Welcome to the blog tour for Heart of Timber, Book 2 of the Cold gay romance series!
Today we’re at Live Your Life, Buy the Book. Stop by and say hello to Barb!
Author of Contemporary Gay Romance
Today we’re at Live Your Life, Buy the Book. Stop by and say hello to Barb!
It’s Day 3 of the Heart of Timber blog tour and today we are over at Attention is Arbitrary for a quick spotlight. Stop by and say hello!
In case you missed our first two stops:
Our first stop is the Boys in our Books blog for an exclusive excerpt from HoT. It’s just a little tiny teaser for those of you who love Lem so much. You can also read their review while you’re there.
Pre-order Heart of Timber from Smashwords, Kobo, or ARe.
When it comes to the genre of Southern Gothic, readers think of Falkner, O’Connor, and Williams. But Southern Gothic fiction has come a long way since the dawn of Modernism. New List Salon Press wanted to bring the genre and the readers out of the past and into the future. Southern Gothic: New Tales of the South features over a dozen fresh stories by established and up-and-coming authors (gay and straight) who turn the genre on its head. Here’s an interview with one such author, Michael Russell. His frank portrayal of homosexuality and religion in the south will not only remind you of why Southern Gothic fiction is so revered, but also why true love conquers all.
Michael, your story “Long Finger from the Sky” focuses on “forbidden love.” Can you discuss how that fits into the Southern Gothic genre, and how, as a gay writer, that theme is important, or prevalent to you?
It’s a standard theme in the genre. It probably shows up in every Tennessee Williams play. Being gay, our love is automatically forbidden, and if you look through literary history, forbidden love is a compelling theme regardless of sexual orientation. My novel First Floor on Fire has a subplot in which one character is in love with his older brother, which is about as taboo as you can get. Southern Gothic stories are full of the human heart divided against itself. I sometimes think of the genre as being about people messing up their lives in ways we can understand.
You grew up in Arkansas, which is also the setting of your story. How does this reflect your experience of being gay and southern?
Unfortunately, I never made love in a cave during a tornado, but the story does [Read more…] about Talking Southern Gothic Fiction with Michael Russell
Welcome author Richard Pearson with an excellent post about our detrimental habit of stereotyping the bodies of gay men. ~ B.
So when you hear these words: “You should meet my friend Richard, he’s in his early 30s, an attorney, an actor, and an author, oh, and he’s gay,” what mental image do you have?
Something like this?
What if I told you he actually looked like this?
Not what you were expecting? Why is that?
For the record, the first one is Djordje Bogdanovic, a runway model, the second one, is me. Yet when I am described to people, they usually expect the model and not the adorable guy in the vest, and a big reason why is that I don’t look like a typical gay man. [Read more…] about Body Shapes and Stereotypes
Impossible, book 6 of the Tate Pack series is out and I am so uberly excited to hear what you all think. It was nice to return to the ranch, to hang with the guys again and I think you’ll all be very shocked by what happens in the story. Though I am to warn you that it’s angsty and will make you cry, at least according to my betas.
In light of where the royalties of the book are being donated I decided to do more than just give you the blurb, excerpt, cover and buy links, I thought I would tell you all why I really want this book to do well. [Read more…] about Author Vicktor Alexander Giving Back with Impossible