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Warrior's Song

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"Like so many college students, Shaw is torn between his father’s dream for his future and his own uncertainty. Shaw’s intellectual self-exploration provides the foundation of this novel. Hill sprinkles the novel’s dialog with references to the fundamentals of a liberal arts education, including American history, science, psychology, sociology, and philosophy. At first, these references seem unrelated; however, Mr. Hill winds them together in an increasingly pertinent existential rationale. Elemental to this exploration are concepts of the human soul, reincarnation and the integration of purpose, fulfilled as a result of Hill’s use of nuance and association."
—Charles Weinblatt, author of Jacob's A Holocaust Love Story


"This book is so very inspirational. There are many young men in the United States who will study for and enter government activities at some time in their lives. They may have taken the same classes as Parker and Sam, but will they have the same drive, the need to reach out and know even more. If you have a teenage son, or daughter, looking toward college, I highly recommend this book be read by the entire family. Hill writes fluently from what he had studied, but more importantly merges his own personal philosophy that has undoubtedly evolved, and shares it with us as we each strive for success in today's world. This literary gem is undoubtedly the first in what will become a treasure of conceptual thinking and insight that will surely spark new enthusiasm in the lives of each and every reader. Don't miss the opportunity!"
—Glenda Bixler, Reviewers Roundup

Parker Shaw is a typical twenty-year-old college student at the University of Virginia—or so he thinks. He has a lucid dream that vexes him but, for the sake of his sanity, he decides to disregard it. In the coming months, however, it is clear that the dream has a special message for him. While on what appears to be a fact-finding mission that takes him and his buddy Sam to the awe-inspiring American Southwest, he encounters a Navajo man who provides some of the answers he’s been looking for.

Warrior’s Song is the first in a four-part series that documents some of the most formative years in Parker’s life as he crosses the great threshold into adulthood. He comes to the realization that, in order to understand his place in society, he must recall to mind critical elements of his past. The new Parker who emerges from the ashes of the old charts his own course by applying philosophical and practical truths with scientific precision. In his quest for answers, he combines all of the disparate parts of himself together to create a whole individual, armed to do battle in the modern age.

Warrior’s Song is the first novel by author Thomas M. Hill. An avid student of philosophy, history, politics, and social science, he blends all of these subjects together in a thought-provoking and at times satirical inquiry into the roots of modern American identity.

reincarnation fiction, past life regression fiction, philosophy fiction, september 11 fiction, native american spirituality fiction, christianity and liberalism, university of virginia books, ayn rand atlas shrugged

236 pages, Kindle Edition

First published April 15, 2011

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About the author

Thomas M. Hill

13Ìýbooks43Ìýfollowers
Thomas M. Hill is an author, editor, and book shepherd who has been working in publishing for the last ten years. For the last four years he has assisted self-publishing authors in developing, editing, and producing print-ready publications that are up to traditional publishing standards. He has published four books, including his first suspense novel, Warrior's Song, which received a Readers Favorite Award in 2011.

Raised in Arlington, Virginia, Thomas began his career in publication composition, design, and production in 2000 and has worked for the U. S. Chamber of Commerce, the University of Virginia Press, the American Staffing Association, and the Computer Sciences Corporation in creative and editing departments. In 2006 he became a copy editor and proofreader for Rowan & Littlefield Publishing Group, where he worked on academic and nonfiction titles.

Among the assignments Thomas finds the most pleasurable are ones that require a great deal of research and thought--ones that take a great deal of time and energy to produce. Because he began his career in scholarly publishing, he tends to take a research-based approach to creating content while working in developmental editing roles. Character development for novels, research necessary to create a plot or write a nonfiction title, one-on-one developmental editing, and manuscript coaching: those are his strong suits. Additionally, he loves to engage his creative side by designing book covers and interiors for print or ebooks.

Thomas loves working with authors of any genre, but he is especially enthusiastic about titles that are thought-provoking, educational, or present unique perspectives on time-tested ideas. He has also studied four different languages (Spanish, German, Ancient Greek, and Arabic), so projects that deal with aspects of the cultures in which these languages are (were) spoken are of particular fascination.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Charles Weinblatt.
AuthorÌý5 books43 followers
April 3, 2012
Warrior’s Song, the first in a four-part fictional series by Thomas Hill, studies the life of 20-year-old Parker Shaw.

Shaw is a descendent of the famous Colonel Robert Gould Shaw, who commanded the first black regiment of the U.S. Army in the Civil War (made famous in the Edward Zwick film, Glory). This novel explores Shaw’s coming-of-age struggle with identity, family, purpose, and career goals.

The novel begins on the campus of The University of Virginia in April 2001 and it ends with the airplane hijackings and bombings of September 11, 2001.

In a strangely vivid dream, Shaw finds himself a Native American warrior pursued and murdered by a group of white men. Like a splinter in his mind, the dream drives Shaw to discover his connection with the murdered Native American.

With a friend, he travels to the American Southwest in search of the dream’s meaning. In this quest, he encounters a man who provides some perspective and direction. Shaw seeks a powerful revelation of the person he is supposed to be. In return, he is served nuggets of insight and enigma, bound together by a common thread of purpose.

Like so many college students, Shaw is torn between his father’s dream for his future and his own uncertainty. Shaw’s intellectual self-exploration provides the foundation of this novel. Hill sprinkles the novel’s dialog with references to the fundamentals of a liberal arts education, including American history, science, psychology, sociology, and philosophy. At first, these references seem unrelated. However, Hill winds them together in an increasingly pertinent existential rationale. Elemental to this exploration are concepts of the human soul, reincarnation and the integration of purpose, fulfilled as a result of Hill’s use of nuance and association.

Shaw finds within ephemeral out-of body experiences a fleeting but poignant insight. He has grown psychologically, as the boundaries of time and purpose become increasingly clear.

He comes to the conclusion that by understanding his past (including a past life) and by deriving insight from the contrasting parts of his personality, he will become a more fulfilled adult. No doubt this insight will serve Shaw well in the next three segments of the series.

Mr. Hill is a cogent and descriptive writer. In Warrior’s Song, he provides a clear and descriptive foundation for the rest of Shaw’s journey, bringing to life the eternal coming-of-age struggle for self identification and purpose.

If Warrior’s Song is lacking in any aspect it would be in the fleeting perspectives of secondary personalities. Of course, brevity of purpose pushes the novelist to be concise in order to keep up drama and pacing, and it is hopeful that Mr. Hill will have the opportunity to engage in more profound character development in the succeeding titles in this fascinating series.


Charles S. Weinblatt
Author, Jacob’s Courage

Profile Image for Preston Fleming.
AuthorÌý9 books66 followers
August 5, 2012
I see Parker Shaw as a young character with a bright future. I started reading WARRIOR'S SONG expecting an enjoyable but conventional coming-of-age story. After reading the first third, I realized that the book was moving in a much more interesting direction than I had expected. Written in an understated, down-to-earth style, the novel follows a good-natured and well-bred young man who, despite being overlooked in a family of overachievers, has the confidence to follow his own path and to allow his life's mission to unfold in its own way. The series of purposeful coincidences that takes Parker from Virginia to Colorado to the Four Corners area of Arizona kept the pages turning rapidly for me. I enjoyed the camaraderie between Parker and his sidekick, Sam, as well as the insights that brought Parker to the point of embarking on his life's mission. More than that, I enjoyed the imaginative and thoughtful approach that the author has taken to the philosophical and metaphysical questions that Parker faces as he sets forth in life as a responsible yet uniquely intuitive young man. I'm ready for the next installment!
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