Feeds:
Posts
Comments

What a week!

My feet haven’t touched the ground. Sheesh – plus my laptop is acting up something horrible. Sadly i didn’t get to comment to the Six Sunday posts – but I read most of them, guys  – and wasn’t able to take part in last weekend’s blog hop, other than by making a post to show my support.

But today I have got the damn machine working so I’m pleased to say that I have done the drawing for the giveaway for the Rainbow Book Reviews Blog Hop.

The Gods of Fate, and my pirate hat, have dictated that the winner is Maggie Blackbird and I have emailed a request to let me know in what format she would like her copy of Alike As Two Bees, assuming she still wants such a thing.

And now there’s another blog hop starting tomorrow – Romancing the Hop from Carrie Ann’s Blog Hops – where I’m supposed to write about romance, my ideas of romance, and give recommendations for romance novels. That’s going to be a laugh. 😀 Tune in tomorrow and watch me flail around a bit.

What can I say? It has been a busy week. 😦 I’ll have to tweet it instead. To make up for it I’ll post an excerpt of something below the cut.

But first, there’s a very big Blog Hop going on to celebrate Rainbow Books Reviews opening for business. If you like LGBT literature you’ll love this!

Just click – here – for a list of all participants and hop from blog to blog for a chance to win prizes [including a copy of Alike As Two Bees if you like you might like such a thing. My post is – here – just comment and I’ll do the ‘drawing a bit of paper out of a pirate hat’ thing on Monday]

There are some terrific authors and some very generous publishers – Amber Allure, Bold Strokes Books, Dreamspinner Press, Less Than Three Press, Riptide Publishing, Silver Publishing, Torquere Press and
Untreed Reads – so it’s well worth having a bash.

But far more important than prizes are the blog posts on the theme “What writing GLBT means to me”.  Some of them are moving, some funny, but all are worth reading.

Right – one erstatz-Six Sentence Sunday coming up ~

Continue Reading »

Here it is – The Rainbow Book Reviews Blog Hop – just click on the picture for a list of all participants and hop from blog to blog for a chance to win prizes.

There are some terrific authors and some very generous publishers – Amber Allure, Bold Strokes Books, Dreamspinner Press, Less Than Three Press, Riptide Publishing, Silver Publishing, Torquere Press and
Untreed Reads – so it’s well worth having a bash.

But far more important than prizes are the blog posts on the theme “What writing GLBT means to me”. I can’t wait to see some of the answers.

I too offer a prize – a copy in the format of the winner’s choice of Alike As Two Bees – winner to be chosen from commenters who say they would like to enter the draw, please provide an email address, and the draw will be done by picking a bit of screwed up paper out of a hat. The old ways are the best and I’ll be using a pirate hat just because I have one handy [doesn’t everyone?]

My post is below the cut. Content warning – it contains, history maths and somewhat shaky logic but made sense when I wrote it.

What Writing GLBTQ Literature Means to Me

Continue Reading »

Many writers of M/M and LGBT themed work will have heard that Serena Yates and Lena Grey, esteemed writers and reviewers, have started their own book review site.

To celebrate Rainbow Book Reviews being open for business they have organised a blog hop with some fantastic prizes and over 70 fabulous authors, bloggers and publishers taking part and offering prizes.  Just click on the picture to see what’s in store.

From August 24th to August 26th join me in hopping from blog to blog. All the posts will be on the same theme:

 “What Writing GLBTQ Literature Means to Me“.

I plan to do my share of hopping once my own post has gone up tomorrow.

Six Sentence Sunday

And another Sunday rolls around. Blimey where is this year going to?

For those who don’t know – which will be hardly any of you – Six Sentence Sunday is an authorial blog hop that gives one the opportunity to read a little of an awful lot of different works. It’s good fun and I’ve met some super people while doing it. You may find the links here if you want to poke around amongst them.

Here is my offering. Another bit of A Fierce Reaping. Winter is drawing in and Cynfal is worried about Aeddan.

~~~

Cynfal scraped together enough firewood to heat the mess through – mostly pinecones and bundles of birch twigs – and fetched water while Aeddan sulked in the bothy. He was definitely off colour and bad tempered with it. Cynfal was reminded of an old hound with an abcess brewing. There was no outward sign and much of the time he carried on as normal, but he was sometimes more abrupt and could snap if touched on the wrong spot. At the moment Aeddan didn’t suffer fools gladly, and that was odd. He normally liked having someone to make fun of.

Brilliant Blog

I have to admit, and this won’t come as any surprise to anyone who has read any of my work, that I find men an endless source of fascination.

I’m not talking in a ‘phwoarr, what I wouldn’t like to do to you’ sense – I’m not sure I’d remember if I was given the opportunity – but in a craft sense. How do I best go about portraying their thought patterns? How do I show what they find important in a situation and what they would dismiss? Not just as in the case of this photo, where a male observer says “Wow she’s hot” and a female one says “Wow, sexy shoes”. In quite mundane situations I’ve noticed that I’ll focus on one part of a problem while my husband will focus on another. We may come up with the same solution but the thought processes and problem solving techniques are fundamentally different. I wonder sometimes if this is why M/M stories penned by female writers are so obvious to male readers?

Anyhow this is a rather long winded way of recommending another Brilliant Blog.

The Art of Manliness is my must go to place for advice framed in suitably manly terms. Everything from opening a bank account to how to shave like grandpa is described in a simple and matter of fact way. I love it.  Of particular interest to me are their survival guides which are filled with fabulous authory ideas for troubles to heap upon my heroes. For instance the many survival uses for the common or garden tampon or how to enhance your chances of surviving in the wild with a broken cell phone. Also interesting are the articles about relationships but be prepared to rein in your inner-feminist when some of the comments get a bit medieval.

 

 

Have you ever come across a true story and thought “If I wrote that people would say it was too far fetched to be believable”? I have, probably a couple of times a month. But this one is very close to home, so I thought I’d write about it.

The lady in the picture is called Vulcana, but started life as Miriam Kate Williams. Her father was a preacher and she worked in the local tannery. Maybe lugging wet hides about sharpened up her physique because she started hanging around the boxing saloon in Castle Street and met a body builder called William Roberts – a small but handsome man with an astonishing moustache and the stage name Mr Atlas. Despite already being married, William took a shine to 15 yr old Kate and they ran off together.

She seems to have been a bit of a heroine. When she was thirteen she halted a runaway horse in its tracks. In July 1901 she rescued a drowning boy from the River Usk when he fell from the bridge.

The stage act that Vulcana and Atlas put on was of a type that was all the rage in music halls and theatres. Billed as brother and sister, although they were living as man and wife, they performed feats of strength and agility. One of Vulcana’s tricks was to lift a grown man from the ground with the strength of one arm. A shrewd show woman, Vulcana once seized the opportunity to lift a wagon that had a jammed wheel, and took care that the audience knew who she was and where she would be performing.

There is some doubt that Atlas was as strong as he claimed – one of his assertions was challenged and his weights proved to be much lighter that stated – but Vulcana is acknowledged as having been one of the strongest women in the world.

 She is credited with having achieved a bent press of 125 lb with her right arm, and could perform an overhead lift with a 56lb weight in each hand. In 1912 at a theatre in Llanelli, Vulcana out-lifted the female world champion [though I have to wonder if there wasn’t an element of showmanship involved – you let me win on my home turf and I’ll make sure that you win on yours?]

Atlas took her to France where Vulcana impressed the Halterophile Society with her strength and charm. She won many weight-lifting medals, including one awarded by the Queen of the Netherlands. She is described as 5 feet 4 inches tall with a beautiful complexion and shapely figure. Roberts played on her attractive appearance and many photos exist, in private collections, of her posing with her hair down looking soulful.

Atlas and Vulcana were joined in their stage act by their children, all of whom had Atlas as their middle names. They continued to perform until the 1930s despite Vulcana being injured in a terrible accident in 1921. They were performing at the Garrick Theatre in Edinburgh when a fire broke out and Vulcana saved trained horses belonging to another act, losing all her hair in the process.

In 1939, Vulcana was run over by a car and taken to hospital where, it is claimed, she heard her own death pronounced. Giving the doctors the lie, she recovered and lived until 1946.

Now, ladies and gentlemen, if you read all that about a heroine, or hero, in a book wouldn’t you describe her [or him] as a Mary Sue? Yep me too, but it just goes to show that real lives can be odder than anything we writers can dream up.

 

Another Sunday, and what would be another six sentences if I had remembered to register in time! Yes, I forgot but then I’ve been a bit excited.

I’ve had an offer for my pirate novel, On A Lee Shore!

I know – crazy isn’t it! So I’ll give you a bit of that today before I have to pick it apart to edit it and get heartily sick of it. AND a bit of  A Fierce Reaping just for the heck of it

First, the usual Six Sentence Sunday pimp. If you haven’t tried it, why not? It’s easy [if you remember]. Go here and register sometime before midnight on Saturday, then on Sunday morning post exactly six sentences from one of your works, either published or a WIP. Then click around the world reading and commenting on all the other excerpts.

~~~
Continue Reading »

Alex Beecroft is my guest today – for the second time, so the first can’t have been too scary.

Our subject today is her latest release, His Heart’s Obsession, about the difficulties experienced by young gay men when part of an organisation that punishes the expression of their desires by death, and the inventiveness required to establish a satisfying relationship.

Hi, Alex, thanks so much for agreeing to sit in my Comfy Chair again.

Elin:  I understand from entries in your blog that His Heart’s Obsession has had a rather long gestation. Would you care to tell us a bit about that?

Alex:  It’s a saga in its own right, certainly. It was originally a longish short story – about 12K words long – and was accepted by one publisher (I won’t give names) to go into an anthology in 2008. Then the editor in charge of that project became ill and all the writers were offered their stories back.

I took it back and sent it out to a different publisher, who also accepted it. Then nothing happened for two years, until eventually the contract ran out. So I took it back again. This time I decided that the story would make more sense if I expanded it to help get across a better picture of who the characters were. And particularly to help explain why Hal doesn’t trust Robert.

After I’d expanded it into a short novella, I sent it to Carina. This time was ‘third time lucky’ and it finally broke its jinx and has been released. I’m so relieved!

Elin:  His Heart’s Obsession is the most overtly romantic of your stories – almost totally focussed on the play of emotions, the development of relationships. Do you find there to be a lot of structural differences between a relationship driven story and one with masses of action?

Sea Battle by Andries Van Eertvelt. From Wikimedia

Alex:  There is a difference in that if you have a story with masses of action, the action in itself is a strand of plot which has to be developed sensibly and tied up or resolved at the end. The more strands of plot you have, the longer your story has to be to do justice to them all. So a story which is only a love story can be shorter than a story which is love story plus action (plus mystery etc.) In either case, the progression of the love story must make its own internal sense, so the difference is one of number of plots rather than structure of plots.

Some villains have such a rough time you have to sympathise.
Loki by Mårten Eskil Winge. Wikimedia.

Elin:  Villains – incredibly important in fiction since they challenge the main protagonists and give them something to contend with beyond the tension of a developing relationship. What sort of villains do you prize? A moustache-twirling nightmare or … ?

Alex:  To tell the truth, I don’t generally have them at all. (Which makes ‘how to write a novel’ books terribly frustrating. They assume you’ve got a single hero facing off against a single villain, or at least an antagonist. I have two heroes and no villain.)

Very few of the struggles in my life have been against  individuals. Most of them have been against society. So in my books, more or less, my heroes struggle to reconcile who they are with a society that cannot accept them for who they are. I don’t generally need a villain on top of that.

However – if I actually answer that question instead of avoiding it – I admit to quite liking a moustache twirling villain. If you’re going to lay the smackdown on someone, I don’t want to be feeling sorry for him. And I will  feel sorry for him if he’s even slightly believable. If there’s a hint of a real human being in there, I’ll want him to be redeemed rather than punished. OTOH, if there isn’t a hint of real human being in there, I’ll find him unbelievable. This is probably one of the reasons why I don’t normally have a villain myself. The whole concept is hugely problematical.

 Elin:  What are you reading? Something to be clutched to the bosom or tossed aside with force? Fiction or non-fiction?

Alex:  I’m between books at the moment. I’ve just finished Neal Stephenson’s “Snow Crash”, which was a wonderfully high-concept cyber-punk SF novel with bonus Sumerian linguistic programming. I don’t know what to read next, though I’ve been told his “Cryptonomicon” is also very good.

On the non-fiction side, I’ve just downloaded “In the Shadow of Empires: The historic Vlad Dracula, the events he shaped and the events that shaped him,” in an attempt to bring some historic grounding to my vampire novel. There are very few available books out there on the history of Wallachia. It’s frustrating.

Elin: I sympathise. When I was flirting with writing about Scythia I thought I might have to learn Ukrainian.

I understand that you are on the planning committee for UK Meet and that we only have – ooh about 5 weeks to go. Any interesting developments lately?

Alex:  Ooh, well, Silver Publishing have very kindly sent us three [three!] Kindle Touches to give away on the day. One will go into the raffle we’re running to support the Albert Kennedy Trust, and the other two will be prizes in various events. I want one!

Also Clare London has given us a sneak peek of the goody bags we’ll be giving away on the day, and they are seriously cool. We were able to get stylish messenger bags rather than cheap cotton ones because Dreamspinner Press are sponsoring them. I was quite cynical about the idea of goody bags at first, but now I’m all “where’s mine!”

Elin:  I know that you are working hard – congratulations on getting an agent, by the way 😀 – so, have you any WIPs you could tell us about?

Alex:  Thank you! Well, I’ve just sent “Pilgrims’ Tale” off to my agent. I don’t know if that counts as being ‘in progress’ but it’s certainly not out yet. I’ve got as far as writing back-cover copy for that one, which goes:

The helmet of Raedwald – possibly. Sutton Hoo.
Picture from Wikimedia

 In Dark Ages’ England, warriors were the highest form of human life. They fucked whoever they pleased, women or men, but they were no man’s bitch. If a man allowed himself to be fucked, then he must be some craven little lickspittle coward – a boy, a slave or a whore – not a real man at all.

Reluctant berserker, Wulfstan, a noble and fearsome warrior, has spent most of his life trying to hide the fact that he would love to be cherished and taken care of by someone stronger than himself. Slight and beautiful harper, Leofgar, has the opposite problem – how can he keep the trained killers off him long enough to get them to acknowledge he’s as much of a man as any of them?

When Wulfstan kills his friend to cover up his secret, and Leofgar flees rather than submit to his lord’s lust, they meet on the road to the pilgrims’ shrine at Ely. Pursued by a mother’s curse and Leofgar’s vengeful lord, they must battle guilt, outlaws, and the powers of the underworld with the aid of music, a single sword and a female saint. And if they fall in love on the way, there’s still that murderous shame to overcome too.

I’ve also got a completed first draft of a light-hearted fairy-tale called “Elf Princes’ Quest.” I’ll be editing and polishing that for a couple of months (and hopefully giving it a better name. Titling is not my forte!)

Then I’ve just started to write the first draft of a vampire novel set in 18th Century Wallachia. I quite like the title of that – “The Glass Floor,” but I’m no longer certain that there will turn out to be a glass floor in it. I’m only about a chapter and a half into that one, but I’m enjoying it a lot, and appreciating the fact that I’m learning all sorts of things about Romania in the process of research.

Elin:  Finally – could we please have an excerpt of something?

Alex:  Well, as we’re talking about His Heart’s Obsession, here’s Chapter One of that 🙂

~*~*~*~

“Mmm… Oh…yes.”

Robert Hughes stirred on his cot. They were at anchor and the night was still and quiet, or he would not have been able to hear the low murmuring of Hal’s voice from the next cabin. Tropical heat suffused the wooden womb in which he lay, made him kick off his one sheet and sit up.

He had never claimed to be a good man. Quite the opposite, he was as deep-dyed a rogue as a man could hope to meet in the British Royal Navy. So he did not hesitate to swing himself out of the narrow coffin of his bunk, land light-footed on the warm planks, and gently move aside the sea chest that lay against the canvas partition wall.

“Ah…” It was a little insinuating murmur, hot as the night, Hal’s woodwind deep voice broken from its daylight authority and gasping, breathless and needy. “Please…”

I’m doing this for his own good.  Behind the chest, the canvas wall had been ripped, and a hole half the size of Robert’s fist stood out from the shaping battens. He had found it there six months ago and not reported it, because sometimes—like tonight—the wanting grew too much. Then he would draw the chest back and kneel here, with his face to the gap, watching Hal Morgan sleep.

It was a stolen intimacy, but those were the only kind he had, so he cherished them.

Hal had a child’s fear of darkness—he slept with a lantern freshly trimmed above him. Always had, in all the five years they had served together. Indeed, it was his shadow on the white canvas, his silhouette—dark against the pale background that moved as he moved, bending down to unbuckle shoes, drawing its shirt over its head—showing itself, slender and well shaped and unselfconscious, that had moved Robert to encourage the fraying hole.

Even now he would touch the silhouette and feign to be touching Hal’s spirit or his naked skin. He dreamed about it at times—of Hal asleep in the other room, and his shadow reaching out from the wall, coming to enfold Robert and fill with tenderness all the places inside that ached when he watched it.

But it seemed Hal had his own dreams.

Scrunched up in the tight corner of his tiny room, Robert kissed the fabric, then put his eye to the hole.

Dim rushlight seemed bright to him after the darkness of his own sleep. He made out Hal’s sheet, crumpled on the floor where he had kicked it off, allowed himself to look up by careful degrees, rationing the torment and anticipation.

Hal’s hand first—held at an awkward angle where his elbow must be jammed into the raised edges of the cot. Such beautiful hands he had—expressive, mobile, clever hands, tanned and capable. Awake, they punctuated his speech with movement and emotion—exclaiming, illustrating, never still. Here, drawn in sepia by the brown light, his fingers clenched and released as though they held tight to a lover’s flesh.

Quietly, Robert reached up and touched the place on his own shoulder where Hal clung demandingly to his dream-lover. A wave of arousal, oily as despair, curled up from his balls to his throat, drying his mouth.  I should stop looking. He would knock me down if he knew.

But his gaze travelled on upwards to where he could see the curve of Hal’s throat, his head tilted back, his neck offered in submission to his lover’s mouth. Only the top of his chest was visible above the side of the bunk, the neckline of his nightshirt askew enough to show flesh as pale as his linen, and sweat like a dew of gold in the lantern light.

He lay on his back, his legs pulled up, one resting against the hull, the other against the board of the cot. His shirt had fallen down to pool in his lap, leaving the braced lines and undefended skin of those long legs bare to Robert’s gaze. Never had a thief more cherished a stolen intimacy than Robert cherished this. He personally slept half-clothed, breeches on, to be prepared for any emergency in the night, but now he stroked a hand up his inner thigh, pretending it was Hal’s bare leg. Fumbled at the buttons of his fly, pressing now uncomfortably hard against his aching yard.

“Nnh! Oh please. Please!”

Hal’s mouth was soft, half parted. His tongue touched his lower lip as if licking off the savour of a kiss, but his eyes were pinched closed, his brow creased as if in pain. His low whisper had grown louder, taken on a growl of frustration. Even—to the sensitive ears of a man obsessed by his moods—an edge of tears.

Not even in his dreams,  Robert thought, soothing the ache between his own legs with a practiced hand, does his imaginary lover make him happy. I would. I would if he would let me. I would take that invitingly open mouth and fill it with bliss. I’d worship him from that vainly offered arse to… God, how I’d fill that until he screamed.

“Please. Oh W…”

Bloody hell, he was going to say it! Robert’s fantasy burst like a sail in a storm. Hal was dreaming, he didn’t know his voice had risen, and he was going to say it out loud. Oh, please, William.  And God alone knew who else was listening in, idly in the dead of night when there was no other source of entertainment. Boult was as close on the other side as Robert was on this, and Boult would have quite a different reaction to learning of Hal’s fantasies than Robert did.

Buttoning himself back up fast, Robert got stiffly up from his knees, lurched out of his cabin’s sliding door. There was a light under Boult’s door—he was awake. Must be listening by now. Bloody hell. Robert crashed into the wall by Hal’s cabin, loud as he could. Then, to be sure, he made a noisy performance of rolling back the door and fell against the sword-belt hung up inside with a great jangle.

When he looked up, it was to find Hal sitting, shirt pulled down over his knees, dark eyes startled and haunted with something worse than sleep. Awake, thank God, and unincriminated. Now all that remained was for Robert to get himself out of here without casting suspicion upon himself, and at that he was infinitely practiced, having been something of a prankster since before he was breeched. That time at university, for example, when he had put down turf in young Smalting’s room and filled it with sheep. That had been most amusing.

So as Hal exclaimed, “Hughes? What on earth?” Robert feigned drunkenness, grabbed for the doorjamb as if to hold himself up, and slurred, “What’re you doing in my cabin?”

The brief glimpse of Hal’s misery, flayed and tender, was whisked away, to be replaced with a more familiar irritation. He had, Robert thought, the kind of face on which anger looked as enthralling as a smile.

“You woke me up, you sot! Your cabin is next door. Idiot!”

It was something just to have that fierce regard concentrated entirely on him. Robert clung on harder and smiled. Hal’s hair had been mussed by the pillow, crushed gold. He never got a chance to see it in the daytime because of the wigs. He could stand here and look forever, and as he now had a perfectly good excuse, that was what he did.

Hal shook his head and gave a small, long-suffering smile. “You’re drunk as David’s sow, aren’t you? Did you hear any of that? Next door. Your cabin is next door.” He reached for the housecoat that lay across the foot of the bed. “Do you need me to take you?”

Oh yes. Come back to my bed with me. Let me show you what I’m really thinking. I’ll banish that phantom from you. I’ll burn it away.

But no. If the others hadn’t been listening before, they certainly were now, and this was not the place, or time. It never was. “Sorry. No. I can… Don’t need any help. Perfectly capable of bedding to my walk on my own.”

The thought weighed him down as he returned to his own humid, empty bed, spoiled his satisfaction in a rescue so neatly pulled off. It never was the time to tell Hal how he felt. When would it ever be?

~*~*~*~

His Heart’s Obsession is available from Carina Press, here.

Alex’s website is here

 

My guest today is Kiran Hunter, author of dark GLBT fiction, whose debut novella “Bedevil” has been very well received including by me.

I’m a bit of a scaredy cat so avoid true horror stories but Bedevil is nicely creepy while not having the squick factor that so much horror involves.

Hello, Kiran, and thank you for joining me today.

~~~

Elin:  “Bedevil” has a strong paranormal theme. Have you always been interested in the ‘unseen’ threats that dog our footsteps?

The Brown Lady of Raynham Hall, 1936.

Kiran: I grew up fascinated by the ‘unseen’, or perhaps more accurately the ‘occasionally glimpsed’. I still love anything dark or unsettling… or with a hint of wickedness, so don’t find anything paranormal threatening – I like that tingle down the spine. I always thought there were creatures lurking in the shadows or dwelling in reflections that I might just catch sight of out of the corner of my eye if I was lucky.

Elin: Have you any personal experience of paranormal occurrences that you could, or are prepared, to share with us?

Kiran: I hear snatches of sentences out of nowhere, usually a female voice and usually when I’m completely engrossed in writing or reading. ‘She’ can be so loud she makes me jump. I used to work in a hospital records store – a claustrophobic room with rows of floor to ceiling shelving. I’d have the impression someone had walked into the room and would get up to see who it was, but no one was there. A strong smell of perfume also lingered in the room – even when it was unlocked first thing in the morning, as if someone had just left when the door was opened.

Image provided by Kiran – could that really be a ghost?

Elin: I really enjoyed that “Bedevil” concerned a relationship that was in trouble rather than being ‘boy meets boy’. Which do you prefer writing?

Kiran:  “Bedevil” definitely isn’t a romance, and I was aware when I was writing it that I was colouring a little outside the lines in as much as it seems that most e-published gay fiction appears to focus on romance and happy-ever-afters. I wanted to write something more sinister but still erotic. I haven’t written anything traditionally romantic so far, but I wouldn’t rule it out.

Elin: I was raised in a small village and loved it but I’m well aware that while I found the closeness comforting, others find it intrusive and claustrophobic.  Which side of the fence do you fall?

Kiran:  I grew up in a small village and when I was in my teens I began to find it claustrophobic. I never really had anything in common with other kids, and my interests lay way outside the boundaries of village life. Much like Rippington, the village in Bedevil, the local pub was where all the gossiping took place and where scandals evolved or were revealed.

Elin:  Harbinger House is almost a character in its own right. Was it inspired by any real building?

Harbinger House

Kiran:  I love derelict churches, ruins, and empty houses and will often go off at the weekend with a camera to take photographs. The idea for Bedevil was inspired by an overgrown house I’d walked past for around 10 years. It was stunning even when it was covered by ivy and crowded by trees. I was never sure if anyone lived there. There was a car ‘parked’ in the front garden, almost smothered by plants and in the winter there would be a single, bare light bulb glowing in an upstairs window. Shortly after I wrote Bedevil I saw that the jungle had been chopped down and the house revealed.

Elin: You have written very compelling characters in Tim, Gareth and Luka. Of all the characters you have written, who is your favourite, which gave you the biggest kick to write and who were you glad to see the back of when the story ended?

Kiran:  I tend not to write completely likeable characters – another reason Bedevil maybe doesn’t fit into the romance mould. I like Luka. He is supposed to exist for only one reason, a sexual being blessed (or cursed?) with an insatiable appetite. However, as the years have passed he’s become lonely, driving away anyone who lives in the house where he is bound to stay. Gareth is an arrogant, insensitive man (I think), perhaps even a little cruel – he dismisses his partner’s fears, yet when he discovers those fears are not unfounded he continues to brush aside Tim’s concerns. However unlikeable a character may be there are none I’d like to see the back of as such.

Elin: I see from your website that there are more tales to come. Can you share any details of your WIPs?

Kiran:  I’m working on the follow-up to Bedevil, currently entitled Devilment. We’ll find out more about Luka and perhaps we’ll get to see Gareth redeem himself a little. And maybe Luka will escape his prison… one way or another.  I’m also writing some erotic shorts and have a much longer term project lurking in my mind.

Elin: Any chance of an excerpt – either from Bedevil or from a WIP?

Kiran:  Sure! Here’s an excerpt from Bedevil:

Gareth slammed the car door shut and activated the central locking system. It was later than he’d hoped; the sun was setting, a flock of birds wheeling up into the sky before turning back on itself and settling in the trees surrounding the village church. Almost pretty, he thought, turning on his heels to take in the rest of the scene. Almost, but not quite… Good God. He cleared his throat. Tim wasn’t going to like this. “Well, there it is, I think. Somewhere in there,” he said.

“What? That?” Tim followed Gareth’s gaze across the road. “No! Look at the place!”

The gate squealed in protest, as if it hadn’t been opened for decades. The sun had almost disappeared, the tops of the trees surrounding the house now brushed with a pink glow and the garden beneath consumed by shadow.

“I suppose it could have been beautiful once upon a time. It’s a little overgrown,” Tim said.

“Adds to its charm.” Gareth hoped he sounded convincing.

“Erm, not sure charm is the word you’re after.”

“Let’s take a look. Reserve judgment until we’ve seen inside the place.”

With Tim a footstep behind, Gareth made his way up the path, negotiating crumbling concrete and easing past rampant shrubs. Beside the front door, a plaque was just visible through the ivy clinging on to the building. He pried the stubborn stems away from the wood to read the carved words beneath.

“‘Harbinger House.”

“Well, that’s reassuring, Gareth. Harbinger of doom, and all that.”

“Curious the place isn’t called that on the deeds…just 20 Willow Green.”

Gareth slid the key into the lock and turned it. There was a moment’s hesitation before the catch clicked and the door eased open an inch, as if the house wasn’t quite ready for them. He smiled at Tim and, with a dramatic flourish, gestured for him to enter first. Tim shook his head.

“After you. The place is yours.”

“Ours, Tim. It’s ours.”

The warning cry from the rusting gate ripped his senses awake, but his mind was slow to follow. All Luka was aware of at first was the agony of sound and the warm trickle of blood from his ears. His muscles stretched as he moved, tendons almost tearing from the bone as he unraveled his body from its fetal position. He wailed with the new pain—a feeble echo of the metal against metal outside. His first intake of breath rasped down his throat and burned into his lungs. He clamped his mouth shut and breathed in deeply through his nose. The house was different—the odor of dust and mold and damp was still there, but something else too. The protesting gate had heralded the arrival of new flesh. He could smell it.

A river of cold air flowed across his pain-wracked body, caressing his arms, his chest, his legs—the outside world finding a way through a crack in his prison and reawakening his nerve endings to remind him of what he had been without for so long. Touch. Skin against skin. Breath on skin…

 

BOOK BLURB

When Gareth Balaam inherits Harbinger House, he thinks his problems are over. But they’ve only just begun. Harbinger House has a dark past. Shrouded in mystery, what may have occurred within its walls is still a matter of conjecture. The locals at the pub talk about the place in whispers. Gareth’s partner, Tim, thinks the house is haunted.

Gareth doesn’t believe in ghosts, but he does believe Tim is using the house as an excuse to not work on their relationship. Their trip to the country to bring them closer seems to be doing the opposite. Tensions and resentments flare, and through it all, someone is watching…

BUY LINKS : Amazon US, Amazon UK, B&N, Kobo and All Romance

FIND ME: Website   Twitter   Facebook