

She is an experienced talk show guest and guest blogger and presents workshops about writing and her novel for school, university, community and business groups. Her essay, "Satori Green" appears in Richard Singer's Now, Embracing the Present Moment (2010, O-Books), and her cancer-survivor story is in Dawn Colclasure’s On the Wings of Pink Angels (2012).įrom 2009 through 2013, Hill was an online journalist for numerous publications, covering topics ranging from nature, health care and accessibility to music, knitting and chocolate. Professionals in the fields of education and the arts have endorsed it as a diversity, inclusion and anti-bullying resource for junior high through college.Ī songwriter with three albums, Hill provided educational and motivational programs in the Greater Philadelphia area for fifteen years before moving to the mountains. Her first novel, The Heart of Applebutter Hill, is an adventure-mystery with excursions into fantasy for general audiences. Hill is a writer, speaker, animal lover and avid knitter from Pennsylvania's Endless Mountains. The heck with the “Ignore working dog” sign no one notices it anyway.ĭonna W. What I really, really want is a “Rangeman” pouch for my guide dog’s harness handle he is, after all, in the security and protection industry, and he’s already dressed in black. The other books I’ve started will just have to wait till I’m feeling less like I’ll crack up from stress if I don’t let myself crack up from Plum. I can’t wait to re-read 12, and I won’t wait to start any later than this evening.

You readers who don’t have print disabilities and can’t listen to Annie Wauters read Stephanie Plum for the National Library Service for the Blind & Physically Handicapped are really missing something spectacular. After 16, he read 1-3 in order, skipped to 15, 17 and now he’s reading 12. It matters, but that’s a battle for another day. “It doesn’t matter what order you read them in.” He doesn’t share my need to read things in order. It’s also the first Stephanie Plum novel my husband read. There’s plenty of food, plenty of Lula, plenty of fire and some real sweetness between Stephanie and the two men in her life. It’s the one where Stephanie explains why Trenton’s senior citizens are like the mob and the difference between how men and women behave when they’ve achieved something great. It’s the one where we get to see Vinnie out of his office and wearing Stephanie’s underwear. It’s the one with the ever-delightful Mooner returning to the spotlight. Some, however, qualify as more of a 5 than others, and this one’s a super-5. Suffice it to say that all the Plum books are 5s - even the one’s I haven’t read yet. I don’t have time to review most of the non- Plum books I read or read all of the non- Plum books I’d like to read.

I had no intention of reviewing all of the Stephanie Plum books.
