‘Places the Dead Call Home’ Wins Best Regional, Mountain West, Book in Reader Views 2007 Annual Literary Awards
AUSTIN, Texas, March 27 /PRNewswire/ — “Places the Dead Call Home” by Detroit, Michigan, and Scottsdale, Arizona, resident Paul L. Hall (ISBN 0-595- 41071-5, iUniverse Editor’s Choice, 2007,) was selected as one of the best Regional, Mountain West, books of 2007 by Reader Views Annual Literary Awards. Reader Views Annual Literary Awards were established to honor writers who self-published or had their books published by a small press, university press, or independent book publisher.”Reader Views reviews more than 2,000 books per year from budding authors who have worked hard to achieve their dream of being published,” Reader Views Managing Editor Irene Watson says. “Our Annual Literary Awards recognize the very best of these up-and-coming authors, all talented writers who we know have very promising writing careers ahead of them.”This is the third award for “Places the Dead Call Home,” which also won a 2006 Midwest Independent Publishers Association (MIPA) Award and a 2007 Independent Publisher Book Award (IPPY).The Reader Views Annual Literary Awards are granted in 20 fiction and 30 nonfiction categories, as well as 15 specialized, sponsored categories. The entries are judged by Reader Views reviewers, all avid readers with a wide range of experiences, considered experts in their respective fields.Reader Views is currently accepting submissions for the 2008 Literary Awards. Entry information, registration forms and further information can be found online at . Reader Views is an Austin, Texas, based company. They started in December 2005 as a volunteer- based book review service. Shortly after the company’s birth they expanded into offering publicity services to authors. Now they are a one-stop center for budding authors. For more information, visit .About “Places the Dead Call Home”"Places the Dead Call Home” begins on a summer night in 1958, as bullets tear through the body of a young man just off Route 66 near Oklahoma City. Nineteen years later, a soldier lies in the pool of his own blood on an army base in Virginia. Death has made room at home for both of them. Death can always find room for more.Josh Kincaid is happy with life in Phoenix where he manages a bar and sells a few drugs on the side. His serenity is soon shattered, however, by a call from his cousin, Frankie McKnight, who claims to know why Josh’s father died many years earlier in the parking lot of a gas station in Oklahoma.Soon, a reporter named Jeffrey Bonus and his traveling companion, Jeanette Koskos, arrive with questions for Josh about the death of Bonus’s father, a highly decorated army colonel.All of these characters converge on Mesa Verde, where Josh and Frankie seek the answer to Jimmy Kincaid’s destiny and Bonus hopes to learn the true fate of his father. But others are making plans of their own to ensure that the dead stay where they belong — the places they call home.Paul L. Hall is the author of the award-winning Our Father and its sequel, The Big Island (”an incredibly entertaining novel. . .” Fearless Reviews). He divides his time between Troy, Michigan, Scottsdale, Arizona, and Rome, Italy.”Places the Dead Call Home” (ISBN 0-595-41071-5, iUniverse Editor’s Choice, 2007) may be purchased at any online or local book store. For more information, visit the book’s website at . Contact: Paul L. Hall 888 464 1292Paul L. Hall & Associates
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