memoir of Family 

    Congratulations to all whose works have advanced to the FINALISTS level. 

    All Semi-Finalists and Finalists will be recognized at the 2020 Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2019 CIBA banquet and ceremony.

    Good luck to all as your works move on the next rounds of judging for the limited 2019 1st Place Category Positions and the 2019 Journey Book Awards Grand Prize.

    The 2019 JOURNEY Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Position award winners along with the Finalists and  Semi-Finalists will be recognized at the Sept 5, 2020 Chanticleer International Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference,  Bellingham, Wash. 

    Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, CAC20 has been rescheduled from the original date in April to September 4 – 6, 2020 with Master Classes to be held on Thursday, September 3. The CIBA Banquet and Ceremony is scheduled for Saturday, September 5, 2020.

    You know that you want one–A CIBA Blue Ribbon!

    Journey Narrative Non-FictionWe are now accepting submissions into the 2020 JOURNEY Book  Awards Narrative Non-fiction competition. The deadline for submissions is April 30th, 2020. The winners will be announced April 2021.

    Please click here for more information.  

  • The Semi-Finalists Announcement for the JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir – a division of the 2019 CIBAs-

    The Journey Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Narrative Non-Fiction and Memoir. The Journey Book  Awards is a genre division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and Novel Competitions (CIBAs).

     

     

    Chanticleer International Book Awards is looking for the best books featuring true stories about adventures, life events, unique experiences, travel, personal journeys, global enlightenment, and more. We will put books about true and inspiring stories to the test and choose the best among them.

    Editor’s Note: Some works have been moved to the new non-fiction division titled the Nellie Bly Book Awards. This new division is in response to the request from the Chanticleer International Book Awards judges to acknowledge the many outstanding works that were entered into the Instruction & Insight Book Awards and the Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction. The Nellie Bly Book Awards recognize outstanding journalistic works and investigative pieces.  After reviewing the comments from the judges along with their suggestions, we decided to recognize these works and create a more fitting division in the CIBAs — the Nellie Bly Book Awards

    The following works have advanced to the 2019 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction & Memoirs Semi-Finals!

    • Anna Carner – Blossom ~ The Wild Ambassador of Tewksbury
    • Rebecca Faye Smith Galli – Rethinking Possible: A Memoir of Resilience
    • Donna Hill – Yes, The World Is Round
    • Linda Gartz – Redlined: A Memoir of Race, Change, and Fractured Community in 1960s Chicago
    • J. Bronson Haley – The Depth of Grace: Finding Hope at Rock Bottom
    • Julie MacNeil – The 50-Year Secret
    • Whitney Ellenby – Autism Uncensored: Pulling Back the Curtain
    • Dena Moes – The Buddha Sat Right Here: A Family Odyssey Through India and Nepal
    • Nancy Canyon – STRUCK: A Memoir
    • Carol E. Anderson – You Can’t Buy Love Like That: Growing Up Gay in the Sixties
    • Steffanie Strathdee and Thomas Patterson – The Perfect Predator: A Scientist’s Race to Save Her Husband from a Deadly Superbug
    • Juliet Cutler – Among the Maasai
    • Andy Chaleff – The Last Letter
    • Rod Baker – I Need my Yacht by Friday – True Tales from the Boat Repair Yard
    • Lance Brewer – Back Story Alaska
    • Lisa Dailey – Square Up
    • Julie L. Seely – Skinny House -A Memoir of Family
    • Eva Doherty Gremmert – Our Time To Dance
    • John Hoyte – Persistence of Light
    • Nikki West – The Odyssey of the Chameleon

    Good luck to all as your works compete for the First Place Category positions.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to the 2019 JOURNEY Book Awards LONG LIST and have advanced to the 2019 JOURNEY Shortlist. Some works were moved to the new Nellie Bly Book Awards division at the request of the judges. These Short Listers have advanced to the Semi-Finalists positions. The Semi-Finalists will compete for the limited First Place Category Winners in the final rounds of judging. All Semi-Finalists will be recognized at CAC20.  The First Place Category Winners, along with the division Grand Prize winners, will be announced at the CIBAs Banquet and Ceremony on Saturday, April 18th, 2020 at the luxurious Hotel Bellwether in Bellingham, Wash.

    The 2019 CIBA winners will be announced at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners.

    Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    Chanticleer Authors Conference April 17th-19th 2020
    Chanticleer Authors Conference 2020

     

    We are now accepting entries into the 2020 Journey Book Awards, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at Info@ChantiReviews.com. 

     

  • JOURNEY BOOK AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction – the Grand Prize Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    JOURNEY BOOK AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction – the Grand Prize Winner and First Place Category Winners – 2018 CIBAs

    The JOURNEY BOOK AWARDS for Narrative Non-Fiction, a division of the Chanticleer International Book Awards.

    We are excited and honored to officially announce the Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category Winners for the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and the 2018 Chanticleer International Book Awards ceremony. This year’s ceremony and banquet were held on Saturday, April 27th, 2019 at the Hotel Bellwether by beautiful Bellingham Bay, Wash.

    We want to thank all of those who entered and participated in the  2018 Journey Book Awards.

    Susan Marie Conrad, the author of the previous Journey Grand Prize Winner, INSIDE: One Woman’s Journey Through the Inside Passageannounced the First Place Award Winners and the Grand Prize Winner for the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards at the Chanticleer International Book Awards Banquet and ceremony.  

    PublishDrive and Hindenburg Systems awarded additional prizes to the 2018 JOURNEY Book Award winners. Thank you!

     

    2018 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Nonfiction First in Category Winners

     

    • A Quest for Tears: Overcoming a Traumatic Brain Injury by Sean Dwyer
    • From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream by Janice S. Ellis
    • SoulStroller: experiencing the weight, whispers, & wings of the world by Kayce Stevens Hughlett
    • No Tougher Duty, No Greater Honor – a memoir of a Mortuary Affairs Marine by GySgt L. Christian Bussler
    • Goodbye to Main Street by Dennis M. Clausen
    • HENRY: A Polish Swimmer’s True Story of Friendship from Auschwitz to America by Katrina Shawver
    • The Day the Musick Died by Cheryl Hughes Musick     

    Honorable Mention:  The Loose Ends Become Knots by Austin M. Hopkins

    Congratulations to the First Place Category Winners of the 2018 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction

    And now for the JOURNEY Book Awards Grand Prize Winner

    From Liberty to Magnolia: In Search of the American Dream by Janice S. Ellis took home the 2018 JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction Grand Prize Ribbon! 

     

    An email will go out to all First Place Category Winners and Grand Prize Winners with more information, the timing of awarded reviews, links to digital badges, and more before May 31st, 2019 (approximately four weeks after the awards ceremony). Please look for it in your email inbox.

    When we receive the digital photographs from the Official CAC19 professional photographer, Dwayne Rogge of Photo Treehouse, we will post the photographs of the JOURNEY winners on this page.

    Click here for the link to the 2018 JOURNEY Semi-Finalists.

    This post will be updated with photos and more information. Please do visit it again!

    The deadline for submissions has been extended for the  2019 JOURNEY Book Awards is May 15, 2019 Midnight (PST).

    Our next Chanticleer International Book Awards Ceremony will be held on Saturday, April 18th, 2020, for the 2019 CIBA winners. Enter your book or manuscript in a contest today!

    As always, please do not hesitate to contact us with any questions, concerns, or suggestions at Info@ChantiReviews.com. 

     

  • IMMUNITY: Entitlement of Wealthy Political Notables by Donna LeClair – Biography, White Collar Crime, Child Abuse

    IMMUNITY: Entitlement of Wealthy Political Notables by Donna LeClair – Biography, White Collar Crime, Child Abuse

    Immunity, the latest offering by award-winning author Donna LeClair, recounts one woman’s struggles to maintain her sanity during a long nightmarish sojourn among the wealthy and powerful.

    Emma, a sixty-something Midwesterner, signs on as a personal assistant to the family of David and Pauline Gram and their four children, in a far off land that Emma comes to think of as “Hollow Wood.” She is told that anything the family does is okay and strictly confidential. On Day One Emma watches as Pauline consumes an illegal substance and tosses her a few hundred-dollar bills to purchase enough pasteurized goat’s milk for Pauline’s bathing pool. When she meets Luke, the only male heir to the Gram fortune (his twin having been forcibly aborted to guarantee he’d have no competition), she sees that he is cute, chipper and totally unaware of anyone’s needs but his own. Her first car ride with David is terrifying as he drives in the emergency lane at top speed and when stopped by the highway patrol, makes it clear that he can’t be given a ticket. In the Grams’ world, it’s not so much who you know but who you own.

    Trying to control her reactions to this selfish splendor, Emma discovers aspects of life with the Grams that are even worse than she could have possibly imagined. Pauline’s vast wardrobe never includes any outfit worn more than twice. David makes connubial visits to his wife, whom he keeps looking like a teenager by paying for the magic of the surgeon’s knife, on a strict schedule. Both parents snort, smoke and sip the best addictive substances, and when Emma hears the precise nature of their drug-related activities, she fears for her own safety. A romance keeps her temporarily soothed, but Emma will soon have to choose between her caring for the family and her culpability as a witness to their many nefarious dealings.

    LeClair is a prodigious wordsmith who uses the writing craft to good effect. Whether it is a drug-induced temper flare-up, the destruction of a motel room, or a brief erotic interlude, the author weaves a rich tapestry. She has made fiction, it seems, of a painfully recalled set of reminiscences, changing the names to protect the innocent and avoid the wrath of the guilty. She examines the word “immunity” in its many guises:  protection from penalty, entitlement of the very wealthy and well-connected, exemption from “an old love,” denial of responsibility, and “declaration protecting honorably truth.”

    Through Emma’s eyes, we see all of these definitions playing out. By stepping into daily life as the Gram family understands it, Emma must make sacrifices that she may later regret. Thankfully, LeClair has ensured an ending that will give Emma the new chance she deserves and take away some of the weapons of power wielded by the Grams and their ilk.

    Immunity won First Place in the 2017 CIBAs, in the JOURNEY AWARDS for narrative nonfiction.