Tag: Paranormal

  • The BOOK of SHADE by K.C. Finn – Paranormal/Fantasy/New Adult/Contemporary Gothic/Literature

    The BOOK of SHADE by K.C. Finn – Paranormal/Fantasy/New Adult/Contemporary Gothic/Literature

    A world of intrigue, magic, and danger awaits Lily Coltrane in K.C. Finn’s The Book of Shade.

    On her very first day at university, Lily and her roommate enlist in the IMLS (Illustrious Minds Literary Society) at the student fair and, despite warnings from her history professor, take one step further and visit the Theatre Imaginique.

    The show seems too real – the lightning, levitation, and the fact that Lemarick Novel, the theater’s top showman and proprietor, keeps locking eyes with her. She tries to put it out of her mind, but a month later, Lily and her roommate return to the show, and this is where author K.C. Finn puts her character in delicious jeopardy.

    Lily learns she’s a shade – a being with the ability to generate and control the natural elements (earth, air, fire, and water). This revelation sets her off down a rabbit hole of mystique and magic. Novel is also a shade, one who is fairly accomplished in his abilities, and he decides to train Lily in her newfound abilities. What follows is an adventure woven with trials, romance, danger, and a whole world of the unknown.

    K.C. Finn does an excellent job of weaving the paranormal and magic in with the modern-day world. She introduces concepts that we’re all familiar with, such as voodoo, vampires, werewolves, but does it in a way that doesn’t feel overly stereotypical.

    Finn takes her time with world building in The Book of Shade, and the reader’s patience is rewarded. Finn develops her characters very well, even foreshadowing here and there. The characters and the story itself are slightly more important to the author than the setting.

    Once the author reveals the world of shade, any reader will find it virtually impossible to put the book down. The book does contain some grammatical errors which could and should be corrected, but the writing, on the whole, is good, which is appreciated. From featuring “playbills” for Theatre Imaginique inserted at the beginning of each chapter to the care Finn takes in creating this imaginative world, this title remains a good read.

    Magic and intrigue throw Lily Coltrane’s world all kinds of upside-down when she discovers she isn’t who she thought she was in K.C. Finn’s The Book of Shade.

  • FRUIT of MISFORTUNE (Creatura #2) by Nely Cab – Science Fiction & Fantasy/Myth & Legends/Paranormal & Urban/Folklore

    FRUIT of MISFORTUNE (Creatura #2) by Nely Cab – Science Fiction & Fantasy/Myth & Legends/Paranormal & Urban/Folklore

    Fans of YA and supernatural fiction will not be disappointed with Fruit of Misfortune, Nely Cab’s second book in her Creatura series.  It’s an adventurous romp through the paranormal with our heroine, Isis, a young woman whose destiny is intertwined with that of all humankind’s.

    Isis is in a seemingly lovely place at the start of Fruit of Misfortune, flying with her adored and adoring boyfriend, David, to Greece to spend time with his family.  Of course, all is not as it seems to be and therein lies the fun and the adventure.  Eighteen-year-old Isis is only days away from transforming into a monstrous beast, the Creatura, and needs the help of David’s family, all of them Greek deities, to halt the mutation.  They rise to the challenge by seeking out a doctor with cutting edge therapies and locating Isis’s long-lost father who knew how “special” his daughter was when she was born.  While encountering demons and monsters, Isis will wonder repeatedly if she shouldn’t make life easier, and safer, for everyone by just calling it a day and ending her life.

    While there’s plenty of intrigue and suspense, what makes this book positively hum with energy is Cab’s genius for characterization. Sure, Isis is on a quest to save herself and, by extension, the world, but she’s also a young woman, eighteen-years-old, who loves her boyfriend but can’t help being attracted to his friend, Eros (and with a name like that, who could blame her?).  She has moments of insecurity about her looks, rails at her father for having been a dead-beat dad, makes friends with the splendidly blunt and spunky Galilea, and, oh, yeah, really misses her mom.

    The dialogue is often humorous, full of quick-witted banter.  There are references to The Exorcist, The Hulk, The Fantastic Four and Wednesday Adams. It’s easy to imagine ‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ telling her friends, “I just read the coolest book about this chick named Isis.” While Isis will be very relate-able for young adult readers, she faces enough maturity issues in Book 2 to engage adult readers as well.

    What also sets this book apart from the typical paranormal adventure is the impressive detail.  Cab describes scenes in Greece with the expertise of a cultural anthropologist.  Her writing is experiential; she makes the reader see, taste, and feel.  When Isis undergoes the most bizarre of pregnancy tests, Cab manages to instill the scene with appropriately convincing details of the biological impact of the metamorphoses taking place in Isis’ body.  Likewise, the author astutely chronicles a medical doctor’s reaction to patients with the most baffling symptoms.  Such careful writing makes the pieces of her fiction fit together like an exquisite puzzle.

    The book concludes at just the right moment.  Some dire problems have been resolved while others are just beginning.  That’s fine because we don’t want to say goodbye to Isis or her boyfriend and his divine family.  We’ve come to love the whole gang and long to spend more time with them. You can do just that by starting the third book in the entertaining Creatura series.

    Being eighteen-years-old can suck. Take heart readers, it’s not as if you’re eighteen and destined to turn into a monstrous beast!  Nely Cab’s Fruit of Misfortune, Creatura #2 delivers everything you love about book one – and more. A must read for YA fans!”

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • The ANGEL KILLER: Book Two of the Watcher Saga by Lisa Voisin – Young Adult/Urban Fantasy/Horror

    The ANGEL KILLER: Book Two of the Watcher Saga by Lisa Voisin – Young Adult/Urban Fantasy/Horror

    High school is a little more complicated for Mia and her unusual boyfriend, Michael Fountaine. Miraculously recovered from a coma only a few months earlier, Michael has many secrets that only Mia truly understands. But love and understanding aren’t always enough to stay sane when the world outside is changing before their eyes.

    These two never know when a day might include demons from the darkest pit, minions of despair, or hellhounds looking for a fresh kill. A battle of supernatural dimension is coming ever closer to the heart of their hometown of Seattle, and Mia will soon have her burgeoning power put to the ultimate test. If only she could believe in it more and trust in the strength of angels! Current and past struggles are interwoven for both of them when a powerful nemesis returns wielding a sword like no other. It’s unique, it has a name, and it’s lethal.

    In book two of author Lisa Voisin’s The Watcher Saga, Mia and Michael reunite when Raguel returns with vengeance on his mind.  With special abilities of her own, Mia is able to see Michael for what he really is and to aid in his battles while keeping his identity secret even from her best friends, and it isn’t easy! If only she could concentrate on more normal things, like Fiona and Dean, and enjoy the school’s wrestling matches. But her destiny is more complicated than that, and she knows it. She also knows that her love for Michael is worth anything to her, just as it has always been across the many lifetimes she is just now beginning to remember.

    In The Angel Killer, certain details are prominent. Actual Seattle locations make strategic appearances, like the Smith Tower and the Underground, and the weather as described will be familiar to any Western Washingtonian. Voisin’s proper names, as well, are made to fit the character and mood. Each Angel, for example, has a name that ends with a similar sound, whether it’s Arielle, Turiel, Damiel, or Michael. These are beautiful beings with beautiful names.

    Another character in Voisin’s book, Mia’s good friend Fatima, is described as a person with visions and her name is equally evocative, reminiscent of the little children of Fatima, a popular Catholic story. But it is with Fatima and her twin brother, Farouk, that Voisin veers from her narrative of Angels and Demons to one of more Middle Eastern content when Fatima is unwittingly possessed by a Djinn, and only the Angel Michael can help. The author’s attempt to meld these two very different descriptions of embodied evil may be unsuccessful for some readers expecting a more strictly Christian storyline, and yet, as early as page one it is Fatima’s gift of a Hamsa necklace that buzzes a warning for Mia when unseen Demons are near.

    Overall, The Angel Killer: Book Two in the Watcher Saga is full of colorful Seattle locations and symbolic characters in this addition to Voisin’s continuing saga of Good vs. Evil. If you’ve already met Mia and Michael, or are just making their acquaintance for the first time, you’ll want to know how this battle ends.

  • The PARANORMAL Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2016 First Place Category Winners

    The PARANORMAL Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2016 First Place Category Winners

    Paranormal Fiction AwardsThe Paranormal Awards Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Paranormal and Supernatural Fiction. The Paranormal Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

    Congratulations to the 2016 Paranormal Awards First In Category Award Winning Supernatural Fiction Novels:

    • Paranormal Award Winning Authors: Joanne Jaytanie, Janet K. Shawgo, and John Trudel

      Adventure/Mystery/Thriller: Archidamus by Janet K. Shawgo

    • What Lies Beyond: The Well by Colleen Golden
    • Strange and Unexplained: Almost Mortal by Christopher Leibig
    • Supernatural Powers: Raven’s Redemption by John D Trudel
    • Paranormal Romance: Corralling Kenzie, Book 4 of The Winters Sisters by Joanne Jaytanie

    CONGRATULATIONS to  Chris Leibig, author of the PARANORMAL GRAND PRIZE winner — Almost Mortal!

    The 2016 Paranormal Short-Listers competed for these First Place Category Positions. These First Place Category Award Winners’ novels have competed for the Paranormal Grand Prize Award for the 2016 Paranormal and Supernatural Fiction. These winners were announced and recognized at the annual Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala, Bellingham, Wash., on April 1st, 2017.

    The First In Category award winning titles will receive an award package including a complimentary Chanticleer Book Review of the winning title, digital award badges, shelf talkers, book stickers, and more.

    Congratulations to those whose works made the Paranormal Awards 2016 FINALISTS and SHORT-LISTERS lists.

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2017 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Fifteen different genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

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

    More than $30,000 worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to the 2017 Chanticleer Novel Writing Competition winners! Fifteen different  genres to enter your novels and compete on an international level.

     

  • Greylock by Paula Cappa – Mystery/Thriller/Paranormal

    Greylock by Paula Cappa – Mystery/Thriller/Paranormal

    What’s in the music we create? When we say it lives – when we say it breathes – when, for one fleeting moment it seems to bridge the gap between one soul and another – what kind of existence does it assume? What does it feel? What does it think? What does it want? Such questions may reside in theory for most, but not for piano virtuoso Alexei Georg in Paula Cappa’s Greylock.

    Hot off the release of what will surely be his magnum opus, October, Alexei has achieved the level of success found only in his wildest dreams. Hailing from a Russian family steeped in musical artistry, he has transcended all those before him and become something they never could: a legend. And that’s all thanks to October.

    There’s only one problem: he didn’t compose it.

    And that would have been fine for him, taking credit for pages found in an antique chest belonging to one of his ancestors, if it weren’t for the demons it conjured every time he plays those chords. If it weren’t for the shadowy figure haunting him, punishing him, coming for him. October may have surfaced through the Georg bloodline, but there is something far more sinister and mysterious hidden in each note that is threatening to break free from Alexei’s control.

    Alexei wants nothing more than to move on, but the past will not let him. Add to his troubles the threat of fraud exposure from those he’s closest to and a string of grisly murders within the Boston music community that brings the police knocking on his door, he can only come to realize just how much October is at the center of it all. He’ll have to confront three generations worth of Georg family demons to overcome this evil before it claims everything he has and hopes to achieve.

    Using music as a central motif and life force to drive the narrative, Paula Cappa defies the limitations of the written word and adds a new dimension in storytelling through the personification of music. The descriptions being so richly layered and animated, one might just imagine these nightmares dwelling in the punctuation, awaiting their chance to come alive themselves.

    With just enough integral characters in place to create conflict, Cappa creates a compelling mystery that allows the reader to virtually hear the machinations of the plot grind away before they inevitably crank up to a satisfying crescendo.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • PARANORMAL Book Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2016 Short List (Semi-Finalists)

    PARANORMAL Book Awards for Supernatural Fiction 2016 Short List (Semi-Finalists)

    Paranormal Fiction Awards

    These titles are in the running for the 5 First Place Book Awards for the 2016 PARANORMAL Book Awards novel competition for Supernatural Fiction!

     

     

     

    The Paranormal Book Awards  Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Supernatural Fiction. The Paranormal Book Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Book Awards and  Novel Writing Competitions.

    Chanticleer Book Reviews is looking for the best books featuring magic, the supernatural, weird other worldly stories, super humans, magical beings and supernatural entities, vampires, werewolves, angels, demons, Fairy, Magical systems and elements, we will put them to the test and choose the best among them.

    The First Place Category Positions in the Paranormal Awards are: Adventure/Mystery/Thriller, Paranormal Romance, Magical Beings & Creatures, Strange and Unexplained, and Supernatural Powers.

    These titles have moved forward in the judging rounds from SLUSH pile to FINALISTS LIST and now has moved forward to the SHORT LIST of the 2016 Paranormal Book Awards. They are now 2016 Paranormal Semi-Finalists as they compete for the limited First  Place Category Positions of the 2016 Paranormal Book Awards in the last rounds of judging.

    Congratulations to these authors for their works moving up from the 2016 Paranormal Finalists to the Short List (Semi-Finalists). These novels will now compete for the First Place Category Positions!

    • Angella Cormier & Pierre C Arseneault – Oakwood Island 
    • Derek Swannson – Crash Gordon and the Illuminati Underground
    • Alex E. Carey – Fire’s Love
    • Jessie Kwak – Shifting Borders
    • John D Trudel – Raven’s Redemption 
    • Ian M. Smith – Trace
    • Janet K. Shawgo – Archidamus
    • Joanne Jaytanie – Corralling Kenzie, Book 4 of The Winters Sisters
    • A.M. Manay – She Dies at the End (November Snow Book 1)
    • Carl S. Plumer – Shadows of Death
    • Harper L. Jameson – The Spirit
    • Ben Sharpton – 2nd Sight
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Christopher Leibig – Almost Mortal
    • Colleen Jiron/Colleen Golden – The Well

    All Short Listers in attendance to CAC17 will receive high visibility along with special badges to wear during the Chanticleer Authors Conference and Awards Gala.

    Good Luck to all of the Semi-Finalists as they compete for the coveted First Place Category positions.

    The PARANORMAL Grand Prize Winner and First Place Category Winners will be announced at the April 1st, 2017 Chanticleer Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash.

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 PARANORMAL Awards Book Awards writing competition. Please click here for more information.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 writing competition winners!  Enter today!

  • Tupelo Honey by Lis Anna Langston – Y/A

    Tupelo Honey by Lis Anna Langston – Y/A

    A stick-to-the-ribs portrait of an extraordinary girl who overcomes the deck stacked against her in the deep South. Tupelo Honey is one of our favorites.

    When you read more than a hundred books per year, it’s exciting to find one that surprises you. Tupelo Honey by Lis Anna Langston is one of those, sneaking up quietly to bust expectations and leaves you thinking about the story long after closing the book.

    Part of the surprise comes from being able to read on multiple levels. On the surface, it’s a sardonic YA adventure through tough modern times. Underneath, a unique and subtle paranormal story grounded in today’s world. At the deep level, a poignant coming-of-age tale about what it’s like to be a neglected child in a twisted family, and how spirit and smarts let one avoid a doom that seems inevitable.

    Tupelo Honey is a preteen girl in Mississippi whose mother is an abusive junkie. Her father is unknown but his place is filled by a compassionate drug dealer; her grandmother can offer only love and shelter; her uncles are both crazy; her best friend is suppressed by severely religious parents. Then there’s Mooshi, her invisible pal—half human, half dog—who comforts and helps through his silent presence. Only Tupelo Honey can see him.

    She accepts his existence (and others’ disbelief) without question, just as she accepts the poverty, insecurity, and frequent illegality of her life. While she’s wise beyond her years, she’s also still a child who craves loving parents and safe routine. There are so many abnormal people in her world that she takes them as normal, so her emotional reactions are low key where more privileged and conventional people would be freaked out.

    This gives the book a sort of creepy, quiet tone from the opening page that seduces the reader onward. Tupelo Honey simply tells her story as she grows through the year that turns her life around.

    The author has mastered the art of showing versus telling, giving just enough information so the reader can figure out what’s going on without having to back up or skip forward. Nothing about Tupelo Honey’s story is familiar enough to guess what’s going to happen next, making it an understated page-turner for youth and adults.

    5 Star Best Book Chanticleer Reviews round silver sticker

  • The 2016 PARANORMAL Book Awards FINALISTS List

    The 2016 PARANORMAL Book Awards FINALISTS List

    Paranormal Fiction AwardsThe Paranormal Awards Writing Competition recognizes emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of  Supernatural Fiction. The Paranormal Awards is a division of Chanticleer International Novel Writing Competitions.

    More than $30,000.00 dollars worth of cash and prizes will be awarded to Chanticleer Book Reviews 2016 writing competition winners at the Chanticleer Authors Conference April 1, 2017!

    The Paranormal Awards FIRST IN CATEGORY sub-genres  are:

    • Paranormal Romance
    • Urban/Edgy
    • Magical Beings & Creatures and Magical Systems
    • Supernatural Powers
    • Adventure/Mystery/Thriller
    • Paranormal

    OFFICIAL LISTING of the 2016 Paranormal Writing Competition’s Finalists:

    The following titles will compete for the Semi-Finalists SHORT LIST, and then the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions and Awards Packages.

    • John D Trudel – Raven’s Redemption
    • Angella Cormier & Pierre C Arseneault – Oakwood Island 
    • Derek Swannson – Crash Gordon and the Illuminati Underground
    • Patricia Mason – The Mercury Papers
    • B. K. Smith – Laina and the Vamp
    • Alex E. Carey – Fire’s Love 
    • Jessie Kwak – Shifting Borders
    • Ian M. Smith – Trace
    • Arjay Lewis – The Muse
    • Lydia Staggs – Shamar
    • Janet K. Shawgo – Archidamus
    • Joanne Jaytanie – Corralling Kenzie
    • Eliott McKay – The Aureate Spectacles
    • Matt Kilby – The Road Cain Walks 
    • A.M. Manay – She Dies at the End
    • Francine Paino – Two Wolves Dancing
    • Lisa Voisin – The Warrior Prophet
    • Carl S. Plumer – Shadows of Death
    • Carl S. Plumer – Zombie Ever After 
    • Harper L. Jameson – The Spirit
    • Ben Sharpton – 2nd Sight
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Silent Meridian
    • Christopher Leibig – Almost Mortal
    • S.T. Holmes – Creole Moon: The Betrayal 
    • Israfel Sivad – The Adversary’s Good News
    • Colleen Golden – The Well

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

     

    Congratulations to the Finalists!  

    Good Luck to all of the Paranormal Finalists as they compete for the coveted SHORT LIST  positions.

    The PARANORMAL Grand Prize Winner and the First Place Category winners will be announced and recognized at the April 1, 2017 Chanticleer Writing Contests Annual Awards Gala, which takes place on the last evening of the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    We are now accepting submissions into the 2017 Paranormal Awards writing competitions for Paranormal Fiction. Please click here for more information or to enter the contests.

  • Ghostly Paws (Mystic Notch #1) by Leighann Dobbs – Cozy Mystery

    Ghostly Paws (Mystic Notch #1) by Leighann Dobbs – Cozy Mystery

    When murder comes to the sleepy hamlet of Mystic Notch, recently relocated crime journalist Wilhelmina Chance and her grandma’s crime-solving cat jump into the case with two feet and four paws.

    Mainly, Willa wants to start over. After her car accident left her with a temperamental leg and a strange ability to see ghosts, she hopes taking over her grandmother’s bookstore in Mystic Notch will offer her needed peace. That is, until, with the help of her grandmother’s cat, Pandora, Willa discovers Lavinia Babbage’s body in the library basement.

    When Lavinia’s ghost appears to her, Willa not only finds out that Lavinia’s death was no accident, but that someone in Mystic Notch is to blame. And Lavinia only leaves her with a few clues to determine who might have a motive to kill the local librarian.

    What Willa doesn’t know is that her cat, Pandora, is part of an elite species sworn to help humans—and that Pandora is just as intent on finding Lavinia’s killer as she is. With Pandora’s help, Willa starts putting the pieces of the puzzle together. She just has to hope that her investigations don’t get in the way of those actually getting paid to solve the crime—namely, her sheriff sister, Augusta, and the handsome but slightly intimidating sheriff, Eddie Striker (and his steely gray glances).

    This is the first in Leighann Dobbs’ “Mystic Notch: series, and the atmosphere Dobbs creates is exquisitely cozy. While there are a few hiccups in this debut novel, they can be forgiven as the series promises to deliver more enjoyable and affably cozy hours of reading–especially with a few of Dobbs’ few magical flourishes thrown in. Mystic Notch is a town that any cozy mystery fan can look forward to hanging out in. The story is enjoyable overall, especially in the last third. The reveals are delightfully unpredictable, and the ending offers a satisfying conclusion.

    The role of the cats also adds an intriguing element to the overall story and reveals important parts of the mystery in a way that not only fits with the plot but provides some surprises along the way. The cats also offer a significant source of humor, which is a winning element throughout the story.

    This debut novel of the Mystic Notch mystery series is perfect for cozy mystery lovers and looking for a humorous and feel-good escape.

  • The AURORA AFFAIR by Carolyn Haley

    The AURORA AFFAIR by Carolyn Haley

    A psychedelic ride through a world of mystics and musicians, rock concerts and psychic powers with the car-racing supermodel, Madeline LaRue, in the driver’s seat, trying to make sense of it all.

    Madeline has been summoned to New Atlantis, the estate of her twin sister’s boyfriend, rock superstar and cult leader, Dru Montclair. Upon her arrival, Madeline sees auras around the guests, including her former lover, turned roadie, Buck Williams, and the sinister promoter, Raoul Lamont, who, she intuits, is stalking Dru.

    Despite her energy readings, Madeline resists her psychic abilities, and even more so when her sister, Blanche, asserts that Mad will destroy the evil encroaching on the rural Vermont compound.

    That is until Madeline’s prophetic dreams and visions come true.

    While re-examining her beliefs, Mad is also preoccupied with the concept of soul mates whom she believes stimulate her psychic powers. The only trouble is, she can’t determine whether her soul mate is Buck or Kit Douglas, the handsome jack-of-all-trades. Kit has the ability to set off her visions, along with her pheromones and sexual cravings. Both men are at times suspect, as is the enigmatic and arrogant Dru. Her sister’s boyfriend invades Mad’s dreams and forces mystical challenges on her, yet ultimately needs her power to keep the Evil One from destroying both him and his New Atlantean world.

    Whether or not you believe in the supernatural and mystic philosophies, Haley’s story will thrill you with its feverish pacing, plot twists, and ever-unfolding action. Madeline makes a bewitching protagonist: multi-talented, free-wheeling, and quick-tempered. She’s equal parts skeptic and believer, seeking truth and power through the ritual of intimacy. However, the love scenes are never explicit or overlong, and just descriptive enough to imply a sacred sexuality. This restraint pairs well with an abundance of inspired language. The sky was “a Parrish blue pricked with stars,” the valley a “cauldron of liquid gold,” an aura that was “gas-burner blue.” Lovely stuff.

    As suspense builds, the psychic warfare ratchets up. Madeline wants to leave New Atlantis but gets pulled back by indecision, persistent visions, and the chance to hide out while contemplating the nature of reality. Then, just as the compound returns to routine, Raoul’s psychic attacks come back with a vengeance, forcing Mad to not only accept her psychic powers but push them to their limits and beyond. This book is a pleaser for those who are drawn to fast action, fun, and a trip on the wild side.