Tag: Romantic Fiction

  • For the Love of Romance Novels – Celebrating Valentine’s Day with Chanticleer’s romance authors

    Will your book be our Valentine? 

    Who doesn’t love a good book? It’s full of angst, misunderstandings, sultry moments, and intriguing characters who break our hearts and sweep us off our feet. Like chocolate, romance is one of those extraordinary genres that can go with almost anything—Historical Romance, Mystery Romance, YA Romance, SciFi Romance, Fantasy Romance, the list goes on!

    Nothing is better than sharing a book you love with someone you know will love it just as much as you.

    Couple, reading, couch, kiss, man, woman

    The Science Behind Love

    Science tells us that two people falling in love is a mix of biological, chemical, and psychological factors. Wouldn’t these same factors play into a reader falling in love with a book? Picture this, you’re in a bookstore scanning the shelves, suddenly, you see a cover that is beautiful, intriguing, mysterious. You pick it up and read the blurb. It teases you with just enough information to make you want to learn more. You read the first page and find out that what it is telling you is exactly what you were hoping for. Your excitement increases as you envision the night ahead, snuggling under the covers, turning the pages as you fall in love with the characters and join them in their journey to find love. As you read, your heart starts to race with anticipation, you cry, you laugh, and you swear your devotion to the love you’ve found between the covers of a book.

    Is there anything better than a great love story?

    Couple reading together

    The Love You Find Between the Covers

    Romance is one of the bestselling genres out there, and it’s clear we’re all looking for love stories that move us. But falling in love isn’t a one step process. First, your curiosity is peaked when you first look at a cover, you judge it by look, page count, and other factors to see if it’s a book that fits you, then you find yourself fascinated when something unexpected happens in the first few pages. You’re hooked!

    As you continue reading you find yourself captivated by the characters. Perhaps they are way more complex than you had anticipated, and you can’t bear the thought of leaving the story half-read, so you march on, feeling nervous, stressed, afraid, and hopeful as the characters go through the trials and tribulations they face in the plot. Now you are infatuated! You can’t put it down! What’s going to happen? Will they, or won’t they? 

    As you draw closer to the climax, you find yourself on the same rollercoaster as the characters. You empathize with the characters and want to see the love match made. You fight the despair of coming to the last page, knowing you’ll have to put these wonderful characters away when you are finished. Ohh! The agony!

    As you place the book on your own bookshelf you find yourself thirsting for more. More love, more conflict, more moments where you think all is lost, but then…

    You realize you’ve fallen in love!

     

    The Chatelaine Awards finds the best romantic novels of the year! 

    At Chanticleer we love Romance Books, and we love to show it off with our Chatelaine Awards! Check out our current Finalists here! First Place Winners will be announced at the Chanticleer Authors Conference!

    Romance Fiction Chatelaine Award
    The Chatelaine Awards are where we find all our romance books about bookstores and beyond!

    Are you looking for your next great romance novel? Find your perfect literary match with these Chanticleer romance authors!

    A Sea of Glass, Gail Avery Halverson, palm, sea

    A Sea of Glass
    By Gail Avery Halverson
    CIBA Grand Prize winner Chatelaine division

    A Sea of Glass by Gail Avery Halverson is a sweeping historical novel that captivates readers as it takes us from the bustling world of Colonial Boston to the shores of Barbados. But the island’s burgeoning sugar industry harbors dark secrets for those trapped there, either by circumstance or by slavery.

    The colonial backdrop is brimming with conflict. Businesses struggle under British taxation enforced by the hated Red Coats. With the dangers of traveling through pirate—and privateer—infested waters, there are more than enough shifting winds to keep readers engaged until the very end.

    Lady Catherine Abbott-McKensie, her physician husband Simon McKensie, and their daughter Charlotte, enjoy the pace of life in Colonial Boston, but their peace does not last long.

    Read more here…

    Loving Beth Cover

    Loving Beth
    By Bonnie Rose Ward

    In Loving Beth, a Christian historical romance by Bonnie Rose Ward, a young woman finds herself in dire straits when her widowed mother dies unexpectedly.

    Beth’s father had taken out loans to improve their property, but he was killed in the Civil War, leaving his wife and daughter to struggle to keep up with the payments. Now, Beth is alone without any means to keep her home—finding and taking in two young, abandoned children certainly doesn’t help. But even amidst her troubles, Beth’s thoughts keep going back to the mysterious and handsome stranger who found and brought home the body of her mother.

    Read more here…

    Edged in Purple, John W. Feist, silhouette, greek

    Edged in Purple
    By John W. Feist

    Edged in Purple by John W. Feist welcomes readers to a place outside of time and space, a liminal space where characters of myth wait to return to their fated stories.

    The Fold is a beautiful land, a near-utopia shepherded– literally– by Thetis and Peleus of Greek mythology. They raise the heroine of Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale, Perdita, after her father had accused her mother of betraying him with another, the whole sad story a product of his own paranoia.

    Perdita’s story is proceeding as it was written. She has already met Florizel, the man who should be the hero of her romance– when her story is intersected by another. Just as The Winter’s Tale features royal courts, doomed relationships, mistaken identities, and family murder, so too does an ancient Greek drama: the Oresteia of Aeschylus, the story of Agamemnon after the Trojan War.

    Read more here…

    Splintered Dreams Cover

    Splintered Dreams
    By Diana Lynn

    After decades spent in a loveless, broken marriage, Crisa wants another chance at love. In Splintered Dreams, a romance novella by Diana Lynn, she must first stumble through her own insecurities to find it.

    When Crisa’s husband, Alan, dies unexpectedly she is left with a stark emptiness inside her heart. Her marriage had been a sham. Her husband’s infidelity and lies crushed her idea of love and left her with questions about who she is, what she wants, and will she ever trust someone with her heart again. Casual sexual relationships can’t fill the void. She needs true love.

    Physical intimacy is only part of what Crisa desires. She yearns for the kind of love that lasts a lifetime.

    Read more here…

    Air Boat Cover

    Air Boat: Love is an Adventure
    By Jacek Waliszewski

    For readers interested in a unique romance, Air Boat: Love is an Adventure by Jacek Waliszewski offers a distinctive cast of characters and tense excitement in the sky.

    Air Boat brings together a former Special Forces soldier, Luke, who prefers to keep to himself, an independent and sarcastic female pilot, Stella, and a three-legged Husky named Saint who marches to the beat of his own drum. These captivating characters embark on a fast-paced, page-turning tale.

    Author Jacek Waliszewski starts this romantic adventure with a suspenseful scene of a vintage plane barreling towards the Twin Cities, accompanied by two F-16 fighter jets, before setting the stage for the two main characters to meet. The mystery of this scene will stick in the reader’s mind, drawing them forward with stark curiosity that only grows in excitement.

    Read more here…

    Happy Valentine’s Day to all lovers of the Romance genre from
    Chanticleer Book Reviews & Media! 

    Hearts, floating, book, red

    Looking for more quality time with us?

    Join us at

    The Chanticleer Authors Conference

     

    A Wreath with the words "CAC 2025" on it to celebrate the Chanticleer Author's Conference!

    Featuring authors like J.D Barker, book doctor Christine Fairchild, and publisher Brooke Warner, our annual conference is shaping up to be excellent! You won’t want to miss out on the best tips around the business of being an author!

    Seating is Limited. The esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887) has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    We’d love to see you there!

  • Valentine’s Day 2024 – SWEET READS From Chanticleer with all the Genres of the Heart

    Will your book be our Valentine?

    At Chanticleer we love Romance Books and we love to show it off with our Chatelaine Awards! We’re currently working as hard as we can to get out the Finalist List for those Awards, and you can see the Semi-Finals for them here! Who will win? Only time will tell.

    However, right now we just want to celebrate some of the best romantic books we’ve been able to discover. Like chocolate, romance is one of those extraordinary genres that can go with almost anything! Historical Romance, Mystery Romance, YA Romance, SciFi Romance, Fantasy Romance, the list goes on!

     

    Even better, romance is one of the bestselling genres out there! Being able to add that tag to your book makes it that much more marketable! For our own Chatelaine Awards, we’re always happy to crow about our winners!

    Our 2022 Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner was Operation Mom by Reenita Malhotra Hora.

    What does Chanticleer have to say about Operation Mom?

    Master storyteller Reenita Malhotra Hora’s YA romance Operation Mom: My Plan to Get My Mom a Life and a Man takes us on a charming journey through the life of one teen, Ila Isham.

    Hora introduces Ila and her best friend Deepali, two boy-crazy teens on a summer quest. Readers will fall in love with the smart, sassy, angst-filled, rebellious Ila. A typical teenage girl, Ila lives in Mumbai with her mom and Sakkubai, their house manager. Ila’s mother calls her obsessed, but that seems unfair. Is she obsessed just because her every waking minute is spent thinking of Ali Zafar, famous pop icon, singer, and heartthrob? Or is she obsessed with fellow classmate Dev?

    No, Ila couldn’t be taken with Dev because he’s one of three young men that her best friend Deepali is juggling in her summer experiment of exploring her “feminine mystique.” This turn of phrase becomes just one of many opportunities for Hora’s humor to shine as Ila remarks, “That’s a book by Gloria Steinem . . . no Betty Friedan.” Deepali’s response? “Yaar. Don’t be so literal.” The delightful balance between Ila’s book smarts versus Deepali’s street smarts carries us through Hora’s expertly crafted story.

    Read more here!

    Operation Mom also took home a First Place Blue in the Dante Rossetti Awards for Young Adult Fiction. We’d love to share other romance books that meet with other genres and why they touch our heart!

    A SPYING EYE: A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel
    By Michelle Cox
    2023 Overall Grand Prize
    Grand Prize for the M&M Awards for Cozy Mysteries

    A Cozy Mystery Romance!

    A Spying Eye Cover

    Brooding Château du Freudeneck, just outside Strasbourg, France has villains in the drawing rooms, stolen art hidden in the cellars, and bats in the belfry – all the best elements for a 19th-century Gothic mystery.

    However, in Michelle Cox’s novel, A Spying Eye it’s the 20th century. The Great War is passed, but the next war already looms on the horizon. The people of Strasbourg feel the growing conflict sharply, at the heart of Alsace-Lorraine, a fertile region that has been contested between France and Germany since time immemorial.

    Which means those bats are in the unfortunate head of the elderly Baron Von Harmon, the current lord and master (as much as he’s still able to be, at least) of the Chateau, while the stolen art is pursued by both the villainous Nazis and the only slightly-less villainous agents of Britain’s MI5.

    Read more here!

    THE LAST LUMENIAN
    By S.G. Blaise
    2023 Cygnus Grand Prize Winner

    A SciFi Romance!

    The Last Lumenian Cover

    Nineteen-year-old Lilla could have an idyllic life, but in The Last Lumenian by S.G. Blaise, she comes face to face with a rebellion and their just cause.

    Lilla’s father leads the Pax Septum Coalition, a nineteen-planet confederation. As a princess in her own right, she should be enjoying the status and wealth that comes from living on Uhna, the richest planet in the coalition due to the diamond mines found by her pirate ancestors centuries ago. She most definitely shouldn’t be worried about the rebellion brewing right under her father’s nose. However, when Lilla meets rebels in a refugee camp, she thinks she has found her destiny, a true purpose.

    Wanting to fight against the injustice and horrific treatment of the refugees, Lilla tries desperately to prove herself, especially after a disastrous first mission where she not only crashes her ship but also ends up in the hands of General Callum, leader of the Teryn Praelium.

    Read more here!

    NORTH QUEEN
    By Nicola Tyche

    A Fantasy Romance

    Norah Andell, Princess of Mercia and future North Queen, has been missing for three years.

    Her father secreted her away to protect her from a prophesied attack in a ten-year war, but he dies shortly after their departure and takes her location to the grave. Alexander Rhemus, Lord Justice to Queen Regent Catherine, Norah’s grandmother, was told by a seer that Norah would be found in the deep forests of the Northern Kingdom, and has searched the woods ceaselessly. Having loved her since they were children, Alexander’s desperation leads him to the Wilds, a legendary and feared area where men often do not return. So opens The North Queen.

    To Alexander’s shock, he finds Norah, who has no memories of her former life or even of her own name. At first, she refuses to believe she’s the missing princess, now Queen, and bristles against her newfound world and the restraints it casts upon her.
    Norah struggles with a position she doesn’t want, governing a people on the verge of starvation and facing an arranged marriage to protect her people from the Shadow King, a ruthless man hell-bent on taking her kingdom.

    Read more here!

    A PLACE Of REFUGE: Book Four of First Light
    By Linda Cardillo

    A Historical Romance

    A Place of Refuge Cover

    Izzy Monroe has lost herself. Three months after an accident that damaged a portion of her brain, she isolates herself in her parent’s home on Chappaquiddick Island, on the eastern end of Martha’s Vineyard.

    She has spent her life in the world of academia, working on a doctorate in literature at Harvard, but now with her short-term memory gone, she has to give up her dreams. Her emptiness and doubt have left her rudderless and deeply depressed.

    When her former college roommate, Maria, suggests she intern at Portarello, Maria’s grandfather’s self-sustaining farm in the Italian countryside, Izzy isn’t immediately convinced she can make the journey alone much less work at the successful inn and thriving farm. However, Izzy remembers the peace she felt there on the one visit she and Maria made years ago, and she knows this is her only chance to regain any sense of normalcy.

    Read more here!


    Thank you for joining us on this adventure of books, and we hope you found a read that caught your fancy! 

    Looking for more quality time with us?

    Join us at

    The Chanticleer Authors Conference

    Featuring authors like D.D. Black, book doctor Christine Fairchild, and Mark Berridge, our twelfth annual conference is shaping up to be excellent! You won’t want to miss out on the best tips around the business of being an author!

    Seating is Limited. The esteemed WRITER Magazine (founded in 1887) has repeatedly recognized the Chanticleer Authors Conference as one of the best conferences to attend and participate in for North America.

    We’d love to see you there!

  • 10 Question Author Interview Series with Alex Sirotkin – Award-Winning Author, Interview Series, Award-Winning Books, Literary, Romantic Fiction, The Long Desert Road

    CHANTICLEER AUTHOR 10 QUESTION INTERVIEW SERIES

    With Alex Sirotkin

    Alex and his dog.
    Alex and his dog.

    Alex Sirotkin is a kind man with intelligent humor tucked in around the edges. He saves his angst for his writing and his law practice. And, boy, does he ever deliver! The Long Desert Road earned a 5-Star rating from our reviewers and went on to take home the 2021 CHATELAINE GRAND PRIZE! (As far as his law practice, one would do well having him on your side.) We are so proud of him for his outstanding work and being a Chanticleerian. I know you will love him as much as we do. So, without further ado, let me introduce you to award-winning author, Mr. Alex Sirotkin.

    Chanti: Tell us a little about yourself: How did you start writing?

    Sirotkin: Sure. I’m pretty old. I didn’t start writing until 2016, so that would have made me about 60. At first, I wanted to write a screenplay. I love movies, to be honest, more than books, which maybe makes me a lousy novelist. But, but…at the same time, I find that most movies are terrible! Over the years, I’d walk out of the movie theater and say to myself “Damn, I could have written a much better story than that!” So, I promised myself to try one day. And that I did.

    It didn’t take me long to realize that I didn’t know the first thing about writing a screenplay, and the apps that would assist me just seemed too complicated. I had a good idea for a story, so I wrote a book instead. My background is in law – so I can write. But it doesn’t come easily or quickly to me. Sometimes it’s painstaking. Being older, okay old, also provided the time to have many life experiences. You write what you know, and I’ve experienced a whole lot in my life, so I know a lot about which I can write. Conversely, it must be so hard for a young person in his/her twenties to be a fiction writer. For them, everything must be made up!

    Finally, I had a particular experience with my daughter that served as the underpinnings for much of the story. You see, she was bipolar and addicted to heroin. I was her primary supporter, mentor, cheerleader, and disciplinarian for the ten years prior to her death from an overdose in October 2020, during the pandemic. It was the most rewarding, uplifting, stupefying, frustrating, busy, and devastating period of my life. Obviously, it ended in disaster, but I wrote the book when she was doing well, when I had a lot of hope. The novel, therefore, is uplifting. I finished the book in January 2020 or so, and she died ten months later. My book was released three months after that. It was quite surreal.

    Chanti: That juxtaposition must have felt so strange. I cannot imagine. Thinking of the places you drew inspiration from, let’s talk a bit about genre. What genre best describes your work? And, what led you to write in this genre?

    The Long Desert Road Cover

    Sirotkin: I won my Grand Prize in Romantic literature. I won (the lesser) First Prize in Literary and Contemporary Fiction. To be honest, my book fits best into the latter genre. Sure, my book is a love story. But it’s not your typical sexy beach read, with scantily clad models on the front cover. In fact, some of my witty friends complained that there wasn’t enough (or any) sex in the book at all. (There was some, but I just didn’t go into the hot details.) I had certain things to say – call it a message – in my book, and those would be best said via literary fiction, which to me is a catch-all genre that is not the other more specific areas of writing. And it connotes, I suppose, a focus on the words, more so than one would expect from a who-done-it, or science fiction, although don’t tell that to Isaac Asimov, one of my favs. My book is therefore a slower more-deliberate read.

    Chanti: First in Category for Literary Fiction is nothing to sniff at, my friend, given the sheer numbers of entries in that division! In terms of writing, do you find yourself following the rules or do you like to make up your own rules?

    Blue and Gold Somerset First Place Winner Badge for Best in Category

    Sirotkin: Other than the law, and the Golden Rule, in writing, as in life, I’m not a big believer in hard and fast rules. In terms of writing, like any creative medium, rules might be a guide to the inexperienced novelist (like me) but ultimately one must go with his gut. I was told not to write in present tense. But I did. I was told to limit points of view, but I wrote partly in first person, and partly in third person from two POVs. I was told not to write at such a high level. In fact, someone told me that Stephen King writes at a 5th grade level. Even if I had believed this, I didn’t care. I wrote as I was trained to write, and my possible audience would hopefully appreciate the art of wordcraft, even if they had to refer to Merriam Webster from time to time. And in fact, some told me they kept a dictionary at their side while reading my book.

    My best line (top of page 161) in my eyes, took me hours to perfect, yet I think it was missed by most. Talking about Hubble the scientist (who lived in the early twentieth century) my main character, Henry said “If Hubble himself had but one character flaw, it was his inability to be humble, and such was his reputation.” Get it?  Lastly, I never had an outline for this novel. I pretended for a while to develop one, but I gave up and just started to write. What I had was a beginning and an end. Somehow I managed to meander my way through the desert to finally reach my intended resolution. I think I was a bit lucky to get there.

    Chanti: What do you do when you’re not writing? Tells us a little about your hobbies.

    Sirotkin: I certainly don’t earn a living as a novelist. I’m too poor a marketer, and I don’t write enough. So, I work in my own business. But for fun, I’ve got a lot going on. Like my main character, Henry, I always have a tune in my head. So, I whistle a lot, which annoys the heck out of my wife. And I play piano – I was trained for 9 years in classical piano, but now I just like to sound things out and improvise. I play tennis. I was really a good club player once, until age finally caught up with me. I still play, but not the man I used to be. So it goes. My wife and I hike locally with our two 90 lb. Rhodesian Ridgebacks. Finally, we love to travel, and one of our trips lay the foundation for much of my novel.

    Scout Running with J
    Scout Running with J

    Chanti: Alex, you keep talking about age, and here we are contemporaries… I’m starting to get a bit nervous! Let’s move on – quickly. How do you come up with your ideas for a story?

    Sirotkin: The ideas come from the heart. A work of literary fiction (as opposed to a detective novel, for example) has to come from within. The ideas are already there. You only must recognize them. Personally, I had difficult experiences with my daughter, a bipolar drug addict, over a ten-year period. But my story is not what you think it is. These experiences framed only a part of the story. The bigger picture for me (in terms of a novelist, and not necessarily as a dad) relates to the concept of perspective. It’s been my mind’s mantra for as long as I can recall. Whether one is talking about mental health, politics, or just getting along with one another, the key in my mind has always been a healthy perspective. The size or importance of something in relation to something else. Thinking about your problems in relation to how much worse things can be. Thinking about the positives in your life in relation to the negatives. Then grasp at the size of the Cosmos. Try to wrap your head around the enormity of the Universe. You begin to realize how each of us, and our issues, are so small. And then there’s G-d, as you know him/her/it, or some higher power, or something else, that might bind us together in a natural world. These thoughts and feelings were all there, all along while trying to deal with my daughter’s inescapable issues. The story sprang from these concepts – the hard part was putting them all together in a cohesive tail. I can’t tell you how that happened. It just did, writing with passion.

    Chanti: And you did it all so beautifully. Well said, sir. Thank you for that. What areas in your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Sirotkin: A difficult, yet interesting question. I can’t say that there is one area in particular. But what comes to mind is doing the research. I intended the book to be a piece of fiction based as much in reality as I possibly could. The book in large part was about the Truth. I couldn’t base a book about the Truth, on something that wasn’t real. So, to understand certain areas of “reality” I needed to do a lot of research. Some of it surrounded the nature and mysteries of the Cosmos, what we understand of it, what we don’t, and what we are learning today. I’m no scientist, but I’m just smart enough perhaps to wrap my head around these issues sufficiently to convey them within a story. And the trick was to do the telling as efficiently as possible so as not to lose the reader in confusing detail. Me thinks I could have done that better, having heard from a few readers that they flipped through the science stuff. (And this is why you need a good editor, who tells you when enough is enough.) In any case, the internet is a limitless source of information. To understand how Hubble the scientist was able to determine that the Universe was expanding back in 1928 or so, I had to sift through dozens of articles, many of which were inconsistent with what I read in the others. I also found myself pouring over YouTube videos, or Google Maps of places I needed to describe in utter detail. My advice? Patience, Yoda. And don’t take anything for granted. Facts are facts, there are no alternative facts, and it may take a while to piece it all together. But you’ll get there.

    Chanti: Who’s the perfect reader for your book?

    Sirotkin: Let me answer this question by telling you who will likely not appreciate my novel: someone with certain expectations, someone without an open mind, someone that only likes a certain genre, and/or finally someone that wants to read a story without thinking. My book is a thinking person’s book. If you have an open mind, if you want to experience something out of the ordinary, if you want to learn about something you’ve never even heard of, then you should read my book. If you like delving into the developing personality and motivation of a character, then you will like my book. If you have a sense of humor, and are compassionate about those in dire straits, you will like my book. Most people who read it do. No writer can please everyone.

    Chanti: I like how you answered that question. What excites you most about writing?

    Sirotkin: I would write each chapter a hundred times. This is without exaggeration. I love to see the improvement with each pass. My first draft of a chapter would literally suck. Pardon that word. So, what excites me the most is seeing this evolution take place.

    Write, write, and rewrite!

    Chanti: Fascinating! Do you ever experience writers block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Sirotkin: No, I would not describe it as writer’s block. On many days, I didn’t have the time to write, attending to more mundane issues, or my work. But when I sat at my keyboard, I could always write something. The question for me was the quality of that something and was it worth keeping. How much work would be required to rehabilitate it. If you’ve ever been down, or depressed (and who hasn’t) the key for me to move on from such a state is to take action. A conversation, a confrontation if needed, a long walk, whatever. Don’t sit and brood. The same with “writer’s block.”

    Take action and write. Write anything. Write about something different. Write a letter. Write a silly poem. Or write another chapter but don’t worry about the quality. Just keep writing. And don’t think about it too much. Get back up on that horse. It will find its way home without you.

    I watch a lot of tennis. It’s amazing how badly a pro could be playing in the first set, only to make a tremendous comeback in the second. He keeps at it, playing the game. As in writer’s block, the setback was all mental! Suddenly, he’s back at the top of his game, often without a clue as to what caused his initial lapse.

    Chanti: What is the most important thing a reader can do for an author?

    Sirotkin: This is an easy one. Love his book and rave about it to him and everyone else in the world. Since I won’t make any money from this experience, at least my ego should be boosted. Big time. Sorry, I’m just mostly kidding here. Seriously? The most important thing a reader can do is to give the work the attention it deserves. If it’s a slow read, like mine might be, read it slowly. Afterward, thoughtful criticism and evaluation is most appreciated, especially if I’m to write another one. And yes, if you like the book, pass it on. The most important thing for me is that people read my book and hear what I had to say.

    Chanti: Okay friends, you heard it! If you love nothing more than a well-built, eloquent novel that addresses the hard issues of life with a strong sense of the human soul, look no further! Read Alex Sirotkin’s Award-Winning novel, The Long Desert Road. Be sure to contact the author and share your thoughts – send the book along to others with similar loves. Tell the World! You will be doing all of us a tremendous favor because good books simply must be read.

    Find our review of The Long Desert Road by Alex Sirotkin here, and buy it from Bookshop, Amazon, or Barnes and Noble! Remember, Reader Reviews really help your favorite authors!

  • VALENTINE’S DAY SWEET READS with LOVE from CHANTICLEER – Romance, Historical Romance, Western Romance, Thriller/Suspense Romance

    VALENTINE’S DAY SWEET READS with LOVE from CHANTICLEER – Romance, Historical Romance, Western Romance, Thriller/Suspense Romance

    A Valentine to Mark Twain, a beloved American Author 

    Both marriage and death ought to be welcome: the one promises happiness, doubtless the other assures it.
    – Samuel Clemens aka Mark Twain

    Editor’s Note: Samuel Clemons writing as Mark Twain is a beloved author to Fairhaven, a village in Bellingham, Wash. where Chanticleer Reviews’ home office is located and where the company was founded. On August, 14, 1895, Mark Twain spoke to  a full house at the Lighthouse Hall (700 seats) and received a standing ovation. Admission was seventy-five cents and one dollar for the best seats. This was the last stop in his United States tour. He arrived from presenting in Seattle on August 13, 1895. His next stop was Vancouver, British Columbia before heading out west across the Pacific Ocean for a world tour.

    February 14th is really one of the strangest holidays we celebrate with its origins in the early Church, mired with martyrs. No one really knows for sure if there was one Valentini or two, or perhaps an entire herd of them, but, it is believed that Saint Valentine lost his head over converting people to the Christian faith. The head in question now resides in “…glass reliquary in a small basilica in Rome, surrounded by flowers.” [Atlas Obscura

    Editor's Note: Did we mention that Sharon Anderson, the author of this article, writes horror...

    For us, February 14th is the day we all wear our hearts on our sleeves (literally), write little notes professing our love to one another, exchange candied hearts (Necco hearts may not be on the shelf this year because the company that purchased the popular brand said they, “Didn’t have time…” ), buy long-stemmed red roses for those we love (One site claims that in 2010, over 110 million long-stemmed roses were sold! That’s a lotta roses!), and chocolates… let’s not forget about the chocolates!

    Susan Marie Conrad offering CHOCOLATES at her book signing, The INSIDE PASSAGE.

    Whichever way you celebrate February 14th,
    we’ve got some fabulous reads lined up for you that are just
    too sweet to pass up!


    A Valentine of Great Reads for YOU from Chanticleer! 

    The Art of Enchantment by M. A. Clarke Scott is a well-paced escape for those hungering for art, history and a hot ride with a handsome Italian hero.

    M.A. Clarke Scott won the 2016 Grand Prize in the Chatelaine Awards for this novel!


    Daughter of Destiny: Guineviere’s Tale, Book 1 by Nicole Evelina is rich in historical detail and fantastical landscapes. This novel takes a brilliant twist on the historical perception of Queen Guinevere: she has magical powers, but will her gift be enough to save her people?

    Nicole Evalina not only won the 2015 Chatelaine Grand Prize for this novel and took home the Overall Grand Prize!


    Twisted Threads by Kaylin McFarren is a fast-paced romantic thriller complete with secret assassins, notorious secrets, steamy passion nights abound on this luxury Caribbean cruise – in other words, exhilarating! This is the fourth book in the Threads Romantic Thriller series and won Grand Prize in the 2017 CIBA CLUE Awards.


    Find Me Again by Janet Shawgo is a mystery, a conspiracy theory, and an amazing love story that crosses generations—all combined into one amazing read. Although there are two more novels in the series, each book stands alone.  Wait For Me.  WWII  Women  Look For Me.   Civil War Historical Fiction


    The Winters Sisters Series by Joanne Jaytanie contain elements of genetic engineering, strong women and the men who love them and nods to the author’s beloved dogs. These are hot romantic thrillers!


    Under an English Heaven by Alice Boatwright has twists and turns aplenty that will make any cozy fan enjoy this easy read, and enough descriptions of the bucolic village landscape and teas to make anyone who loves all things British happy. A second Ellie Kent Mystery is promised sometime this year.


    Building Mr. Darcy by Ashlinn Craven is a fun, fast-paced cozy reveals what happens when the witty and charming Mr. Darcy springs to life as an A.I. But, is he more than his two developers can handle?


    Seize the Flame by Lynda J Cox is a romantic Western celebrating second chances and proving that lightning not only strikes twice – but sometimes in the exact same spot.


    Threads of Passion by T.K. Conklin is a paranormal romance, western-style, that will leave you begging for more!


    The Blackbird by Kristy McCaffrey is a steamy, intelligent historical fiction set in the Arizona desert where the harsh environment matches the characters who populate it. This is the fourth book in McCaffrey’s Winds of the West series. 


    Hot Scheming Mess by Lucy Carol is a hilarious, fast-paced sexy cozy mystery with a believable lead and a gripping plot. Sassy, smart, and FUNNY!


    Mistress Suffragette by Diana Forbes is an engaging, stimulating, and action-packed novel that examines the facts of life, the challenges of social restrictions, and the woes of youthful love through the eyes of a sharp-minded, sharp-shooting young woman.


    The Passage Home to Meuse by Gail Noble Sanderson is an epic journey back to the post-war world of the 1920s where Noble Sanderson’s characters explore whether love can indeed conquer all.


    The Boundary Stone by Gail Avery Halverson – This story is set against the backdrop of the black plague, one woman of note risks everything to follow her calling and find her true love…


    Dare Devil: A Georgian Historical Romance, Book 3 of the Roxton Family Saga by Lucinda Brant


    A Girl Like You: A Henrietta and Inspector Howard Novel by Michelle Cox is about a brave and daring darling of the Great Depression puts herself in harm’s way to solve a mystery and endear herself to the handsome detective whose job it is to solve it.


    Check out our list of Chatelaine Award Winners here.

    Please let us know, who is your favorite romance author?

     

  • CHATELAINE BOOK AWARDS for Women’s Fiction & Romantic Fiction 2017 SHORT LIST

    CHATELAINE BOOK AWARDS for Women’s Fiction & Romantic Fiction 2017 SHORT LIST

    Romance Fiction Award

    The CHATELAINE Book Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works of Women’s Fiction and Romantic Fiction. The CHATELAINE Book Awards is a division of the Chanticleer Reviews International Book Awards.

    The following titles will compete for the FIRST IN CATEGORY Positions (Contemporary Romance, Adventure & Suspense, Historical Romance, Inspirational/Restorative/Clean, and Romantic/Steamy/Sensual)  Book Awards Packages for the 2017 Chatelaine Book Awards.

    Congratulations to all those who made the SHORT LIST!

    The Finalists Authors and Titles of Works that have made it to the highly competitive Short-List (aka The Semi-Finalists) of the Chatelaine 2017 Book Awards are:

    Good Luck to All! 

    • Diane Wylie – Magic of the Pentacle
    • Phillip Vega – Last Exit to Montauk
    • Elizabeth Crowens – Dear Mr. Hitchcock
    • Abbie Roads – Hunt the Dawn
    • Anna Durbin – King of Swords
    • J.L.Oakley – Mist-chi-mas: An Novel of Captivity
    • Nick Rester – Darlings
    • Ryan K. Nelson – Cash Valley
    • Eileen Charbonneau – Watch Over Me
    • Kate Vale – Chance Encounter
    • F. E. Greene – The Best-Left Questions
    • Cynthia A. Crowner – Blinded by the Night
    • Gail Noble-Sanderson – The Passage Home to Meuse
    • Cheri Champagne – The Trouble With Love
    • Cheri Champagne – Love and Deceit 
    • Cheri Champagne – Love’s Misadventure
    • Michelle Cox – A Ring of Truth 
    • Lucinda Brant – Proud Mary: A Georgian Historical Romance (Book 5)
    • Cerella Sechrist – A Song for Rory
    • Leigh Grant – Mask of Dreams
    • Keith Zwingelberg/Rory Church – Kindred Spirits the Healers
    • Sara Dahmen – Wine & Children
    • Dana Faletti – Beautiful Secret

    The 2017 Chatelaine Short Listers will compete for the Chatelaine First-In-Category Positions.  First Place Category Award winners will automatically be entered into the Chatelaine GRAND PRIZE AWARD competition.  The CBR Grand Prize Genre Winners will compete for the CBR Overall Grand Prize for Best Book.

    Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner M. A. Clarke Scott

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

    Nicole Evelina awarded Chatelaine Grand Prize for DAUGHTER OF DESTINY

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

    Congratulations to the Short Listers in this fiercely competitive contest! 

    Good Luck to each of you as each one of your works competes for the Chatelaine Awards  First Class Category Positions. 

    Janet Shawgo Won the Chatelaine Grand Prize

    The Chatelaine Grand Prize Winner and the  First Place Category Position award winners along with all Short Listers in attendance will be announced at the April 21st, 2018 Chanticleer Book Awards Annual Awards Gala, which takes place at the Chanticleer Authors Conference that will be held in Bellingham, Wash. 

    To compete in the 2018 Chatelaine Book 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 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 and Book Awards.

  • The Chatelaine Awards 2013 Finalists for Romantic Fiction

    The Chatelaine Awards 2013 Finalists for Romantic Fiction

    It is our pleasure to post the Official List of The Chatelaine Awards Finalists 2013.

    Finalists will compete for 1st Place Category positions. First Place Category winners will compete for Overall Best of Chatelaine for Romantic Fiction 2013.

    Jane-morris-blue-silk-e1359158634897The Chatelaine Awards recognize emerging new talent and outstanding works in the genre of Romantic Fiction. It is a division of Chanticleer Blue Ribbon Awards Writing Competitions.

    The Updated list of  Finalists Titles & Authors that made the Chatelaine Awards 2013 Shortlist are:

    • The Lily and the Lion  by Catherine T. Wilson & Catherine A. Wilson
    • Choices  by Kate Vale
    • Swamp Secret by Eleanor Tatum
    • The Hourglass by Sharon Struth
    • Wait for Me by  Janet K. Shawgo
    • Pulse and Prejudice by Colette Saucier
    • Crimson Flames   by Ashley Robertson
    • Love on the Back Burner: A Tasty Romantic Comedy  by Barbara J. Oliverio
    • Chasing Charlie by C. M. Newman
    • Shining Star by Anna Lopez
    • Give Her the Stars by Marilyn Lathrop
    • A  Path through the Garden  by Nancy LaPonzina
    •  Show No Weakness by Joyce Holmes
    • Whatever He Wants  by  Bridgett Henson
    • Brimstone and Water by Sharon House
    • I, Walter  by Mike Hartner
    • To Dare the Duke of Dangerfield   by Bronwen Evans

    Now this is something to CROW about!

    Congratulations to the Chatelaine Awards Finalists!

    Good luck to all in the next two rounds!  1st Place Category winners will be announced before Jan. 15, 2014.