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Archive for the ‘Guests’ Category

My guest today is Paula Sophia whose work delves into the complexities endured by transgender characters as they try to balance their emotional needs against the demands of their professions.

Thanks, Paula Sophia for joining me today.

~~~

Elin: Please can you tell me a little bit about the inspiration behind Hystericus? Have you always enjoyed storytelling or was the urge to write fiction a fairly recent development.

Paula Sophia: Hystericus came from a workshop exercise where we were instructed to write something about a true-life experience. I had initially sent it to a friend of mine who was putting together a book about transgender women, The New Goddess, Transgender Women in the Twenty-First Century, published by Fine Tooth Press. The editor decided not to use the story, instead using some of my poetry – several slam pieces I’d written during my short career as a slam poet.
I revived Hystericus (which means of the womb in Greek) while enrolled in a Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing program at the University of Central Oklahoma. Hystericus proved one of my better efforts according to one of my professors and most of the other students in the program.
I had submitted it to over two-dozen literary magazines, only to get rejection after rejection. One editor wrote comments, saying the story was well-written but unbelievable. This response stung a little since Hystericus is very true-to-life. Everything that happens in the story happened to me in real life, just not on the same day. I did use some literary licence to explore some metaphors: the chain-gang snake at the beginning, the railroad crossing, and the phone call Angelina makes to her mother. (more…)

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My guest today is Ute Carbone. She is best known as a writer of het romances and as a poet. Her novel “Blueberry Truth” has a delightfully relaxed narrative style and I am looking forward to reading her latest release “The P-town Queen”.

Greetings, Ute, thanks for agreeing to answer my questions.

Hi Elin! Thanks for having me. I love your comfy chair! (more…)

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My guest today is Steve Emmett – reviewer, writing coach and author of deeply scary horror novels. He is here today in celebration of the release of his novel Diavolino in paperback and to tease us a little, I hope, about his WIP.

Many thanks for joining me today, Steve. I know you’re a busy man!

Steve: Well, thanks for asking me to come. I don’t get out much these days and I look forward to invitations such as this. It does mean I may ramble a lot, so be warned. Oh, and I ought to say that I don’t do much by way of reviews these days, I’m just too wrapped up in my own writing and I’ve landed rather a lot of paid editing work!

Elin: Oh, grand news! So on to the questions. Diavolino was published firstly as an e-book and has done very well. Now it is out in paperback has your attitude to it changed? Does it feel more ‘real’ now you can hold a physical copy of the book in your hands? (more…)

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My guest today is Sue Roebuck, whose novel “Perfect Score” was on everyone’s TBR list when it came out and was nominated for an Epic award.  Sue has recently released a novel with Etopia Press. Hewhay Hall examines the nature of good and evil and the importance of courage.

Hi, Sue and thanks for agreeing to answer my questions.

Sue: Thanks Elin. Gosh *wriggles a bit* this chair’s comfy, just wish my feet could reach the ground. Never mind, I’ll curl up.

~~~

Elin: There are some scenes in Hewhay Hall that I found kept me awake at night. Do you think you have to enjoy the scary stuff to be able to write it?

Sue: I think it’s got something to do with enjoying scaring the living daylights out of yourself. To let you into a secret, I had nightmares when I was writing “Hewhay Hall”.

Elin: Are there any horror stories or films that you would recommend as a ‘must read/see’ list to a novice?

Sue: You know, I’m not entirely sure how to define “horror”. I just like reading and writing what is “out of the ordinary”. I cut my teeth on C.S. Lewis’s Narnia series and Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland. Then I went onto The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, and then Mervyn Peake’s wonderful Gormenghast Trilogy which I adored – and I mean the books, not the TV series – and anything by Terry Pratchett, especially if it features Granny Weatherwax and Death. I don’t suppose any of those are actually horror books, they’re just unusual (and the weirder the better). As an adult I remember being glued to the screen watching Stephen King’s The Shining which led me to read Carrie and Misery. Nowadays, as long as the book has quirky characters and is out of the ordinary, I’ll read it (I just finished Michel Faber’s The Crimson Petal and the White which isn’t horror but is populated by unforgettable characters).

Elin: The biggest difference between Hewhay Hall and Perfect Score is that in HH the protagonist is straight while Perfect Score is a male male romance. Which do you find easiest to write?

Sue: The male/male relationship was right for Perfect Score. I didn’t actually set out to write an M/M but Sam, the protagonist, dictated it and I honestly don’t think a girl would have survived what he had to go through as a child in the 1950s. That doesn’t mean I’ll not write another M/M – I already have an idea for one set in Victorian London. So, what I’m trying to say is that I don’t find the relationship difficult to write. It’s getting the plot moving, upping the stakes and keeping the reader wanting more that causes the most work for me.

Elin: Your characters are vital, well rounded and full of life. Do they arrive like that or do you have to tweak them to fit your stories?

Sue: I have them before the plot! I think my stories are character-driven so I keep piling the layers on them until they become fully-rounded. There’s a character in “Hewhay Hall” that’s based on someone I know. It’s Roma and she’s a spiritual medium who piles superlatives on superlatives when she speaks: “Unutterably awful situation darling.” I won’t reveal the person’s name in real life though and I hope she doesn’t recognize herself.

Elin: You’ve covered a lot of different subjects in your stories – music, luteny, pharmaceuticals, the operations of a fire station – do you enjoy research? What is the most interesting fact you have discovered that you were unable to fit into one of your novels?

Who can forget the ‘beans’ scene from Blazing Saddles?

Sue: I usually try and pile them all into a book, nothing wasted, that’s my motto. But to answer your question, I returned to my old notebooks and had a look through. There was indeed a lot of wasted research: bovine post partem (!) A Cow Ranch Annual Calendar, Psychotropic plants in America, the Cow-Calf Manager, Gay in the 1960s, Scams 101 (I kid you not). I even researched Zachary Smith from Lost in Space but I can’t remember what that was for. So, yes I do enjoy research because it takes me on a true journey of discovery. Looking at that notebook again I think the most interesting fact I gleaned came from Gary’s Texas Cooking: how to make cowboy beans.

Elin: What are you working on at present?

Sue: A book about greed and corruption (surprise, surprise) set in Portugal. It features an endangered fishing village, two fishermen (the guy’s from the US and the girl from the UK) who unwittingly uncover not only plans to destroy the village but also surprising secrets about their family backgrounds. And a rather nasty female bullfighter will swagger around on the pages until you’ll want to smack her.

Elin: So out of all these lovely characters who would you most prefer to snog, marry or avoid?

Sue: Well, I’d snog and marry Sam from Perfect Score, but I don’t think he’d enjoy or agree to it somehow. In that case I’ll snog my brave firefighter Jude from Hewhay Hall before Slater gets him. Do you know, I don’t think I’d marry anyone from my books – they’re all rather feckless – or not interested. I’d avoid Alex’s Uncle Timothy from Perfect Score because he’s a sociopath, and also Mule Palmer because he’s not too keen on personal hygiene, farts a lot and has anger issues a mile long. But If I saw Slater from Hewhay Hall coming along, I’d cross the road, fast. Stuff of nightmares.

 Elin: That’s brilliant, Sue. One last question – could we please have an excerpt of something?

Sue: Sure. Here’s the blurb and the start of Hewhay Hall:

An unsung hero’s destiny–Slater’s house of horrors.

 Fire-fighter Jude Elliott loses part of his leg trying to rescue a family held hostage during a terrorist attack. He journeys to mysterious Hewhey Hall, where it is told there are wondrous, magical cures.

Little does Jude know that his destination is Slater The Prince of Envy’s lair where demons reside and courageous souls are tormented…

Can Jude escape Slater’s house of horrors, or will he suffer for all of eternity?

~~~

Jude stared down the hill at the glint on the water and then across to the fields baked hard by weeks of sun. He’d followed the directions to the letter, so this was the right place. But where was Hewhay Hall?

A row of swallows balanced on a wire stretching overhead, each facing the same way as Jude, who rested against a five-bar gate. They too seemed to be eyeing the fallen tree trunks that littered the overgrown path down the rocky hillside. They were lucky—they could fly, but Jude had to hobble.

The air moved on the other side of the marshland. He didn’t imagine it. A definite ripple, the kind that alters your vision when a migraine’s about to start. Although the shift was fleeting, he had the idea something was down there after all, very faint and hard to describe. The outline of a building? Or maybe just heat haze. Whatever, he’d come this far—he’d go and investigate.

The latch and hinges on the gate were so rusted, Jude couldn’t open it. Nothing for it, then, but to climb over. He propped his crutches against the wooden bars, placed his hands on the top, and hauled himself up so his right leg got a footing on a lower rung. Now he could sit on the top. He bent down, picked up what was left of his other leg, and maneuvered it over until he straddled the gate. It creaked under his weight. As he swung his right leg over, he teetered, tried to grab the top bar but lost his balance and fell headlong into a bramble patch.

Prickles stabbed him as he lay on his back, his whirling gaze locked on a wiggly jet trail in the cloudless sky. Once the world righted itself, he pushed himself up on his elbows and extracted some of the more painful brambles before rolling onto his right knee. His bum in the air, he hoped no one was looking and that he retained a shred of dignity as he balanced on his right leg and wobbled his way upright. As he tried to stand, his knee locked. He was a second away from landing back on the ground but he grabbed an oak tree trunk for support.

Bloody hell. Wasn’t it about time they gave him a prosthesis? He bent to rub his stump, still raw after all this time. Why wasn’t he healing?

 ~~~

Thank you so much for letting me curl up in the comfy chair, Elin!

If you’re looking for me, you can find me at:

www.susanroebuck.com

www.facebook.com/SuRoebuck

https://twitter.com/#!/suemonte

Buy Perfect Score from Amazon or direct from Awestruck.

Buy Hewhay Hall from:

Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Kobo
OmniLit

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My guest today is Anna Mayle, a talented young author, best known for her “Stolen Child” series of novels.

When her name was brought to my attention by a mutual friend, I read “Bedtime Story for a Stolen Child” and was very much impressed. The descriptions are just enough to set the mind working without stopping the action, the world building is beautiful but bleak and the sex scenes are seriously creepy yet appropriate to the plot.

Good day, Anna, and thank you very much for agreeing to answer some questions about your work.

~~~

(more…)

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Today was supposed to be a Comfy Chair day for my good mate Sue Roebuck but due to an unexpected trip for her and general daffiness and dopiness from me [honestly, at the moment I could sleep for my county, no word of a lie. If ZZZZZing was an Olympic event I’m sure I’d be in with a chance for a Bronze] no such post was written. You’ll have that to enjoy with when she comes back 😀

However, I can’t let the  day pass unmarked so here are the details of her book.

How cool is that book cover!!

 

Hewhay Hall

by Susan Roebuck

Contemporary Fantasy, Dark Fantasy

ISBN: 978-1-937976-28-6

Editor: Katriena Knights

Cover: Amanda Kelsey

Words: 53,216

Novel

$5.99

An unsung hero’s destiny–Slater’s house of horrors.

Fire-fighter Jude Elliott loses part of his leg trying to rescue a family held hostage during a terrorist attack. He journeys to mysterious Hewhey Hall, where it is told there are wondrous, magical cures. Little does Jude know that his destination is Slater The Prince of Envy’s lair where demons reside and courageous souls are tormented… Can Jude escape Slater’s house of horrors, or will he suffer for all of eternity?

Buy Hewhay Hall here:

Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Kobo
OmniLit

I’ve read Hewhay Hall and Wow! If you like your horror lightly spiced with sex, angst and heroism this will be the book for you!

There are 2 other releases from Etopia Press as well – details here – and I plan to be all over them like a rash. 🙂

 

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My guest today is the very lovely Charlie Cochrane, author of the Cambridge Fellows Mysteries and one of the organising team for the UK Meet – a convention for readers and writers of LGBTQ fiction [this year it is being held inBrightonon the weekend of 15th and 16th September! I’ll be there, will you? :)] Charlie has the facility of being able to write the most deliciously amusing prose then suddenly deliver the most appalling yet enjoyable wrench to the heart strings. She is here today to talk about her latest release – Tumble Turn – a romance set against the Paralympic swimming competitions and anything else that has cropped up in conversation. 🙂

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 Elin: Hi Charlie. So pleased to have you here. So, the Olympics. I understand that they, and the Paralympics, are a really Big Thing in your house? What is it specifically about the Paralympics that sparked off the idea for Tumble Turn?

Tumble Turn - what a feast for the eyes!

Charlie: The Paralympics are a huge thing chez Cochrane, ever since we discovered Oscar Pistorius and David Weir. I took the girls to the Inaugural World Paralympic Cup event inManchesterin 2005 and we were blown away by both the standard of competition and the whole friendly atmosphere. At the swimming we ended up sitting among the swimmers’ families which was brilliant (they looked after us so well and gave us lots of inside gen, as well as lots of 2004 Parlaympics goodies). That memory has stayed with me, germinating, and formed a big part of the inspiration for Tumble Turn, especially the bits involving Ben’s family.

Elin: I associate the Olympics with the honour of competing rather than position in the medals tables, but I have noticed in other sports an almost complete lack of honour. Do you think that society in general has lost its grip on the concept of ‘fair play’ and should we blame the 80s? Or have there always been people who played ‘tactically’ rather than properly?

Charlie: I am convinced that nothing really changes and that Ham, Shem and Japhet probably cheated at Ludo to get one over on the old man. I was recently reading about two Irish forwards dumped a Welsh rugby player into the crowd during the game, leaving him with nasty injuries including a couple of fractured ribs. Back in 1999? No. 1899. I could find you stories of crowds on the brink of riot in 1913 and even the great man WG Grace (changing sports to cricket here) used to refuse to accept he’d been given out.

Nigel Owens lays down the law!

And there are plenty of modern examples of fair play and decency – nothing warms my heart more than seeing little Nigel Owens giving a wigging to two great big players and them meekly saying. “Yes, sir.”

Elin: Changing the subject to something equally weighty but more fun -Rugbyplayers’ thighs. Discuss providing examples. 😀

Messrs Duckham to the left and JPR in red to the left

Charlie:Oh, thighs. When I was a teenager I wrote poetry about David Duckham’s thighs – not a word of a lie. For sheer beauty of line, appropriate muscularity, silky smoothness and sweaty excellence, a rugby player’s thigh is hard to beat. The other thigh par excellence of the 1970’s was that gracing the form of JPR Williams. Right good leg that – left was pretty nice, too.

Messrs Bowe to the left and and Daggs to the right.

Bringing things up to date, through the best part of forty years of excellent femur related substances, one of the nicer ones to be seen on display is that of Tommy Bowe. And just to show that one can always learn something new, I was watching a bit of a Super 15 game at the weekend and was pleasantly surprised at Israel Dagg’s legs.

Elin: Put together your ideal team of men – drawing from all and any walks of life, fictional or non-fictional – who you would want to come to your rescue if menaced by muggers/alligators/fundamentalists?

Charlie: Jesus! Seriously, one of my all time favourite guys. However, to make up the numbers on his posse, I’d have:

Nigel Owens – gay, out rugby ref who’d ensure fair play all round.

George Mallory – the first man to climb Everest , at least in my reasonably-based-on-fact opinion. Just the sort of man you’d want in a tight corner (so long as he’d keep his clothes on!)

Steve Redgrave, Chris Hoy and Jonny Wilkinson – in their pomp, they’d have sneered at muggers and eaten alligators for breakfast.

Laurie O’Dell from The Charioteer, because I adore him.

And if we wanted to have a laugh – Eric Morecambe or dear old Hugh Paddick.

DREAM TEAM!

Eric Morcambe and comedy partner Ernie Wise in their lissom youth!

Elin: Jonty and Orlando – boxers, briefs or loooooong underwear with dinky little trapdoors?

Charlie: For the time, probably real passion killers. Something in flannel, not as long as long johns but edging towards mid thigh at least.  Ooh, and here are the boys themselves to show it off!

The contribution itchy underwear made to Empire has often been underestimated.

Elin: I asked Erastes and Alex which of their heros they would snog, marry or avoid and they both pointed out that they don’t think of them that way. Come to think of it, I don’t either. So let’s change the choices a bit. Of all your characters who would you be most enjoy pushing downstairs, sharing a taxi cab with, or having them move in next door so you saw them every day?

Charlie: When the house next door went up for sale, the youngest Cochrane was desperate for a gay couple to move in there, so it’d have to be Jonty and Orlando as neighbours. Easy on the eye if I caught a glimpse of them sunbathing, too…

Orlando Coppersmith and Jonty Stewart as depicted by Ovsannan

I’d like to share a taxi cab with either  Ben from  Tumble Turn or Rory from Wolves of the West, as they’d have some brilliant tales to tell – respectively – of behind the sporting scenes and life as a highly respectable werewolf.

Who would I push downstairs? Owens, the unspeakable but always offstage villain from “the college next door” to St. Bride’s in theCambridgestories. And everyone would cheer as he took the tumble!

Elin: “Had we but world enough and time” and no other commitments, is there anything you would write that you’ve been eyeing and putting off because it’s just too big a project? Anything else?

Charlie: I’d love to write about the Theban Band but the amount of research involved is too daunting to fit into a schedule that’s already straining at the seams. Ditto I’d like to have something with dashing young WWII Spitfire pilots andKentairfields, but I worry it would end up too much like a pastiche of a John Mills/Michael Redgrave black and white film. I don’t have a sure ‘feel’ for the time and I suspect it would take me forever to acquire one.

Elin: Well that’s all the questions. Thanks so much for answering them. Just one last thing. Can we please have an excerpt? WIP, published work, twinkle in author’s eye? Or one of your famous limericks? 😀

Charlie: You can have both! The first is in honour of you:

A lovely Welsh author called Elin

Wrote of men called Ap Hwyl and Llewellyn

They drank and they talked

Once they’d hunted and hawked

But what they did in bed I ain’t telling.

Elin: XD I don’t think I will either. Thank you very much. And now for the excerpt – a nice little bit of Tumble Turn!

~~~

Excerpt (PG 12 for language)

By the time we finished that round and Matty had been sufficiently made fun of, it was getting late, too late for a lad who had to get his backside to a training camp the next day, so I started to make “goodbye” noises.

“You can’t go yet.” Matty—who might just have had a touch too much of the falling down water—made a grab for my arm.

“Leave him be.” Nick came to my rescue with another one of his dazzling smiles. “This boy’s got a busy few weeks ahead. He doesn’t need any beauty sleep but he’s got to keep that body of his in peak condition.” He got up. “I’ll walk you to your car.”

“I’m getting the tube home. I’ve got all my gear at my parents’ house.”

“Then I’ll walk you to the station.” He offered me his hand, to pull me up out of my seat. “I’ll go straight home afterwards, Jenny.” We made the usual pleasantries, Matty promising that it

wouldn’t be so long in between us meeting up next time, after which we managed to get away.

I walked as slowly as I could, just to eke the time out as much as possible, although I must have overdone it, getting to the point Nick where stopped and asked if I was alright.

“I’m fine,” I snapped, immediately regretting how sharp I’d sounded. “Sorry. I just didn’t want you thinking I have to walk this slow. You know, because of ‘it’.”

“It?”

“The cerebral palsy. I’m not a fucking cripple.”

“I know you’re not.” He moved a step closer, grabbing my jacket and drawing me face to face with him, just a beery breath apart. “I meant what I said about you not needing any beauty sleep. You can’t improve on perfection.” He leaned in, sharing the most romantic kiss I’ve ever been lucky enough to receive. I don’t know what swept me off my feet more—the kiss or the

words.

Nobody has ever called me perfect, not even my mum when she was trying to cheer me up on one of my rare feeling down days. All my life I’ve had to work around my limitations, make do with what I’ve got and try not to dwell too much on not being one hundred per cent. Maybe Nick was just trying to get into my pants but at least for the time being I was going to pretend he was sincere about every word.

“Daft bugger.” It was the best I could manage, with the wind taken out of my sails. Not very romantic, but it seemed to do the business.

~~~ 

Charlie: And a limerick in honour of Ben:

To fall for your romantic lead

Is a Sayers and Wimsey misdeed

But Ben’s lovely face,

body shaved for the race

makes me trembly and rather weak kneed

Tumble Turn

Winning isn’t everything…except when everything rides on being first.

Ben Edwards is the rising star of British Paralympic swimming, with a medal at London 2012 firmly in his sights. Love isn’t going to be allowed to get in the way — until he meets Nick, who proves to be a big distraction from training. With his times sliding, and a family illness, to worry him, it looks like Ben’s Olympic dreams are in tatters. Until Nick comes up with the most outrageous incentive for winning.

Get your copy HERE  

If you want to follow Charlie (and let’s face it, who doesn’t?) please follow the links below.

Website: www.charliecochrane.co.uk

Blog: http://charliecochrane.livejournal.com/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/#!/charliecochrane

FB: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000878813798

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My guest today is one of my oldest online friends, B. G. Thomas, a writer of M/M romance and an unashamed romantic in his own right. He publishes with Dreamspinner, Amber Press, Tor, Silver Publishing, and Freaky Fountain Press and has a substantial backlist of contemporary, fantasy and science fiction stories both in anthologies and as stand alones.

Today he is here to talk about his latest release “Meant to Fly” in the Dreamspinner anthology “Men of Steel”.

~~~

Elin: Can I just say, BG, what a fantastic cover that is. Do you know who made it? 

BG:  Isn’t it wonderful! So surprised me, not at all what I thought they would do. It looks just like a comic book cover, right down to the font they used. I didn’t know who the artist was at first, so I sure looked him up online and wow!  Wonderful work!  His name is Keith Dolney and he understands comic books. When I Googled him I was amazed. And it looks like he has done some actual comic book covers.  You should look up his stuff.  He is really good!

Elin:  I’m avidly following the development of  The Pride a locally written and drawn comic about a whole team of gay superheroes, but I’m not really an aficionado of comic book history.  I’m assuming that when I say I’ve never seen one with a gay superhero it’s just because I either haven’t read the right ones or I just haven’t been paying attention. Are there many? If not, why do you think that is?

BG:      Well, I am sure part of it had to do with the marketability of a gay superhero. I am willing to bet that the companies were naïve and didn’t think there was much interest in such a thing. (more…)

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                                                                                                                                                 My guest today is Kay Berrisford, an English author specialising in delicious fantasies rooted in the mythology of the mysterious and sacred places of our prehistory. Mmm, love it. Her stories are also deeply erotic with a twist of BDSM. She’s here today in celebration of the recent release of her second novel Bound to the Beast, whose hero is and always has been close to my heart, but I’ll let Kay explain about him in her own words and pictures.

~~~  (more…)

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The Comfy Chair!

My guest today is Tristram La Roche, rapidly becoming the ‘go to’ man for raunchy gay erotica in both contemporary and historical genres. His first contemporary story “On My Knees” has been lauded to the skies, as have his follow up tales, “Fixed” and “Lorenzo the Magnificent”. His first historical “The Hun and the General” hasn’t failed to deliver the goods.

Thank you, Tristram, for agreeing to answer my questions today.

~~~ (more…)

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