Wednesday, March 4, 2020

BEYOND THE CASTLE ON THE HILL - Now Available


Paralyzing fear causes Dora and Ethan to flee the ghostly terrors of the Dimensional Arts High School and seek the solitude of the Olympus One space station. They leave behind their friend Phillip who is exposing students to the life-extending Blue Mist. His ever-expanding group is unaware of the drastic side effects, which accompany their newly prolonged life. Can Dora and Ethan build up enough courage and find a way to turn back the hands of time, or is it already too late?

Beyond the Castle on the Hill - Book Trailer






Beyond the   Castle on the Hill, book two in the Chronicle of the WELL series. 

Monday, December 16, 2019

Beyond - Back on Track (Journal #4)

Beyond The Castle On The Hill will be completed by March 2020 but why did it take me so long? ​I'm pretty certain that my experience as a writer isn't as just isolated situation and will sound familiar to many others.

First of all, a bit of history - The three memorable years that I spent at the High School of Music and Art, inspired me to write a story of the future of my school. I wanted to heavily reference the gothic styled building and the warm relationships a school like HSMA could promote. In April of 2015, I published the sci-fi romance novella Castle on the Hill: Secrets. ​Thanks to innovative gadgets, a warm love story and new ways to express ones artistic talents, it turned out to be a thrilling view of the school that's been in existence since 1936.


Fast forward to late 2016 - I had a great many ideas for the sequel to Castle on the Hill: Secrets. For example: Adding new twists to the evolving relationships of Phillip, Dora, Ethan and Grace and their new connections with the Castle. Also, what's a marauding group of teenagers who feel they are indestructible have to do with an ominous space station orbiting overhead?  After many variations, the working title became Beyond The Castle On The Hill. ​I began running advertisements for the upcoming book and even picked out potential book covers.

I got more than halfway through my first draft when suddenly I found myself obligated to catching up on other writing projects. I made the difficult decision to shelve Beyond for just a short while. A few months passed and I felt more comfortable with resuming my sci-fi sequel. Unfortunately, every time I sat down to get started, I experienced a severe case of writer's block. I had many ideas but they just weren't jibing with the existing material. The same thing happened every month or so that I attempted to return to this project.

A few weeks ago, I had an epiphany about how to combine those many new ideas with the story. Thankfully, I've worked pass my writer's block and I'm back on track with my goal to complete the sci-fi adventure Beyond The Castle On The Hill. I've finished the first draft and I'm pretty excited now that I'm one step closer to completing this saga.

Drawing by Picolo

One of the main characters, Dora, has gone through a quite a personality evolution as compared to book one, Castle on the Hill: Secrets. I'd like to say that most of these changes are due to the scientific experiments of her father, Dr. Zachery Stone or her flirty best friend, Grace but I won't. I will say that her change has something to do with the Castle on the Hill.
Watch out for the next journal entry. 
Check out the previous journal entries for more info on
Beyond the Castle on the Hill.

JOURNAL #1       JOURNAL #2      JOURNAL #3

Wednesday, November 6, 2019

Playground Stitches

Back in the early 1950s, when Foster Houses were first built, the countless playgrounds throughout the complex could not be missed. My childhood friends and I would loose our minds jumping around all the different apparatus available and our imaginations soared as we made up stories as we played. During our childish travels we were never concerned of how dangerous our newly built surroundings might be. It appears safety concerns are now paramount in creating playgrounds but that wasn't always the case.


Photo: October 2017

The largest playground in the complex was one that we all called 'The Big Park.' Presently, it's called the Martin Luther King Jr. Playground. Its borders are Lenox Avenue (Malcolm X Blvd.), 70 Lenox Avenue, 41 West 112th Street and 70 West 115th Street. Besides a spacious area to run and play, there were four handball courts, two full sized basketball courts, a sandbox, a large and small sliding board, children's swings, see-saws, adult swings and an enclosed sprinkler wading pool.


Drawing by Lloyd A. Green

I still have fond memories from the fifties and sixties of fun during hot summer days.  In particular, I think of that huge rectangular wading pool that had multiple sprinklers. It was placed in north-east corner of the playground.  All us crazy kids had lots of fun running wild through the controlled showers back then. 


Sprinkler in Carroll Park 1960s

Unfortunately, by today's standards, that pool would have been closed. The entire thing was made out of concrete.  All you had to do was fall and you could not avoid getting a bad scrape or worst.  These types of injuries would happen often.  Close by adults would scream, “Stop running, stop running,” but how could they expect kids to be careful.  Hot weather and cold water had been mixed together. Half the fun was learning the hard way. 

Speaking of pain, do you know why it was not a good idea to place your precious child into the uplifting metal child swing on a hot summer day? All that baked-in heat on the metal surfaces of the swing could easily give your child a first degree burn. The same can be said of the metal seat of the adult swing and the long metal sliding boards. I remember the times I anxiously climbed the steps to slide down but after touching the hot metal, I almost changed my mind.  After sliding down, I jumped off as fast as I could. I didn't go back on the slide because I wanted to keep playing and not seek first-aid for burns. 

(BTW - the child swings shown below are exactly the same type as one that used to be found in 'The Big Park'). The sliding board is similar.


Riding the swings at Oval Park. Photo: John Kachejian 1961



Photo: 1965



Please explain to me the rationale behind using a building material like concrete for kids to play on.  Wouldn't that be considered dangerous? Oh yeah, concrete blocks could last for a life-time. The playground apparatus were made to be durable so that they would endure long after the kids were gone.  In other words, children were considered secondary in this formula.
Which reminds me. Throughout the other playgrounds in the complex, there were these rectangular platforms that looked like three-step pyramids but were flat on the top. Of course, all of these "objects" were also made of concrete. 
Concrete 3-step pyramid & barrels (west side of 70 Lenox Ave.) Photo: 1993

When I about eight years old, my older brother and I were having a great time, jumping around on this insanely durable pyramid.  Then while we were playing tag, he had to go and slip and then fall chin-first. At first, I couldn't understand why he stood up crying and screaming bloody murder.  Then I noticed that he was bleeding like a pig from under his chin and adding new color textures to the worn stone slab.  We had to go to the emergency room so he could get about ten stitches. Talk about a ten-year old screaming his brains out. I watched in horror as others helped to hold him down so he could get this minor surgery. This was not a fun day for me or him.   
Of course, none of this stopped us from returning to the playgrounds. The seven-foot tall cube made of steel pipes was one of my favorites. We called it the Monkey Bars. Unlike the photo shown below, there wasn't any soft surface underneath. The fun was worming yourself through the geometric shape, hanging from different heights, finding your way to the top, looking down at the rest of the playground and feeling thankful that you didn't fall on the way up. I never saw anyone fall off but I'm sure there were those that were a lot more daring than I was. The playgrounds that held this jungle gym were open day and night, which meant there was ample opportunity to get hurt.
The first jungle gym, at the Winnetka Historical Society. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

My real point in reminiscing about all this is, a lot of that fun has been lost for a little thing like child safety.  Don’t today’s adults realize that all the rubber matting that's placed under every fun obstacle protects children from getting hurt but it does nothing to build character. The scars we used to get during childhood, helped us to grow up faster, a little crooked maybe, but we grew up, regardless. At least I did.

Want to know the rest of the story?
​Check out 


Thursday, September 26, 2019

THE DREAM DILEMMA - 33% - 66% OFF



THE DREAM DILEMMA 
by Lloyd A. Green

Is available at a discounted price through
Kindle Countdown

9/27/19, 8:00 am - 10/4/19, 12:00 am


Deidre’s dreams are unnerving nighttime excursions involving her fascinating brother-in-law and her dear sister. Hazy premonitions of dread, force Deidre to make three well-intentioned wishes then her blood suddenly runs cold. She soon realizes that in life’s endless barter, there are debts to be paid.

Available at Amazon.com

Sunday, June 23, 2019

Alumni & Friends - Audition Stories

Check out the Audition Series through the Alumni & Friends website and  their Alumni & Friends Facebook site.

AUDITION STORIES
PRECIOUS MEMORIES


Regardless of the year, every student had to go through THE AUDITION in order to be accepted. These are the stories from alumni who experienced the anxiety of being tested and soon found that that glorious feeling of getting-in was only the beginning. 

For more information visit:

Tuesday, January 16, 2018

REFLECTIONS OF EL: IN SEARCH OF SELF

FREE KINDLE COPIES AVAILABLE - 1/31/18 - 2/4/18
Fictionalized Autobiography that will draw you in. 
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004RJ3NGS


Childish games are fun and safe until Dyllon is drawn to a locked trunk. Something sinister escapes and he finds that the seven deadly sins are not only real but the darkest part of his life. Dyllon must learn to deal with his inner turmoil as he searches for the love of his life.

During his travels, Dyllon’s heart is stolen by the overly self-indulgent Regan but the whirlwind romance takes a detour when he finally meets the optimistic and assertive Kelly. With hopes of happiness always in sight and a multitude of dark forces at his back, Dyllon must learn the difference between blissful passion and soulful commitment.

​Join Dyllon on his quest to understand life, love and the demons that persistently haunt him in this fictionalized autobiographical account of the first twenty-three years of the author’s life.

Thursday, December 28, 2017

Goodreads Book Giveaway - The Castle on the Hill: Secrets

Chapter 3

Dora gathered up what little her courage she had left. She had no other choice. As her chilled knuckles slowly pulled the blanket down across her forehead, she could see wisps of her own breath escaping through the breech. As the covering passed her eyelashes, Dora was confronted with another set of eyes close enough to her face that they almost touched her own. Despite the panic that gripped her, Dora’s first reaction was to focus on the images that appeared within the thing’s dark colored iris. From deep within its eye, the shadowy face of a teenage girl slowly became more and more clear, moving nearer and nearer to Dora.