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Marianna Hoff, branch librarian
It’s said that poetry comes from and speaks deeply to the human soul.
This certainly seems to be true in our literate, creative Laguna village.
Each April for the past five years, your library has enjoyed
celebrating National Poetry Month by sponsoring a communitywide original
poetry writing contest. This year’s competition, “Land of the Free . . .
Verse,” was entered by more than 400 aspiring poets, and we’d like to
congratulate the following Robert Frosts and Emily Dickinsons as our 2002
winners.
Adult category
1st: Jan Troutner for “Salvation”
2nd: Paige Rhine for “Sunday Sanctuary”
3rd: Lauri Mendenhall for “July’s Baptism”
High School
1st: Ryan Allcorn for “Finish Line” and “Sept. 11, 2001”
2nd: Alex Herskovitz for “Minimum Dosage”
3rd: Nan Newell for “Transient”
Sixth, seventh and eighth grades
1st: David Clausen for “Shell”
2nd: Thomas Stevens for “Liquid Amber”
3rd: Jane Sasso for “Gnarled trees with orange leaves . . .”
Fourth and fifth grades
1st: James Luby for “Homework Eulogy”
2nd: Lauren Mendoza for “Ladybugs”
3rd: Hannah Glass for “Lily Lerts”
Second and third grades
1st: Daniel Anvari for “A Book and a Prayer”
2nd: Taylor Pitz for “The Skies are Filled . . .”
3rd: Jack Pillsbury for “Lighthouse”
First grade
1st: Eliott Glass for “Birds” and “Little Letters/BIG NUMBERS
2nd: Eliana Alcouloumre for “My Sister”
3rd Carly Willner for “Dolls Pretty Dresses”
Pre-K and Kindergarten
1st: Jack Odanaka for “Panthers Pouncing,” “Upon the Sunny Summer Day”
and “I Love You When”
2nd: Aaron Acouloumre for “The Bone”
3rd: Hannah Martin for “Now I Know You are Wondering . . .” and “Here
I Am”
The 21 winning poems will be published in a free booklet to be printed
by the library. The community is welcome to pick up a copy after June 20
and, of course, is always welcome and encouraged to visit their library
for business or pleasure.
“How I Read It”
By Doug Bowler
“A Darkness More than Night”
By Michael Connelly
Reintroduced from previous Connelly stories, Terry McCaleb, recently
retired from the FBI’s Behavioral Sciences due to a heart transplant, is
living with his new wife, daughter and son-in-law and managing a sport
fishing charter business on Catalina Island.
A former colleague from the L.A. Sheriff’s Department Det. Joyce
Winston visits with a plea to help profile a suspect from a nasty murder
scene she believes may become a serial event. An offer McCaleb can’t
resist.
After conducting a very creative and thorough investigation, McCaleb
identifies a prime suspect: LAPD. Det. Harry Bosch, another Connelly hero
from previous work.
Bosch is the lead detective in a high-profile trial involving the
murder of young, aspiring actress by a powerful Hollywood film producer.
During this trial a newspaper reporter is tipped off that Harry may
be a murder suspect. The reporter tries to confirm this information
through the FBI and lets the cat out of the bag, causing McCaleb’s
immediate dismissal from the case.
The second-half of this story is what makes this a unique mystery
novel. Bosch confronts McCaleb, accusing him of missing something in his
analysis of the clues. He challenges him to solve the real mystery.
McCaleb does and ties the first and second halves of this creative novel
into a very exciting and surprising conclusion.
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