interview: Leigh M. Lorien, #ISORoommates

Today we welcome Leigh M. Lorien, who’s here to chat about her new release #ISO Roommates! I’ve also included an excerpt right at the bottom after the interview after Leigh’s bio.

Leigh M. Lorien

Hello and first of all, thank you for letting me stop by! I’m super grateful for the opportunity. (Ally: You are most welcome!)

For anyone who follows this blog regularly, you may have read the post in February featuring Nell Iris and Ofelia Grand discussing their recent releases for the #Love submission call from JMS Books. I’m here to talk about my release for that same series, titled #ISORoommates (for anyone who missed Nell & Ofelia’s post, the theme of the #Love submission call was “love in the age of social media” and the story had to include some form of social media, real or not, and the title of each story starts with a hashtag, thus my title, #ISORoommates, wherein ISO means “In Search Of”). 

In #ISORoommates, Marc and Sora meet when they move in to a new house. They each have their own reasons for the move, but both expect the new situation to be better—and it is, until the two of them butt heads over shared work spaces and polar opposite organization techniques (if you can call “throwing things around” an organization technique).

The story came to me while on a six-hour drive with my sister. She and I are both creative souls.  We hoard craft supplies. We hoard things that could be craft supplies, someday. We hoard shiny things, cool rocks, bits of wire, random junk we find on the ground. We hoard cardboard boxes because, you know, that’s a really good box!  You can never have too many boxes.

But our ideas of organization could not be more different.  I lose everything I touch. Sometimes I don’t even need to touch it. I just think about it, and it is spontaneously absorbed into the chaotic abyss of my house, never to be seen again.  My sister, on the other hand, is an organization junkie. She loves order. She has drawers and shelves and cabinets, things are labelled neatly, and everything has a place.

While discussing artsy habits, the concept of an opposites attract story featuring a disastrous, disorganized artist and his tidy opponent crept into my mind.

When I started writing this lovely artist character, he let me know he’s also transgender.

Aaaaand autistic.

Cool buddy, no pressure.

Sora isn’t the first trans character I’ve written, and he definitely won’t be the last. He’s not the first autistic character I’ve written, either. He is, however, the first autistic transgender artist I’ve written, so it felt a good deal like ripping my own heart out and smearing it all over the page.

Autism presents differently depending on gender. Most [neurotypical] people’s understanding of autism comes from the symptoms typical to cisgender boys and men, which are diagnosed and portrayed far more often. Cisgender women, and those of us assigned female at birth, often go undiagnosed and unnoticed since our presentation is different than what society “expects” autism to look like. Since Sora isn’t a cis man, I was able to use my own experiences to inform his character. The lack of social interest, withdrawing, panicking, hyper-focus, and meltdowns are all things that I’ve experienced as an AFAB person on the spectrum.

Sora’s love interest-slash-opposite, Marc, comes off as quite a dick initially, but it was very important that he be anything but. If I’m writing a transgender or autistic character in a relationship, they’re going to have a healthy, supportive partner. There’s no other option in my mind. Marc is not perfect, but no one is. The important thing is that he doesn’t question or belittle any aspect of Sora’s identity.

Anyway, if that’s not enough to sell you, did I mention there’s car sex? Who doesn’t love some good car sex.

#ISORoommates
Cover, #ISO Roomates by Leigh M. Lorien

The only thing Sora wants is to be left alone to do his art. When he moves into a house with three other people, he knows he’ll have to make some adjustments, but he didn’t count on one of his roommates being a neat-freak with no regard for personal boundaries. If there’s one thing Sora can’t stand, it’s other people telling him how to live his life.

Marc is excited to move in with new people. After his last break-up, he’s keen on being independent and focusing on his own hobbies. His new house has a garage, so he’ll finally get to work on his car! But Marc’s enthusiasm falls apart when he realizes his disorganized artist roommate, Sora, intends to work on his projects in the garage, too.

The two men could not be more opposite… or more similar. They each do their best to ignore the other, but the longer they spend together, the harder it becomes. It’s only a matter of time before sparks start to fly—but their differences may be too much to overcome. Can two fiercely independent men learn to let another into their space, and into their hearts?

Buy #ISORoommates

Meet Leigh!

Leigh M. Lorien is a queer author who got her start at the tender age of five, writing and illustrating her own Sonic the Hedgehog stories. Fortunately, her writing has improved in the subsequent decades. Nowadays, Leigh’s stories primarily lean toward science fiction, fantasy, and urban fantasy, but she has had some contemporary pieces sneak out of her head. Regardless of genre, her books will usually include sarcasm, strong relationships (romantic and platonic), polyamory/non-monogamy, magic, music, animals, mental illness, and less-frequently-represented queer identities.

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Excerpt of #ISO Roommates

Within just a couple minutes, Marc had grouped the paints into the standard color categories in rainbow order, plus pink, black, white, and gray. It was still just a rough pile of mess on the floor, but it was one step closer to tidiness. Sora leaned over, shifting onto hands and knees so he could examine the blue and green groupings. The way he looked, the way he sifted through, was haphazard and frantic, with no logical process.

“Stop it,” Marc said. “You’re just making it worse. Go logically.”

“What?”

He couldn’t believe he was teaching a fully grown adult how to look for something. In quick, small groupings, he shifted tubes from right to left, eliminating some based on brand or bottle shape, pausing longer on ones that matched one category to determine if they were what Sora wanted. When he reached the end of the blues and greens and hadn’t found the right one, he straightened up.

“At least now you know for sure that it isn’t here.”

“But it was here! That’s what’s killing me. I swear, I remember seeing it in one of these boxes when I was carrying them in here.” He groaned and lay back on the cold concrete floor with his hands over his face. “Sorry, this is just really frustrating. I’m always losing things. I hate it.”

“Maybe you should keep your stuff more organized.”

“Thanks, Mom, that helps.”

Marc frowned at the sharp tone. “Hey, no need to be a jerk about it.”

“I don’t have the time or energy to organize. I work. I have deadlines. I barely have time to sleep.”

Something about the way he said it sent a twinge of sympathy through Marc’s chest. While he couldn’t imagine, personally, being able to function in the disaster that Sora worked with, he did know what it was like to run yourself ragged trying to be in three places at once.

“I could help, if you want.”

Sora lifted his hand from his face and looked up the great distance to meet Marc’s eyes… or, something thereabout. He never quite made eye contact, Marc had noticed. Sora’s eyes and cheeks were red from the pressure of his hand, or maybe from the frustration of losing the paint he needed.

“Thanks,” he said. “I’m okay though.” He sat up and started throwing the paints back in the box, just as haphazardly as they’d been before he’d dumped them—completely ignoring what Marc had tried to do to help him. Marc sighed and cast another glance at the disastrous workbench. There were a few bottles of paint sitting there among everything else, half hidden by a pile of canvases. Marc stepped over the mess on the floor and picked up each bottle in turn, checking the color. They were all blues and greens… and there, lying on its side behind all of them, was phthalo green.

“Hey,” he said. Sora looked up. “This what you need?”

“Holy shit!” The man sprang to his feet, wide-eyed. “Where was it?”

Marc gestured vaguely to the other paint bottles. “Behind stuff.”

“Jesus.” Sora took the bottle from Marc’s hand and held it to his chest like a precious item. “Thank you. Sorry.”

“Anything else you need help finding in this train wreck?”

“Not at the moment.”

“All right.” With a half-smile, Marc left the man to his devices and went back to his own project. This time, though, he couldn’t find the same deep concentration he’d had before. He kept glancing at Sora, though he wasn’t sure why. That one little comment about barely having time to sleep… the distress at the state of his workspace… An idea had crept into Marc’s head. He wasn’t sure if it was there for the right reasons, but it was there now and it wasn’t going away.

Buy #ISORoommates

interview: Shelly Greene

Today we have Shelly Greene visiting! Welcome, Shelly. What brings you here today!

Just fun! Programming isn’t a new release, but I think it’s the kind of thing your readers might like, so I just wanted to get it out there. (I have newer stuff as well, but Programming is the only one so far with a transgender character.)

What started you writing?

In second grade, my teacher gave me a folder of writing prompts that I could work on when the other kids were doing worksheets. That wasn’t the first time I wrote stories, but it did cement writing as something I enjoyed and wanted to do more of. Within a couple years I was hand-writing “novels” in pretty journals, and I was unstoppable from there. I was out of college before I finished something I thought I could actually sell—and I did! When I was thirty years old, haha. I’m never going to be a household name, but my writing brings me a lot of joy and a tiny trickle of pocket money. I call that victory.

Where do you write?

I can write almost anywhere. I get a lot done during downtime at work. When I worked retail, I would write on scrap paper and hide it in my pockets. Sometimes I end up writing on my notes app after I’ve gone to bed. Most of it gets done on my laptop at my desk, though. I keep everything on a flash drive that lives in my pocket wherever I go.

What do you like to read?

I mostly read fantasy and science fiction, and have a special fondness for things that blend the line between the two, like Star Wars and the Dragonriders of Pern books. My top three favorite authors, the ones whose new releases I will drop everything to read, are Lois McMaster Bujold, Jim Butcher, and Patricia Briggs.

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

The Curse of Chalion by Lois McMaster Bujold – I get hungry for this book if I go too long without re-reading it.

Grave Peril by Jim Butcher – I love the entire Dresden Files series, of which this is the third. It’s a favorite because I feel like it’s where the series really hit its stride.

Pride & Prejudice by Jane Austen – a change of pace from the others! It’s hard to beat Austen for character development and use of language.

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?

I’ve been in writers’ groups in the past, but mostly didn’t find it that helpful. In a writers’ group of any size, it takes so long for it to be your turn to be critiqued! And it’s hard to know whether to trust the other members’ judgments of your work, especially when you’re not familiar with their writing yet. So I’ve long since given up on writer’s critique groups. I am very active as a fanfic writer, though, and that’s quite a wonderful, lively community! You can definitely find critique partners (“betas”) if you ask around for one, or you can just put stuff out there and not worry too much about it being polished. It’s all just very supportive, and it’s hard to beat the immediate gratification of people commenting on things within hours of posting!

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

I live within two miles of three of my siblings, so they’re most of my social life. I especially like to spend time with my adorable preschool-age nephews. They are a handful, but I love them to pieces. I also have a dog, an adopted senior Corgi/Golden Retriever mix. All fluff, no legs! And I do spend more time watching Netflix than I probably should—my current favorites are WandaVision, She-Ra and the Princesses of Power, and of course, The Great British Baking Show.

Tell me a little bit about Programming? 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?

Programming isn’t my most recent release, but it is the one I think is most suited to your blog. This one had a very convoluted journey into its final form. Once upon a time, I took two male movie characters from a modern-day canon setting, made one of them an android because the actor had once played an android, and made a sci-fi fanfic out of it. Some time later, I “filed off the serial numbers” to make the story more original and see if I could sell it; that’s when the main characters became female instead of male. One day I saw an anthology submission call at a small queer press for science fiction stories. By the time I’d rewritten the story to fit the submission call, giving it a whole new setting and theme, it had become a very different creature from its fanfic origin. It was accepted for the anthology, only for the publisher to fold before the anthology was ever published. So my twice-reworked former-fanfic 8,000 word novelette ended up being published as its own thing by a different publisher, JMS Books. Bit of a wild ride!

Programming
Cover, Programming by Shelly Green.

Simone, a female-identifying android, is part of a scientific team sent ahead of the first colony to return to Earth, which is finally habitable again after centuries of radiation recovery. She mostly finds her human crewmates irritating, and the most irritating by far is Dr. Lucy Zhong… who slowly becomes Simone’s best friend, more important to her than anyone else has ever been.

When Lucy is fatally injured, she kisses Simone during her last moments of consciousness, and only then does Simone realize they may be more than friends. Can Simone go against her programming to save the woman she loves?

Buy Programming

Find Shelly!

I am most active on tumblr, at turtletotem.tumblr.com. You can also find me on Goodreads.

Interview: Skye Kilaen

Skye has come today to talk about her new release, The Home I Find With You. It’s a a queer polyamorous post-collapse romance and as such is right up my jigger. Welcome Skye! Thanks so much for coming along!

Firstly, tell us in your own words why you’re doing this interview?

My first full-length romance novel, The Home I Find With You, is out March 3rd. It’s a hopepunk post-collapse polyamorous small town romance with a suspense sub-plot, and yes, that’s a lot of descriptors!

It’s my first M/M title (after two published F/F stories) and my first polyamorous romance. A lot of firsts! 

The Home I Find With You. How you you build a new life after the world falls apart? A queer polyamorous post-collapse romance.

What started you writing?

Like many romance writers, I found the romance genre when I really needed something to get me though a rough point in my life. I’d written fiction passionately from when I was six or seven through college and then just fell away from it, but I didn’t start reading romance intending to pick up writing again. 

When I did, I went through this somewhat ridiculous process of denial. First I told myself I just wanted to scribble some notes down for myself. Then I said maybe I’d have friends read those scribbles at some point. Then I said maybe I’d put them up for free somewhere and see if anyone else happened along. It took a while before I was willing to admit I wanted to get published. Maybe that’s what I had to do to work up the courage, haha.

Where do you write?

In a house built in 1964 that was not soundproofed against the possibility that in 2020 and 2021 there would be two adults trying to work here and one child trying to attend virtual school here. I have gotten way more familiar with YouTube white noise coffeeshop type videos than I ever expected to! 🙂

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?

Finding writing again gave me a fresh creative hobby, but I’m definitely one of those people who loves being in a team rather than on my own… and you’re right, aside from co-writing situations, writing is a solo gig. But I need other people to cheerlead for or I’m a sad daisy! So I’ve engaged with other writers on Twitter and in Discord servers. I’ve made some great writer friends and found amazing critique partners.

It can be super intimidating to reach out when you don’t already know anyone, though. I started with some of the hashtag games on Twitter, and one day I also just held my breath and tweeted that I wanted to connect with other queer authors of queer romance for beta reading and whatnot, and it worked.

If anybody reading this doesn’t already have a queer romance writer crew and wants one, come sit by me, we’ll chat!

Tell me a little bit about your most recent release. What gave you the idea for it? 

Aesthetic for The Home I Find With You. Hammer and tool belt. Small wooden cabin. Person shooting a rifle. Empty bed. Heart on a fence. A rucked up duvet with someone's leg showing. Rainbow coloured night sky. People riding horses in a forest. Another rainbow striped night sky.

The Home I Find With You is a romance set in a rural town fifteen years after a future U.S. Civil War. It’s an M/M love story, but also polyamorous. One lead character, Van, is pansexual and has a girlfriend. They have an open relationship. He’s actually dating someone else too as the story begins, but that other relationship coincidentally ends as the attraction between Van and the other lead character, Clark, is heating up.

Many polyamorous romance novels end in a closed triad: three people, all involved with each other romantically and sexually, and not involved with anyone else outside the triad. I wanted to do something a little different, to present a romance between Van and Clark that is very intense and real—actually life-changing for Clark, and maybe even life-saving—without it being exclusive or meaning that Van’s relationship with his girlfriend has to end. I also wanted to show how one person might have different relationships that bring different things into their lives, but that doesn’t mean one relationship is better or worse than the other.

I love post-apocalyptic movies, comics, and games, so the post-collapse setting of this book was a natural for me. But I have to admit that I’m often frustrated by the lack of attention to supply lines and salvage in those works. I find myself yelling “Where is the food coming from? Why haven’t you gotten all the usable stuff out of that abandoned house and brought it back to your stronghold?” So it was also fun to base the suspense part of the story around exactly those questions, how resources are being salvaged out of the environment, how this small town is making it, what types of technology they’re able to bring back into town from the nearest big city and what’s kind of faded out of people’s lives.

The Home I Find With You
Cover, Skye Kilaen, The Home I Find With You

A polyamorous romance about building a new life after the world falls apart.

Life in rural Colorado fifteen years after the second U.S. Civil War is perilous. Van and his girlfriend Hadas only recovered from the attack that killed Van’s wife because their community helped them heal. The warmth Van and Hadas share isn’t the love he lost, but it’s precious. He’s content.

Clark survived the war, but his family fractured and now his relationships are in ruins… which must be his fault, or everyone wouldn’t say so. Figuring he can’t destroy ties he doesn’t create, he relocates to start over, zero interpersonal complications welcome.

When Van and Clark meet, though, it’s nothing but complicated. Clark can’t stop wanting quiet, loyal Van no matter how the electricity between them misfires, and Van craves more than hookups from the charismatic newcomer. Hadas and others start coaxing Clark out of his emotional isolation, but when violence threatens the town, Van and Hadas must leave him behind to defend it.

To bring them safely home, Clark must decide whether Van’s love, Hadas’s friendship, and the belonging he’s found are enough to overcome his fear of once again letting down those he cares about.

A high heat, hurt-comfort post-collapse M/M romance novel with D/s elements, polyamory, open relationships, and a guaranteed HEA.

Detailed content warnings are available on my website for those who need them.

Buy The Home I Find With You

Find Skye: Website : Goodreads : Twitter

Nell Iris’ #PetPeeve: Shower Scenes

The shower sex scene. We’ve all read them, right? Romance books are littered with them, no matter if the lovers are gay or straight or somewhere in between. And I get it. I do. Water running in rivulets along a chiseled torso. A drop of water clinging seductively to a nipple, lips wet and inviting. Skin pink from the hot water and hands sliding effortlessly over wet, steamy bodies. Someone being pressed against the shower wall, an aroused groin pressed against an equally aroused groin, chests rubbing against each other all while the warm, seductive water beats down on our lovers’ heads.

You can see it before you, can’t you? Does it make you squirm? Does it make you want to grab your partner and drag them into the shower and give it a go yourself?

Don’t! No seriously. Don’t.

I’m here to tell you that shower sex is not sexy. Every time I read a shower scene, I think Oh God, they’re gonna slip and fall, and that glass wall is going to break into a million pieces and they’re going to land in it and cut themselves to pieces and it will end in a blood bath. Or if our lovers are in the tub: Don’t they know how slippery the tub is? And there’s no mention of a bathmat (of course there isn’t because that’s not sexy) so I squint my way through the scene, holding my breath as I fear someone will slip and bang their head against the tub and the other will leap out to call an ambulance. All this is stressing me out something fierce, making it impossible for me to enjoy it, and I’ve now reached the point where I actively dislike it and it’s become an honest-to-goodness pet-peeve.

Once, I told one of my writer friends about this pet peeve of mine, and she promptly decided to write exactly this scenario: two lovers getting hot and heavy in the shower…and then an accident happens. That’s what friends are for, right? To enforce each other’s fears? 😊

A quick google search on the topic leads me to articles named “How to Have Shower Sex Without Hurting Yourself” and “5 Hidden Dangers of Shower Sex” and “People Share Their Worst Shower Sex Injuries” so my fears are clearly not unfounded. I also found a Reddit thread where the original poster asks for shower sex tips and receives them from experienced Redditors. Advice like “do the sex before washing because soap and shampoo make the floor even slipperier.” Or my favorite: “Swimshoes dude. Seriously.” And the reply, “I second this. After a separated shoulder that I wasn’t able to explain to my family, I really second this.”

This is what I’m talking about! A separated shoulder is not sexy!

But if you’re still not convinced, if you’re on team Sex in the Shower, I have just the thing for you. A suction handle you can hold on to. Or suction handcuffs if you’re BDSM inclined. 😁

And if you, like me, are on team No Sex in the Shower, you might hurt yourself, I’m happy to tell you that all my books are safe for you to read. 😁

Nell Iris graphic. Completely free of shower sex.
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.

Buy Nell’s books:

JMS Books :: Amazon

Find Nell on social media:

Webpage/blog :: Twitter :: Instagram :: Facebook Page :: Facebook Profile :: Goodreads :: Bookbub :: Pinterest

Interview: Luna Tibling

Please welcome Luna Tibling today to talk a bit about themselves and their new release!

Hi Luna, thank you so much for coming along today! Why have you decided to subject yourself to my nosy questions?

I’ve recently released the first 2 books in my LGBT+ romance series, Beyond the Binary! I’m super excited to share my work, and hope it will speak to fellow members of the community and allies alike.

What started you writing?

I’ve enjoyed writing stories since childhood, and would often start random projects with no idea where they were going. I’ve now realised that my passion is writing wholesome LGBT+ stories that are accessible both to those within the community and without.

Where do you write?

I rent a room in a shared house, so that’s where I usually write, but when the weather is good I like to scribble ideas in the park.

What do you like to read? 

I don’t read nearly as much as I write, but one of my favourite authors is Jodi Picoult. The way her complex characters speak frankly to the reader has been a big influence on my work.

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

This would have to be split between one adult novel, one children’s book and one poetry book:

Sing You Home by Jodi Picoult – this is my favourite of her books. It features a woman who separates from her husband and finds herself falling in love with another woman. Opposing views are presented compellingly and the lesbian relationship is treated with great sensitivity.

Green Eggs and Ham by Dr Seuss – did you know he wrote this in order to win a bet with his publisher that he could write a whole book using only 50 different words?

The Complete Nonsense of Edward Lear – Lear is one of the poets who have inspired me most, along with Lewis Carroll, Hilaire Belloc, Ogden Nash, Edgar Allan Poe, Roald Dahl and Spike Milligan.

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

I do an exercise routine every morning, and love going for walks, especially when I need inspiration. Besides writing, my main creative outlet is acting; I have been a member of two amateur theatre groups for many years. I also like to play the keyboard, but am not especially good.

I love cats too! Who doesn’t?

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?

Skylar, the protagonist of the series, has many similarities to me: they are non-binary, in their twenties, suffer from depression and write poetry as a means of coping. I had wanted to write a story about a character like Skylar for several years, but I had no plot to go with the raw concept. It turned out that leaving my job to focus my energy on writing was what I needed to be able to develop the idea.

It took me about four months to write the first two books. It was a great challenge, but very rewarding on a personal level: it has been a pleasure to pour my own experiences into fictional stories that represent the LGBT+ community in a positive light. Although a lot of progress has been made in recent years, we still see too much media that encourages people to see LGBT+ characters as nothing more than objects of desire, novelty or simply comic relief.

I don’t stop at having a non-binary protagonist; Skylar is in a polyamorous relationship with a trans man and a cis man, and their friends include a trans woman who comes out during the story, a pair of queerplatonic partners and an asexual person. Some of these characters haven’t been explored in great depth yet, but will be in future instalments.

How I found myself

The introductory novella to the series, How I Found Myself, is available for free here.

Barry is aggressive, abusive and the most prejudiced individual Skylar has ever met.

Following their dad’s premature death, Skylar had hoped that their mum would find a new boyfriend, but she couldn’t have chosen a worse man: it has been clear to Skylar from the beginning that Barry will not accept them for who they are.

Skylar already struggles to fight against their own depression, but now that Barry is in their life to stay, they face the possibility of alienating themself from their one remaining parent. The best hope Skylar has of overcoming both obstacles is the support from their love life, but it would be impossible to reason with Barry if he knew the nature of the relationship…

The tension and uncertainty increase with each day the issue goes unresolved. Skylar will have to face Barry eventually, but how can they do that, and what will be the consequences?

They certainly won’t be doing it alone.

The first full-length novel, How I Found Ariana, can be purchased here

Find Luna: Facebook :: Instagram