Laurel Anne Hill

In another world, troubled beings follow the way of honor and discover inner strength and peace. A homeless girl in California stands up for the rights of homeless children and becomes empowered. A Biblical harlot’s self-sacrifice finally frees her from repetitive reincarnations and unhappiness. Laurel Anne Hill crafts stories with inspirational premises. Worthiness is rewarded. The power of love, honor, faith and duty can surmount daunting obstacles and transform lives.

KOMENAR Publishing released, Heroes Arise, Laurel’s debut parable in October 2007. Her shorter fiction and creative nonfiction have been published in the Contra Costa Times, Nth Zine (Online Exclusives), Lynx Eye, the San Jose Mercury News, Space and Time, and a variety of small-circulation magazines. KQED-FM (NPR, San Francisco) broadcast her perspective in 2004 about the plight of homeless families.

In 2005, Laurel was awarded first prize in the Ninth Annual Captivating Beginnings Short Story Contest for “Reaching for Rainbows.” She received an honorable mention (creative nonfiction category) for “Learning the Bones” in the 2004 Soul-Making Literary Competition, an extended community arts outreach program of the National League of American Pen Women, Nob Hill, San Francisco Bay Area Branch. “Crescendo,” her personal essay, won honorable mention in the Foster City 2003 International Writer’s Contest. Upon invitation, she participated in the Literature Without Borders readings at the 2005 Oakland Literature & World Music Expo.

Plague of Flies, a novel set in early California, is Laurel’s current writing project. She lives in Northern California with David, her husband, and Bear, their rather large “shelter-mix” dog.

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