Laurel Anne Hill

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June 23, 2009 By Laurel Anne Hill

Laurel Anne Hill (Author of "Heroes Arise" Reads "Reaching for Rainbows," Part 2

Five years ago, I first volunteered to cook, serve and share dinner in local shelters for homeless families.  My experiences chatting with shelter residents inspired me to write two award-winning stories: "Heroes Arise" and "Reaching for Rainbows."  "Lynx Eye" published "Reaching for Rainbows" in 2005.  Several weeks ago I recorded the first part of the story to make the piece available again.  Now I've recorded Part 2.

In "Reaching for Rainbows," a ten-year-old girl copes with homelessness, a school assignment about Martin Luther King, and the narrow line separating reality from imagination.  This is a great story for a broad range of ages and backgrounds.  No need to wait for Martin Luther King Day.  This award-winning tale has inspired a number of people to reach out to homeless families and others in need.

Visit my website (http://www.laurelannehill.com) for more about my compelling fiction, including my award-winning parable, "Heroes Arise" (KOMENAR Publishing, 2007).

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June 18, 2009 By Laurel Anne Hill

Laurel Anne Hill (Author of "Heroes Arise") Reviews "The City & The City"

I'm a guest panelist at Readercon 2009 and working on my assigned reading, which includes China Miéville's "The City & The City."  I never managed to finish "The Iron Council" a couple years ago, so I groaned a little upon ordering Miéville's latest novel.  Silly of me.  My biggest mistake in reading "The City & The City" was starting too late in the evening to finish the book in one sitting.  Alas, my eyeballs turned into bloodshot pumpkins at midnight and I had to wait to discover "who done it."

 

One might consider "The City & The City" as being set in a parallel world.  Yet the sense of place is so real.  As I read the novel, I visualized the eastern edge of Europe in our own world, and stretched my imagination to make room for the cities of Ul Qoma and Bes?el.

 

As the novel opens, an unidentified woman is found murdered in Bes?el.  Unknown at the time, she was a foreign graduate student working in Ul Qoma.  Ul Qoma and Bes?el both are sovereign with restricted passage between them.  Their cityscapes–with some shared areas–intertwine, complicating the subsequent investigation of the crime.

 

Residents of Ul Qoma and Bes?el learn from an early age to see what happens in the city they are located in and "unsee" what doesn't–even if they must unsee something several feet away from them.  Sounds impossible to believe?  Miéville pulls it off.

 

Miéville has given "The City and The City" strong forward momentum.  His protagonist, Inspector Tyador Borlú of Bes?el's Extreme Crime Squad, is sympathetic and compelling.   Miéville has created a plot as intricate as his two sovereign societies and marvelous city sights.  The only downside I noticed was in the paragraph structure of some of the dialogue.  I had to reread some sections to ascertain the identity of the speaker.  All in all, I highly recommend this wonderful and literary piece of speculative fiction.

 

Repeat warning:  this book is hard to put down, a real page turner.  Start reading "The City and The City" many hours before bedtime.  Your eyeballs will thank you.

 

Laurel Anne Hill

Author of "Heroes Arise"

http://www.laurelannehill.com         

 

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June 8, 2009 By Laurel Anne Hill

Laurel Anne Hill (Author of "Heroes Arise") Reads "Reaching for Rainbows," Part One

Five years ago, I first volunteered to cook, serve and share dinner in local shelters for homeless families.  My experiences chatting with shelter residents inspired me to write two award-winning stories: "Heroes Arise" and "Reaching for Rainbows."  "Lynx Eye" published "Reaching for Rainbows" in 2005.  Now I've recorded the first part of the story to make the piece available again.

In "Reaching for Rainbows," a ten-year-old girl copes with homelessness, a school assignment about Martin Luther King, and the narrow line separating reality from imagination.  This is a great story for a broad range of ages and backgrounds.  No need to wait for Martin Luther King Day.  This award-winning tale has inspired a number of people to reach out to homeless families and others in need.

Visit my website (http://www.laurelannehill.com) for more about my compelling fiction, including my award-winning parable, "Heroes Arise" (KOMENAR Publishing, 2007).

 

Laurel Anne Hill Reads "Reaching for Rainbows," Part One

 

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May 30, 2009 By Laurel Anne Hill

BayCon 2009: Welcome to the Light of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Steampunk at Pyrocumulon

For the love of Science Fiction, Fantasy and Steampunk, Laurel Anne Hill (Author of "Heroes Arise") and her husband, David, snapped plenty of photos at BayCon 2009 over the Memorial Day Weekend.  This slide show is the result.  Welcome to the Lost Sky City of Pyrocumulon.  (In case you wonder why I've got such a sour expression in one photo, I played "The World's Deadliest Librarian" in a zany fan movie filmed at BayCon this year.)  Be sure to visit my website at http://www.laurelannehill.com. 

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May 21, 2009 By Laurel Anne Hill

CAPITOL CITY YOUNG WRITERS: THIS ORGANIZATION ROCKS!

May 21, 2009, 10:17 am

May 16th With Capitol City Young Writers

May 16th With Capitol City Young Writers

 

I had the pleasure of addressing members of “Capitol City Young Writers” last Saturday morning in the Sacramento State University Student Union.  Capitol City Young Writers is a nonprofit organization offering literary assistance to young writers on a national level.  All you young writers out there, this organization rocks!

Check out their website at http://www.capitolcityyoungwriters.com.  A slide show of the May 16th event is available at http://www.bubblegumportraits.com/CCYW-051609/. Verna Dreisbach deserves a special round of applause for helping young writers achieve their literary dreams.

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