Tag: Narrative Non-Fiction Writing Competition

  • 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. 

     

  • Cami Ostman – psychotherapist, editor, writing coach

    Cami Ostman – psychotherapist, editor, writing coach

    Cami Ostman holds a B.Ed. in English from Western Washington University and an M. S. in Marriage and Family Therapy from Seattle Pacific University. She is the author of Second Wind: One Woman’s Midlife Quest to Run Seven Marathons on Seven Continents, co-editor of Beyond Belief: The Secret Lives of Women in Extreme Religions, a contributor to Adventures Northwest and to her own blog, 7marathons7continents.com. Cami is also the founder of Red Wheelbarrow Writers, a community of writers in Western Washington and a blogger for psychologtoday.com. She has been profiled in Fitness Magazine and her books have been reviewed in O Magazine, The Atlantic, and Washington Post. Having spent fifteen years as a psychotherapist, and now serving as a writing coach and editor, Cami specializes in helping authors “figure out what they really have to say.” She is currently working on a novel and on her second quest memoir.

    Cami has long been interested in how the words we use to describe ourselves actually serve to CREATE our identities. Her experience in writing supports this, as does her work as a psychotherapist for the past fifteen years. When she wrote about turning herself into a runner on a quest to do a marathon on every continent, she became a runner on a quest to do a marathon on every continent.

    Cami will present the following sessions on Sunday, April 28th

    Making Money with Back End Programs: How to take the content of your non-fiction book and create programming people will pay you for.

    Master Mind Your Book: Using the Story Spine as a tool to move you forward when your writing gets stuck.
  • JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2017 Slush Pile Survivors

    JOURNEY Book Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction – 2017 Slush Pile Survivors

    The JOURNEY Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding Narrative Non-fiction works. The JOURNEY Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Reviews International Book Awards.

    Chanticleer Reviews International Book Awards also offers Non-Fiction Book Awards focusing on Instruction and Insight, Guides, How-To, and Self-help. Click here for more information.

    The following titles and their authors have made it past the initial “Slush-Pile Rounds” and will compete in the next rounds to see which titles will  be Short Listed for the 2017 Journey Book Awards.

    Good Luck to All! 

    • Kari Rhyan – Standby for Broadcast
    • Patricia Walkow – The War Within, the Story of Josef
    • Marilynne Eucgubger – Lives of Museum Junkies
    • Roni McFadden – The Longest Trail
    • Theresa Mathews – Fishing With Hyenas
    • Bruce Rettig – Refraction
    • Karen Elizabeth Lee – The Full Catastrophe: A Memoir
    • Pattie Welek Hall – A Mother’s Dance: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward, Full Circle
    • Alice Grant Bingner – Some Steps Back in Time
    • Dennis P Freed – Love Loss and Awakening
    • Donna LeClair/Emma Baker – Immunity
    • Susan Marie Conrad – Inside: One Woman’s Journey Through the Inside Passage
    • Judith Works – Coins in the Fountain
    • Valerie Gardener – Chapunza: Witch doctor, Ax-In-Head and Pink Baboons, Memoir of a Nurse in the African Bush
    • Lou Lesko – The Ghost of Communism
    • W. Hock Hochheim – Don’t Even Think About It
    • Dr. Scot Hodkiewicz – Getting to Heaven By Going Through Hell
    • Tommy Donovan – The Rail: What Was Really Doin’ in the 60’s Bronx
    • Deeann Callis Graham – Head-On, Stories of Alopecia
    • Kevin M Maher – No Couches in Korea
    • Rachel Thompson – Broken Places: a  Memoir
    • Frank Iszak – Freedom Flight
    • Joseph William Simmons – Dirty Motel Shenanigans

    These titles will compete to be SHORT LISTED in the next rounds.

    We are accepting entries into the 2018 Journey Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction works.

    To compete in the 2018 Journey Awards or for more information, please click here.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media, L.L.C. retains the right to not declare “default winners.” Winning works are decided upon merit only. Please visit our Contest Details page for more information about our writing contest guidelines.

    CBR’s rigorous writing competition standards are why literary agencies seek out our winning manuscripts and self-published novels. Our high standards are also why our reviews are trusted among booksellers and book distributors.

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com about any questions, concerns, or suggestions about CBR writing competitions. Your input and suggestions are important to us.

    Thank you for your interest in Chanticleer Book Reviews International Writing Competitions and Book Awards.

  • JOURNEY Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction First Place Category Winners 2016

    JOURNEY Awards for Narrative Non-Fiction First Place Category Winners 2016

    journey-126x1501.gifThe JOURNEY Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Awards International Writing Competitions.

    Congratulations to the 2016  JOURNEY Awards First Place Category Winners.

    Journey Award Winners: Nick K. Adams & Cyndy Shelton
    • Professional Experiences: Gestalt as a Way of Life by Cyndy Sheldon
    • Memoir: My Dear Wife and Children: Civil War Letters from a 2nd Minnesota Volunteer by Nick K. Adams
    • Enlightenment:  Cocoon of Cancer: An Invitation to Love Deeply by Abbe Rolnick
    • Self Help: The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves by Destiny Allison
    • Personal Experiences: The Silver Lining Encounters with Angels by Phoebe Walker

    cac16The Journey First Place  Category award winners  competed for the Journey Grand Prize Award for the 2016 Best Narrative Non-fiction work. The First Place Category Winners and the Overall Grand Prize Winner of the 2016 Journey Awards were announced at the annual awards banquet that was held on April 1, 2016 in Bellingham, Wash.

     

    Congratulations to Destiny Allison, the author of the JOURNEY Grand Prize Winner — The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves!

    We are now accepting entries into the 2017 JOURNEY Awards. The deadline is April 30, 2017 Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2016 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Fifteen different  genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

     

  • JOURNEY 2016 Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction – The SHORT LIST (Semi-Finalists)

    JOURNEY 2016 Book Awards for Narrative Non-fiction – The SHORT LIST (Semi-Finalists)

    The JOURNEY Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Awards & International Writing Competitions.

    We are pleased to announce the JOURNEY Awards Official Short-List (Semi-Finalists)  for 2016 for Narrative Non-fiction.

     

    Congratulations to the JOURNEY AWARDS 2016 Semi-Finalists and Good Luck to them as they compete for the First Place Category Positions.

    Chanticleer Short List

    The Official 2016 JOURNEY Awards SHORT – LISTERS:

    • L. Darlene – Another Thirty-(Seven) Days (The Aftermath)
    • Gretchen Walker – The Silver Lining Encounters With Angels
    • Judy Lytle – A Mile in Her Shoes
    • Destiny Allison – The Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves
    • Hazel J. Magnussen – The Moral Work of Nursing: Asking and Living with the Questions
    • Abbe Rolnick – Cocoon of Cancer: An Invitation to Love Deeply
    • Nick K. Adams – My Dear Wife and Children: Civil War Letters from a 2nd Minnesota Volunteer
    • Phillip Buchanon – New Money: Staying Rich
    • Robin Suerig Holleran, Lindy Philip – Bracing for Impact: True Tales of Air Disasters and the People Who Survived Them
    • Monica Sucha Vickers – My Extraordinary Life
    • Cyndy Sheldon – Gestalt as a Way of Life 
    • Richard Southall – Haunted Plantations of the South
    • Roni McFadden – The Longest Trail

    Good luck to all the Journey Awards Semi- Finalists who made the Short List as they compete for the First Place Category Positions.

    More than $30,000 dollars in cash and prizes are awarded to Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Winners annually.

    The 2016 Journey Short Listers will then compete for 5 First Place Category positions that will be announced and awarded on April 1, 2017 at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash. All Short Listers in attendance of CAC17 will be given recognized at the awards ceremony and will be given special badges to wear at the conference.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2017 JOURNEY Awards. The deadline is February 28, 2017. Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2016 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Check out out fifteen genres to enter your works into to compete on an international level and distinguish your books from the two million new titles hitting the market this year.

  • The Breast is History: An Intimate Memoir of Breast Cancer by Bronwyn Hope – Inspirational Non-Fiction

    The Breast is History: An Intimate Memoir of Breast Cancer by Bronwyn Hope – Inspirational Non-Fiction

    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.

    When she was first diagnosed, a close friend advised her to start a blog, something very far from her mind at that moment. But, her friend reasoned, she could inspire others with her story. This was not a fanciful idea, given that Bronwyn was and is a powerhouse—an avid athlete, media maven, entrepreneur, activist, mother, and writer. She took her friend’s advice and this book is the result, a sometimes day-by-day journal of her battle with a disease she admits we often think of as a death sentence.

    Through the blog and, one suspects, because of her generally extroverted nature, Bronwyn discovered a very positive aspect of her illness: the immediate outpouring of warmth, good wishes, gifts and visits from a host of friends and family members. But as time passed, and her treatments, especially chemo, took their toll, she records many days of lonely suffering, struggling with nausea, pain in every part of her body, the loss of all body hair, and feelings of profound weakness and despair.  Yet she constantly, remarkably, tries to recoup her pre-cancer strength and endurance.

    A visit to a Catholic church and a later whirlwind trip to India provide spiritual insights. During her own cancer challenge, Bronwyn’s sister Fiona was also diagnosed with cancer. Helping Fiona through what she had already experienced became a sustaining factor for Bronwyn.

    The author does not shy away from tough issues, or from the occasional use of profanity when appropriate. She displays a secure knowledge of many complex medications and their effects and side effects. By detailing how her illness progressed, she provides a guideline for others. Her account is not without humor: she had been a large-breasted woman and had named her breasts Nicky and Paris. Nicky was the first to go, early on, and Paris about two years later. Photographs show the author with her once-straight hair, then hairless (with husband and dog getting a shave in sympathy) and then with the incongruously curly hair that grew in later.

    There will be no doubt as one reads this honest account, that Hope has walked the walk and is also very capable of talking the talk. Her wisdom, based on a long, harrowing experience, is anything but saccharine. She concludes, “I am not angry or depressed or saddened by what cancer has taken away from me. I am instead, empowered and strengthened by what it has given me: lessons that are priceless.”

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs by H. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd – Non-Fiction/Memoir

    The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs by H. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd – Non-Fiction/Memoir

    Thousands of wild mustangs now have a sanctuary to call home thanks to one man: H. Alan Day. This is his story.

    Perhaps you’ve heard of a horse whisperer: a person who gently and patiently communicates with an animal. Multiply that by 1,500 and you have H. Alan Day, a cattle rancher from the southwest turned horse herder who takes on what would seem to be an unimaginably huge project.

    The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild Mustangs, is Day’s story of Mustang Meadows Ranch in the Sand Hills of South Dakota, the first government-sponsored wild horse sanctuary established in the United States.

    In beautifully vivid prose, Day transports us to the prairie, as in this passage: “The sun highlighted the horses, now twelve hundred strong, creating a canvas of golds, bronzes, beiges, blacks, and deep browns that stretched out before me.”

    Day’s youth played a critical role in his success and interest with horses as he grew up on a 200,000-acre cattle ranch straddling the high deserts of southern Arizona and New Mexico. After college, he returned to manage Lazy B, the family ranch, for the next 40 years. Later, he (hesitantly) purchased 35,000 acres in South Dakota and dedicated it as a horse preserve for 1,500 wild mustangs. Relying on a herd medication program he used at Lazy B, he trained the group of mustangs, those considered unadoptable, to follow a lead horse from the wild through the gates and into the horse meadow.

    However, it wasn’t always easy. Initially, Day scoffed at the idea. “Come on, wild horses? I was a cattle rancher…”

    Thanks to a heartfelt and informative introduction by his sister, Sandra Day O’Connor (the first female US Supreme Court Justice who retired in 2008 after 25 years on the bench), we learn that wild mustangs, formerly running free, breeding and multiplying, were being captured, sold, or destroyed. The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) took care of many of them; however, the remainder was considered unadoptable.

    Day remained stalwart facing dangers, frustrations, and heartbreak and had to deal with government red tape. Through his eloquent and moving story, he shows us the resolve and passion required for undertaking South Dakota ranching.

    It’s no surprise Horse Lover is well written and poignant; in 2002, Day partnered with his sister to co-author the family memoir, “Lazy B: Growing Up on a Cattle Ranch in the American Southwest,” which went on to become a New York Times bestseller.

    Horse lovers will not want to miss this book – and witness the magic of thousands of horses running wild. The rest of us will marvel at what Day was able to accomplish in this story of loyalty and hope.

  • November Spotlight: The Somerset Awards Bring a Satisfying Conclusion to the Submissions Deadlines for the 2016 Contest Year

    November Spotlight: The Somerset Awards Bring a Satisfying Conclusion to the Submissions Deadlines for the 2016 Contest Year

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    November is bringing a conclusion to the calendar year and to our contest year. It’s time to submit your work to the Somerset Awards for Contemporary, Mainstream and Literary Fiction. Get your manuscripts ready! The deadline is November 30.

    The Somerset Awards – A Satisfactory Conclusion to the Chanticleer Conference Year

    Mainstream Contemporary Fiction AwardsThe Somerset Awards are the traditional end to the Chanticleer contest year. These awards are an interesting mix of genres coming together under one roof for a literary Thanksgiving dinner. Literary Fiction, Mainstream Fiction and Contemporary Fiction are all related but distinct in their own ways. Literary works are non-genre, elegantly written and often focus on deep characterization. Mainstream works are stories that don’t easily fit into a specific genre but also tend toward artful prose, sometimes called literary light. Contemporary stories are primarily defined by being stories set in modern times, with settings and events that could realistically occur, but that do not fit within any particular genre. Some of the categories in the Somerset Awards are: Adventure/Suspense,  Women’s Fiction (for those that don’t fit within the romance genre), Satire, and Magic Realism. The Somerset Awards are a cornucopia of these stories and we are looking forward to feasting our eyes on them.

    We are honored to name the Literary, Mainstream, and Contemporary Novel Writing Competition division of the  Chanticleer International Novel Writing Awards the SOMERSET AWARDS.

    William Somerset Maugham (pronounced MAWm), born January 25 1875 and died December 16, 1965, was one of the most popular and highly paid authors of the 1930s. During the WWI he served in the ambulance corps and then was recruited into the British Secret Service. He traveled widely, most notably to India, Southeast Asia, and Russia before the 1917 revolution, which influenced his writing. He was a contemporary of Hemingway, E. E. Cummings, William Faulkner, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Evelyn Waugh.

    Maugham is known for his writing’s diversity that consists of plays, short stories, and distinctive novel genres that have been adapted to film. He is well known for The Razor’s Edge, Of Human Bondage, The Moon and Sixpence, Cakes and Ale, The Magician, Rain, The Painted Veil, and his first work: Liza of Lambeth. He has twenty novels to his credit, twenty-five plays, and sixteen collections of short stories.

    Here are a few of tidbits of Somerset Maugham’s wisdom:

    • There are three rules for writing a novel. Unfortunately, no one knows what they are.
    • The ability to quote is a serviceable substitute for wit. 
    • Every production of an artist should be the expression of an adventure of his soul.  
    • I always find it more difficult to say the things I mean than the things I don’t.
    • The fact that a great many people believe something is no guarantee of its truth.
    • When I read a book I seem to read it with my eyes only, but now and then I come across a passage, perhaps only a phrase, which has a meaning for me, and it becomes part of me.
    • We do not write because we want to; we write because we have to.
    • I write only when inspiration strikes. Fortunately it strikes every morning at nine o’clock sharp.
    • If you can tell stories, create characters, devise incidents, and have sincerity and passion, it doesn’t matter a damn how you write.

    The Somerset Awards History of Winners:

    2015

    The Alexandrite by Rick Lenz won the Somerset Award category for Magic Realism and then went on to take home the 2015 Somerset Grand Prize. 

    Time-travel Noir becomes High Art with a wicked sense of humor in this fast-paced novel that offers up alternate views of Hollywood’s past and present….The Alexandrite by Rick Lenz playfully challenges the reader to ask questions about a world that exists outside of the four dimensions in which we live. A must-read for anyone and everyone who has been touched by the magic of Hollywood.

    Rick Lenz is a jack-of-all-trades in show business: actor, artist, and author. He has acted alongside many of the biggest names on stage and screen, and his prismatic role playing parlayed over to the pen with a successful string of plays from Off-Broadway to PBS. When Lenz is not riding away on his next kaleidoscopic quest, he can be found painting, playing the piano, or reading at home with his beloved wife, Linda.

    2014

    The Manipulator by Steve LundinThe Manipulator by Steve London won the Somerset Award category for Satire and then went on to take home the 2014 Somerset Grand Prize.

    With a fast-paced story line and a rich cast of characters, this award-winning winning novel offers a uniquely hilarious, but scary, perspective on the how the businesses of public relations and marketing can take technology to its precipice to take advantage of a media addicted public. Lundin’s clever blending of fact and fiction alternately tempts and taunts the reader with Vlad’s prophetic question, “Are you comfortable with the edge?” Highly recommended.

    Steve Lundin is the humor column for MediaPost’s Marketing Daily and has written for the Chicago Tribune, International Watch and a variety of aviation publications.   He is a writer, cartoonist, photographer, videographer, designer, amateur sociologist, pop culture expert/collector, scuba diver, motorcyclist and aviator in the making.  And he knows a few things about marketing, having consulted for nearly 100 companies from Fortune 50 to a couple of guys in a garage with a business plan.

    2013

    Individually Wrapped by Jeremy Bullian won the Somerset Award category for Speculative Fiction and then went on to win the 2013 Somerset Awards Grand Prize.

    Individually Wrapped tells us the bizarre tale of Sam Gregory’s descent over the condensed course of a couple of days. Set in a 21st century futuristic city, technology has permeated every aspect of the city dwellers’ lives. In some ways things are more efficient: cars drive themselves, doors open on voice command, money is exchanged via thumbprints. None of the technologies presented are far-fetched; many exist today.

    Jeremy Bullian is an Assistant Professor Librarian at Hillsborough Community College. He has a strong interest in emerging technologies in librarianship but also more broadly in terms of how these new technologies affect us as individuals and as a society. He lives in Tampa, Florida with his family where he is a librarian, writer, and musician. He is currently working on a follow-up to Individually Wrapped.

     2012

    Rain Shine Secrets by Alice T. Robb, manuscript won a Chanticleer Review award for best manuscript, women’s fiction category, in 2012.  This book should be ready for publication within the next year or two.  It is about an old woman with Alzheimer’s who gets lost in Seattle for several days.  She is befriended by a homeless woman.  Meanwhile her grandson and his wife, who live with her, are caught up in their search for her, while also coping with their own complex relationship.

    SEE YOUR NOVEL in the SPOTLIGHT!

    All you have to do is to enter your manuscript or published novel into one of the genre divisions of the Chanticleer International Novel Writing Awards.

    The November 30th deadline for the SOMERSET submissions is going to be here before you know it.

    Don’t miss this opportunity to earn distinction for your novel. Enter our contests today!

    All category winners have the opportunity to attend our spring Award Gala ceremony that takes place during the 2017 Chanticleer Authors Conference where they will be whisked up on stage to receive their ribbon in a magical evening including dinner, networking opportunities, and celebrations–not to mention free reviews, and the chance to win the grand prizes and cash![/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container][fusion_builder_container background_color=”” background_image=”” background_parallax=”none” enable_mobile=”no” parallax_speed=”0.3″ background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” video_url=”” video_aspect_ratio=”16:9″ video_webm=”” video_mp4=”” video_ogv=”” video_preview_image=”” overlay_color=”” overlay_opacity=”0.5″ video_mute=”yes” video_loop=”yes” fade=”no” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding_top=”20px” padding_bottom=”20px” padding_left=”0px” padding_right=”0px” hundred_percent=”no” equal_height_columns=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” menu_anchor=”” class=”” id=””][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_title size=”2″ content_align=”left” style_type=”single solid” sep_color=”transparent” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” class=”” id=””]What are the Somerset Awards?[/fusion_title][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”3_5″ last=”no” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” hover_type=”none” link=”” border_position=”all” border_size=”0px” border_color=”” border_style=”” padding=”” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ animation_offset=”” class=”” id=””][fusion_text]Mainstream Contemporary Fiction AwardsOur Somerset Awards are the Chanticleer Reviews search for the best Literary, Mainstream or Contemporary books of 2016!

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring contemporary stories, literary themes, adventure, satire, humor, magic realism or women and family themes, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”2_5″ last=”yes” spacing=”yes” center_content=”no” hide_on_mobile=”no” background_color=”” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” background_position=”left top” hover_type=”none” link=”” border_position=”all” border_size=”1px” border_color=”#606060″ border_style=”solid” padding=”10px” margin_top=”” margin_bottom=”” animation_type=”” animation_direction=”” animation_speed=”0.1″ animation_offset=”” class=”” id=””][fusion_text]

    Our Chanticleer Review Writing Contests feature more than $30,000.00 worth of cash and prizes each year! 

    ~$1,000 Overall Grand Prize Winner Purse
    ~$2,800 in Genre Grand Prizes Purses
    ~$28,980 in reviews, prizes, and promotional opportunities awarded to Category Winners

    [/fusion_text][fusion_button link=”https://www.chantireviews.com/services#!/Contemporary-&-Mainstream-Novel-Writing-Contest/p/21521214/category=5193080″ color=”darkgray” size=”” stretch=”” type=”” shape=”” target=”_blank” title=”” gradient_colors=”|” gradient_hover_colors=”|” accent_color=”” accent_hover_color=”” bevel_color=”” border_width=”1px” icon=”” icon_position=”left” icon_divider=”no” modal=”” animation_type=”0″ animation_direction=”left” animation_speed=”1″ animation_offset=”” alignment=”center” class=”” id=””]Enter Somerset Awards[/fusion_button][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container][fusion_builder_container hundred_percent=”yes” overflow=”visible”][fusion_builder_row][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_text]

    Don’t delay. Enter today! 

    [/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • The JOURNEY AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction Book Awards 2016 Official Finalist List

    The JOURNEY AWARDS for Narrative Non-fiction Book Awards 2016 Official Finalist List

     journey-126x1501.gifThe JOURNEY Awards writing competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Narrative Non-fiction. The Journey Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Book Awards & International Writing Competitions.

    We are pleased to announce the JOURNEY Awards Official Finalists List for 2016,The Official Finalists Listing is comprised of works that have passed the first two rounds of judging from the entire field of entrants. These authors and their titles will now compete for the SHORT-LIST of the 2016 Journey Awards for Narrative Non-fiction.

    NOTE: This list is now Complete as of January 28, 2017. Congrats and good luck everyone.

    Congratulations to the JOURNEY AWARDS 2016 FINALISTS and Good Luck to them as they compete for the Short List Positions:

    • Roni McFadden – The Longest Trail
    • Richard SouthallHaunted Plantations of the South
    • Cyndy Sheldon –  Gestalt as a Way of Life
    • Sean-Michael GreenThe Things I Learned in College
    • Monica Sucha VickersMy Extraordinary Life
    • Robin Suerig Holleran, Lindy PhilipBracing for Impact: True Tales of Air Disasters and the People Who Survived Them
    • Michael Anthony Turpin53 Is The New 38
    • Phillip BuchanonNew Money: Staying Rich
    • Sean Dwyer The Year without Tears
    • Nick K. AdamsMy Dear Wife and Children: Civil War Letters from a 2nd Minnesota Volunteer
    • Abbe RolnickCocoon of Cancer: An Invitation to Love Deeply
    • Christopher OelerichMerry Christmas and a Happy PTSD
    • Viviana AgostiniThe True Sense of Life
    • Gretchen WalkerThe Silver Lining: Encounters with Angels
    • Christie MussoHope Knows Your Name
    • Hazel J. MagnussenThe Moral Work of Nursing: Asking and Living with the Questions
    • Destiny AllisonThe Romance Diet: Body Image and the Wars We Wage on Ourselves
    • L. Darlene Another Thirty-(Seven) Days (The Aftermath)
    • Scott KiersztynMetamorphosis, Notes from a stay-at-home dad naturalist
    • J.E. RothA Fine Line
    • Judy LytleA Mile in Her Shoes
    • Gwen MillerEchoes of Silence: Letters to a Drug Addicted Mother from the Woman Who Took Her Place
    • Peter GibbWalking Straight, Down A Crooked Path

    Good luck to all the Journey Awards Finalists who made the Finalist List as they compete to be Short Listed!

    More than $30,000 dollars in cash and prizes are awarded to Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Winners annually.

    cac17 logoThe Journey Short Listers will then compete for 5 First Place  Category positions that will be announced  and awarded on April 1, 2017 at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash.

    The First In Category award winners will receive an book award package including a complimentary book review, digital book award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

    We are now accepting entries into the 2017 JOURNEY Awards. The deadline is January 31st, 2017.  Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2016 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Check out out fifteen genres to enter your works into to compete on an international level and distinguish your books from the two million new titles hitting the market this year.

    Who will take home the $1,000 purse this coming April at the Chanticleer Awards Gala and Banquet?