Category: The Year of Fog

Cupertino Library’s Year of Fog essay & photo contest

Cupertino Library’s Year of Fog essay & photo contest

Today in the San Jose Mercury news, an article about the essay contest and photo contest the Cupertino Library Foundation is running in conjunction with Silicon Valley Reads 2011. Two grand prizes of $500 each and two prizes of $300 each will be given to the winners of the essay contest, and four prizes of $100 each will be given to the winners of the Holga photo contest (Holgas can be checked out at the Cupertino Library).

Essay contest: Applicants are asked to describe in 500 words or less how the themes of The Year of Fog deal with discouragement, human frailties and the power of perseverance, hope, faith and love. Essay writers are being asked to think about what role fog plays in the story. The essay contest is open to all adults living or working in the city of Cupertino or students attending Monta Vista, Homestead, Cupertino or Lynbrook high schools.

For more details, read the article in the Mercury or visit SiliconValleyReads.org.

Day 49: The Missing Final Chapter of The Year of Fog

Day 49: The Missing Final Chapter of The Year of Fog

Now available as an ebook: the never-before-published original ending of THE YEAR OF FOG. (ISBN 978-1-4524-9639-9)

Spoiler alert: Do not sample this ebook unless you have already read THE YEAR OF FOG!

A note from Michelle: A few weeks before THE YEAR OF FOG went to press, I found myself agonizing over the ending . Was I saying too much? Too little? Should I tie up all the loose ends, or should I go with a more open-ended approach? After much deliberation, I decided to leave Chapter 82 on the editing room floor. I had never set out to write a traditional mystery or police procedural, but rather a book about relationships, guilt, and memory. My choice to cut Chapter 82 from the final version of the book was an attempt to honor this original intent. My hope was that readers would continue to think about Abby and Emma after the last page was turned, and that they would would form their own conclusions about the future of the novel’s heroine.

Since The Year of Fog was published in 2007, I’ve been fortunate to receive thousands of emails from readers, many of whom keep coming back to the same questions. I hope that Chapter 82 will satisfy their curiosity. For those who have asked if a sequel is in the works, I will say that, although I haven’t yet set pen to paper, I do find that Abby and Emma still haunt me. One day, I may yet return to the characters of The Year of Fog.

I’ve had the pleasure of visiting and speaking with dozens of book clubs in the past couple of years. One question is invariably asked at some point in the evening: where did you get the idea for The Year of Fog? In this ebook, you’ll also find a short essay entitled “Girl on the Beach,” which explains how a chance encounter with a young girl on San Francisco’s Ocean Beach nearly a decade ago inspired The Year of Fog.

Best books of 2010, London style

Best books of 2010, London style

London’s News of the World has just published its list of the best books of the year for 2010. The list includes nine fiction titles, a memoir, and three children’s books.

I’m delighted that THE YEAR OF FOG, published this year by Ebury Press, made the cut. You need a subscription to view the page, but you can see the fiction list below:


Freedom by Jonathan Franzen

The Pregnant Widow by Martin Amis

The Blasphemer by Nigel Farndale

The Kill Zone by Chris Ryan

Worth Dying For by Lee Child

The Death Instinct by Jed Rubenfeld

The Year of Fog by Michelle Richmond

My Name is Memory by Ann Brashares

The Last Letter from Your Lover by JoJo Moyes

The Guardian has also published its year-end list; you can see it here. And the Guardian’s fiction-only list appears here.

Thanks to my my fabulous editor at Ebury Press, Gillian Green, Ed Griffiths, and the whole Ebury team for giving The Year of Fog a second life across the pond!

Missing girl found across the street from Ocean Beach

Missing girl found across the street from Ocean Beach

Every now and then, the real-life story of a missing child ends with the child’s safe recovery. But the story of Brittany Mae Smith really caught my attention, even more than all the others, due to the fact that Smith, reported missing four days ago from Salem, VA, was spotted on Friday at the Safeway by Ocean Beach in San Francisco, accompanied by Jeffrey Scott Easley, the 32-year-old boyfriend of her mother. Until we moved out of the city  last year, this was our neighborhood Safeway, within walking distance of our house, where we did most of our grocery shopping. (This particular Safeway also happens to be just steps from the beach where the fictional Emma Balfour disappeared in The Year of Fog.)

A woman who had seen Brittany’s picture, along with the picture of Easley,spotted the pair. In addition to recognizing their faces, she recognized two tattoos on the alleged abductor.

On Friday, San Francisco police called Virginia police after the shopper spotted the fugitive and the girl at the Safeway at 48th Avenue and Fulton Street. They described distinctive tattoos Easley had on his calves to confirm his identity.

Despite her recovery, Brittany’s story is a tragic one. Her mother, 41-year-old Tina Smith, was found murdered on Monday, and Easley is suspected in the woman’s death.It is unclear exactly how long Brittany was with her abductor, but, according to an article in the San Francisco Chronicle, “Easley and the girl were recorded on video buying a blue tent at a Walmart near the victim’s home, possibly on the day of the slaying, believed to be Dec. 3.”

Police say Easley and Brittany were staying in a homeless encampment near Ocean Beach, possibly in Golden Gate Park. Some reports state that Brittany had told a friend she was afraid that Easley would harm her mother and take her away. The fact that Brittany was found–and found relatively quickly– can be attributed to media attention, the Amber Alert, and a conscientious citizen who acted on her her hunch and called police.

Coincidentally, Brittany’s recovery came on Friday, December 10, the same day that a federal jury found Brian David Mitchell guilty of kidnapping Elizabeth Smart, who was 14 years old at the time, in 2002 and transporting her across state lines with the intent of engaging in sexual activity. Smart’s ordeal lasted a harrowing nine months; much of that time was spent in an encampment in the woods near Smart’s home. According to Ed Smart, Elizabeth, who spent three days testifying in court against Mitchell, now hopes to become a prosecutor.

Sign up to have Amber Alerts sent to you by text at wirelessamberralerts.org.

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