Just when I was getting some good news about my huge uterine mass likely not being cancer and could exhale a peaceful breath, our world erupts in fire. Yesterday over 500 strikes hit Iran, and now they have retaliated unlike anything I have ever seen. Strikes have hit or been intercepted from Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Jordan, and the United Arab Emirates, to Dubai, and Oman.
All of those children. Mothers. Fathers. Families. With no clear plan. No congressional approval. Why?
I just want to get ready for my upcoming surgery. Take care of my home. My dogs. Love my children. Write. It’s only two weeks away.
My tumor may weigh seven pounds, but right now it feels astronomically heavier.
Now that they have vowed vengeance I fear for our world.
And wonder. What will happen now?
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned in 2025. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
There are seasons in a creative life when the noise falls away.
The urgency to produce, to promote, to keep up with the world’s pace softens, and what remains is a quieter question: Why do I make stories at all? What am I really trying to leave behind?
I’ve been thinking about how stories like this tend to surface during quieter parts of the year, when readers and writers alike seem more open to complexity and reflection. December has always felt like a threshold to me. Not an ending, but a pause. A space between what has been and what might still be possible.
It’s in those pauses that purpose becomes clearer.
Across my life as a writer, I’ve worked in different genres and for different audiences, but the heart of my work has remained surprisingly consistent. Again and again, my stories return to the idea that creativity is not a luxury. Wonder is not escapism. Care for one another and for the living world is not optional. These are forces that shape who we become.
Artania: When Creation Is Magic
Artania began with a belief I hold deeply: that when children create, they are not wasting time. They are learning how to shape reality.
In Artania, art quite literally comes alive. Drawings move. Sculptures protect. Paintings carry courage. The message is simple but radical: creativity is power. Especially for children who feel small, overlooked, or bullied, the act of making something becomes a way to claim agency in a world that often tells them they have none.
Artania is my love letter to imagination and my refusal to accept a world that teaches children to abandon it.
Forest Secrets: Standing With the Living World
Forest Secrets grew out of grief and hope braided together.
It tells young readers that friendship matters, that loyalty matters, and that the natural world is not a backdrop for human stories, but a living presence deserving of protection. The forest in that story is not a metaphor. It is a being.
I wanted children to feel that standing up for a forest, or a friend, or something fragile is not naïve. It is brave.
Finding Joy: Even When the World Is Cruel
Finding Joy came from a harder place.
That book says something I wish more people had told me earlier in life: that even when abuse, cruelty, or chaos surround you, there is still something inside you that can express joy. Not forced happiness. Not denial. But a quiet, stubborn joy that refuses to be erased.
It’s a book about survival, yes, but also about dignity. About reclaiming the right to feel alive.
Time Murmurations: Protecting What We Love
Time Murmurations follows Renata Aguillon, a grieving ornithologist who is pulled through time by living starling murmurations. Her journey is not about mastering time, but about learning how to move within it without being destroyed by loss. Writing Renata’s story helped me sit with uncertainty and remember that even in disordered systems, patterns of meaning still emerge.
Murmurations are not controlled by a single bird. They arise from attention, responsiveness, and care. Each bird adjusts to the others. Each movement shapes the whole. Renata comes to understand that survival, whether personal or planetary, depends on the same principles. No one moves alone. No moment exists in isolation.
That felt important to write into the world.
At its heart, Time Murmurations is a story about protecting the Earth, about fighting for those we love, and about understanding that time itself is not something we conquer. It is something we move through together.
Celestial Pirouette: Transformation Through Wonder
Celestial Pirouette is perhaps my most intimate work.
It says that metamorphosis is possible, not through force or perfection, but through surrender to wonder. Through music. Through dance. Through allowing ourselves to be changed by beauty.
It’s about grief, yes, but more than that, it’s about permission. Permission to feel. Permission to move. Permission to become someone new.
Divine Proportion: Rejecting the Lie of Perfection
Most recently, Divine Proportion asks a question I think our culture urgently needs to face: What happens when safety becomes ideology?
In that world, human worth is measured. Bodies are ranked. Perfection is enforced. And the cost is profound.
At its core, Divine Proportion says this: we are not valuable because we conform. We are valuable because we are human. Wondrous, flawed, unique, and alive.
It is a rejection of the lie that we must earn our right to exist.
What I Hope to Leave Behind
When I look across these stories now, what I see is not a career so much as a conversation.
A conversation with children about imagination. With readers about grief. With communities about responsibility. With the future about what we choose to value.
If there is a legacy in my work, I hope it is this: that someone, somewhere, feels a little braver for having encountered these stories. That they create when they’re told not to. That they protect what is fragile. That they dance when the world tells them to stand still. That they refuse to reduce themselves or others to numbers, categories, or rules.
Stories do not save the world on their own.
But they shape the people who do.
And sometimes, in quieter seasons, that feels like enough.
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned in 2025. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
What makes you happy? When do you truly feel joy? Is it when you are painting, writing, dancing, or gardening? My happiest times have been when I was helping others to experience joy. When I was teaching and acting goofy to show the kids how to subtract. Or being silly on the dance floor to make others smile. Or writing something that came from a true place.
Our society tries to convince us that fame or the car or the house or the designer clothes will make us happy. But in my experience it is just the opposite. As a kid I attended an exclusive camp every summer and saw many poor rich kids. Their parents might have been a celebrity or Grammy award winning musician, but it didn’t mean that they were giving these kids the attention all children deserve. I saw kids as young as seven sent to camp all summer only to have no one pick them up with a hug at the end. After hours of waiting, the counselors had to call home and some staff member would finally come.
Some of these parents had both fame and fortune but still were addicts. Not to say that wealth and celebrity equal dysfunction. I saw wonderful parents who were famous too.
Because they knew joy wasn’t in a pill or a bottle. But in the love of self and others. In the finding of purpose. In the connections that bind us.
By the time I was in my teens I was already questioning what I wanted for my life. Then I worked as a counselor at that camp and got so high on the connection with the kids that it started me down my career path.
I have been so blessed in my life. Living my purpose. Teaching. Writing. Dancing. Raising children that also raised me.
Life is joy!
And I hope the same for all of you.
My kids and me.
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned by producers Danny Laker and Jean-François Cavelier of Gallico Media. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
This time, I didn’t flinch. I didn’t cry. Instead, I felt something new.
Rage.
Rage for every blow Mom and I had ever taken. Every bruise. Every black eye. Every time I cowered behind a locked door. Every cruel name, every threat.
All of it— turned to paper. Paper flashing flame.
In America 16% of all children experience physical abuse. Of those, adult women are two to three times more likely to experience intimate partner violence.
I was one of those children. And when I grew up, I wanted to beat the odds. That’s one of the reasons I wrote Finding Joy, a novel about a teen who desperately seeks happiness amidst the backdrop of familial violence. I hope it helps to shed light on this all too common occurance for other children like me.
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned by producers Danny Laker and Jean-François Cavelier of Gallico Media. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned by producers Danny Laker and Jean-François Cavelier of Gallico Media. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
A few days ago I got this email from a former student who is now in prison for a gang related murder charge that was in my class for third and fourth grade. He lived in a high crime area, and like many children at my school was so inured in the gang lifestyle that any other choice was inconceivable. What follows is a heartfelt exchange with him after tragic news. Note: All names have been changed to protect their privacy.
“Alberto Diaz passed away. Do you remember him?”
Thu 8:13 PM
Me:
“He used to smile all the time. Cute little kid. Too young! I am so sorry for your loss.”
Samuel
“I was surprised to find out, thought I’d rather let you know.”
Fri 8:27 AM
Me:
“Thank you. So sad. You know, as a teacher, you try so hard to give your students the tools they need for healthy successful lives. You BELIEVE in their possibilities. It is heartbreaking when tragedy strikes those you’ve gone to bat for.”
Sat 1:13 PM
Samuel
“To be honest Mrs. Woodward you were the best teacher I ever had, you did everything you could to help keep me away from the lifestyle that I chose but I made my own choices, I wanted to make a name for myself by being the craziest gang member I could be, but look what it got me, but even though Alberto was a gang member he never got in trouble and he didn’t die due to gang violence.”
Me:
“Bless you Samuel. I wish I could have done more for you.”
Samuel
“No you did everything you could and more, I knew what I was doing, but i thought I had real friends, but that all changed and opened my eyes when they tried killing me in here, you were the best teacher I ever had and I’m sure you’ve made an impact on ALL your students lives, me, Nidia Sanchez, Monica Salas, and Pilar Huitron are all my Facebook friends from your class and we were all just talking about you the other day.”
Me: “Thank you kiddo.”
I had to stop typing then because I was starting to cry.
This man was once such a sad little third-grader. The school year had barely started and I knew something was up when I noticed him drawing dark crosses and headstones everywhere. It made me wonder. Why would an eight-year-old refuse to draw in any color but black?
Then I discovered that everyone in his family had gang ties and vowed to help him. I told him time and again that I believed in him. That he was better than the gangs. I signed him up for soccer and bought him equipment and a uniform so it wasn’t a hardship on the family. He started to do a little better. Smiled more.
Since he was our champion speller, I got him into the local spelling bee. His family was so proud to see him compete! Later, the school counselor and I helped his abused mother move into a shelter.
None of this was enough. He was jumped in before he ever started high school. And I stopped hearing about his life. Yet still I wondered. Had I made a difference?
About 10 years ago I bumped into his brother who told me he was in prison. I went home sobbing.
Then we reconnected on line. And we started communicating Sometimes he even calls me from prison telling me how he is trying to better himself. Once, I was busy and didn’t get back to him quickly and he took it wrong thinking I didn’t want to hear from him.
Samuel
“Sorry for bothering you. I’ll leave you alone.”
My heart sunk. And I saw that sad little face again. I so wanted to be that teacher telling him that he is an amazing, worthy individual who can still change his life!
Me:
“Don’t ever say you’re sorry for saying hi! I am happy to hear from you. I do wish I could change your challenging situation but I am proud how you keep trying to do better. Smiles!”
He kept contacting me. And the connversation continues.
The young man who recently passed.
About Laurie: “Fantastically original concept,” reviewers say. “An art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.”
Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning writer whose Artania screenplay was optioned by producers Danny Laker and Jean-François Cavelier of Gallico Media. Her published works include Time Murmurations, Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles series, and Forest Secrets. Each project champions hope, resilience, and empowerment—encouraging children to stay authentic, whether facing bullies in real life or dark forces in fantasy.
Her honors include recognition from the Writers of the Future Contest and publication in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and many anti-bullying grants. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet.
A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to nurture creativity, believing that artistic expression can spark extraordinary change.
Tongues click White gloves sweep tables, until grey Clasped hands cry conformity Like a muted scream in sign language As lips lecture Biblical quotes Cleanliness is next to Godliness. Eyes scan and fall upon An unmade bed Or a dirty dish Ocular glares Filthy lazy child! Blares An encapsulated bullhorn Shatters bifocals Leaving piercing shards upon the floor Which cut my feet.
Photo by David Stroup
About Laurie: The author of Forests Secrets and Finding Joy as well as The Pharaoh’s Cry, Portal Rift,Persistence of Memory, Kidnapped Smile, and Dragon Sky of the fantasy series The Artania Chronicles, Laurie Woodward is also a screenwriter who co-authored Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy. Her poetry has been published in multiple journals and anthologies and she was a collaborator on the popular anti-bullying DVD Resolutions. Bullied as a child, Laurie is an award-winning peace consultant, poet, and blogger who helps teach children how to avoid arguments, stop bullying, and maintain healthy friendships. She writes on the Central Coast of California. More about her work can be found at Author Laurie Woodward — Next Chapteria.net
Fantastically original concept,” says one Artania reviewer, while another describes it as, “an art-born world full of prophecies, enchanted creatures, and wishes that come true.” Laurie Woodward is a multi-award-winning author and screenwriter who brings wonder to life through her novels, screenplays, and blog. Her published works include the coming-of-age novel Finding Joy, The Artania Chronicles fantasy series, the middle-grade adventure Forest Secrets, and numerous short stories and poems. Across every project, Laurie champions hope, resilience, and empowerment, showing that true strength is found in staying authentic—whether facing bullies in the real world or dark forces in fantasy. Her work has won awards from L. Ron Hubbard’s Writers of the Future Contest, been featured in A Hudson View Poetry Digest, and reached the screen through projects like the anti-bullying DVD Resolutions. She also co-wrote the memoir Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy, featured in the IMAX film Dolphins, Robin Williams’ In the Wild, and Animal Planet. A former bilingual teacher and peace consultant, Laurie’s lifelong mission is to inspire others through art. She believes that when creativity is nurtured, it can birth incredible things—films, stories, and songs that change the world.
I had a sublime love once, A love of salt and sea and skin With quivering lips Where every song was him And poetry filled my heart. But now it’s gone And all I’m left with is The specter of transcendent embrace Floating in memory.
Photos by David Stroup
About Laurie: The author of Forests Secrets and Finding Joy as well as The Pharaoh’s Cry, Portal Rift,Persistence of Memory, Kidnapped Smile, and Dragon Sky of the fantasy series The Artania Chronicles, Laurie Woodward is also a screenwriter who co-authored Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy. Her poetry has been published in multiple journals and anthologies and she was a collaborator on the popular anti-bullying DVD Resolutions. Bullied as a child, Laurie is an award-winning peace consultant, poet, and blogger who helps teach children how to avoid arguments, stop bullying, and maintain healthy friendships. She writes on the Central Coast of California. More about her work can be found at Author Laurie Woodward — Next Chapteria.net
About Laurie: The author of Forests Secrets and Finding Joy as well as The Pharaoh’s Cry, Portal Rift,Persistence of Memory, Kidnapped Smile, and Dragon Sky of the fantasy series The Artania Chronicles, Laurie Woodward is also a screenwriter who co-authored Dean and JoJo: The Dolphin Legacy. Her poetry has been published in multiple journals and anthologies and she was a collaborator on the popular anti-bullying DVD Resolutions. Bullied as a child, Laurie is an award-winning peace consultant, poet, and blogger who helps teach children how to avoid arguments, stop bullying, and maintain healthy friendships. She writes on the Central Coast of California. More about her work can be found at Author Laurie Woodward — Next Chapteria.net