Laurel Anne Hill

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September 19, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

Con-Volution 2016: The Age of Monsters (Schedule for Laurel Anne Hill)

Some Monsters Age Better...
Some Monsters Age Better…
...Than Others Do.
…Than Others Do.

Con-Volution 2016 is coming up fast:

September 30 – October 2, at the Hyatt Regency San Francisco Airport. The program schedule’s live on their website. Go to http://www.con-volution.com/.

I’ve listed my program schedule below and look forward to seeing you.

Laurel Anne Hill

How “Scary” is Science?
Saturday 10:00 – 11:30, Parlor 2036

There was a time where things like organ cloning and replacing body parts with plastics were things that fiction writers used to fuel thrills and chills; now we’re seeing these medical marvels come true. Are they still scary, or have we moved on?

Garrett Calcaterra, J. L. (Jim) Doty, Laurel Anne Hill, Kevin Roche (M), Heidi Stauffer

Devilishly Daring- Demonic Monsters
Saturday 12:00 – 13:30, SandPebble D

We’ll discuss the devils, demons, succubi and lords of the underworld that feature in our genre fiction and media SO often- because we adore them!

Chuck Serface, Loren Rhoads, Emerian Rich, J. L. (Jim) Doty, Laurel Anne Hill (M)

How Cthulu Became Cuddly?
Saturday 17:00 – 18:30, SandPebble B

How did the most terrifying beings of our imagination become cuddly plushies, love interests, and punchlines? We’ll look at the intersection of horror and humor, and whether they enhance or deface the genre.

Deborah J. Ross, Ms. Jennifer Carson, Laurel Anne Hill, Lee Moyer (M)

Meet HorrorAddicts.net!
Sunday 10:00 – 11:30, SandPebble C

Meet and chat with the authors who comprise HorrorAddicts.net, and find out more about their monster favorites!

Emerian Rich (M), J. Malcolm Stewart, Loren Rhoads, Laurel Anne Hill, Sumiko Saulson

August 5, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

WorldCon 2016: Schedule for Laurel Anne Hill, August 17-21, Kansas City, MO

Laurel Anne Hill, Author of "Heroes Arise" and plenty more.
Looking forward to meeting you!

Kaffeeklatsch: Pat Cadigan, Laurel Anne Hill, Shanna Swendson, Carrie Vaughn

Thursday 15:00 – 16:00, 2211 (KKs) (Kansas City Convention Center)

Oceans: The Wettest Frontier

Friday 10:00 – 11:00, 3501F (Kansas City Convention Center)

Although science fiction tends to focus on strange environments in space, there are also strange environments (with aliens) here on Earth. Discuss fiction set in oceans — on Earth and elsewhere.

James Cambias, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill, Patricia MacEwen, Christopher Weuve (M), Alyx Dellamonica

The Steampunk Explosion

Friday 14:00 – 15:00, 3501H (Kansas City Convention Center)

Steampunk is one of the most popular and fast growing sub genres in fandom.  From costuming to films to comics.  Is there more that spurred its the rapid growth than “it looks cool”?  Can Steampunk maintain its primacy in fandom?

Gail Carriger, Mr. Jeffrey Cook, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill (M), Nina Niskanen, Carrie Vaughn

Ethics of Tomorrow in Young Adult Fiction

Friday 15:00 – 16:00, 2204 (Kansas City Convention Center)

Do young adult authors have a role in creating the ethical attitudes of tomorrow? How can young adult authors of SF&F write characters and stories that will inspire tomorrow’s adults and leaders to be more open-minded, tolerant, and moral? Do you see that happening in today’s young adult science fiction and fantasy, or not?

Jane Ann McLachlan (M), Tamora Pierce, Kathryn Sullivan, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill

Hard Fantasy — Does it Exist?

Friday 19:00 – 20:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)

‘I’m going to write about what Tove Jansson called “the lonely and the rum,” the unschoolable and ungroupable, those strange and shaggy literary creatures that have no ilk or kin and that mathematically can be contained in no set smaller than the set of all sets contained in no other sets’.  (Michael Swanwick).

Does Hard Fantasy have a place in fantasy literature, and how should we approach it?

Michael Swanwick , Mr. Preston Grassmann (M), Sebastien de Castell, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill, Courtney Schafer

Writers Workshop 9B

Saturday 13:30 – 15:30, Lester Young B (Marriott, Writing Workshop) (Kansas City Marriott Downtown)

Susan Forest, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill

Space Technology Spinoffs

Saturday 16:00 – 17:00, 2210 (Kansas City Convention Center)

There have been some 2,000 technological products, inventions and ideas trasferred from NASA missions to commercial products and services. Of these, many have made life on Earth better in the fields of health and medicine, transportation, public safety, consumer goods, energy and environment, information technology, and industrial productivity. Panelists discuss their favorite examples of space technology spinoffs.

Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill, Les Johnson, Janet Freeman-Daily (M), Joy Ward, Brenda Cooper

Broad Universe Rapid Fire Reading: Group Reading

Sunday 10:00 – 11:30, 2504B (Kansas City Convention Center)

Join members of Broad Universe — a nonprofit association dedicated to supporting, encouraging, and promoting female authors of science fiction, fantasy, and horror — as they read tidbits of published works and works in progress. Hosted by Loren Rhoads.

Loren Rhoads (M), J. Tullos Hennig, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill, Roberta Rogow, Kathryn Sullivan, Paula S. Jordan, Katie Li, A C Ellas, Tamara Jones, Wendy Van Camp

Terraforming Terra: Geoengineering for Climate Change Survival

Sunday 12:00 – 13:00, 3501B (Kansas City Convention Center)

What can we do in terms of really big engineering projects to change or adapt to what looks like a pretty hot, wet, and stormy future?

Gregory Benford, Ian McDonald, Patricia MacEwen, John DeLaughter PhD, Elizabeth Moon, Mrs. Laurel Anne Hill (M)

PLUS, Laurel Anne Hill is in charge of the Broad Universe Table (Section I, Table #17) in the Dealers’ Room, and will be spending around 15 hours there during the con. Please drop by.

June 25, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

“First Friday” by Tory Hartmann Reeled me in. (Book Review by Laurel Anne Hill)

first friday

I purchased a copy of Tory Hartmann’s novel, First Friday, from her at the 2016 San Mateo County Fair. As Editor of Sand Hill Review Press, Tory was pushing her literary wares. She’s a friend of mine and a great writer with a keen sense of humor. How could I go wrong? Besides, the blurb on the back of First Friday lured me in.

The O’Neil Household is rife with saints and sinners. Statues and paintings of the Virgin Mary are everywhere, as this large Catholic family still keeps many old traditions nearly lost in the 21st century. Every first Friday of the month, Malachi and Irene insist that the kids come up for 7 am mass at Old Mission Dolores in San Francisco. That same night there is an enormous First Friday dinner at the house. The adult children may roll their eyes during grace and make fun of their parents for being so old-fashioned, but they all show up. Agnes Anne, 28 and the last child living at home, is trying her best to launch an independent life, but her stutter, lack of self-confidence, and the lecherous advances of her brother-in-law stall her exit. One day, she brings home a nice Jewish man and all hell breaks loose.

The book is character driven with a strong component of tension. Colorful characters abound, yet the story always belongs to Agnes Anne. Even “Our Lady of the Belgian Waffle,” a metaphorical garden snail, and sightings of the Blessed Virgin Mary (BVM) can’t upstage her. Dialect, essential when used, is masterful and never feels overdone. (Yes, all you writers’ workshop leaders out there: Dialect CAN work.) WARNING: Don’t start reading First Friday at night if you have to get up early the next morning. I read until 1:20 am and nearly fell asleep with my nose in my cup of breakfast coffee.

Thoughts that First Friday left behind in my brain—other than the fact that Tory Hartmann truly is an author worth reading.

  1. I will never look at pancakes the same way again.
  2. I will think twice before harming a garden snail.
  3. I will never stop believing in miracles.

Kudos for Tory Hartmann (http://www.toryhartmann.com/).

Warm wishes,

Laurel Anne Hill (Award-winning author of Heroes Arise.)

May 19, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

Once Upon A Scream Author Spotlight: David Watson Interviews Laurel Anne Hill

Laurel beside the Seine River in Paris
Laurel Anne Hill, author of “Commanding the Stones,” beside the Seine River in Paris 2002

Horroraddicts.net Publishing has recently published their fourth anthology called Once Upon a Scream. Remember the fairy tales that you grew up reading? Well they are back again with a horror twist. Once Upon a Scream includes 18 tales that are fantastic and frightful. One of the authors in this anthology is Laurel Anne Hill and recently she talked to David Watson–from HorrorAddicts.net–about her writing:

Cathedédrale Alexandre Nevsky de Paris
Cathedédrale Alexandre Nevsky de Paris
Paris Sewer Tour: Tunnel Drain
Paris Sewer Tour: Tunnel Drain

What is your story in Once Upon A Scream called and what is it about? My short story is “Commanding the Stones,” about Yana, a middle-aged Russian-American woman on a business trip to Paris with her husband in 1995. In “Commanding the Stones,” a murder, Yana’s troubled marriage, her mysterious benefactor, and a Russian fairy tale—a twisted variant of The Stone Flower—add up to terror and redemption in the sewers of Paris.

What inspired the idea? My love of Russian fairy tales and painted lacquer boxes sparked the initial inspiration. Then I visited Paris during the month of November in 1999. Through the rain and chill, a story line emerged.

Once Upon a Scream
Once Upon a Scream (An Anthology, HorrorAddicts.net)

When did you start writing? I started writing before I could read. I created stories and my older sister wrote them down. I illustrated them with pictures from comic books and magazines. My first short story was published—in the kids’ section of a major San Francisco newspaper—when I was eleven. The piece was absolutely terrible, but I had no clue. The San Francisco News paid me $2, enough for eight double-feature movies back then.

What are your favorite topics to write about?  Many of the stories I craft have inspirational premises. Worthiness is rewarded. The power of love, honor, faith and duty can surmount daunting obstacles and transform lives. But I also like to write about the jolting “rewards” unworthiness can bring, and the sometimes blurred line between virtue and vice. Whatever I write, I love to use my imagination.

What are some of your influences? Without a doubt, atmosphere and music influence the direction of many of my stories. Between 1999 and 2005, for example, I made three trips to Paris—all during the November time frame. When first working on “Commanding the Stones,” I took the Paris sewer tour. The unpleasant taste of the air near an underground sewer drain let me picture ominous things happening to my protagonist. My mind processed the many details of the scene. Back home in California, I listened to Russian Orthodox chants to set my mood, allowing ancient magic and mysteries to merge with modern times as I worked.

What do you find fascinating about the horror genre? The physiological reaction a scary movie produces in me. The increase in my heart rate and breathing. The tensing of my muscles. It’s like I’m the one in danger. I’ve had a half-dozen or so close brushes with death—experiences that had nothing to do with movies. During those times, survival—and the various chemicals released into my bloodstream to secure it—exhilarated me. Not so with movies. When an emphathetic character on the screen escapes death, I feel more exhaustion than elation. When I read horror, however, my brain does a better job of moderating the intensity of my physical reaction. Maybe that’s why I prefer scary books to scary movies in recent years, although I do adore both.

What are some of the works you have available? My award-winning novel, HEROES ARISE, and many of my thirty published short stories are available through Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Laurel-Anne-Hill/e/B002XK5R5S. To listen to my stories I’ve recorded (including award-winning “Flight of Destiny” and “The Grave of Mario Bandini”), go to Welcome to my Bedroom Closet at http://laurelannehill.libsyn.com. For my darker short stories in print, read “Wings of Revenge” (in The Wickeds), “Till Death Do Us Part” (in Horrible Disasters), “The Vengeance Garden” (in Spells and Swashbucklers) and “Fowl Consequences” (in Fault Zone: Diverge).

What are you currently working on? My novel, The Engine Woman’s Light (a spirits-meet-steampunk, weird west tale) was accepted for publication by Sand Hill Review Press last month. I anticipate it will be available in 2017. I’m preparing to serve as editor for the next Fault Zone Anthology. That, too, will release in 2017. Also, I’ve started working on a short story for Horror Addicts’ next anthology. For long-term projects, I’ll either return to a novel-in-progress (magical realism) set in Mexican California, or start a new one based on my recently-published fantasy short story, “Going Revolutionary.”

Where can we find you online? For my website, go to http://www.laurelannehill.com. My Amazon author page is at http://www.amazon.com/Laurel-Anne-Hill/e/B002XK5R5S. For Facebook, go to https://www.facebook.com/laurel.hill.7.

One of the historic stone walls of the Paris sewers, labeled with the name of the street above.
One of the historic stone tunnels of the Paris sewers, labeled with the name of the street above.

 

April 24, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

“Once Upon a Scream” HorrorAddicts.net Anthology Now Available on Amazon

Read Laurel Anne Hill’s short story, “Commanding the Stones,” in ONCE UPON A SCREAM.

"Once Upon a Scream" now available on Amazon.
“Once Upon a Scream” Anthology available on Amazon.

 

Once Upon a Scream…there was a tradition of telling tales with elements of the fantastic along with the frightful. Adults and children alike took heed not to go into the deep, dark woods, treat a stranger poorly, or make a deal with someone-or something-without regard for the consequences. Be careful of what you wish for, you just might get it. From wish-granting trolls, to plague curses, and evil enchantresses, these tales will have you hiding under the covers in hopes they don’t find you. So lock your doors, shutter your windows, and get ready to SCREAM.

Go to http://www.amazon.com/Once-Upon-Scream-Dan-Shaurette/dp/1530529514/ref=sr_1_fkmr0_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1461512625&sr=8-1-fkmr0&keywords=once+upon+a+scream+anthology+horror+addicts

April 24, 2016 By Laurel Anne Hill

Wine Country Comic Con: A family event in Santa Rosa, CA

I was so honored to be photographed with Eric, the winner of the costume contest today at the Wine Country Comic Con. My owl and his hawk made a good combo for this picture.

I met so many delightful people, from toddlers to folks well beyond my age, at this fledgling event. I’m looking forward to another great day tomorrow. Thank you, Uriel Brena, for making this possible–and all for a good cause: addressing the needs of autistic children in the local community.

Warm wishes,

Laurel Anne Hill, Author of “Heroes Arise”

Laurel Anne Hill and Capitán México
Laurel Anne Hill and Capitán México

 

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