Tag: New Adult

  • The SOMERSET 2014 AWARDS First Place Category Winners for Literary and Blended Genre Fiction

    The SOMERSET 2014 AWARDS First Place Category Winners for Literary and Blended Genre Fiction

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the SOMERSET  AWARDS 2014 for Literary and Blended Genre Fiction, a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions.

    SomersetThe SOMERSET Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in Literary and Blended Genre Fiction. The First Place Category Winners will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala held in late September 2015.

     

     

     

    Congratulations to The SOMERSET FIRST PLACE Category 2014 Award Winners:

    • Social Issues:  Thomas McNeely for Ghost Horse
    • Satire: Steve Lundin for The Manipulator, a Private Life in Public Relations
    • Literary: Tom Glenn for No-Accounts, Dare Mighty Things
    • Contemporary: Judith Kirscht for Home Fires
    • New Adult: Tanya Fife for Lost and Found in Missing Lake 
    • YA/Juvenile Fiction:  E. F. Winters for Memeloose, The Island of the Dead
    • Adventures/Suspense: Jim Hennigan  for Recording a Kill
    • International Intrigue: Rian Everest for The Tangerine Trio
    • Mainstream: Nancy Adair for Soon Coming
    • Women’s Fiction: Jessica H. Stone for The Last Outrageous Woman
    • Blended Literary Fiction: Michael Olin-Hitt for The Homegoing 

    Honorary Mentions:

    • Enid Harlow for Good to Her
    • Thomas Whaley for Leaving Montana
    • Kate McKenna for True Stories of Local Heroes
    • Angela Brackeen for Lark, in Her Element
    • Laurie Fitzpatrick for Niello
    • Michael Hurley for The Vineyard
    • Ken Swarmer for Family of the Year

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    To view the 2014 Somerset Finalists whose works made it to the short list, please click here.

    Good Luck to the Somerset First Place Category Winners as they compete for the Somerset AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the SOMERSET AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2014 SOMERSET category winner was announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala in September 2015. See the Grand Prize Winners.

    The deadline for The SOMERSET Awards 2014 was November 30, 2014.
    The deadline for The SOMERSET Awards 2015 is November 30, 2015.

    GRAND PRIZE Overall SOMERSET  Awards 2013 Winner was:

    Jeremy Bullia for Individually Wrapped

    The OVERALL CHANTICLEER GRAND PRIZE WINNER for 2013 came from the Somerset Awards: Michael Hurley for The Prodigal

    To view the 2013 SOMERSET Award Winners, please click here.

    To enter the 2015 SOMERSET  Awards, please click here. The deadline is November  30, 2015.

    To enter your work into a Chanticleer Writing Competition, please click here. 

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

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com with 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.

  • The CHATELAINE 2014 AWARDS for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Finalists

    The CHATELAINE 2014 AWARDS for Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Finalists

    The Chatelaine Awards recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction Novels. The Chatelaine Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Awards International Writing Competitions.

    chatelaineWe are pleased to announce the Chatelaine Awards Official Finalists List for 2014 Entries, otherwise known as the “Short List.” The Official Finalists Listing is comprised of entries that have passed the first three rounds of judging from  the entire field of entrants. To pass the first three rounds of judging, more than sixty pages of the works below  have been read and have deemed worthy by the CBR judges of continuing in competition for the Chatelaine FIRST IN CATEGORY positions and their prize packages.

    Congratulations to the CHATELAINE AWARDS 2014 FINALISTS:

    • Isabella Hargreaves  for The Persuasion of  Miss Jane Brody
    • Kathy Bryson for Feeling Lucky 
    • Sarah Katz for Hidden Miracles
    • Catherine A. Wilson and Catherine T. Wilson for The Order of the Lily 
    • Danica Winters for  Montana Mustangs 
    • Jennifer Snow for The Trouble with Mistletoe 
    • Dr. Evan Mahoney for Nongae of Love and Courage 
    • Kaylin McFarren for Buried Threads
    • Deborah Hining for A Sinner in Paradise 
    • Kerryn Reid for Learning to Waltz
    • Peggy Patrick for Surrendered II
    • K.C. Simos  for Ambrosia Chronicles: The Discovery
    • Donna Barker for Mother Teresa’s Advice for Jilted Lovers
    • Diane Green  for Dragon Wife
    • Nadine Christine for Quintal’s Return; Home Again, Home Again; and Remembering Love
    • Ashlinn  Craven  for  Maybe Baby 
    • A. Clarke Scott for A Dissimulation of Doves 
    • Noelle Clark  for Rosamanti 
    • Jamie A. Waters  for The Two Towers
    • Martha Rather for Kismet or Kamasutra  
    • Nancy Marie Bell for Christmas Storm
    • Janet K. Shawgo  for Find Me Again 
    • Betty Codd for Eleanor Grace  
    • Julie LeMense for Once Upon a Wager
    • Kristine Cayne  for Deadly Betrayal 
    • K.C. Berg for  Fallen Angel
    • E.E. Burke for Her Bodyguard
    • Debra Pickett for Reporting Lives
    • Gita Simic and G.T. Symms for As for Costanza
    • Eleanor Tatum for Swamp Home 
    • Cauleen Noël for The Changes Within Us
    • Lisa Souza for Beauty and the Bridesmaid
    • Patricia Sands  for The Promise of Provence 
    • Callie James for Innocent
    • Kim Sanders for The Ex Lottery
    • Jianna Higgins for Just Going and Just Wondering  
    • Sharon Struth for Share the Moon    
    • Kate Vale for Destiny’s Second Chance     
    • Colette Saucier for Viuda

    Good luck to all the Chatelaine Awards Finalists who made the Short List as they compete for the First In Category Positions!

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

    cac3The Chatelaine First in Category award winners will compete for the Chatelaine Grand Prize Award for Women’s/Romance Book 2014. Grand Prize winners, blue ribbons, and prizes will be announced and awarded on September 29th at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash.

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

    We are now accepting entries into the 2015 Chatelaine Awards. The deadline is August 31, 2015. Click here for more information or to enter.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2015 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Ten genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

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

    Last year’s Chanticleer Grand Prize winner was Michael Hurley for The Prodigal.

    Last year’s Chatelaine winner was Kate Vale for Choices

  • The DANTE ROSSETTI 2014 AWARDS for Young Adult Fiction Official First Category Winners

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the DANTE ROSSETTI AWARDS 2014 for Young Adult Fiction, a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions.

     

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti  Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Young Adult, T’weens, New Adult, & Children’s  fiction. The First Place Category Winners will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala held in late September 2015.

     

     

     

     

     

    The DANTE ROSSETTI FIRST PLACE 2014 Award Winners are:

    • Steampunk: Padgett Lively for Odette Speex: Time Traitors, Book 1
    • Contemporary: Gretchen Wing for The Flying Burgowski
    • CyberPunk: Jesikah Sundin for Legacy: The Biodome Chronicles, Book 1
    • Romance: Roni Teson for Twist
    • High Fantasy: S.A. Hunter for Elanraigh: The Vow
    • Blended Genre: Nely Cab for Fruit of Misfortune: Creatura Book 2
    • Science Fiction: Chris Pawlukiewicz for Dreams of a Red Horizon
    • Dystopian: Scott Smith for  An Outcast State
    • Mythological:  Stephanie Keyes for The Star Catcher
    • Lighthearted/Humorous:  Elizabeth Barlo: Ruth 66
    • New Adult:  Tiana Warner for Ice Massacre
    • Teen Fantasy: Elisabeth Hamill for Song Magick
    • Tweens : Mark Murphy  for The Curse of the Thrax
    • Children’s: Kirsten Pulioff for The Escape of Princess Madeline
    • Manuscript: Ben Hutchins for The Lackawanna Prophecies: Black Shadow
        
    • Honorable Mentions:  P. J. Martin for Riding with Crazy Horse (manuscript)

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    To view the Dante Rossetti 2014 Finalists  whose works made it to the short least.

    Good Luck to the Dante Rossetti First Place Category Winners as they compete for the Dante Rossetti Awards 2014 GRAND PRIZE position!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the DANTE ROSSETTI AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2014 DANTE ROSSETTI category winner was announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala in September 2015. See the Grand Prize Winners.

    The deadline for entry submissions into the Dante Rossetti Awards 2014 was April 30, 2014.
    The deadline for entry submissions into the the Dante Rossetti Awards 2015 was April 30, 2015.

    GRAND PRIZE Overall Dante Rossetti Awards 2013 Winner was:

     th_148175890X-100x1501.jpgTom and Nancy Wise  for Borealis Genome

    To view the 2013  Dante Rossetti  Award Winners, please click here.

    To enter the 2016 Dante Rossetti Awards, please click here. The deadline is April 30, 2016.

     

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

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com with 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.

  • The M&M Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Novels 2014 First Place Category Winners

    The M&M Awards for Mystery & Mayhem Novels 2014 First Place Category Winners

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is honored to announce the First Place Category Winners for the M&M Awards 2014 for Mystery & Mayhem Cozy Novels, a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions.

     mandm-126x150.jpgThe M&M Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of cozy mysteries novels. The First Place Category Winners will be recognized at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala held in late September 2015.

     

    The M&M  FIRST PLACE 2014 Award Winners are:

    •  Amateur Sleuth: Wendy Delaney for SEX, LIES, and SNICKERDOODLES
    • Romance: Janet Shawgo for FIND ME AGAIN
    • Animals: Pamela Beason for THE ONLY CLUE 
    • Blended Genre: Winslow Elliott for SATI and the RIDER 
    • Classic Cozy: Stephen Kaminski  for DON’T CRY OVER KILLED MILK
    • Female Sleuth: Julie Mulhern for The DEEP END
    • Humorous: Ann Philipp for GRAND THEFT DEATH
    • American Mystery: Amy Beth Arkawy for DEAD SILENT 
    • Classic British Cozy: Marni Graff for GREEN REMAINS 
    • Y/A/New Adult: Julie Moffett for NO PLACE LIKE ROME 
    • Senior Sleuths: Mark Reutlinger for MRS. KAPLAN and the MATZOH BALL of DEATH
    • Legal/Medical/Lab: Ken Malovos for CONTEMPT of COURT

    CONGRATULATIONS!

    Congratulations to all of the 2014 M&M Finalists Short List! This is a highly competitive writing competition and many of the calls were close. We invite you to enter your new works into the M&M 2016 Awards.

    Congratulations to those whose works were selected for First Place Category positions. Good Luck to the M&M First Place Category Winners as they compete for the M&M AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position!

    The 1st Place Category Winners compete for the M&M AWARDS 2014 GRAND PRIZE position. The 2014 M&M category winner was announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala in September 2015. See the Grand Prize Winners.

    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2014 was March 31, 2014.
    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2015 was March 31, 2015.
    • The deadline for entries for the M&M Awards 2016 is March 31, 2016.

    GRAND PRIZE Overall M&M Awards 2013 Winner was:

    2013-MM1.pngBerndatte Pajer, for Fatal Induction    

    To view the 2013 M&M Award Winners, please click here.

    To compete in the 2016 M&M Awards or for more information, please click here.

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

    Please do not hesitate to contact Info@ChantiReviews.com with 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.

     

  • NEWORLD PAPERS: The HISTORIAN’S TALE by KB Shaw

    NEWORLD PAPERS: The HISTORIAN’S TALE by KB Shaw

    A young man’s unique talents plunge him into the center of a revolutionary movement and force him to make decisions that could destroy his world, the peaceful Neworld with no concept of war or murder.

    In a world where all forms of history are forbidden, Fallon becomes the Historian for a new age using his power of observation to unlock long-buried secrets and reveal the truth about Neworld’s origin. But truth, no matter how noble, has teeth as well as limits and those limits are tested as Fallon is forced to choose between the status quo and the potential destruction of Neworld society.

    Through first-person narrative, K.B. Shaw’s engaging world-building novel introduces the reader to Fallon, a foundling who’s lived his first 17 “annums” as a ward at the Neworld school known as the “Mount.”

    Fallon’s inferior status places him in the servant’s quarters rather than the classroom but his unique set of abilities and his hunger for knowledge give him hope as he anticipates the arrival of his 18th annum – the date when he comes of age and claims his freedom.

    His hope is crushed when, days shy of his legal liberation, the head of the Mount “sells” him into what he fears is indentured servitude. In reality Fallon’s time at the school has been closely monitored. His talent for rendering detailed drawings from his perfect memory makes him an asset to the revolutionary Solarist Movement. Those same talents mark him as a danger to the Council, the ruling body of Neworld. Fallon’s fate is now in the in the hands of the Solarists, as much for his protection as for their use.

    In Neworld Papers Series 1: The Historian’s Tale the author has created a planet rich in textural detail from the native plants and creatures to the underground world where technology lies like treasure waiting to be unearthed. At times the pacing slows when Fallon is trying to make sense of objects and life forms that are foreign to him but using Fallon’s innocent and decidedly un-worldly point of view enables the reader to enjoy the journey and stand alongside Fallon as he encounters each new discovery with clear, unbiased eyes.

    Author K.B. Shaw effectively uses Neworld Papers as a platform for deeper thought by providing moral dilemmas that continue to challenge mankind, not the least of which is the question of how truth, freedom and control can intersect to create a functional society.

     Neworld Papers: The Historian is an engrossing Science Fiction novel with a thought provoking premise, awesome world building, and more than a dash of romance. An overall enjoyable read!

  • THE WATCHER by Lisa Voisin

    THE WATCHER by Lisa Voisin

    Mia Crawford is a vibrant, outgoing high school student in West Seattle with a close circle of friends. She shares most things in her life with them, but not the strange occurrences that keep her guessing her own sanity: cloudy dog-like creatures with menacing red eyes that chase her, voices cloaked in static, flickering lights, and even real people no one else sees. Mia’s family isn’t around much – Mom works a lot, her dad has a different life out of state, and her brother is away at college. She feels everything with deep intensity, as the smallest events trigger emotional responses landing on both ends of the spectrum.

    Two new boys arrive at her high school this year: the first is mysterious Michael, who experienced death after an accident but came back. He is beautiful, strong, and seems to show an interest in Mia, always showing up at just the right time. She quickly develops strong affections for him, but he does not reciprocate her feelings. Instead, he pushes her away, disappointing and confounding her, giving rise to her insecurities.

    Damiel, the other new boy, shows up dashing and debonair on his vintage motorcycle. All the girls swoon under his attention, and he pursues Mia persistently. Michael warns her to stay away from him, and she really doesn’t like Damiel. However, she is inexplicably drawn to him, in spite of being in love with Michael.

    Mia loves the study of ancient civilizations and literature. She lives out her painful crush through a classroom reading of Shakespeare’s Hamlet. Sometimes she has visions of another world, seeing at times a meadow, a loom, and large birds circling in a fight to the death. She also knows she has some kind of connection with Michael, and that he and Damiel have a history. But nothing could prepare her for knowing the truth of that history, and her role in it.

    Things become heated when Michael and Damiel confront each other in an other-worldly fight over Mia. When she finally discovers the truth, it sends her on a soul-searching journey of love and redemption, and into a supernatural battle of good and evil, involving angels and demons.

    Voisin transports us visually into Mia’s world with rich details, from places as mundane as a wall locker in a school corridor, to a thrilling winged flight high above the city. We ache with Mia for Michael’s touch when he is near, and feel Michael’s pain for resisting.

    The mundanity of high school life and petty spats gives way to an other-worldly realm with life and death significance. Mia and Michael have a tragic past that occurred before recorded history, resulting in Mia’s early death and Michael’s fall from his fold into hell and guilt-ridden remorse. Only Mia’s strength can save them in this lifetime; is she up to the task?

    The author draws from principles of many different sources, from the Bible and the Quran to Tarot cards, giving none any greater importance than the others, and without judgment.  The Watcher will keep you guessing, and feeling, and leave you with great hope.

     The Watcher by Lisa Voisin was awarded the Grand Prize Award for Paranormal Novels, a division of Chanticleer Reviews Novel Competitions.

  • BY the SWORD: SPOILS of OLYMPUS by Christian Kachel

    BY the SWORD: SPOILS of OLYMPUS by Christian Kachel

    By the Sword is an atmospheric and character driven coming-of-age story that takes place in the years immediately following the untimely death of Alexander the Great. The news of his death traveled quickly throughout the land. He was born to the King of Macedon and was tutored as a noble and later by Aristotle. When he died, his kingdom was one of the largest the ancient world had known—more than 2 million square miles. His unexpected death left a vacuum of power and chaos. Civil wars and power grabs from Alexander’s generals tore this great empire apart. This is when Kachel’s enthralling Hellenic military epic begins.

    Andrikos grew up during Alexander’s rule. Now everything has changed. The story begins in his village when he is an errant adolescent more interested in his next drink or round of sex. He is in no hurry to have the responsibilities of an adult. Kachel illustrates the ages-old influence that peers may have on young men and how they can affect them and their actions—changing their lives forever—for better or for worse. Young Andrikos hangs out with the wrong crowd and is swept up in their illicit behaviors and actions. He finds that he must flee his family and his home to save himself from an unintentional crime—forever changing him and his life.

    Andrikos has no real plans for his life. Suddenly he finds that the only option he has is to join the armies of Alexander to escape his past. However, he was unprepared for the brutal conditioning and the heartlessness of the recruiters whose job it is to ferret out the weak from the strong. Kachel vividly portrays these horrific and brutal experiences through the eyes and heart of Andrikos as he undergoes the physical and mental conditioning that is forced upon him and his fellow recruits. There is no turning back. The only way out is death or fight to live another day.

    Kachel captures what could happen when trained killers are left to their own devices and their own greed and bloodlust without guidance and a chain of command in this satisfying read. He also brings forward the importance of having a mentor can be to the young and inexperienced. Vettias is a confident and self-reliant warrior with a complicated background in gathering intelligence. He recognizes potential in Andrikos and takes on the mantle of becoming his mentor and teacher. Under Vettias’ guidance, Andrikos develops and matures into more than a foot soldier as he learns of honor and integrity, of treachery and deceit, and of friendship and loyalty.

    By the Sword is a well-researched military historical epic where Christian Kachel, the author, portrays the effect that chaotic, warring times have on women and children, on the weak and infirmed, and the men who are caught up in the violent and ruthless swells of battles, and then the heartrending aftermath that follows even on the heels of victory.

    One cannot help but think of the millions of young people who are going through their own coming of age throes in the heat of battles and skirmishes that are taking place at this very moment. Kachel, who has served three tours of duty in Afghanistan and Iraq, writes with compelling adroitness about what Andrikos experiences as he makes his journey from an oblivious youth to a young man whose eyes have been opened to the cruelty of war but still manages to maintain his empathy for his fellow man and holds on to his humanity.

    Be warned that Kachel does not whitewash the horrors of war, nor the rape and brutish treatment of women and children, nor the screams of pain and the blank eyes of starvation in the telling of his epic.

    Christian Kachel’s By the Sword is a fine debut novel that explores the little known, but fascinating, age of post-Alexandrian Greece. Its intriguing interwoven storylines of a young man’s coming of age, of alliances and espionage, and of harrowing battles scenes will be sure to captivate readers and keep them turning the pages even as they wince and grimace with Kachel’s no-holds- barred descriptions in this well-researched historical narrative. We look forward to reading more from Kachel about what awaits Andrikos in his next adventure.

    Historical Fiction: Military, Classical Age
    Targeted Audience: New Adult, military history buffs, Classical Studies

  • The Dante Rossetti Awards 2014 for Young Adult Novels – Official Finalist List

    Dante Rossetti Awards for YA FictionThe Dante Rossetti Awards recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Young Adult, New Adult, and Tween Novels. The Rossetti Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    More than $25,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2014 writing competition winners!

     

    The Dante Rossetti Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY nine sub-genres are:  Contemporary, Fantasy/Steampunk/SciFi, Romance, Historical, Inspirational, Dystopian/Edgy/Urban, Mystery/Thriller/Suspense, Lighthearted/Humorous, New Adult, and Tween.

    The Official Listing of Finalists  of the Dante Rossetti Awards 2014 Young Adult Novel Competition:

    •  Song Magick by Elizabeth Hamill
    • An Outcast State by Scott Smith
    • The Labyrinth Wall by Emilyann Girdner
    • Student Bodyguard for Hire by Callie James
    • The Black Shadow by Ben Hutchins
    • Skin Deep by Kate Pawson Studer
    • Just Going by Jianna Higgins
    • Crazy Like Mom by Joanna Bowman Woods
    • Scargirl by Eliza Mann
    • Fruit of Misfortune; Creatura Book 2 by Nely Cab
    • A Slow Climb Up the Mountain by Susan Cornfield Dugan
    • Project Aquarius by Colleen Jordan
    • The ARK Brothers by James B. Hoke
    • Odette Speex – Time Traitors by Padgett Lively
    • Unearthed by Karen Seymour
    • Kerry’s Shattered Heart by Samantha Giles
    • Ice Massacre by Tiana Warner
    • The Curse of the Crystal Kuatzin by Jan H. Landsberg
    • The Obsidian Dagger by Brad A. LaMar
    • The Sage Wind Blows Cold by Clint Hollingsworth
    • In the Rock by Mark Facciani
    • Orbit by Leigh Hellman
    • Ambrosia Chronicles, the Discovery by K. C. Simos
    • Chrissie’s Run by S. A. Mahan
    • Mark of the Remaker  by Ian Yamagata
    • Elainraigh: The Vow by S. A. Hunter
    • The Star Catcher by Stephanie Keyes
    • Kharishma by Jenny L. R. Nay
    • Riding with Crazy Horse by PJ Martin
    • Strega by Karen Monahan Fernandes
    • Ruth 66 by Elizabeth Barlo
    • The Sage of the Heroine by Bobbie Groth
    • The Diamond of Talakmoon by S. E. Burt
    • In the Blink of an Eye by Linda L. Creel
    • Solomon’s Lake by Jenny Clark
    • Scriptors by Shannon Crolly
    • The Curse of the Thrax by Mark Murphy
    • Discovering Daniel by Nadine Christian
    • The Dragon Within by Cindy Lyle
    • The Escape of Princess Madeline by Kirstin Pulioff
    • The Flying Burgowski by Gretchen K. Wing
    • Twist by Roni Teson
    • Once Upon a Road Trip by Angela N. Blount
    • Scattered Links by M. Weidenbenner
    • Sydney West by Rebecca McKinsey
    • Legacy, the Biodome Chronicles by Jesikah Sundin
    • Project Aquarius by Colleen Jordan
    • Orbit by Leigh Hellman
    • Mischief and Mayhem by Monte French
    • Solomon’s Lake by Jenny Clark
    • Dreams of a Red Horizon by Chris Pawlukiewicz

     

    Finalists will continue on to compete for a first place category win in their sub-genre, and then for the overall grand prize of the 2014 Dante Rossetti Awards. First place category winners will receive an award package including a complimentary book review, digital award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

     We are now accepting submissions into the Dante Rossetti Awards 2015 for YA Novels. Deadline is April 30, 2015. 

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

  • The Somerset Awards for Literary & Mainstream Fiction:  First in Category Winners

    The Somerset Awards for Literary & Mainstream Fiction: First in Category Winners

    The  Somerset Awards  recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Contemporary, Mainstream, and Literary Fiction.

    W.-Somerset-Maugham

    The Somerset Awards is a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions. This contest division is  named after W. Somerset Maugham (1874- 1965), author of “The Moon and Sixpence,” “Of Human Bondage,” “Razor’s Edge,” and other literary masterpieces. Maugham was trained and qualified as a medical doctor. He served in the Red Cross ambulatory corps in WWI, then was recruited in the British Secret Service. During and after the war, he traveled extensively.  

     

     

    We are honored to post the Official List of 1st in Category Winners for the Somerset  Awards 2013.

    These 1st Place Category Winners  have been read cover to cover and have made it through seven rounds of judging. The authors of the winning titles will receive a Chanticleer Editorial Book Review and promotional package.

    First Place Category winners will compete for Overall Best of Somerset Awards for Contemporary, Mainstream, and Literary Fiction 2013.  Overall Best Book for the Somerset  Awards 2013 will win a $250 purse and will compete for the Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Awards Grand Prize for Best Book 2013 and a $1,000 purse (U.S. Dollars). Awards will be announced and presented at the Chanticleer Awards Banquet on September 20th, 2014.

    The Overall First Place Category Winner for the Somerset Awards 2013 is:

    Jeremy Bullian, Individually Wrapped

    The First Place Category Winners Titles & Authors of the Somerset Awards 2013  are:

    • Contemporary:  Chocolates on the Pillow by Sean Dwyer
    • Satire:  Brain: The Man Who Wrote the Book that Changed the World by Dermot Davis
    • Mainstream:  The Prodigal by Michael Hurley
    • Speculative Fiction:  Individually Wrapped by Jeremy Bullian
    • Adventure/Suspense:  Tarnished Hero by Jim Gilliam
    • Literary:  The Opposite of Everything by David Kalish
    • Women’s Fiction:  Cheating the Hog by Rae Ellen Lee
    • New Adult:  Saving Faith by Patrick M. Garry

    Congratulations to the Somerset Writing Competition 2013 Finalists and 1st in Category Winners!

    The staff and judges at Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Writing Competitions want to thank everyone who participated in the Somerset Awards Writing Competition 2013.  The selection process was quite competitive. 

    We are now accepting entries into the Somerset Awards for 2014.  Click here for more info.

    CBR — Discovering Today’s Best Books with International Writing Competitions! 

  • An Editorial Review of “Candles in the Window” by Karl G. Larew

    An Editorial Review of “Candles in the Window” by Karl G. Larew

    Candles in the Window, by Karl G. Larew, follows a group of college students as they make their way through a year of school at the University of Connecticut in the 1950s. The military draft was in full swing, young women were pursuing college degrees in more than negligible numbers,  wives still had to have their husbands sign contracts for them, and homosexuality was considered a heinous crime.

    Candles in the Window is brilliantly told in a non-traditional manner rather like the storyline of the Mad Men TV series. (Keep in mind that Mad Men script was first aired in 2007 while Candles in the Window was originally published in 1999.) There is no typical plot line of rising action, climax, and quick resolution. Rather, the story takes place over the course of one academic school year at the University of Connecticut (or UCONN as it is called throughout the novel).

    This work chronicles what happens to a group of students who attend school there. The focus of the narrative is shifted regularly between eight to ten characters. The author makes the characters come alive with spot-on dialogue and pieces of reality from this era when society’s social norms are about to experience a great upheaval.

    There is one character who serves as the axis for the story, and that is the alluring character of “Silky” (aka Susan Schreiber). However, no one really seems to know her or her whole story, in fact, no one even seems to be able to agree on what her first name is. Nevertheless, she’s beloved by everyone despite, or perhaps because of, the mystery surrounding her.  Her story comes through in bits and pieces.

    When tragedy strikes part way through the school year, the students must learn to cope and several of them find they need to reevaluate what they hold dear along with how they define relationships and love. The conversations between them often wax philosophical, as conversations between college students are wont to do.

    Readers should be aware that the novel’s prologue sets the stage and framework for the story. We get the opportunity to see Silky through the different perspectives of the other characters as the story progresses.  Be advised by this reviewer to read Candles in the Window’s epilogue for a more satisfying conclusion and for tying up most of the threads.  Again, if you are a fan of Mad Men, (which I am) and how its characters grapple with rapidly changing realities and social norms, then Candles in the Window comes highly recommended.

    The novel cleverly documents the contradictory and conservative morals of the 1950s.  Readers will experience a world where female college students have curfews and male students don’t, unmarried individuals are expected to know nothing about sex, and religious tension is often swept under the rug. This novel intelligently and authentically explores the true nature of humans against the standard of this era’s “traditional family values” that come on the heels of the two great wars.

    Candles in the Window by Karl G. Larew is a captivating and intriguing account of young people who find themselves increasingly at odds with the dictates and mores of “The Greatest Generation” as they contend with new advents just on the horizon: civil rights, war protests, equal rights, and the sexual revolution.