What’s Fun About M/M? Hmm, Let’s See… (NSFW)
Betty Crocker Recipe Cards
Writer Wednesday: B.D. Heywood and Eternal Samurai
What are your names? And tell us a little about yourselves?
Arisada: Watashi wa Saito Arisada. I am Saito Arisada, but please, call me by my first name, Arisada. After all, we are friends here. I was born in 1155, the third son of a noble Japanese family. When I was nine, I was sent to the Buddhist temple at Mii-dera, just east of Kyoto, to become a Sōhei, a warrior monk. In 1180, during the Battle of Mii-dera, I was found near death by a vampire and turned.
Tatsu: Konnichiwa, hello. My name is Tatsu Kurosaki Cobb. I was born in Japan in 2000 (the Year of Tatsu), the oldest son of a Japanese mother and an American father. When I was ten, I moved to New Mexico to live with my uncle after my family was slaughtered by a vampire. I did not remember their deaths. My grandfather also lived with me, and we continued my studies of swordsmanship until he passed away while I was in college. When my memories of the night my family was slaughtered returned, I became driven by fukushū, revenge, and the need to know the reason why they died.
How did you meet? Was it love at first sight?
Arisada: Meeting Tatsu was rather complicated. I fell in love with him in 1172 when he was a youth named Koji Nowaki. After I became a vampire, I searched for Nowaki’s reincarnated spirit for eight-hundred years. I had vowed to kill Nowaki for betraying Mii-dera and me. When I saw him reincarnated as Tatsu Cobb, I realized I still loved him in his new form. However, I was oath-bound to slay Tatsu for revenge for my slain Sōhei brethren. But before I killed him, I wanted him in my bed just once.
Tatsu: Arisada saved my ass in a dark alley one night when another vampire jumped me from behind. Then he kissed me and disappeared. That kiss was so incredibly hot I felt it clear down to my toes and in a lot of other regions. It felt so familiar that it drove me nuts—until I discovered who and what he was.
If it wasn’t love at first sight, what changed?
Tatsu: No it wasn’t love at first sight for me, but it sure as hell was lust. Then the more I saw Arisada, the more I realized he embodied bushi damashi, the true spirit of a samurai. This forced me to accept he was not a vicious animal. He wants a world where everyone lives in peace. Then his avowals of love for me began to get to me. Not to mention he is hot!
What do you believe is your worst or most frustrating quality? What about his/hers?
Tatsu: Well, Arisada is—
Arisada: Please, be quiet Tatsu. I shall answer this first. After all, I am older. The most frustrating quality about Tatsu is his stubbornness. He is still young and naïve, and tends to jump into fights to save others without thought. I had to rescue more than once. Plus, he refused to accept that vampires are capable of love.
Tatsu: Okay, Arisada, you’ve had your say. There are times Arisada despises who he is. His nature as a vampire goes against the tenants of his Buddhist faith. He needs human blood to survive yet he grieves each time he causes the death of an innocent. That conflict is the source of so much of his self-loathing.
What is your best quality? What about his/hers?
Arisada: I wish to speak about Tatsu and allow him to speak about me. He is unbelievably brave and embodies all the qualities of a true samurai. He dedicated himself to redeeming his family’s name knowing it may cost him his life. He is also utterly adorable and the sexiest man on two legs I have ever met.
Tatsu: Okay, now you are embarrassing me. We were both raised as samurai warriors—
Arisada: And samurai never speak of their emotions? Silly boy, you know better.
Tatsu: Arisada believes everyone can be redeemed no matter how evil they are. Also, he loves humans for their effort to save beautiful things, like KubotoPark, in the midst of all this chaos and death.
If you could have one wish come true, what would it be and why?
Arisada: True harmony between vampires and humans.
Tatsu: That Arisada and I could always be together, which is not possible since his lifespan as a vampire is so much longer than mine.
***
About the Author
Tell us a little about yourself!
I was born in England, moved with my family to several countries before landing in the United States. I obtained a Bachelor’s in English and one in Secondary Education although I taught only briefly. My first passion is horses, and I raised and trained them for the show ring. I am single now but have children and grandchildren, all of whom know about my book.
After twenty-five years as a writer and editor for several national magazines, I felt I was totally burned out and retired. I was determined never to put another word down on paper, e-mails notwithstanding. That lasted all of three months.
One night at 2 a.m., I surfed onto the Sci-Fi channel and saw an anime that showed two men kissing. (I could not believe at my age, I’d never heard of much less seen a yaoi anime.) It was scorching! I was hooked and bought as many yaoi manga and anime as I could get my hands on. I love how they deal with some of the most complex and, in some cases, dark aspects of human nature yet still incorporate all the elements of romance. When I wrote my first fan fiction, I received many surprisingly positive and insightful reviews.
I began taking shinkendo classes and read The Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu. I found the feudal Japanese culture to be incredibly fascinating, maybe more so because I am a Westerner. Later, I read the story about the Battle of Mii-dera and how the defeated monks committed seppuku. That historical event coupled with the idea of an story of eternal love led to my novel.
What makes your current offering a different and compelling read?
The theme is that souls who are truly in love will eventually find each other. Although Eternal Samurai is foremost M/M erotica, it is also an urban fantasy set in a dystopian world but with historical flashbacks. I avoided many of the tropes of vampire folklore—immortality, flying, religious inferences, death from wooden stakes, etc. Vampires must have blood to survive and it must be taken directly from a living human being. No blood-in-a-bag home delivery unless it is the pizza boy! Although faster and stronger than most humans, vampires will die if exposed to sunlight. The conflict between vampire and human is vicious and brutal, and is a major factor in the conflict between the two lovers. But never fear, there is plenty of romance, sex and more than a taste of BDSM.
What keeps you inspired?
I am inspired by the thought that there is a reader who will pick up my book and spend a night or two enjoy being immersed in love, passion, bloody battles and some really graphic sex. Well, that is part of my inspiration. I also love it when my characters take over and begin to act out their own story. I can’t wait to find out what they are going to do or say next. And I love language, how versatile it is. I love how words are so evocative and can bring worlds to life in such a manner that readers feel they are there.
How do you juggle writing and working outside the home? Or how do you juggle writing and your family life? Or writing, working, and family life?
As most of us, I’ve always had to juggle work, school, family, in addition to managing my horse farm and teaching youth to ride. I didn’t believe the time I suddenly had when I and my last two show horses retired three years ago. Well, semi-retired. I founded an editing and consulting business. The horses spend most of their time at pasture although we go for the occasional trail ride. I have always been involved in social advocacy so I volunteered for a GLBTQ youth organization and an equine rescue. Also, I took up shinkendo for recreation, which began my love affair with the Japanese culture. Then the writing bug hit.
What other book/series would you compare your current offering to?
That is a tough one. I would describe Eternal Samurai as cross-genre and am not sure what it compares with. There is so much in this the M/M supernatural genre I haven’t read yet. Instead, I’d love to discuss what influenced my work. (I hope it is okay to mention other books and authors here). I have been reading vampire, urban and paranormal fantasies for more than forty years. I love all things vampire.
My first exposure to supernatural M/M was Shadow Harvest by James Buchanan. One of his stories moved me so much that I sent the publisher a letter (talk about fandom!). First vampire book? Bram Stoker’s Dracula. Now, that’s a book rife with homoerotic suggestions. My first contemporary M/M vampire read was Jourdan Lane’s Bound by Blood series. Laura Baumbach’s Blood Claim was next. Hot! I read dozens more like it, some wonderful, some dull and formulaic.
Other influences include authors Marion Zimmer Bradley, Diana L. Paxson and Anne McCaffrey who created marvelous fantasies set in believable worlds. Worlds I’d love to live in. For real-life drama, I adore MZB’s The Catch Trap and Patricia Nell Warren’s The Front Runner. These benchmark novels attest to the fact that women can tell a sensitive yet powerful and emotional story from the POV of a gay man.
I devoured the Japanese novels Taiko by Eijo Yoshikawa and Cloud of Sparrows by Takashi Matsuoka (the English translation of course). Always looking for more like that.
However, my personal bravo goes to the manga/anime series Yami no Matsui by Yoki Matsushita, which was the magical wand that began my fiction writing. The dystopian world in Eternal Samurai was influenced by dozens of science-fiction novels but I feel it echoes the setting of the anime series Ai no Kusabi by Rieko Yoshihara. The use of the Japanese language and subsequent English meanings was influenced by the style of James Clavell’s Shogun. And I can’t resist a quick shout out to Buffy the Vampire Slayer for its sheer quirky, campy, bite-me enjoyment.
Elements of successful and popular M/M erotica stories showed me what worked. I am grateful for the success of so many of these books, especially those written by women. Finally, when I made the commitment to write a novel, I poured over Josh Lanyon’s Man Oh Man, Writing M/M Fiction for Kinks and Cash. Thank you Josh.
What is the most rewarding aspect of writing and/or publishing? The most terrifying/frustrating?
With writing, it is those rare moments when my Muse takes over. I am in an altered state, and the words just flow unimpeded from brain to keyboard. I usually emerge wondering where it all came from—but delighted with the results. Doesn’t happen very often. Mostly, writing is hard work but I am committed to creating something every day even if it isn’t what I can use.
As for publishing, the most rewarding is when a reader tells me they enjoyed my book. Not a rave review—although they’re incredibly affirming—but when someone lets me know my characters came to life, that the reader felt their emotions and couldn’t wait to find out what happens to them.
The most frustrating was almost getting accepted by three different traditional publishers. I said almost. Those high hopes were followed by some awful, I-have-no-business-writing-fiction lows. I received constructive feedback from two publishers that pointed out how my book does not fit the traditional M/M romance formula. However, the long periods between submittal and rejection showed me I did not have the luxury of time to wait for an acceptance by a publisher (I’m on the gracious side of middle age).
The most terrifying aspect is once I publish the book, it is no longer mine. It is now subject to others’ opinions.
What’s next for you?
Book Two. Although my books are not a series in the classical sense, the second novel Eternal Warrior, takes place in the same world. It is the love story between two men introduced in Eternal Samurai. I also have written a coming-out play in conjunction with a group that plans to stage our works for the GLBTQ community this summer.
I have several short M/M erotica stories for an anthology but want to include other writers. Still figuring out how to reach other authors who may wish to contribute. ***laughs*** My social-networking learning curve is barely above flatline.
Is there anything else you’d like us to know about you, your books, or writing?
Oh yes! There is a huge difference between writing non-fiction and fiction. During my career as a journalist, I won several press awards, none of which mean you-know-what in the fiction arena. Of course, fiction is more fun. But the most significant thing was I discovered that I am compelled to write fiction. The characters and stories demand to be told. I love the characters and dark world I have created, and plan on playing in it for as long as I am able.
What was your favorite thing about writing these characters?
Revealing the love between Arisada and Tatsu. These are not gentle characters; both are alpha males and oath-sworn enemies. I had to allow them to accept the love between them and yet not lose honor. Okay that might have been my favorite but the second was definitely the sex. Oh, I love writing the sex! Some readers may wonder how I, a bi-sexual woman—although I prefer the term genderqueer—could know what love and sex feels like for a gay man. But I have some amazing, loving, gay-male friends who not only shared with me how it feels to be in love, but were happy to demonstrate how it works. Or is that TMI?
What was the hardest part of writing this book?
Body counts. More dead guys at the end of a fight than live ones at the beginning. No, not really. The hardest thing is my compulsion to revise. A friend and fellow author says I suffer from OCED, obsessive compulsive editing disorder. Even after a professional editor proofed my book, I made revisions to the work. Later, when I corrected the errors in the first published edition, I still could not stop the compulsion to revise. I always feel my writing can improve, and I will never stop learning. It is the same with working with horses; you never stop learning about them.
What’s the coolest factoid that you discovered while doing research for this book?
One factoid that surprised me? Oh my gosh, where to start? Folklore about vampires in Japan did not exist until the late 1950s when Western vampire movies (based on classic 18th Century European folklore) introduced the mythology to Japan. Lucky for me and many of us, the Japanese have totally embraced the legend in so many creative ways including manga and anime.
What would your superpower be and why?
Oh to fly, no doubt. I have parasailed and flown a small aircraft and even bungee jumped (once in a moment of insanity) but it would be marvelous to soar through the clouds and view the entire panorama of the world below. Plus, with the cost of air fares these days, it would be handy since my family is scattered from England to New Zealand to South Africa.
40 years in a world which I cannot find a reflection of myself
Happy birthday, my friend. May your wishes come true for all of us. <3
3 – Twenty Five Things Tuesday: Where the Orchids Grow
Sometime before I die, I want to attend a Tori Amos concert with my daughter. It’s been a dream of mine since before I ever had her, and when it became clear that she loves Tori Amos, too, my dream only intensified. One day, we will sit in the audience together. Maybe we’ll hold hands. Maybe she’ll ignore that her mommy cries half of the show. Or maybe she’ll cry too.
Flipping Gender Changes Meaning — Examples
A question I get a lot is “Why m/m? Why do you write so many books with gay main characters?” I’ve got a lot of reasons behind that, some of them incredibly deep and involved, based in feminism and gay rights and freeing the mind. But let’s leave all that behind for now, and focus on how things change meaning when you change the sex/gender of any particular person within a certain expected dynamic.
I feel like the easiest way to illustrate this is with music, so let’s start there.
Everyone knows Adele’s song “Someone Like You”. What happens to the meaning and to your understanding of the song when a man sings it without changing any lyrics.
Jay Brannan also did a cover of Lana Del Rey’s “Video Games”. When he performed it live, he said, “My favorite thing about this song is knowing that by singing it I make you all picture me in a sundress.” I practically jumped up and down when he said that because it told me that he gets it and isn’t just covering it because he likes it, but that he sees a wider implication in his choices.
Another example might be Tori Amos covering “I’m Not In Love”. As she said in an interview, people grew up in the 1970s and 80s slow-danced to this song, not really listening to the lyrics. She covered it to point out how the meaning of it changes when it’s sung by a woman. What opinions do we have about a woman who sings, “I’m not in love, so don’t forget it. It’s just a silly phase I’m going through, and just because I call you up, don’t get me wrong, don’t think you’ve got it made. I’m not in love, no no, it’s because…I like to see you, but then again, that doesn’t mean you mean that much to me.” How do we feel about her compared to how we might feel about a man singing the same thing.
And then there is the more obvious commentary of “Real Men”.
For me, aside from just wanting to tell good stories with characters that I like, I enjoy the challenging nature of writing away from expectations and exploring how changing the sex, gender, sexuality of characters changes the consequences of certain behaviors within relationships. As I said, this is only the tip of the iceberg, but it’s a nice fat tip. Enjoy it. (Heh. See what I did there? LOL!)
Fanworks Friday: Recreating a Spaceship (Thanks, Digitalwave!)
Song of Late Spring and Roses
Writer Wednesday: Casey Cox & Finding King
What are your names? And tell us a little about yourselves?
Merrick: My name is Ged Merrick. I’m Captain of the Breaker-one-Niner. It’s a military class ship designed for deep space missions. And she’s fast, she is mighty fast when we need her to be.
Jessie: And sometimes we need her to be.
Merrick: Yeah, we don’t always work within the law.
Jessie: You can’t say it, can you? We’re pirates. We never work within the law.
Merrick: It’s a small crew, usually just ten men. It fluctuates. We work mostly in the Zeta Quadrant, but have been known to drift closer to the homelands from time to time. More lately, I guess, in the search for Jessie.
Jessie: You went back into homeland territory for me?
Merrick: Of course we did. I thought he might have been sold back to Rexalon for reconditioning. Oh, that’s our home planet. Where we were trained. Farmed really. They pay big money for runaways.
Jessie: I’m King Jesson. I used to be second in command on the Breaker but for the last six years—
Merrick: You don’t have to tell them about that Jessie.
Jessie: Sure I do. For the last six years I’ve been working as an erotic dancer all over Zeta and the surrounding quadrants. There was a … we got caught up in … some bad stuff and I was uh … captured. And sold. But that’s old news. Now I’m back with the Breaker.
What do you believe is your worst or most frustrating quality? What about his/hers?
Jessie: He’s stubborn, boneheaded and never thinks of himself.
Merrick: Uh, I was going to say the same about him.
What is your best quality? What about his/hers?
Jessie: He’s stubborn, boneheaded and never thinks of himself?
Merrick: Oi, cut it out. I said he was very bendy, didn’t I?
If you could have one wish come true, what would it be and why?
Merrick: I only had one wish, and that came true.
Jessie: He’s playing you. He wants a Helden 54 fighter platform with duel relay.
Merrick: You’re right I do. It’s the latest in military tech. Full cloaking, quantum generators and she can be remote piloted from five hundred clicks.
Jessie: I knew it. You bastard. I’ve only ever wanted Merrick.
Merrick: Except when you didn’t.
Jessie: Yeah, well. I was lying.
How did you meet? Was it love at first sight?
Jessie: It was for me. Merrick didn’t know I existed for a long while.
Merrick: I did. I just didn’t want you to know I had a thing.
Jessie: You had a thing for me? That’s too sweet for you Merrick, you didn’t have a thing.
Merrick: I was a kid, of course I was sweet. And who didn’t have a thing for that stupidly bendy body of yours?
Jessie: And I thought it was my eyes, and my charm that got you. We met in training. On Rexalon. Pair of kids being forced to make hard decisions. He blew my world. All that anger and compassion bleeding through his skin. Hot as hell. And I should know—I’ve been there. It was a precise military operation to get his attention.
Merrick: Don’t be daft.
Jessie: Took a lot of effort to hook him, but once I did—
Merrick: I basically didn’t stand a chance.
***
Casey, tell us a bit about yourself! From your back catalog, do you have a secret favorite? If so which book and why?
Ooh, that’s a difficult one. It’s got to be The Rise of Alec Caldwell series. I’m addicted to the characters’ lives and Alec never shuts up, he’s always up to something in my head and the muse is crazy about him. I can’t ever imagine a time when I won’t be writing about Alec and his adventures, even though the published version will end with Volume Four.
What is the most rewarding aspect of writing and/or publishing? The most terrifying/frustrating?
The best part is when a reader really gets the characters. I’m amazed at some of the reviews and emails I’ve had. It feels good to share a little bit of love and inspiration and to brighten someone’s world for just one day.
The most terrifying is the same with any creative venture, sharing a story is like sharing a little piece of yourself. That and the fact you always think people are going to hate it, and of course, sometimes they do.
What’s next for you?
Finding King is the first in a trilogy, so the next installment is on the drawing board. I have Alec Volume Four in progress and a couple of new WIP’s, a novel length paranormal fantasy, a psychological thriller and a couple of contemporary novella’s. I am also working on a sequel for Be My Boy.
2 – Twenty Five Things Tuesday: Paris in Spring
Hints at Books to Come: Southern Coming of Age in the ’90s
This year I am going to have the final draft completed for a book that has been near and dear to my heart for a number of years now. These are your hints.






And you’ve got the book I’ve called BTP but will make it out to readers under a different name sometime this year.
Let’s Talk About All the Ways This Is Offensive
1. Whore.
2. Male figure saying, “Calm Down.” This basically says that whatever the woman has just said or done is a result of hysteria or overemotionalism and thus invalidates it.
3. Overriding the woman’s self-definition with one the man proclaims more appropriate. And a demeaning one at that. Determining that the male way of doing something is the only ‘right’ way.
4. The Fake Geek Girl thing is utter bullshit.
As I said to the man who posted this:
It isn’t funny for a male figure to a) call a woman a whore, b) determine that a woman cannot define herself appropriately because his ability to define her supersedes her own, c) demean a woman’s self from the status of an intelligent human being (nerd) to a whore on the basis of, what? How she looks?
When I see something like this tossed up casually as “too funny”, I realize that we have so far to go. Then again, all I have to do is turn on the news, walk out of my house, and exist in this world as a woman to have that proved time and again.
Luck!
Fanworks Friday: Meta from Ladyw1nter, Incorporates Film Theory
LadyW1inter has posted a fantastic meta piece exploring why one particular character/story interpretation can, in her opinion, be backed up by meta analysis of the filming choices made during certain key scenes.
Warning! Spoilers for the finale of season two of Teen Wolf! READ IT HERE!
Check out her commentary here. Whether or not you agree with her, it’s clear that fans give a lot more thought to every single piece of the media they consume and use it to draw conclusions about the characters and the show itself.
It’s Spring! It’s Finally Spring!
Writer Wednesday: Rebound with Sabrina York
Welcome Kristi and Cam. Can you tell us a little about yourselves?
KRISTI: I’m Kristi Cross and this is Cam Jackson.
CAM: I’m a computer programmer—
K: A computer genius.
C: You just say that because you have yet to figure out how to work Facebook.
K: Shut up.
C: Seriously. I have to stop by her store once a week or so just to unscramble everything she’s enabled on her phone.
K: I’m technologically challenged. So sue me.
What kind of store do you have?
K: A book and coffee.
C: She loves books.
K: And coffee.
C: And the coffee grinder is the old fashioned kind.
K: Because, did I mention? Technologically challenged?
C: Best coffee in Seattle, though. And that’s saying a lot.
Seattle? Have you always lived there?
C: Oh yeah. We both went to the University of Washington.
K: Loved it.
Was that how you met?
C: Yep. There was a group of us living on the 7th floor of McCarty Hall.
K: Called ourselves the “Dawgs.”
C: We’re still friends with our dorm-mates. We all share a vacation house on Tryst Island.
THEY SHARE A STEAMY GLANCE.
Tryst Island? I don’t think I’ve ever heard of it.
C: It’s our nickname for it.
K: Short for Trystacomseh Island. It’s in the San Juans.
Oh, it’s beautiful there.
C: It is.
THE GLANCE HEATS UP EVEN MORE.
Ahem. So. Was it love at first sight?
KRISTI LAUGHS. Probably.
CAM QUIRKS A BROW. Only probably?
K: We met during the playoffs…I doubt he even noticed I was a female.
CAM, UNDER HIS BREATH: Oh, I noticed.
The…playoffs?
C: Our group gathered every weekend in the Fall in the lounge on our floor to watch football.
K: Mostly yell at the screen.
C: Only when the Dawgs were losing. Anyway, one Saturday, I turned around and there she was. HE CHUCKLES. Wearing her pajamas.
KRISTI WRINKLES HER NOSE. It was a nightshirt. The only thing I had with a Husky logo.
C: She was adorable.
KRISTI SMACKS HIM ON THE SHOULDER. Why didn’t you make a move then?
C: Hello. You had a boyfriend.
KRISTI GLOWERS AT THE INTERVIEWER. We wasted so much time. We both had crushes on each other.
C: And you had a boyfriend.
SHE SNORTS. You had a girlfriend. Always. Anyway, we both had these ridiculous crushes.
C: And both pretended we were just friends.
What changed?
K: We played a game of Hearts.
A game of Hearts?
CAM GRINS. Tell her what we played for.
KRISTI BLUSHES. You tell her. It was your idea.
C: A kiss. It was genius on my part, really. See, if she lost, she had to kiss me. If I lost, I had to kiss her.
K: He lost.
CAM WAGGLES A BROW. Either way, I won. Like I said. Genius.
KRISTI NODS. I did mention he was a genius.
C: An evil genius. And you liked the kiss.
SHE BLUSHES. I did.
SO Kristi, what is your worst quality?
KRISTI MAKES A FACE: I wish I was skinnier.
C: What? Are you crazy? You’re perfect. HE TUGS HER CLOSER AND NIBBLES ON HER NECK.
K: I should lose weight. Maybe I should go on a diet.
CAM’S EXPRESSION DARKENS. Don’t even joke about it. I love everything about you. Just as you are.
A MISCHEVIOUS EXPRESSION FLITS OVER KRISTI’S FACE. Everything?
C: Everything.
K: Even my…frisky side?
C: Especially that.
K: Then when are you going to let me try that…thing Holt mentioned?
A TELLING FLUSH CREEPS UP CAM’S NECK. I have no idea what you’re talking about.
K: Don’t you? SHE LEANS OVER AND WHISPERS SOMETHING IN HIS EAR. HIS FACE GOES BEET RED.
CAM, TO THE INTERVIEWER: Can we change the subject?
This seems interesting…
CAM: Please?
HE IS JUST TOO ADORABLE WHEN HE BEGS, SO THE INTERVIEWER RELENTS. Alright. Kristi, what is Cam’s worst quality?
KRISTI LAUGHS. Other than the fact that he cheats at Hearts?
CAM PUTS OUT A LIP. Only to lose. Only for a kiss.
KRISTI CUPS HIS CHEEK. I was kidding, darling. I love that you tricked me into kissing you. And I loved everything that happened after that. Mostly, I love that we found each other.
HE GAZES INTO HER EYES. Me too.
So, if you could have one wish come true, what would it be and why?
KRISTI (STILL MOONING AT CAM): It already has.
C: Undoubtedly.
KRISTI SIGHS. But honestly? If I could have one other wish come true, I would wish my sister Bella could find what we’ve found.
CAM WRAPS HIS ARM AROUND HER SHOULDER. She will. When the time is right. You’ll see.
K: I hope so. She deserves…this.
CAM KISSES KRISTI. FOR A LONG TIME. WHEN HE FINALLY PULLS AWAY, HE MURMURS SOFTLY, Everyone deserves this. Everyone.
***
Welcome Sabrina! Tell us a little about yourself!
I am excited to announce that I am celebrating my one year anniversary as a published author. In this year I’ve sold more than fifteen titles and garnered some pretty awesome reviews. It’s been an exciting journey.
I wanted to do something special to celebrate, and I decided a self published series was a great way to do that. I wrote Rebound, the first book in my new Tryst Island Series, and enrolled it in Amazon’s Kindle Prime program, because I wanted to be able to give it away for free once in a while. My next free days will be sometime the first week in May to celebrate my first visit to the RT convention!
What makes your current offering a different and compelling read?
The cool thing about the Tryst Island Series is that it’s about a group of friends. So you meet the same characters over and over again. I worked very hard to make these characters people you would want to hang out with. They’re funny and smart and sexy—and undyingly loyal to each other.
It must have worked. People are already clamoring for Bella’s story. I’ve been scolded for not writing faster.
What keeps you inspired?
For this series? Yeah. Just look at the photo.
What is the most rewarding aspect of writing and/or publishing? The most terrifying/frustrating?
The most rewarding aspect is hearing from readers who love my books. Oh, that never gets old. And the authors I have met? What a wonderful group of ladies. It’s pretty amazing when someone you worship loves your books too! Best selling erotic author Desiree Holt had this to say about Rebound: “You can’t go wrong with a Sabrina York story. You’ll want to take the hero home with you and keep him forever. And the sex? More than you ever dreamed. Get this book today.”
I know! Right?
*Fans self*
Self publishing was pretty terrifying. Because I had to edit the book, format it and upload it. Fortunately I had a great team to support me.
And wouldn’t you know? Now that I have it all figured out, it’s not scary at all!
What’s next for you?
Dragonfly Kisses (Cassie and Dylan’s Story) is Book 2, and Bella and Holt’s story is the third. And did I mention, there are ten stories in the series? Strap in. It’s gunna be a wild ride.
A Tryst Island Erotic Romance
Kristi Cross has had the hots for her friend, Cameron Jackson as long as she can remember, but she knows she’s not his type. She’s nothing like the women he dates. So when he suggests they play for a kiss over a game of Hearts, Kristi can’t resist. Even if she loses, she wins. Because she’s finally going to taste him.
Of course, one kiss can quickly become something altogether steamier, especially when both parties are on the rebound…
Fall in Love on Tryst Island
When a group of friends share a vacation house, wild hijinks, unexpected hook-ups and steamy sex ensue. And true love. Did I mention they all find true love? Visit www.sabrinayork.com for more details.
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About Sabrina York
Sabrina is an award winning author of erotic romance with nearly a dozen titles available, ranging from sweet & sexy erotic romance to BDSM to erotic horror. Connect with her on twitter @sabrina_york or Facebook.
Check out Sabrina’s books and read an excerpt on er webpage (www.sabrinayork.com) or explore on Amazon or at Ellora’s Cave.
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Other Books by Sabrina York
Adam’s Obsession (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
Dark Fancy (Erotic Regency, Ellora’s Cave)
Extreme Couponing (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
Five Alarm Fire (Erotic Contemporary for the High Octane Heroes Anthology, Cleis Press)—coming soon
Folly (Erotic Regency, Ellora’s Cave)
Lust Eternal (Erotic Fantasy, Ellora’s Cave) —coming soon
Pushing Her Buttons (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
Making Over Maris (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave) —coming soon
Man Hungry (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
Rebound: A Tryst Island Erotic Romance (Erotic Contemporary, Available on Amazon)
Rising Green (Erotic Horror, Ellora’s Cave)
Saving Charlotte (Erotic Contemporary for the Smokin’ Hot Firemen Anthology, Cleis Press)
Training Tess (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
Trickery (Erotic Contemporary with Magical Elements, Ellora’s Cave Hex Line)
Tristan’s Temptation (Erotic Contemporary, Ellora’s Cave)
1 – Twenty-Five Things Tuesday: Become A Woman
Before I die, I’d like to see my daughter grow up to be as authentic a person as she can possibly become. I want to see her grow into her body and her spirit, which as always been so large. I want to be present as she her grows into her warm, sensitive, beautiful heart. I want to see her adult smile, her womanly strength, her rounded edges, her beauty in whatever form it takes. I want to learn from her as she learns from the world. I want to be the student to her teacher as she matures into someone I had no idea would even exist when she started out in my womb. I want to witness the end result of her genes, her upbringing, and her own special nature. If there is one thing in this world that I want to the exclusion of all others, this would be it.
Before I die, I want to see my daughter become a woman.
Goodreads Rating System – Stars In Confusion
So, I made a post last week about some things I don’t get, some more controversial than others. Today I’m going to post about something I think every author and reader can agree on “not getting”. The Goodreads rating system.
For example, in what world does two stars equal “it was okay”? Do you look at a two star rating on a book and think the person liked the book? Heck no. You think, “Wow, they didn’t like this book, but it wasn’t the worst thing they’ve ever read in their life either.” But apparently in Goodreads world, two stars means “it was okay”. I don’t understand.

In my mental star system (where Jean-Luc Picard reigns in naked glory like the time when the Borg kidnapped him), it works more like this:
One star = Loathed this book and think it sucks like a massive black star of suck.
Two stars = This book was pretty bad, but I’ve read worse.
Three stars = The book was incredibly mediocre but the author could spell and use commas, even though it was dull and I almost didn’t finish it.
Four stars = Yay, I liked it!
Five stars = Yay, I liked it a hell of a lot!
So, here’s my question–when you rate at Goodreads do you use their star system or your own mental star system? And does your star system more closely resemble mine or Goodreads’?
Also, what about rounding up? If you feel like the book was really 1.5 stars, do you give it the benefit of the doubt and round it up? Or do you stick it with the lower number because you’d hate to mislead people?
Another thing I’ve noticed about Goodreads–some people give stars based only only literary merit and not how much they enjoyed the book. I got a few emails from a friend proclaiming that she was crazy about a book featuring gay football players in love, couldn’t stop thinking about it, spent the whole day at work wishing she was home and could read the book. When it was over I got a text reporting that she was sad the book was done and the ending had been just what she wanted. Yet, on Goodreads, she gave the book only three stars. When I asked her why, she said, that it was a great read and she’d loved it a lot, but it was no Deathless or Fortress of Solitude.
This was fascinating to me because I always like to give stars based on the books effectiveness in its genre. If it’s erotica, did it engage me and get me titillated? If it’s romance, did I fall in love too? If it’s literature, was I impressed by the words and the craftsmanship? If it’s fantasy, how was the world building? If it’s self-help, was it actually, you know, helpful? If it’s a children’s book, will actual small children enjoy it? If it’s a spy novel, was it exciting and did I guess the end before it was over? If it was historical fiction, was it well researched?

It had seemed to me, from the outside in, that the gay football players in love novel had been a total five stars for her in terms of it being a book that did what it was written to do. But she rated on how it worked as literature, not how she reacted to the book in the context of what it was designed for. And that’s her prerogative and one of the things that makes Goodreads a confusing mire when it comes to interpreting the ratings given to a book.
What are your thoughts on the Goodreads rating system? How do you use it?
ETA: I wrote this post a month ago or more, and I honestly have no idea what Jean Luc Picard has to do with any of it. Just…you know…go with it.
Fanworks Friday: White Blank Page
by Suzvoy
Originally found here. It’s pretty great. Oh, ATWT, you were such an asshole to your loyal fans in the end.





























