Tag: Steampunk

  • The 2025 Ozma Book Awards Spotlight for Fantasy Fiction!

    The Search for the Best Fantasy Fiction of 2025 is on!

    Ozma Awards

    The submissions for the 2025 Awards are well underway, and Ozma closes submissions at the end of June!

    Fantasy isn’t just elves and magic—there are so many possibilities for a Fantasy tale, and we love that! From epic quests to urban magic, from steampunk adventures to mythical retellings, the Ozma Awards celebrate the boundless imagination that fantasy fiction offers.

    Let’s Dive into the Categories!

    • Magic, Heroes and Villains is the great variety of books that involve big archetypes and adventures like Six of Crows or The Fourth Wing.
    • Coming of Age Fantasy typically looks at someone coming into their own, like Harry Potter discovering his magical heritage, but it can also be aimed at a younger audience. For YA Fantasy, check out the Dante Rossetti Awards, and for Middle Grade Fantasy, explore the Gertrude Warner Awards!
    • Steampunk/Dieselpunk/Gaslight Fantasy are types of Alternative History and Counterculture. Steampunk features Victorian-era sci-fi or fantasy with an emphasis on steam-powered technology and historical fashions. Dieselpunk has more of an industrial Art Deco, Film Noir aesthetic with elements from the World Wars and Early Cold War—think Bioshock or Blade Runner.
    • Modern and Urban Fantasy is exactly what it sounds like—Jim Butcher’s The Dresden Files is a perfect example. Fantasy elements in realistic, contemporary settings.
    • Myths and Legends and Fairy Tales feature classic Fantasy elements: fairies, King Arthur, folktale-type stories that have enchanted readers for generations.
    • Fantasy – Classic is High Fantasy like Lord of the Rings—epic battles between good and evil in richly imagined worlds.
    • Historical Fantasy is history with magic, where dark sorcerers move in ancient Viking battles or Nazis attempt to secure the Holy Grail.

    Celebrating Our 2024 Grand Prize Winner!

    After months of reviewing hundreds of entries, we are delighted to announce that Erin Lark Maples claimed the 2024 Ozma Grand Prize with her extraordinary novel A Circle of Stars! Throughout last year’s Ozma Book Awards, we’ve had the pleasure of promoting nearly 60 books as they advanced through our competition tiers.

    Circle of Stars

    Ozma Grand Prize Badge for A Circle of Stars by Erin Lark Maples

    Erin Lark Maples’s reluctant hero, compelling narrative, and richly layered world that exemplifies the innovative fantasy storytelling we seek to recognize. In addition to all the featured posts that have already gone out for the Ozma Awards, A Circle of Stars will be regularly promoted throughout the year on the Ozma Awards page and for the next five years in our upcoming Hall of Fame post. Erin Lark Maples will also be invited to participate in a Chanticleer 10-Question Interview, and you can read the Chanticleer Editorial Review for A Circle of Stars here!

    Looking for Your Next Fantasy Read?

    Check out some of these incredible books we’ve reviewed recently that showcase the amazing diversity of fantasy fiction!

    DIOMEDES In KYPRIOS: Diomedia Series Book 2
    By Gregory Michael Nixon

    Diomedes in Kyprios Cover

    Gregory Michael Nixon’s Diomedes in Kyprios, book 2 in the Diomedeia Series, continues the adventures of the godlike yet all too human hero, Diomedes of Tiryns, as he seeks to discover a meaningful destiny in the chaos of the Bronze Age Collapse.

    We begin after the fall of the Hittite Empire, four years after the destruction of Troy. He emerges from the dark river that runs through the underworld where the sacrifice of the Hittite Great King has just occurred, and he has rescued the Hittite Queen from certain death. Nearly drowned but still alive, he recalls only that he had vowed to reunite with the former Queen of the Hittites, the woman he loves named Lieia, at Paphos on the island of Kyprios (ancient Cyprus).

    Lieia must undergo her own “odyssey” to get to Paphos to meet Diomedes. She depends on her band of protectors, but they pay for fare aboard a ship with evil men who cannot be trusted.

    Read more here!

    THE WINTER HEIR: Fractured Kingdoms Book 2
    By J.A. Nielsen
    Dante Rossetti First Place Winner

    The Winter Heir Cover

     

    The Winter Heir, the second book in J.A. Nielsen’s Fractured Kingdoms series, picks up where the first book, The Claiming, leaves off—with its protagonists struggling under the weight of a vital bargain.

    Lady Dew Drop, Dewy to her friends—and her frenemies—is languishing in the court of the Winter Fae, a summer princess nearly frozen in both heart and spirit as she does her best to fulfill the pact she made with the Winter King. Meanwhile, the man who got her into this mess, the human mage and illegitimate princeling of Telridge—Spence Ferrous—tries to fulfill the deal for her.

    But the story is much bigger than these two young lovers. The Winter King is dying without a legitimate heir. And it’s his own proud, arrogant fault. As much as both the humans and the Summer Fae would be willing to let him suffer the consequences of his own actions—he’s not the only one who will.

    Read more here!

    SUMMER CYCLONE: Magic at Myers Beach Book 4
    By Alan B. Gibson

    Summer Cyclone Cover

    The citizens of the three fairy kingdoms clash, forced to live shoulder-to-shoulder alongside ungoverned Outliers. In Summer Cyclone, fourth book of Alan B. Gibson’s Magic at Myers Beach series, unassuming tea-shop manager Stefán tries to find love while keeping all of fairy society from fracturing.

    The three fairy kings, Theos, Zsombor, and Christophe, evacuate their people to Myers Beach. It’s only here that they have any chance of recreating fairy dust after their old sources had been poisoned, and saving every fairy life. They take in the Outliers, remnants of a fallen kingdom, and at first find good will between the groups. But with thousands of fairies moving in, they have to keep everyone on a short leash or else risk humans catching wind of their new neighbors. Resentment of these strange Outliers builds.

    Stefán, a close confidant to Theos, struggles to keep anti-Outlier sentiment at bay with the help of some enigmatic and knowledgeable new friends. Rumors of him giving the Outliers special treatment grow stronger as some fairies begin to suspect that he’s actually one of them.

    Read more here!

    BOOK Of LEPRECHAUNS: The Lore Gatherers
    By Jonathan Uffelman
    Ozma First Place Winner

    Book of Leprechauns Cover

    Three leprechauns, Molly, Shaun, and Dorker, have their lives turned upside down when a sinister figure returns to their peaceful village with greed and revenge on his mind. In Jonathan Uffelman’s middle-grade fantasy, Book of Leprechauns: The Lore Gatherers, they embark on a treacherous journey to recover their lost home.

    Shaun McClanahan struggles to support his daughter Molly as she fails a crucial test for young Lore Gatherers—a subculture of Leprechauns who respect the power of stories. Though he’s weighed down by his responsibilities as the protector of his village’s communal gold stash, Shaun tries to overcome his worrying nature by trusting Molly to check on the gold by herself, hopeful that she can prove her worth to the village.

    But when Molly follows her father’s magical instructions to the letter, she discovers with horror that the treasure is missing, save one ancient Roman coin.

    Read more here!

    These reviews represent just a glimpse of the fantastic worlds waiting to be discovered in today’s fantasy fiction.


    See the Chanticleer Difference for Yourself!

    We’re so excited about all the great books we receive every year for both the CIBAs and for our Editorial Reviews. The Chanticleer International Book Awards offers an incredible $30,000 in cash, prizes, and promotion across all divisions!

    This is the journey from beginning to end for the CIBAs! Every list you make means more promotion for you and your work as each advancement tier is posted right here on our website, on our social media, and also out in our newsletter! Your book deserves to be discovered.

    Don’t Let Your Tale Remain Untold!

    Ozma Awards
    Ozma Awards are due June 30, 2025!

    The magic of storytelling lies in sharing your vision with the world. Whether your fantasy features dragons soaring over ancient kingdoms or witches working spells in modern cities, the Ozma Awards are your gateway to recognition and readership.

    Fantasy has the power to transport readers beyond the mundane into realms of infinite possibility. Don’t let your story remain hidden in an enchanted vault—submit to the Ozma Awards today and join the ranks of celebrated fantasy authors who’ve found their audience through Chanticleer!

    You know you want it…

    Enter the Ozma Awards today!

  • Laurel Anne Hill 10 QUESTION AUTHOR INTERVIEW SERIES – Author Life, Book Discovery, Young Adult Novels

    Ozma Grand Prize Badge for Plague of Flies by Laurel Anne Hill10 Question Author Interview Series with Laurel Anne Hill, Award-Winning Author

    Laurel Anne Hill is one of our favorite authors. Whip smart and full of life, Laurel Anne took home the Grand Prize in OZMA for her work, Plague of Flies: Revolt of the Spirits, 1846.

    Let’s get to know Laurel Anne Hill a little better. Read on!

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

    Hill: Born in 1943, I started writing stories before I could read. My older sister would write down the words I told her to, inside a paper tablet. I’d fill in the blank places with pictures I’d cut out of comics or magazines. My first published short story—Nancy Saves the Day—appeared in the children’s section of a major San Francisco newspaper when I was eleven years old. For this I received the payment of two dollars, enough money to see eight double features at my local movie theater if I hadn’t decided to spend the money on something else.

    My craft may have been questionable, but I’d become a published author.

    My publications as an adult include three award-winning novels, over thirty short stories, many short nonfiction pieces, and one scientific paper.

    Chanti: Some of those awards are from Chanticleer! Let’s talk about genre. What genre best describes your work? And, what led you to write in this genre?

    Hill: I mostly write speculative fiction: science fiction, fantasy, steampunk and horror. My warped brain has loved to create that sort of stuff since the third grade, when my parents took me to the theater to see Bela Lugosi’s “Dracula.” During the many years I worked professionally in the field of environmental health and safety, I even described my on-the-job writing assignments as “science facts, written in response to governmental fantasy, in order to avoid regulatory horror.” My novels and many of my short stories feature young adult protagonists.

    Chanti: Do you find yourself following the rules or do you like to make up your own rules?

    Hill: I like to follow what I call “standard good writing practices,” the information I’ve learned (and continue to glean) from writing mentors and experts in the field. I stray from these rules when the story I’m writing demands me to deviate. For example, in Plague of Flies: Revolt of the Spirits, 1846, my protagonist, Catalina Delgado, narrated in first person present tense. One-third through the first draft, I realized I needed a second point-of-view character to provide information only an antagonist could. Two first person point-of-view characters would have confused readers. I opted for a hybrid point-of-view, like I’d experimented with in my second novel, The Engine Woman’s Light. This approach of one first person and one third person narrator solved my problem.

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

    Hill: When I was growing up, my family was poor, and my dad was an alcoholic. Three generations resided in a two-bedroom, one-toilet rented flat in San Francisco. I wanted to attend college, but realized I’d have to earn the money to do so. I entered every essay contest open to public high school students in the city and won enough money to pay for four years of college tuition and books at San Francisco State College. In 1967, I graduated with a degree in the biological sciences. In 1978, four years after I’d left my psychologically abusive first husband for a far better man, I earned my Master of Science degree at California Polytechnic State University.

    In my twenties, I loved to skin and SCUBA dive, and ride a surf mat down miles of California’s white-water river rapids. I also experimented with oil paints and underwater photography. By my early thirties, I still did skin and SCUBA periodically, painting and underwater photography, but I’d married a widower with two teenage sons and one preteen, and joyfully accepted my family responsibilities. Immediately, I expanded my cooking repertoire. All those wonderful guys loved to eat.

    One ring to rule them

    Back then, I worked at San Francisco General Hospital as a nuclear medicine technologist. My husband owned a cabin in the Sierra foothills, and we would spend at least one weekend a month there. Our daughter was born when I was thirty-five years old. I didn’t start writing as an adult until my early fifties. By then, our daughter was a teen, the three “boys,” long-since grown, and our cabin sold.

    Aside from our annual family fishing trip, my “hiking” became mostly limited to traversing the 53-acre site where I worked in environmental health and safety. When I retired in 2008, I joined my husband on his daily walks up-and-down-the hills where we resided—up to three miles daily. Now, as a widow, my physical therapist has assigned me exercises in response to the three major falls I had a couple years ago. My “hobby” has become enjoying my amazing family and learning a path to improved health. I also serve as secretary of my high school alumni association and a member of my local Methodist church.

    Chanti: That’s incredible! Paying for university by writing essays? Amazing! Thank you for sharing some of your history. How do you come up with your ideas for a story?

    Hill: Since my childhood, characters (often armed with their own adventurous tales) have popped into my dreams and conscious thoughts. Up until the second or third grade, they were like imaginary friends, except I understood they weren’t real people. After that, some of them gradually morphed into a cast of characters for possible future stories. Throughout the past thirty years, characters have moved into my mind with their own stories to tell as the need arose. I’ve often said that a main character has to feel real in my head before I can make him/her/they “real” on the page. Once characters and I start communicating inside my brain, my ideas flow.

    Chanti: How do you approach your writing day?

    Hill: Before I retired from my job as an environmental health and safety specialist at a pharmaceutical research and development site, my writing time was early in the morning, after dinner, and/or as weekends allowed. Once retired, I wrote at the table while my beloved husband sipped coffee and read the morning paper or while he watched the evening news. I would write in-between my household, family and other obligations. After my husband passed away six years ago, my “approach to my writing day” has consisted of consulting my kitchen calendar in the morning, then deciding the best time to grab my laptop, open it and start working.

    Chanti: What areas in your writing are you most confident in? What advice would you give someone who is struggling in that area?

    Hill: I’ve had over thirty of my short stories published since 1995, served as the editor-in-chief for three anthology collections, and assisted in the editing of several others. I’ve also judged a number of short story contests. I love the short story as a writing medium, but caution new writers to consider the following advice before creating one: The short story is not a very, very short novel. Remember to avoid the temptation to use subplots and multiple point-of-view characters. Read a lot of short stories in your preferred genre. Reading the classics is great, but read plenty of contemporary pieces to see what’s getting published today.

    Chanti: That’s great advice! What craft books have helped you the most?

    Hill: You might laugh, but I vote for Writing in General, and the Short Story in Particular by L. Rust Hills, first published, I believe, in the late 1970s. I read a lot of classical literature years prior to my first attempt to write a short story as an adult. Despite my Craft of Fiction class in college, I never understood that the difference between a short story and a novel involved a lot more than length. Nor did I comprehend the ways in which the modern novel had evolved in the twentieth century. The diagrams in Orson Scott Card’s Characters and Viewpoint (1988) helped me visualize the differences between the various point-of-view options writers have. Recently, I discovered a website blog by David G. Brown that explains what I’ve been learning at conferences about point-of-view for the past ten years. [Go to: https://darlingaxe.com/blogs/news/history-of-pov.]

    Chanti: Thank you for that information. Give us your best marketing tips, what’s worked to sell more books, gain notoriety, and expand your literary footprint.

    Hill: I’m active in the California Writers Club and participate in their “Writers Helping Writers” outreach programs. I’ve been a program participant at many science fiction/fantasy “cons” internationally for fifteen years. I’ve run Amazon book promos, with up to 3,000 book sales (and Amazon best seller status in particular categories) over the promotional period. My most recent novel, Plague of Flies: Revolt of the Spirits, 1846, has won seventeen awards and a number of excellent professional reviews. My previous novel, The Engine Woman’s Light, won thirteen awards and received a Kirkus Star. Yet my overall book sales are not particularly impressive. At age eighty, I’m still not sure what the heck works at all, let alone the best. With luck, maybe I’ll figure it out by the time I hit ninety.

    Plague of Flies book promoChanti: You figure it out and let us know, okay? What are you working on now? What can we look forward to seeing next from you?

    Hill: I’m writing a steampunk fantasy set in Mexico and California in the nineteenth century. Working title: Saints of Fire. In this novel, the mass murder of family members forces a Mexican woman and her two daughters to flee into hiding from the unidentified perpetrators. The spirit of her now-deceased husband seeks to identify the persons responsible for the disaster, but death has stolen most of his memory. He finds he can only communicate with his fifteen-year-old daughter. Gradually, he and his daughter start to realize he might have played a role in the horrific event.

    Chanti: That actually sent chills up and down my arms! Do you ever experience writers block? What do you do to overcome it?

    Hill: I have never been blocked from writing words. Writing the best words, however, can pose a challenge. Sometimes, I’ll stare at the screen, pour another cup of coffee and keep mulling over possibilities until the answer materializes in my gray matter. Other times, I’ll move to a different part of my manuscript and work there. Eventually, I’ll find my words in all the places I need them to be.

    Chanti: What excites you most about writing?

    Hill: The ability to combine words, ideas and art to create a piece unique to me—a dynamic adventure with authentic, engaging characters. I’m excited by the possibility of touching another human heart and changing that organ’s owner in some small yet positive way.

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

    Hill: Some might say to read the author’s latest book and give it a good review on Amazon. Then recommend that book to other readers. Some might say to read multiple books by the same author. Those are both important. Yet I really hope at least a few of my readers will allow my words to touch their hearts—to encourage them to modify their thoughts and lives in a positive manner, if only in some small way.

    Chanti:  Here is the link to Laurel Anne’s website where you can discover her works 

  • LUNA: Rhone and Stone Book 2 by Strider S.R. Klusman – YA, Action/Adventure, Steampunk

       

      Luna, the second book in Strider S.R. Klusman’s YA Rhone and Stone Series, follows Rhone and his alien partner Stone as they develop a ship that can sail through the air.

      The two train to become agents for the Office of Public Recrimination, urged to join by their friend – and now boss – Aundrea. Rhone struggles through training with the help of his trusty partner, but a much more difficult test remains before them – their first assignment.

      Aundrea sends them to Corgy, a port town, without explaining their mission. But it doesn’t take long for Rhone to encounter troubles from shore and sea alike.

      He and Stone meet Mayor Dugan, who takes an instant dislike for Rhone, posing as a wealthy merchant’s son. But it’s his front, designed so by the ladies of the OPR, and commands a great deal of respect and authority from the locals, if not Bella. Sometimes it’s difficult not to forget his actual purpose for being at Corgy. As an agent of the OPR, he must solve the town’s greatest problem, a rash of pirate attacks on Corgy’s vital ocean-borne trade; if they continue, Corgy won’t survive.

      But to fix anything in Corgy, Rhone will need help.

      The roguish Captain Black tests Rhone’s sea legs on the Backwater Mistress. Rhone passes the test of rough waters – barely – and garners the good captain’s respect.

      He also meets the beautiful Bella, a waitress at The Common House in Corgy. Though he’s smitten with her, Rhone is on a mission, and ends up frustrating her with mixed messages.

      Bella responds to him with a fiery personality, but Rhone finds her passion to be as enthralling as it is unpredictable. As he gets to know her, he helps Bella find her place in a society that tries to smother her drive for independence.

      She wants to prove that she is as good as any man. And, when Rhone comes up with the idea to hunt Corgy’s pirates from the air, Bella has her chance to do so.

      Rhone takes Bella’s opinions and advice as they design a unique kind of ship. Aviation is unknown to this world, but the trio – Rhone, Stone, and Bella – design and pilot their first prototype, named Bo, a hot-air balloon made from a whale’s bladder. While a proof-of-concept, Bo doesn’t last long, and they’ll need a much greater ship to take down the dangerous pirates.

      Stone provides immense scientific knowledge, Rhone the training in sailing he received from Captain Black, and Bella a knowledge of materials and the resources of Corgy. Between them, they turn an awkward and dangerous balloon into a vessel worthy of the sky.

      Joining with Captain Black, the three plan to stop the pirates in their tracks – despite the great danger.

      Tense and descriptively rich action scenes will keep readers turning page after page to find out if Rhone and Bella will survive their flight in an experimental craft – relying on the work of their own minds and hands.

      Klusman’s masterful storytelling takes this second book in the Rhone and Stone series to the next level. Readers who have not read the first book will have no problem following this story, but will eagerly go back to join Rhone’s first adventure. Rhone and Stone make a fabulous team, sharing thoughts and trust as they claw their way out of danger time after time.

      This book is a five-star read and a great adventure. Readers will be chomping at the bit for book three!

       

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • THE HIDDEN LIBRARY: Book 2 of the Isle of Dragons Series by L.A. Thompson – Steampunk, YA Fantasy, Action & Adventure

      Isle of Dragons: The Hidden Library by L.A. Thompson is a breathtaking race to seize the reins of destiny and find a magical library that was once the subject of stories and lore. Jade and Kaylen, once friends, oppose each other in search of this hidden library and its world-changing secrets.

      Demoted and dejected, Kaylen reels from her valiant but failed attempt to bring back the final item that King Jarrod needs to fulfill a prophecy. The iconic stone remains out of reach. Kaylen is summoned for an audience with the king. A glimmer of hope for the future flickers, but the king demands an even more ambitious mission of her. He will restore her rank and honors if she finds for him the mysterious hidden library that can open a gateway between worlds. It’s a deadly challenge that will once again pit her against an old friend.

      Jade summons all her strength and courage with others who stand against the king who has made her family suffer. When she and Kaylen clash, sparks will ignite as hot as a dragon’s roar.

      The king’s final, harrowing order troubles Kaylen as she embarks on her quest. She is to kill her shapeshifter friend Drey after he’s helped her find the hidden library. Is Kaylen willing to sacrifice so much for her king? Can she even find what she seeks for her people and for herself, or will Jade find a key to winning the war against King Jarrod?

      The spirit library of The Isle of Dragons was once in water dragon territory, but the guardian spirit has now moved to a secret location on the isle. Jade and her small band search for this new location. They might have to sacrifice the magical stone they use as a tool in taming dragons, but it will be worth the brilliant goal they seek, a better world.

      Kaylen hopes to release new magic from the library to birth an era that she believes will be free forever of famine or plague. From two different directions, Kaylen and Jade pursue the vision of a beacon of hope, but at cross purposes how can this quest end?

      Author L. A. Thompson tells a soaring adventure on the backs of towering dragons full of personality. This fast-paced story proves a dramatic sequel in the Isle of Dragon series.

      Determined, inspiring characters battle on despite their sorrows, setbacks, and weaknesses. They accept terrifying challenges for the good of their people. The Isle and its people are imaginative and fleshed out, bringing the world to life. The characters’ kindness in moments of desperation, and their bravery in facing the unknown will stir empathy and concern in readers. Can these intrepid heroes stay resolute, and unite to see a brighter future?

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • DRUIDS Of The SKY by Dana Willow – Coming of Age, Steampunk, LGBT+ YA Fiction

       

      A young adult fantasy gem, Dana Willow’s Druids of the Sky, is a story about the power of found family and self-discovery.

      On a steampunk version of Earth, humans and druids have tensely coexisted for much of known history. Leah lives a content life with her merchant father aboard Skyport, a giant world-traveling airship held aloft by a metal called Heracleum. Another merchant boards Skyport with the hope of selling his druid creatures to humans as pets, but when one imprints on Leah, she discovers she’s not as human as she thought.

      Revealed to be a half-druid, her calm life traversing the human world is about to change forever.

      Leah leaves Skyport to seek out a druid community in hopes of finding whatever remains of her infamous family. Leah has a lot to discover about herself and must do so carefully in the face of prejudice against her nature.

      After departing from Skyport, Leah comes across a small druid town and meets Aspin, a young druid also struggling to find her place in the world. She is an alchemy school dropout and struggles with insecurity in her magical abilities. Together they embark on a journey to uncover Leah’s family, finding plenty of danger along with small but significant acts of kindness.

      Druids of the Sky is a page-turner with a flowing style that fits the young adult genre wonderfully.

      Author Dana Willow creates authentic emotional connections among her characters, growing them into complex and dynamic people. At the heart of the book is a romance intolerable to this world of druid and human conflict. This beautiful element of the story adds significant depth to the polarizing races and cultures of human and druid societies.

      Throughout Leah’s journey to find her parents, she encounters many who wish her harm, but just as many who hold out hope that one day druids and humans can live in peace. Druids of the Sky is a reminder that we are never alone and that there is always kindness in the world.

      This story shows the beauty in a journey shared with others.

      Dana Willow writes an ambiguous ending with many questions unanswered. This sly trick leaves readers with plenty of room for personal interpretations and hope that the story will continue well beyond the last page.

      Dana Willow’s debut novel Druids of the Sky is a heartfelt and relatable coming-of-age story, a must-read young adult fantasy novel. In a massive and congested genre, Druids of the Sky adds a needed touch of kindness and compassion.

       

      5 Stars! Best Book Chanticleer Book Reviews

    • The DEVIL PULLS the STRINGS by J. W. Zarek –  Young Adult Epic Fantasy Adventure, Young Adult Fantasy Action Adventure, Young Adult Urban Fantasy

      The DEVIL PULLS the STRINGS by J. W. Zarek – Young Adult Epic Fantasy Adventure, Young Adult Fantasy Action Adventure, Young Adult Urban Fantasy

       

      Overall Best Book of 2021 Grand Prize Badge for J.W. Zarek's The Devil Pulls the StringsThe protagonist and all-around decent guy, Boone Daniels, is in a heap of hurt in JW Zarek’s new Young Adult novel, The Devil Pulls the Strings.

      One would think being plagued by an evil spirit wendigo since age six would be enough inconvenience to last a lifetime, but when Boone jousts with his best bud at a Ren Faire and accidentally deals a mortal blow, the hurt he experiences suddenly lands on a sliding scale of 1 to 1 million. And Boone Daniels becomes a millionaire, so to speak.

      No ordinary guy, Boone makes a living as a handyman and swashbuckling knight at Renaissance Faires around Missouri. He’s also uniquely gifted with a form of eidetic memory coupled with synesthesia. What’s that? Simply put, synesthesia allows people to see colors and taste things when they hear music – and an eidetic memory allows folks to memorize whatever they’ve seen or heard one time. But that’s not all. Boone can time-travel, make friends with almost any feline or shapeshifter, and convince a certain immortal he’s worth more as an ally than a snack. No kidding, Baba Yaya loves human meat.

      After wounding his best friend, Boone promises to fill in for him as lead vocalist in the band, The Village Idiots, for a major gig in New York City.

      The gig caps off the Dragons and Nymphs Annual Charity Ball – a blood drive. (The irony of this will make readers chuckle.) After the band plays, a mysterious score of music by Niccolò Paganini will be played by the best violinist of the time, who also happens to be Boone’s fast-friend-confidant-maybe-girlfriend-we’ll-have-to-see, Sapphire Anjou. Sapphire, the French Ambassador’s daughter, has connections that tie her deeply to the Lavender and Rose Society. There’s more to these societies. The Dragons and Nymphs want nothing but destruction and chaos, while the Lavender and Rose Society maintain order and work to keep people alive. And both societies seek the magical score. You see, no one actually has the Paganini sheet music. It’s a mystery and plenty of people die and get maimed in the pursuit of the piece, but finally, just in the nick of time, Boone and Sapphire obtain it.

      What’s so special about this piece of music?

      It’s magic, of course! Whoever plays the Paganini score can summon anyone they want. The Dragons and Nymphs want it to summon Ambrogio, their Vampire All-Father, who now resides in Hell. One immortal wants it to free her sister, who’s been caught in a pocket universe (you’ll have to read the book to figure out what that means). And then there’s the nefarious all-around baddie, Ambrozij Sinti, humiliated as a young boy, who now seeks his revenge by using the Paganini piece to summon the Devil himself and destroy the world. The stakes are high, and there’s no time to lose.

      Told in first-person by hero Boone Daniels, J. W. Zarek spins an epic fantasy with tons of action, adventure, and folklore.

      His writing peppers readers with alliteration in trios, that serve to tighten phrasing to speed up action scenes, evoking visceral responses. Readers feel the panic Boone feels as the world closes in around him. Does it work? Like a charm. Almost perfect, readers will surely love this first in series, epic fantasy world and fall in love with Zarek’s leading man because of it.

      Somewhere between The Librarians meets The Magicians – mixed with the flawed hero archetypes of Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden and Harold Hearne’s Atticus O’Sullivan, Zarek’s hero brings fans of the genre something new to dig their teeth into – and that’s an excellent thing. Fans will be thrilled to learn that the novel will release in Graphic Novel format soon!

      The Devil Pulls the Strings won a whopping four Ribbons at the 2021 CIBA Ceremonies, a First Place Ribbon in both Ozma and Cygnus, as well as the Grand Prize in Paranormal, and the Overall Best Book of 2021 for the Chanticleer Int’l Book Awards!

      Chanticleer Book Reviews 5 Star Best Book silver foil sticker

       

       

       

       

    • Contract for OZMA Award Winner – Noah Lemelson – Good News Department

      Contract for OZMA Award Winner – Noah Lemelson – Good News Department

      A Good News Announcement at Chanticleer Reviews!

      Noah Lemelson, the author of  The Sightless City, a 2019 OZMA Book Awards First Place Winner, contacted us  to say that the work was picked up by Tiny Fox Press. It is scheduled to be released in July 2021 in print and e-pub.

      The Sightless City
      November 28, 2020 – Posted in: New Author, New Releases, News
      Love steam punk? Want it with an extra side of gritty? Maybe garnished with some first place awards? Look no further and check out our upcoming title The Sightless City by Noah Lemelson! We’ll let the blurb tease you with more, and we’re absolutely certain you’ll love this book as much as we do.

      Check it out and grab a copy from us here: https://tinyfoxpress.com/product/the-sightless-city/

      You can also pay Noah a visit on his site here: https://www.noahlemelson.com/blog

       

      ​A short-story writer and novelist based in LA. I write Science Fiction, Fantasy, Surreal-Horror, “Insert-Adjective-Here”-Punk and all sort of weird nonsense.

      I received my B.A. in Biology from the University of Chicago in 2014, then made a hard pivot into the world of fiction. I have previously publish short fiction pieces in the online magazines: “Space Squid,” “Literally Stories,” “Silver Blade,” and “Allegory.” I am currently completing my MFA in Creative Writing at Calarts, and have a novel in the works…

      Congratulations, Noah, on your publishing contract! 

      “It was awesome being part of the [OZMA] competition, and I think being [earning a First Place position] helped my book stand out when I was sending to Tiny Fox. Have a great day!” Noah
      Comments from the CIBA OZMA Judges:
      • Excellent crafting of a captivating story, setting an old-school, 1940s-style detective in a dark and dystopic world full of paranoia and ever-present dangers.
      • Details of day-to-day survival are smartly imagined, making it easy to sink one’s teeth into the plot.
      • Kudos to the author for making the various humanoid and non-human species believable and the physics and resources of this strange place seem perfectly acceptable.

      At Chanticleer International Book Awards, we are passionate about Discovering Today’s Best Books!

      Please send us your good news!

      Email us at: Chanticleer@ChantiReviews.com  — type GOOD NEWS and your last name in the Subject Line.

    • INTO the NORTH: A Keltin Moore Adventure by Lindsay Schopfer – Epic Fantasy, Steampunk, Action/Adventure

      INTO the NORTH: A Keltin Moore Adventure by Lindsay Schopfer – Epic Fantasy, Steampunk, Action/Adventure

      If Jack London had written about hunting fantastic beasts in a fantasy-tinged “Great White North” during a gold rush, instead of real animals in the Klondike, he’d have created a hunter like Keltin Moore and a beast like the Ghost of Lost Tap.

      The adventures of Keltin Moore read a lot like London’s best adventure stories, only written as if they were inspired by Larry Correia’s Monster Hunter International series. The combination leads to a chilling story (in more ways than one) about a professional beast hunter and his companions on a quest to make some money and save a town from a beast that no one has survived. Still, everyone has seen the aftermath of its depredations.

      They call it the Ghost of Lost Tap because it moves like a ghost. Or something supernatural. And no one has been able to catch it, certainly not the little band of shakedown artists calling themselves the Hunter Guild that has sprung up in the ramshackle boomtown of Lost Tap.

      The story focuses on the character of Keltin Moore, the last of a long and storied family of professional beast hunters. Keltin learned his trade at his father’s knee, and like his father, is used to hunting alone. But in his second adventure, he is traveling with an apprentice, young Jaylocke, who needs to learn a trade to earn his place as an adult among his own people.

      In Lost Tap, Keltin and Jaylocke band together with old friends that they fought with in the first book of Keltin’s adventures, The Beast Hunter. While they hunt the “Ghost,” Keltin finds himself meditating on the nature of leadership, his need to be alone versus his understanding that he needs others to bring down this unstoppable beast, and his feelings of responsibility to those under his care and in his heart.

      Keltin is a fascinating character. This second installment of the series provides a thought-provoking perspective on his profession, his responsibilities as a leader, and his desire to save people, often from their own mistakes.

      At the same time, the world that Keltin inhabits, as much as it will remind readers of London’s tales of the Klondike, is a fantasy world and not London’s historical one. Except for the beasts themselves, with atypical and strangely asymmetric biology, there is little magic in this world or not that is seen in this story.

      Beasts are killed with guns, not spells. No matter how unnatural they seem, a bullet to the brain, once Keltin manages to determine where a beast’s brain actually is, kills them just fine. But the places Keltin refers to, and the sentient nonhumans that he meets and befriends, remind the reader that this is a different world with its own history.

      While these reminders are not enough to make the reader feel they have missed too much by starting with this second book in the series, they do serve to tease the reader that there are stories yet to be told. We love this adventure/fantasy so much, we happily recommend readers to start with the first book in the series and then move on.

      Into the North: A Keltin Moore Adventure by Lindsay Schopfer is such a terrific story on its own that readers will feel compelled to pick up the other stories just to catch up on all the action! Highly recommended.

      Into the North: A Keltin Moore Adventure won First Place in the CIBA 2018 OZMA Awards for Fantasy Fiction.

       

    • The TIME TRAVELER PROFESSOR, Book One: SILENT MERIDIAN by Elizabeth Crowens – Steampunk, Sherlockian, Time Travel

      The TIME TRAVELER PROFESSOR, Book One: SILENT MERIDIAN by Elizabeth Crowens – Steampunk, Sherlockian, Time Travel

      A budding concert pianist delves into the realms of spiritism, sexuality, and scary foreshadowing through his time travel adventures in Elizabeth Crowens’ steampunk novel, Silent Meridian.

      John Patrick Scott, a conservatory student, meets with Arthur Conan Doyle in Edinburgh, Scotland under unusual circumstances because of an elusive and mysterious red book. Arthur, lacking inspiration and tired of his Holmes character, covertly employs John as a ghostwriter. The two also indulge in the transmigration of souls and time travel. The latter topic is of high interest to the young aspiring musician since he has already accrued a handful of time-travel experiences via a mechanism of his creation. Although Arthur introduces John to nightly practices of communicating telepathically, John doesn’t include the beloved author in his time-traveling adventures until years later.

      John’s time-traveling skills sharpen to the point that he no longer needs his device and uses his grandfather’s timepiece instead. He becomes particularly fixed on exploring his past, especially his school days at the Underground University; he includes Wendell Mackenzie, his old schoolmate, on his adventures—some of which John escapes just in the nick of time. Over time, John finds it difficult to distinguish between time travel and dreams and seeks the help of Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung. His adventures take a dark turn when they predict an impending war.

      Sherlock Holmes’ enthusiast, Elizabeth Crowens, spins a wild tale riddled with glimpses of stories and themes from the early 20th century. Crowens’ quirky narrative, which covers sixteen years, could easily befit behind-the-scenes to John’s ghostwriting connections to Doyle’s published works: The Man with the Twisted Lip, The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton, and The Adventure of the Greek Interpreter, to name a few.

      Scenes regularly flip from John’s music studies and his time-travel quests, and are heavily punctuated with references to prominent historical figures and their thematic connections of the era, such as H.G. Wells, J.M. Barrie, Jules Verne (fantasy and sci-fi); Sigmund Freud, Carl Jung (psychology); and Aleister Crowley, Theodore Reuss (metaphysical). While sexual identity plays a close second to the last parenthesized theme scenes, providing only innuendos. John continuously processes his particular leanings, weighing his feelings as a woman in some of his time-travel ventures and amid affairs against Doyle’s and Wells’ free-love beliefs.

      Crowens balances nonfiction with fiction by incorporating memorable characters, such as Whit, John’s annoying tutor, and Finn (who John dubs Sherlock), John’s “Jiminy Cricket” guide who is only visible to John and comes and goes as he pleases. Sure to be a new favorite for Sherlock Holmes’ aficionados, Silent Meridian’s cliff-hanging closure is a perfect segue to the second book in Crowens’ The Time Traveler Professor series, A Pocketful of Lodestones.

       

    • The VITRUVIAN HEIR by L.S. Kilroy – Y/A Steampunk, Fantasy

      The VITRUVIAN HEIR by L.S. Kilroy – Y/A Steampunk, Fantasy

      It is the 23rd century. Eighteen-year-old Lorelei (Lore) Fetherston lives in Vitruvia. This area, once known as the United States, is under a monarchist regime that dictates Victorian and Edwardian principles, including the subordination of women on various levels. One issue that greatly affects Lore, is the custom of parents to arrange their children’s nuptials. Lore is earmarked to marry Gideon, a man she does not love, in three weeks time. If she were to have her way, she’d marry Fallon, a man her parents have dismissed. Added to this, Lore’s talent for writing is summarily squelched under the iron hammer of Vitruvian’s laws against freedom of speech.

      While trying to figure out how to escape her upcoming marriage, Lore becomes the recipient of her grandmother’s tiny music box that contains information on Artemis Klepes. Meeting with the supposed crazed scientist, Lore receives from him a journal, which transforms into a suitcase filled with her grandmother’s controversial book collection. Although the banned literature is nothing less than eye-opening, it doesn’t change her current situation. Lore still must find a way to escape her arranged marriage.

      Kilroy’s futuristic realm, replete with a repressive quasi-Orwellian setting, is riddled with everything sinister. Among her mix of developed and elusive characters and creatures (i.e., yoctos, minuscule beasts; galateans, humanoids), Kilroy keeps readers wondering who can be trusted.

      While punctuating her narrative with cruel and brutal scenes, Kilroy weaves in Lore’s gift for story writing. Amid oppressive situations, Lore collects the personal accounts of repressed women—stories she hopes one day will be made known to the world. It is in the shaping of this heroine as a lover of humankind that makes Lore such a unique and appealing character.

      A natural storyteller, Kilroy engages her audience on a deeper reading level from the get-go through inferencing. This powerful tool enables readers the opportunity to create the necessary puzzle pieces that will aid in completing the plot.

      Balancing familiar with unexpected description and a smooth narrative voice, this is a Y/A classic in the making and has the power to develop a loyal readership.