K. L. Noone: Magician!

Hi, I’m K.L. Noone—many thanks to A.L. Lester for letting me drop by to talk about Magician today!

K. L. Noone interview. Magician.

Magician comes out July 24 from JMS Books, and it’s m/m high fantasy, with bisexual main characters—at least, Gareth is bi, and Lorre is whatever ancient weary shapeshifting magicians are! (He’s been and done quite a lot, over the years, and at this point what he mostly is…is tired. But Gareth’s got a lot of enthusiasm…)

It’s very much about magic—probably obvious! And also it’s about past mistakes and guilt, and redemption, and trying to hide from the world on a deserted tropical island (because one might as well hide and feel guilty for one’s past mistakes in comfort!), and then it’s about what happens when an optimistic young prince shows up on one’s island and believes with all his heart that the world’s last legendary magician has to help with his quest, because that’s how quests go, isn’t it…

(It’s also the novel I once referred to on Facebook as, “Well, now there’s a lot of tea and magical sex diamonds.” So if those sound like your cup of…er…)

This might be one of my favorite novels that I’ve written; it’s one that’s lived in the back of my head for at least a decade. It’s technically a spin-off for a side character (in fact, the antagonist—though he’s not a bad person, just thoughtless!) from my short story “Sorceress,” which was my first-ever romance sale, way back then! I always knew the sequel was Lorre’s story: what does a magician do after he’s been reckless with his power and caused problems? And who would he fall in love with? The answer to the second question was, obviously, an Earnest Young Hero, someone who still believes that other people will help you if you ask them nicely, and who looks at a lonely and dangerous magician and asks how he can help, in turn.

(A fun and true trivia fact: Gareth’s name wasn’t necessarily going to be Gareth! I wasn’t sure it felt like him, but I needed to call him something—I thought I might change it later. But, around 30k in, I’d been writing him and thinking of him as Gareth, so…he was! And I actually quite like it now—the Arthurian reference fits nicely, I think. Gareth would also get along well with Prince Lir from Peter S. Beagle’s The Last Unicorn, I suspect…)

There are also nectarines. And some discussion of giant turtles. And a bandit or five.

Magician also has two of my favorites of my own ending lines—one for the main story and one for the epilogue. I sometimes find ending lines tricky, but both of these just turned up and felt right. (The last word of the novel overall, by the way, is “yes.” It’s an answer.)

I always write with music, and this playlist has a lot of The Proclaimers, The Pretty Reckless, and Volbeat on it—flavors of Edinburgh, of wild magic, of aging, of falling in love, of finding home at last. And some Against Me! because I suspect Lorre would sympathize with “I Was A Teenage Anarchist,” and The Cars’ “Magic” because, well, magic!

Here’s an excerpt, and buy links, and everything—I hope you enjoy this world and these characters. I’ve loved them for a very long time, and I’m excited to share. And if there’s a third story in this world, it’s got lesbian romance—a sorceress and a princess, in fact, but we’ll get there when we get there…

Buy Magician! JMS Books : Amazon

The beginning of Magician

Magician by Kristen Noone

The world’s greatest living magician, lying on his back on a rocky ledge halfway up a cliff and bathed in sunshine, felt the boat’s arrival on the island shore below like an uninvited knock at a private door. He did not enjoy it.

He didn’t move for a moment. He did not feel like it, and there’d be no rush. Nobody’d get past his wards.

He kept both eyes closed. Sun streaked red behind his eyelids; gold warmed his skin, his hair. His body soaked in the sensations of strong heated stone, sank into stone, became stone: learning how the rock felt when bathed in lush late-morning light. His edges blurred, softened: time slowed, thrummed, grew earthen and deep, salt-lapped and wind-etched. He might’ve been here for centuries, unhurried. Equilibrium and erosion, solidity and reshaping: a balance.

He had needed balance. Something he’d thought he’d known, once. Something he no longer understood.

He’d thought the island might help. Being rock for a while, or the wind, or the seaspray: being suspended amid them all. Being alone, because he was not sure he recalled how to be human, not well enough.

The island was warm—Lorre had always shamelessly adored being warm—and far enough from the mainland that he’d been mostly undisturbed, and close enough to trade routes that he could occasionally walk on water out to a boat and barter some repairs or some healing for some news of the Middle Lands and King Henry’s court at Averene and the Grand Sorceress Liliana. Lorre had promised not to magically check in on Lily or their daughter; he was attempting to keep that promise.

Equilibrium. Difficult. Sunlight was easier. Sunbeams were weightless. Stones did not have to think about human promises. Human perceptions.

The knock came again. It was not physical, or not entirely. It was a presence, an unexpected intruder standing below, shuffling feet in the sand and no doubt wondering where precisely a magician could be found, being faced with a towering blank cliff and no visible habitation.

Lorre sighed, pulled himself back from frayed edges and heavy sleepy light, and sat up, pulling a robe on in an unfussy tumble of blue and gold, mostly just because he liked the caress of silky fabric on bare skin. His senses shifted, dwindled: more human, though not entirely. He’d been a magician too long to not feel the threads of brilliance—cliff, vines, fish, grains of sand, sea-glass polished by waves—all around.

He peeked over the side of the ledge. Behind him the cave yawned lazily, reminding him of sanctuary: he could simply walk back inside, the way he had for several years now, and ignore the new arrival. That generally worked.

He was rather surprised someone’d found him at all. He wasn’t exactly hiding—oh yes you are, said a tart little voice in his head, one that sounded like Lily’s—but the island, after a bit of work on his part, nearly always concealed itself from maps and navigation charts. At the beginning a few enterprising adventurers had managed to track it down, young heroes on quests or proving their worth by daring an enchanter’s lair or begging for Lorre’s assistance in some revenge or inheritance or magical artifact retrieval scheme.

He’d ignored all but two of them. The illusion-wall kept everyone out, simple and baffling; the island had fresh water but little in the way of food. Mostly the adventurers’d given up and gone home, years ago; he couldn’t in fact recall the face of the last one. Two had become nuisances, loud and shouting; one of those had actually threatened to drink poison, melodramatically demanding Lorre’s assistance in collecting a promised bride from a glass mountain, claiming he’d die without her.

The young man currently standing on the beach was neither loud nor melodramatic. In fact, he was calmly considering the sheer cliff-face, which revealed nothing; he stepped back across the small curve of beach, shaded his eyes, seemed to be measuring. After a second he put a hand up, obviously checking the edge of the cliff: having noticed the very slight discrepancy where sea-birds dropped behind the illusion-wall a fraction sooner than they should vanish in reality.

Intelligent, this one. Lorre dangled himself over the ledge at an angle which would’ve been dangerous for anyone else, and watched.

The young man had dark reddish-brown hair, the color of autumn; he wore it tied back, though a few wisps were escaping. He’d dressed for travel, not in shiny armor the way some knights and princes had: sturdy boots and comfortable trousers, a shirt in nicely woven but also practical fabric, a well-worn pack which he’d swung down to the sand. He wasn’t particularly tall, but not short: average, with nicely shaped shoulders and an air of straightforward competence, not trying for impressive or intimidating.

Lorre, despite annoyance at the interruption, couldn’t help but approve. At least this one had some sense, and didn’t walk around clanking in metal under the shimmering sun.

The young man called up, “Hello?” His voice was quite nice as well, not demanding, lightly accented with the burr of the Mountain Marches but in the way of someone who’d been carefully sent to the best schools down South. “Grand Sorcerer?”

Lorre mentally snorted. He didn’t have a proper title, not any longer; if anyone did, it’d be Lily. His former lover, now wife of the brother of the King of Averene, was by default the last Grand Sorceress of the Middle Lands; she’d started up the old magician’s school again, welcoming and training apprentices. Lily always had been better with people. Lorre was not precisely welcome in Averene.

The young man said mildly, “I expect this is a test; I thought you would do that, you know,” as if he thought that Lorre might answer, as if they were having a conversation; and looked around. “I’m meant to find you, is that it?”

That was the opposite of it. Lorre on a good day barely recalled how to be human, and certainly wasn’t fit to interact with them. He’d lost his temper with the melodramatic poison-carrying prince, strolled invisibly onto the shore, asked the poison to turn itself into a sleeping draught, and then poured it into the idiot’s water flask. Then he’d found a passing ship and dumped the snoring body onto its deck. He hadn’t known the destination, and hadn’t bothered to find out.

His current young man was looking at driftwood. Lorre wondered why. He was getting a bit dizzy from leaning nearly upside down; he considered the sensation with some surprise. A swoop of gold swung into his eyes, distracting and momentarily baffling; he pushed the strands of his hair back with magic.

The young man found a stick, one that evidently met his standards for length and strength. He kept it in front of himself; he walked deliberately toward the cliff, and the illusion.

Oh. Clever. Avoiding traps. Testing a theory. Lorre found himself impressed, particularly when the young man watched the tip of the driftwood vanish and nodded to himself and then set rocks down to neatly mark the spot.

The island was not large, and the beach even smaller: a jut of cliff, a tangle of vines, a small lagoon and a trickle of water down to the shore. The illusion hid the cave-opening, but there wasn’t really anywhere else for someone to be; the young man figured that out within an hour or so of methodical exploration, and returned to the shore, and looked thoughtfully at the cliffs. He’d rolled up his sleeves and undone the ties of his shirt, given the heat; he had a vine-leaf in his hair, along with a hint of sweat.

Lorre, in some ways still very much human, couldn’t not stare. Something about those forearms under rolled-up sleeves. That hint of well-muscled chest. The casual ripple of motion, broad shoulders, heroic thighs.

“I suppose,” the young man said, very wry, still looking at the cliff as if perfectly aware Lorre was watching, “I should introduce myself. I think I forgot to, earlier.”

I suppose you should, Lorre agreed silently. Since you’re here. Disrupting my life.

He ignored the fact that he’d had no real plans. Meditation. Quiet. A hope for calm.

A hint of dragon-fire slid through his veins, under his skin. A memory. Restless. Beckoning. Dangerous.

Blurb: A magician in need of redemption. A loyal hero on a quest. And only one bed at the inn.

Once the world’s most legendary sorcerer, Lorre fled the Middle Lands after his own curiosity — and a misguided transformation spell—turned him into a dragon and nearly killed a king. He isn’t a dragon anymore, but he is hiding alone on a tropical island, avoiding people, politics, and his own reputation.

But now a hero has found him. And not just any hero. Prince Gareth’s full of patience, intelligence, a kind heart…and unfairly attractive muscles. And he needs Lorre’s help: his tiny mountain kingdom is under attack from ice magic, and Gareth hopes the world’s last great magician will save his people.

Lorre’s very much done with quests and princes and trying to change the world. But Gareth might tempt him to believe again…in heroes, in himself, and in magic.

Meet K. L. Noone

Merlyn the cat

K.L. Noone employs her academic research for writing romance, usually LGBTQ+ and often paranormal, fantasy, or historical! Her full-length romance novels include the Character Bleed trilogy (Seaworthy, Stalwart, and Steadfast), Cadence and the Pearl, and A Demon for Midwinter, available from JMS Books, and A Prophecy for Two, available from Inkshares. She’s also the author of multiple romance novellas and short stories with JMS Books, and previously with Less Than Three Press, Circlet Press, and Ellora’s Cave. Her non-romance fantasy fiction has appeared in Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Sword and Sorceress and the magazine Aoife’s Kiss.

With the Professor Hat on, she’s published scholarly work on romance, fantasy, and folklore, including a book on Welsh mythology in popular culture and a book on ethics in Terry Pratchett’s fantasy. She is happily bisexual, married to the marvelous Awesome Husband, and currently owned by a long-legged black cat named Merlyn.

Twitter : Instagram : WordPress : Amazon

Interview: Marie Sinclair

A big welcome to Marie Sinclair this week! Marie is here to talk about her new release and the aromantic main character!

Marie Sinclair interview: Nothing like forever

Greetings to Ally and her readers! I’m Marie Sinclair, a new author in the MM/gay romance genre. Thank you to Ally for letting me come talk about my upcoming release, Nothing Like Forever. It’s the second book in my Finding Forever series, and my fourth release this year. 

I call Nothing Like Forever a soulmates to partners love story because it follows Jake and Micah over the course of the twenty years it takes them to figure out how to turn the instant connection they had when they met at eighteen into a sustainable relationship. On the surface, they’re a classic can’t-live-with-him/can’t-live-without-him couple whose attempts to be together lead to crash-and-burn disasters and silences that last years. Something always brings them back together, whether it’s a friend’s wedding or a chance encounter on airplane, and makes them keep trying to be together. It isn’t until they’re in their late-30s that they recognize and understand that Jake is aromantic and that, in order to build something together, they have to redefine their expectations of each other and what being in a relationship means. 

This novel is all about learning what you can and can’t expect from your partner and what you can and can’t accept for yourself, what are lines you’re willing to cross, and where do you have to stay true to who you are no matter how you feel about the other person.  

The idea for writing a romance with an aromantic character is based in a 30+ year friendship I have with a guy I met in college. We met, much like Jake and Micah do, when he came to visit his best friend, who lived on my dorm floor. It truly was an instant connection between us as soon as we saw each other. (And, yes, we have tried to turn that connection into something more a few times, but unlike Jake and Micah, we aren’t actually attracted to each other in that way – figuring that out took us years, and it was every bit as bumpy a road as Jake and Micah have, full of hurt feelings and a sense of betrayal that the universe would bring us together in a way that all the books and songs and movies say is meant to be, and yet…it wasn’t). 

It wasn’t until a few years ago, when I was describing my relationship to this man to a new acquaintance, that I began to have an understanding of what was going on. As I described our relationship and the way in which I can often sense when he’s in distress or the time I called him after I came across puppy pictures of our dog who’d recently passed only to have him tell me he’d just (and I mean, just, he had it in his hands when I called) found a pamphlet his vet had given him after his dog passed away a few years before, this acquaintance said, “That’s so romantic! Like something out of a movie!”

Something in that moment made everything click, and I started to research aromanticism. The more I learned, the more I realized that my friend is aromantic, and the more I wanted to take on the challenge of writing a romance with a main character who does not experience romantic attraction. 

Aromanticism is often linked with asexuality (aro/ace) in the queer community, but that’s a bit misleading. There are people who are both asexual (experiencing little or no sexual attraction) and aromantic, but they don’t necessarily go hand in hand. There are people who don’t experience romantic attraction but have a high sex drive. One of the challenges for aromantic individuals is that romantic attraction is so ubiquitous in most cultures that we don’t recognize there’s a difference between sexual and romantic attraction. 

I did a lot of research as well as worked with an authenticity reader to make Jake’s experiences as true as I could. In the end, I settled on Jake being demi-aro, meaning that he can develop romantic feelings but only for someone he’s intensely connected to. While Jake intentionally comes off as a player at the beginning, I tried to be careful with the language I used in his POV chapters to highlight physical and sexual attraction to Micah. As the story progresses, that language begins to include more romantic attraction and then, as I hope you’ll see because I’ve enticed you to read the book, results in some epic fails for Jake as he tries to master what it means to be a boyfriend. 

If you’re interested in more information about aromanticism, I highly recommend starting with the LGBTQ Wiki https://lgbta.wikia.org/wiki/LGBTA_Wiki. There are also some wonderful IG accounts such as aro.aro.ace and aromantic_support that can provide resources as well as information. 

Nothing Like Forever
Nothing Like Forever cover, Marie Sinclair

Fairy tales say that when you meet the love of your life, you know. Micah and Jake definitely knew they’d met someone special the instant they saw each other. Only Jake doesn’t believe in fairy tales, and Micah believes in them too much. 

Nothing Like Forever is an insta-lust, soulmates-to-partners, can’t-live-with-him/can’t-live-without-him unconventional love story in which Jake and Micah learn that loving someone isn’t always enough for a happily ever after, and sometimes the journey is as important as the destination. 

Now available for pre-order on Amazon and releases on KU on 10 August 2021.

Excerpt

    Jake knew someone was in his house as soon as he opened the front door. It was something in the way the air moved, or the echoes sounded in rooms that should be empty, maybe the trace of a scent that was out of the ordinary. Whatever it was, it put Jake on alert that last night’s hookup had stayed longer than was either necessary or welcome.

    He put his briefcase down on the table by the front door and toed off his shoes before shrugging out of his wool overcoat and taking off his leather gloves. An arctic blast had blown in from Alaska over the weekend and the temperature in the Bay Area was still in the low forties. Jake left his coat draped across the lime green chair that had been a gift from an interior decorator he’d slept with a few weeks ago.

    He’d assured Jake it was fun and kitschy in a 1960’s Palm Springs pool party way, totally in keeping with his ocean front bungalow. Jake wasn’t sure he was a fun and kitschy type, but he was definitely not an interior decorator kind of guy. The more times he saw the chair, the more he hated it. Not to mention it reminded him of the less-than-stellar sex they’d had, and the way the guy had screamed dramatically as he came. Jake was not a fan of performative orgasms.

    At the moment, though, Jake had more pressing issues than a walk down memory lane and deciding whether he wanted to hurl the chair out the door. There was a twink to send home as well. The guy had been a fun fuck, maybe he’d gift him the chair on his way out. 

    Jake had very specific and clear-cut rules for hook-ups and made sure potential partners understood them before he brought them home. No kissing. No overnights unless given an invitation. No sharing his bed: fucking happened in the guest room and that’s where hook-ups stayed. There were no repeats, and no exceptions. 

    He’d long ago accepted that he was interested in sex not relationships. Romantic gestures and sentimentality made his skin crawl, and finding Mr. Right had never been his goal, and, even though he’d tried relationships a couple of times, Jake was only ever looking for Mr. Right Now. He had little patience for anyone who thought they could change his mind or expected him to make an exception for them.

    He climbed the stairs to the living room, and stepped through the archway on alert for anything that might have been moved. The room looked the same as he’d left it with its leather sofas and dark wood tables and blond hardwood floors. The big picture window looked out over Great Highway and towards the Pacific Ocean beyond, both sea and sky gray. He didn’t stop to admire the view, focused instead on finding the location in which his visitor was overstaying his welcome. When he saw the roller suitcase tucked into a corner, he realized he had a different issue to deal with entirely. 

    The bag was the generic black all flight attendants used, but he knew who this one belonged to without looking at the ID tag.

    Micah. 

    What had it been? Six months since he’d left San Francisco? Maybe eight? A year? Fuck, could it have been that long since they’d seen each other? Since they’d last spoken? 

    Jake tried to remember when Micah stopped flying out of SFO and transferred to Seattle. It had been nearly a year since Micah’s part-time residence in his house had come to a devastating end when Micah crossed a line he knew was unforgiveable. They both had that night. Jake wasn’t enough of an asshole to blame it all on Micah, but they’d also both gone silent afterwards. No texts, no calls, nothing. That wasn’t surprising. In the history of their relationship, they’d done this before, but Micah usually got in touch after they both cooled down. When that hadn’t happened, Jake figured they were probably done for good this time and let the walls he’d erected harden into fortifications. 

    Now Micah was back, and Jake knew, no matter how hard he tried, he’d never be able to say no to Micah.  

About Marie

Marie Sinclair is a queer writer living in San Francisco. Though she’s been a writer all her life, it wasn’t until she stumbled upon MM romance that she knew she’d found a home for herself and all the characters in her head. 

Her focus is on contemporary romance, usually on the steamy side, and HEAs are guaranteed, though it might take some work for the couples to get there. As a member of the LGBTQ+ community, Marie believes in rooting her stories in the real world of queer culture and showing how love can survive even in challenging times. 

Her first novel, A Kind of Forever, released in January of 2021, with a prequel novella, A Winter’s Dance, available on Prolific Works and Book Funnel. Jake and Micah’s prequel novella, Nothing Like a Summer’s Romance, which details the month they spent together when they were nineteen, is available on Amazon and KU. 

Marie’s Sin Bin readers’ group on Facebook : IG: marie.sinbooks : Twitter @marie_sinbooks : Website and newsletter sign-up: www.sinbinbooks.com

Interview: Ana Night

Ana Night

This week we welcome Ana Night, who’s come to talk about her new release and answer some nosy questions! Welcome, Ana!

Thank you for having me! I’m here to talk about my newest release Avenging a Raider, book six in my Black Raiders series. This book is one I’ve wanted to write for quite a while, but it hasn’t been easy – anything that could get in the way would. So to finally have it done is just amazing and I’m so happy it’s out now!

So, on with the questions! What started you writing?

I think it was just one of those inevitable things. I’ve always loved stories, from having them read to me as a kid, to learning to read while listening to tapes of the book (I feel way older than I am writing that, by the way), to reading so fast and so much the local library couldn’t keep up. No matter what, if we were going on a drive, I had pen and paper with me and would be writing from the car started till it stopped. I started out writing fanfiction even though I had no idea that’s what it was, and I would rewrite the things I thought could be better and I guess that slowly led to me just wanting to write those stories from scratch. I have quite a few unfinished and/or unpublished books on my computer and I’m sure some of them date back to my early teens. It wasn’t until I was nineteen that I decided to give this whole being an author thing a try and I haven’t regretted that decision once. I absolutely love writing and sharing my stories with others!

Where do you write?

Usually at my desk or on the couch. If I’m feeling frisky, though, I’ll write on my balcony but only when it’s warm enough. That also puts me at risk of just working on my non-existent tan instead of writing, so not always a good idea. Yes, I know. I like to live my life dangerously! Or, really, just in danger of ending up looking like a lobster.

What do you like to read?

I only read MM and have for almost five years now. I mostly read romantic suspense, so it takes a lot for me to read things like fantasy and contemporary but if the writing style is a hit, then I’ll probably read anything by that author. I’m a lot more about the writing than the story these days if that makes sense? This is actually something that happened as I started to write. I became pickier with what I’d read, and I read a lot less now than I did just five years ago. Then again, I could read two to three books a day back then and I have no idea how I had that much time. I certainly don’t now! So I just really enjoy those few books that I do read.

What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

I have a horse, so I spend a good amount of time at the stables. Besides that, I probably watch too many tv shows. No regrets, though! I also have a cat, but he lives at my parents’, so I only get to love on him a few times a week. Other than that, I read when I find a good book or one of my favorite authors has a new one out. I’ve also started sewing again which turns out to be a lot harder than I remembered, but a few broken needles won’t stop me! At least, it won’t stop me from breaking more… I try, though, and I really like making skirts and dresses so hopefully I’ll get better with time.

I like how you put ‘Do you like to exercise?’ in your suggestions for this question because hell no. I’m the biggest couch potato to ever couch potato (I don’t know if you can actually say that but if you ask me, I’ll claim wholeheartedly that you can!). I’ve even stolen my parents’ car— don’t worry. They have two—because it takes forever to take the train to the stables. Lazy? Maybe. I’ll probably have to aspire to be the couchiest potato ever but I’m okay with that.

Tell me a little bit about your most recent release. What gave you the idea for it? How long did it take to write? What did you enjoy about writing it? What did you hate?

As I said before, I’ve wanted to write this book for a very long time. Probably since I started on the first book in the series which is—god, where did the time go?—five years ago now.

I always wanted to pair up these two. Things always change from when I get an idea to when I’m actually writing the story but for the most part, there weren’t a whole lot of changes with these guys. I’m not entirely sure what gave me the idea except that it just made sense the more I wrote and fleshed out the first few books in the series. The more I knew about Will and Colt, the more I liked them together.

What I hate about this book is how long it took me to finish it. I didn’t write for two months this year because shit happened and then it was just so hard to get back into it, but fortunately the boys started talking to me again (they had some abandonment issues we had to work through) and I managed to finish the book in June.

Avenging a Raider
Avenging a Raider by Ana Night

Eleven years ago, Lieutenant William Stanton’s entire world went up in flames. He lost his brother. His family. He left his old life behind to hunt down the people responsible. Avenging his brother was all he’d thought about, all he’d done, for a decade. A sexy little assassin shouldn’t be able to distract him from that goal, but he never counted on the feelings Colt would spark in him.

Colt ‘Shadow’ Castillo has a job to do. A very important one that could stop a terrorist, but he had to go rogue from the CIA to do it. His handler sending someone to retrieve him isn’t surprising. He never expected it to be the missing lieutenant of the Black Raiders, though. Teaming up with the man certainly wasn’t on his to-do list, but the attraction he feels for Will isn’t exactly driving him away.

With people to save, a job to do, and a terrorist to stop, can Colt allow himself to trust Will and the feelings he has for him? Can Will convince Colt he’s worthy of his love?

Buy Avenging a Raider!

About Ana

Ana Night is a writer of suspenseful gay romance. She’s an avid reader who has loved the written word since she discovered it. When she was a kid, she never went anywhere without a notepad. She was always writing, be it in the backseat of the car, between classes in school, or by the pool on vacations. When she’s not writing, you can find her with her nose buried in a book, singing and dancing, or watching her favorite TV shows.

Ana lives in Denmark where she spends most of her time running from her ninja kitty–that one goes for the ankles–and getting lost in the woods with her horse.

Website : Instagram : Facebook : Bookbub : Goodreads

Flowers Under My Pillow – Guest Post by Nell Iris

Hi everyone, I’m back! Thank you so much Ally, for inviting me to your blog to talk about my brand new release, Flowers Under My Pillow, a contemporary story infused with some of the Midsummer magic of the olden days.

The idea for the story came from old Swedish folklore. In olden times, Midsummer was considered a time of magic. Its proximity to the summer solstice makes it one of the brightest nights all year because the sun barely (or never) sets, and it was believed to be one of the most magical nights of the year. The boundaries between the human world and the paranormal were blurred, and anything could happen.

Plants and herbs with healing powers were believed to be extra powerful during this night, so people picked them and dried them to preserve the power of Midsummer all year. Walking barefoot—or rolling around naked—in the morning dew supposedly helped keep you healthy and strong during the year, and people also collected the dew and added it to bread and beer to help leaven and ferment. They also used the dew for medicinal purposes.

People also believed you could predict the future on nights like this, and this is where the idea for my story came from.

If a young lady wanted to know who she was going to marry, all she had to do was pick seven kinds of flowers on Midsummer’s Eve and put them underneath her pillow and she’d dream of her future husband. There are variations to the tradition; in some places, you had to pick nine kinds of flowers, and in other places, you needed to jump over the corresponding number of fences before putting your bouquet under the pillow. And if you didn’t do it in silence, you broke the magic and it didn’t work.

So I took this idea and adapted it to suit my purposes. I threw out all the heteronormative crap and made a man dream about a man because this is the 21st century and even old folklore needs to be more inclusive, amirite? 😊

Traditional Swedish folklore tells you that if you pick seven kinds of flowers in silence and put them under your pillow on midsummer's eve, you'll dream of the man you'll marry. Flowers Under My Pillow available now!
Excerpt:

“You’re certainly beautiful enough to be a hallucination,” he murmurs. “Are you some kind of forest spirit, here to lure me into your lair?”

His thumb strokes, strokes, strokes my lip, but his words make my breath stutter. Make my words stutter. “Wh-wh-what did you just say?”

“I asked if you’re a forest spirit, here to captivate me and hold me prisoner for the rest of eternity.” His smile tells me he’s joking.

“I can’t believe you said that.”

“Why?”

“My mom calls me her forest spirit son. She has a mad scientist daughter and me. The forest spirit.”

“So you are here to abduct me.” He runs his finger along my hairline and then twists an errant lock around his finger. “I can totally believe it. What’s happening here is too surreal; you must be some kind of sprite.”

I snort. “You’re ridiculous.”

“I come willingly. I’m yours; do what you want with me.” He tugs lightly on my hair, his brown eyes twinkling like stars in a night sky.

Whatever I want?” I let my gaze fall to his mouth; the darkness of his beard surrounding his full lips makes them shockingly red, like sun-ripened strawberries.

“Yeah.”

I run my finger along the seam of his mouth and my skin buzzes at his touch, as though one of the bees had gotten stuck between my digit and his skin. His eyes darken and hypnotized, I trace the outline of his lips. Then I skim my fingers down his beard, careful to not disturb the blossoms. “Every year, I pick the same flowers as I did that first year. And now, you’re wearing them.” His beard looks wild, wearing my bouquet. The cow-parsley is sprawling everywhere, the forget-me-nots and buttercups are dainty and almost disappear among the thick strands, the daisies take up too much space, and the cornflowers are so blue against the dark hairs they’re almost too bright to look at. It should be crazy, but it’s amazing and I can’t take my eyes off him.

“May I take a picture of you?” I ask.

“Of course.”

I take out my phone, and he smiles at me as I snap several photographs of him before stuffing my phone back into my pocket, my hand returning to his face like a magnet, my finger softly ghosting over his lips.

What would kissing him feel like? Would his beard scratch and prick me? Or would it be a gentle rasp, drawing my blood to the surface, arousing me? I squirm at the thought.

His brown eyes burn into me and his grip strengthens on my hand. “Anything,” he whispers.

I move closer to him, crane my neck until our noses nudge. I let my eyes fall closed and wait for a heartbeat, giving him the opportunity to pull away if he wants to, but he doesn’t. So I rub my nose along his, feeling the first tickle of his beard against my clean-shaven cheek. It provokes a shudder and spurs me on. Unable to wait a nanosecond longer, I lean in, and hum when our mouths touch.

It’s a chaste kiss, so light and fleeting I wouldn’t have believed it was real if it hadn’t been for his beard tickling my lips, inviting me to press a little harder. My heart hammers so hard in my chest, I’m certain he can feel it pulsing through my lips, certain it reverberates through the forest like some ancient, shamanistic drum. The kiss is everything I’ve ever dreamed of and I want more. I need more.

Flowers Under My Pillow
Flowers Under My Pillow by Nell Iris

Smiling brown eyes. A dark beard. Dandelions. Sunny, happy dandelions.

For thirty years, Frode’s had the same dream. Every Midsummer’s Eve since he was a kid accompanying his sister to pick flowers to put under his pillow, he’s dreamed of the same man. A dream he never shares with anyone, that makes him wish for impossible things…like true love.

“It’s you.”

Then one Midsummer’s Eve, the man of Frode’s dreams stands before him in the flesh. Both men recognize each other despite never having met in real life. Both men are instantly drawn to each other and want to know more.

“Who are you, Viljar? Are you even real?”

Their questions are many but do the whys and the hows matter? Or should they allow the Midsummer magic that brought them together to lead the way into each other’s arms? Into each other’s hearts?

Traditional Swedish folklore tells you that if you pick seven kinds of flowers in silence and put them under your pillow on Midsummer’s Eve, you’ll dream of the man you’ll marry.

M/M Contemporary / 17 477 words

Buy Flowers Under My Pillow: JMS Books:: Amazon :: Books2Read

About Nell

Nell Iris is a romantic at heart who believes everyone deserves a happy ending. She’s a bonafide bookworm (learned to read long before she started school), wouldn’t dream of going anywhere without something to read (not even the ladies room), loves music (and singing along at the top of her voice but she’s no Celine Dion), and is a real Star Trek nerd (Make it so). She loves words, bullet journals, poetry, wine, coffee-flavored kisses, and fika (a Swedish cultural thing involving coffee and pastry!)

Nell believes passionately in equality for all regardless of race, gender or sexuality, and wants to make the world a better, less hateful, place.

Nell is a bisexual Swedish woman married to the love of her life, a proud mama of a grown daughter, and is approaching 50 faster than she’d like. She lives in the south of Sweden where she spends her days thinking up stories about people falling in love. After dreaming about being a writer for most of her life, she finally was in a place where she could pursue her dream and released her first book in 2017.

Nell Iris writes gay romance, prefers sweet over angsty, short over long, and quirky characters over alpha males.

Newsletter :: Webpage/blog :: Twitter :: Instagram :: Facebook Page :: Facebook Profile :: Goodreads :: Bookbub :: Pinterest :: Ko-Fi

Interview: Ana Ashley

I’m delighted to welcome Ana Ashley today to talk about her new release, How to Catch a Vet! Her story fits in very well with my ‘slightly crazed smallholding’ vibe… Welcome, Ana!

Headshot: Ana Ashley

Hi everyone! I’m really pleased to be here today to talk about my new book, How to Catch a Vet. This is the sixth book in the Chester Falls series, which is a small-town romance with all the feels. Don’t take it from me, check out the reviews and you’ll want to move into Chester Falls in no time!

Now for the questions. What started you writing? How did you fall into this writing gig?

I’ve always had this hidden desire to be an author but it wasn’t something I thought about too much until I voiced it in a coaching session. Once those words were out I decided to see where it led me. Four years on and I’m now doing this gig full time.

Where do you write?

I have a makeshift office but it’s not where I tend to write. I prefer to move around. Sometimes I sit outside on the various seating areas we have around the house, or the pool, if it’s not too hot. I like the dining table too because it allows me to spread. My favorite place of all is coffee shops, but sadly it’s been over a year since I’ve been able to do that.

What do you like to read?

I read mostly gay romance. It’s partly research but mostly pleasure because I absolutely love the genre I write in. I also read some craft books about writing and publishing but I need to be in the right mood for those. I’m a romance girl all the way.

What are the three books you’d take to a desert island? Why would you choose them?

Oh my goodness, what a question to ask a reader! I really don’t know. I always think that even my favorite books, if read over and over, would become old news if I couldn’t access other books. I love to reread books and I always find new things I hadn’t noticed before, but I normally have a break between rereads. Can this island have power so I can take three ereaders full of books?

Writing is an intrinsically solo occupation. Do you belong to any groups or associations, either online or in the ‘real’ world? How does that work for you?

My writing goes through stages. Sometimes I need total silence, and other times I need someone around to talk things through. I have a close author friend and we usually skype and write together. We have the option to talk or just be silent but we’re there for each other regardless. I’m in quite a few author groups and have had the pleasure to meet some of my author friends personally at conferences. I love making that personal connection with people.

What do you like to do when you’re not writing?

I love baking so when I’m not writing I’m usually thinking of something to bake. We also have a really big garden so I’m learning how to grow things and look after the various fruit trees that came with the house when we bought it. I find it’s good exercise and it helps clear my mind and thinking about my writing, or if I’m stuck in a particular plot point.

Tell me a little bit about your most recent release. What gave you the idea for it? How long did it take to write? What did you enjoy about writing it? What did you hate?

How to Catch a Vet is partly the plot bunny from a reader. She messaged me after How to Catch a Boss released last Christmas saying that Santi, the brother of one of the MCs needed a dedicated and off-the-charts sweet vet that would help him with the great dane he adopted.

In total the book took me 2 weeks to write but many more weeks of research and gathering information. Santi, one of the main characters has an eye condition called retinitis pigmentosa, which is the reason he had to leave the military. At the same time his Dog, Duchess Olive McPickles, also ends up needing a procedure which is quite common with great danes. These two things alone made it the most challenging book I’ve written research-wise. It was also super fun because alongside this we have a menagerie of animals that steal the show at every chance they have.

After five novels and two shorter stories, writing in this world is like coming home and I always love to include recurring characters. It’s something my readers love as well since they get to see their favorite characters come back. There’s also plenty of shenanigans, so there’s that, too.

How to Catch a Vet

Ana Ashley, How to Catch a Vet

The first thing I learned at Vet school was to always expect the unexpected.
Well, I sure never saw Santiago Torres or his adorable Great Dane coming.

Santi is everything I’m not. Tall, confident, overbearing, and if I’m to believe his advances, he’s also very experienced in…well, you know what.

I always play safe, but it’s time to ditch the v-card. We couldn’t be more different, but that doesn’t matter because this is just a one time thing.

I’m not going to want more, right?
I’m not going to fall for him, right?

How to Catch a Vet is the sixth book in the Chester Falls series and features an opposites attract story between a virgin and a player, a Great Dane with a tendency to rescue- read kidnap- other people’s pets, and a small town like no other.

Buy How to Catch a Vet!

Admitting I'd been bullied at school was one thing. Admitting I was still a virgin at almost thirty was another altogether. 
Despite the hotter-than-the-earth's core kiss, Santi didn't want to start anything. He was dealing with his stuff, and I understood that. 
We could still be friends, couldn't we? I could make sure my grownign feelings for him didn't get any bigger, couldn't I?
Ana Ashley, How to Catch a Vet. Out now!