
Ever heard of a ‘twofer’? Well that’s what you’re getting tonight – two for the price of one and worth every penny. My guests tonight are Tristram LaRoche and Daniel DeLoite. I first got to know Tristram through his historical novel The Hun and the General, which pairs Attila the Hun with a Roman general. With my passion for the horse archer cultures the book was a must read and I was impressed with the edgy prose. Tristram introduced me to Daniel’s work, which is of a far more robust nature than I would normally choose to read, but I gave it a go anyway because – hey, British authors need to stick together. All I can say is that I was pleasantly surprised.
They are here to celebrate their first joint venture – a self published volume both in Kindle format and paperback, comprising one of Tristram’s stories and several of Daniel’s – and it is called Manthology. So read on for a chat with the guys and an excerpt of my favourite of Daniel’s books, Dead Gorgeous.
Welcome, fellas.
~~~
Tris: I never thought it would happen. The first time I came across Daniel deLoite (Shut up, Dan! Behave.) I thought he was a right jerk-
Dan: Oh,hark at you!
Tris: But I was going to say how wrong I turned out to be, if you’ll give me chance.
Dan: Ok, be my guest. I’ll play with myself a bit while you finish boring everyone.
Tris: Thanks. Go do it in the fast lane of the M1 if you like. Now, I never thought it would happen-
Dan: You said that-
Tris: Ssh! Never thought I would write a book with anyone, let alone the uber tricky Daniel.
Dan: Well, we haven’t exactly written one together, have we?
Tris: Oh, how picky! OK, we’ve collaborated on an anthology. Is that better?
Dan: Yes. Spot on. Actually, some spot off would come in handy at my place.
Tris: Good grief. Will I live to regret it, I wonder? Anyway, Dan persuaded me to stick my novella On My Knees between the same covers as five of his short stories.
Dan: Much better! You’re getting the hang of it – at last.
Tris: And we called it MANTHOLOGY. It’s only available from Amazon because we wanted to put it on their Prime programme so that you can borrow it for FREE if you want to. And-
Dan: *buzz* Repetition of ‘and’.
Tris: *groans*
Dan: We’ve also whacked out a paperback version at a really interesting price, again from Amazon or the Createspace store.
Tris: Say “thank you” to Elin for even entertaining your presence.
Dan: Huh?
Tris: You heard me. You’ve said some pretty biting things about female writers of gay fiction and she hasn’t banned you from her website.
Dan: Yet.
Tris: Don’t! Just say “thank you Elin”.
Dan: Thank you Elin. I didn’t mean anything personal, like đ
Tris: And thanks from me, too, Elin. You’re a star. I’ve persuaded the tight-fisted Dan to let you have an excerpt.
Dan: Nothing wrong with tight fisting.
Tris: Ssh! Go away.
MANTHOLOGY in paperback and eBook from Amazon
and the Createspace store
An excerpt from Daniel deLoite’s short chiller, Dead Gorgeous which is part of the Manthology
Max knew me too well. After half an hour heâd found his place on the dance floor â a clear area near the old baptismal font that had been turned into a bar for the evening â and he partied with anyone and everyone. Iâd picked up a can of lager and found my way up the steps to the organ loft, trying to escape the infernal racket of the so-called music. I leaned on the balustrade and looked down into what was left of the church. Many of the pews had gone, whether to a good home or at the hands of vandals I couldnât tell, and mounds of rubbish had been swept into shapes resembling giant molehills on the cracked floor. My eyesight couldnât penetrate the gloom to the far corners, and the strobe lighting that flashed somewhere beneath me tormented my vision. No sooner did I think Iâd worked out the carvings and statues than the frantic light would pummel my senses and something completely different would be staring back at me. What the fuck? I shook my head and looked at the can of lager. Not even Special Brew.
As the music changed track, I thought I heard a sound behind me. I turned on my heel, my eyes automatically searching the floor in expectation of a rat. They say that wherever you are in London youâre never more than six feet from one of the effing creatures. Anyway, it was far too dark down on the floor to see, even if there had been a family of vermin. When I raised my eyes the organ caught my attention. Everything in the church had a look of decay and dilapidation, dust had gathered everywhere – the Goths downstairs didnât seem at all bothered by it but I did think it must really fuck with their black clothes. But the organ stood there untarnished, its pipes as bright as the day theyâd been fitted, the glorious carvings oozing with the rich warmth of tropical hardwoods as if theyâd been waxed and polished only that morning. I breathed in and the smell could not have been more remote from the staleness Iâd expected, all beeswax and honey and vinegar.
By now my eyes had become better accustomed to the dim light, my back to the nave and the incessant strobing. Yet, as the swatch of light flashed on behind me, the face of an angel appeared and disappeared, appeared and disappeared. I stepped closer and put out my hand to feel it, like a blind man acquainting himself with a stranger. The angel stood too high for me to reach and I was glad to find the organistâs stool nearby. I dragged it across the floor and climbed up, grabbing hold of the angelâs arm with my free hand to steady myself. My own body cast an intermittent shadow now, and I traced the intricate carving that gave life to this creature of Heaven. I never could tell the gender of angels and often joked that when youâd seen one, youâd seen them all, yet something about this androgynous face attracted me. I felt the square jaw, the full lips, cheeks so gently formed they felt soft despite being made of wood. High cheek bones and a subtly prominent brow reminded me of the chiselled features so often seen on male models and I smiled to myself. Dare I? My hand made its way downwards, running through the folds of the robe.
âDo you like angels?â The voice seemed to come from the wooden lips and I flinched, grabbing the rich folds of the rigid garment to prevent myself falling from the stool. I peered at the face, trying to make it out. âDo you like angels, Rick?â The lips didnât move. What the fuck? Of course they didnât move, it was a fucking statue!
The sound Iâd heard before, the rustling that made me think of rats, came louder now from behind. I turned, still clinging to the angelâs robe with one hand, can of lager in the other.
âHello, Rick.â Even in the gloom I could see the source of the voice. The strobe had no effect on the face, its luminescence cold and constant, as if not really there.
My senses told me this was the same face as the carved angel, but how? I held up the can of lager, turned my eyes on it even though I could barely see it, and threw it to the floor. âJesus.â
âNot quite.â The voice had an ethereal quality that rose above the clatter and fizz of the discarded can, light but smothering the rhythmic sounds below. It sounded male and female all at the same time.
A tremble ran through my body and when I opened my mouth to speak my teeth chattered. The apparition moved toward me and I heard the rustle again. Fear pinned me to the spot, even as I felt hands on my crotch and heard the zip of my flies being pulled down. My entire body stiffened instantly.
You can find Tris here: http://tristramlaroche.com/
And Dan here: http://danieldeloite.blogspot.co.uk/

E.L : Yes, and no. From a sketch of a character, which is not much more than a name (the name is the first thing to come actually) the character emerges, with my fiction, through dialogue and through interaction with other characters. Then the scene and history emerges around them, because for me, the character, and his (I mostly write male chief protagonists, for reasons I now only later in my life fully understand); and I usually find out there is a historic frame and I start in on the historical research. History fills in the details as I research. That is how I wrote the first novel I actually completed, which encompasses 8 weeks in the campaign of Alexander into Asia Minor, the Anabasis Alexandri (Alexanderâs March Up Country.)  The name of the book is âThe Confession of Alexandrus Basileus 334â which opens as he and Hephaestion have taken Troy and founded the first city of Alexandria, and he is confessing to his mentor, Aristotle, in a long letter. One might think Alexander is overdone, but at the time I wrote âThe Confessionâ, Michael Crichton had not yet written the screenplay of âAlexanderâ and no film treatment had been done since the 1940âs; certainly none that addressed his bisexuality â the 1940âs portrayal from Hollywood was a strictly heterosexual manly hero, defying his well-known biography. I developed the book from its opening chapters through close readings of a number of sources such as âAnabasis Cyraeâ by Xenophon, and Xenophonâs later work on Alexander, the âA History of My Timeâ which prominently conveys â after the end of Alexander IIIâs sreign, the Anabasis Alexandriâ which first conveys the fantastical tale of Alexander spending a night of passion with a wild Amazon queen so she could give birth to more single-breasted Amazonian archers, since Alexander was very early known as the greatest warrior in the known world, and had been blessed by Artemis, goddess of the hunt. My Alexander is not anyone elseâs Alexander, because I based him upon the various viewpoints his contemporaries, such as Arrianus, Xenophon and Kallisthenes (who was on Alexanderâs Asian campaign and chronicled it), and fueled my own outline of him with their views â and of course, his dialogue.




Liam: Â Thanks, Iâm glad you found it entertaining! The rest is the same â a mixture of humour and more serious topics. I think itâs so important to be able to laugh, even during the darkest times in life. A friend was very ill for a month or so in hospital, being visited by an endless round of grapes toting and sympathetic simpering friends, until his best friend turned up, plonked herself in the seat, looked around the room and said, âYou look like sh*t, when you getting out so we can have a drink? Where can I have a fag?â It was the first time heâd smiled since collapsing four weeks earlier.






S
 Also, when my characters become real enough to me, they demand to show up again. Often just in a cameo, but sometimes more. Or it will go the other way. My character Tommy from “All Alone in A Sea of Romance,” appeared in several of my shorter pieces and finally demanded his story be told, and that he finally get a chance to find a man instead of always being the bridesmaid and never the bride.
 BG: I’m reading an amazing book called “Inside of a Dog: What Dogs See, Smell, and Know,” by Alexandra Horowitz. I have trouble reading non-fiction sadly, because I think so much of it is so dry. Not this book. And if you are a dog-lover, you mustread this book. It started as research for the book I am writing now, and has turned into something that makes me understand my dog in ways I never did before. She pretty much tells The Dog Whisperer that he is full of shit. Dogs are not wolves. They are an evolutionary miracle and the greatest genetics experiment of all time. Dogs have been with mankind for far longer than anyone thought, maybe 40 thousand years, and their domestication might have been more important than the discovery of fire for humans. And it is romantic! so romantic. Not in some weird way, but if love your dog now, just wait until you read this book. And see how much they really do love us back.
It was cold outside. It was really cold. Freezing cold.
Follow BG at any or all of the links below!
Aubrey looked at his sisterâs angelic face and his heart sank. Slowly, and with many pauses and digressions, he related the terrible events of the previous evening. He told the story very badly, unable to describe the anguished expression on Chumâs face as he gasped âI lost it, Aubrey, I lost it!â and his own strange breathlessness as he realised who was holding the vital slip of paper so carelessly between his fingers or his horror when that soft, mocking voice said âI appear to hold a note of yours, my boy. Do you want to settle up tonight or shall I collect her in the morning?â





