Showing posts with label M/M romance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label M/M romance. Show all posts

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Is That a Trick Question? by EJ Russel

Thank you, Genre-istas for inviting me back to Romancing the Genres today. The last time I was here (April 2016), I had published two books (one M/M and one M/F), with the release of my third (also M/M) looming the following month.

Now, if we don’t double-count re-releases or include omnibus editions, I’ve got twenty-five published titles under my belt. And you know what? That first M/F book remains the only M/F romance in my entire backlist. My primary couples (with one exception in a currently out of print novella) are cis men, although their sexual orientations run the gamut from pansexual through asexual.

https://ejr.pub/duking-it-out-amz
When Judith suggested “why I write M/M romance” as a potential topic, my knee-jerk answer was “because that’s what was contracted.” Beginning with my third book, I wrote for a publisher that specialized in queer fiction, and for another that only published M/M romance.

But that’s not the only reason. 

I came of age smack in the middle of the second wave of modern feminism--the first issue of Ms. magazine was published two years before I graduated from high school. I’m an introvert who had always been a high achiever in school (sneeringly referred to as “a brain”), and as I hit puberty and entered the scary world of non-platonic relationships, I began to get seriously irritated by the way boys were defined by their success and accomplishments while girls were defined by their looks or their domestic function.

It wasn’t fair, dammit.

Although this implicit gender bias isn’t as pronounced as it was back then—barely a decade past the 50s—it’s still with us today, and any female character you put on the page has an automatic disadvantage because of it. At this stage in our societal evolution, that power imbalance cannot be overcome. It’s baked into all our systems, reinforced by tradition, the media, politics, and interpersonal baggage. When I first began writing romance, I struggled with this dichotomy. I mean, a kick-ass heroine can only kick ass so far—because a hero who allows his ass to be so kicked apparently isn’t “heroic.”

On the other hand, two male characters, while they might have other personal and relationship issues to confront, at least start out on a level playing field with regard to gender expectations. Their relative social power, as a function of their genital configuration at birth, is the same. I found that writing about two men falling in love, besides being fun, was much better for my blood pressure!
https://ejr.pub/silent-sin-amz

But that’s not the only reason either.

My best friend in high school was gay. He came out to me in 1975—and mind you, consensual intercourse between men was still a felony in California at that time, so I was constantly concerned for his safety and well-being. I’ve had countless queer friends over the years. My twin sons are both gay. All of them—not just my family or personal acquaintances, but the whole glittering spectrum of gender identity and sexual orientation in the LGBTQIA+ community—deserve stories that are just as happy, just as funny, just as charming, ridiculous, heart-warming, uplifting, and romantic-AF as any cis heterosexual couple. It’s only fair, dammit.

In my books, everybody is out. LGBTQ+ relationships are first-class relationships like any other—and characters who don’t subscribe to that view are quite obviously Wrong with a capital W. 

I write romantic comedy—both contemporary and paranormal. I write supernatural romantic suspense. I write historical romance. But as far as the question about why I write M/M romance? Yes, I want to write it--I love writing it as much as I love reading it. It makes me happy to tell stories about LGBTQ+ folks finding their soul mates. But when it comes right down to it, the real question is…

Why not?

Multi-Rainbow Award winner E.J. Russell—grace, mother of three, recovering actor—holds a BA and an MFA in theater, so naturally she’s spent the last three decades as a financial manager, database designer, and business intelligence consultant (as one does). She’s recently abandoned data wrangling, however, and spends her days wrestling words.

E.J. lives in rural Oregon, enjoys visits from her wonderful adult children, and indulges in good books, red wine, and the occasional hyperbole.

Find E.J. here:

Facebook group (Reality Optional): https://www.facebook.com/groups/reality.optional

E.J.’s latest release is a tale of the Tokyo Olympics that-might-have-been.
It’ll take more than medals to mend their relationship.
https://ejr.pub/thomas-flair-amz
Diabetic gymnast and team alternate Sol Ashvili had one thing on his agenda when the 2016 Rio Olympics wrapped up—confess to his teammate and best friend Tony Thomas that he’d been in love with him for years. But Tony took a major deduction in Sol’s heart when he jetted out of Rio and turned his back on an almost-finished college degree, international gymnastics meets… and Sol. The first two Sol could forgive—barely. The last? Not a chance.
Tony’s crowd-pleasing, no-holds-barred, high-octane gymnastics style stole its nickname from a legendary gymnastics move—the Thomas Flair. After the 2016 Games, he vaulted into a career as an internet celebrity, specializing in extreme sports and risky stunts. When Tony decides to battle his way into competition shape to earn a spot on the 2020 Olympic team, he has to survive the most extreme risk of all: facing Sol again.

For the sake of the team and the reputation of US men’s gymnastics, Sol and Tony must leave the past behind and get a grip on working together. And as the Games draw closer, they realize that being more than teammates might be the only way they can truly fly high and stick the landing.
The Thomas Flair is available at Amazon on Kindle Unlimited.



Saturday, April 30, 2016

BEST DAMN JOB IN THE WORLD By Laura Baumbach

I've been writing m/m erotic romance professionally for 16 years. I've seen a lot of changes in the romance community and publishing industry over that time. Most have been for the better; some were a long time coming, and others were not so good.  
My name is Laura Baumbach. I'm a life-long reader, a published romance author for sixteen years, and a publisher celebrating a successful decade in the romance business. 
At one point, my writing was published by six different romance epublishers with many of the titles put out in print from them as well. I've enjoyed a varied and exciting career that eventually led me to start my press, ManLove RomancePress aka MLR Press. We publish over 120 authors and have an editing staff of over thirty people, formatting department, social networking director, and a roster of talented artists for cover art.

It wasn't easy getting to the place I am today.  Fifteen years ago I started out fighting to break down of barriers that prevented m/m erotic romance from being even considered a part of the romance community. In the early days, I and others like me fought for equality within the community especially where contests and reviews were concerned.
We joined RWA, participated in the community, attended conferences – where we weren't always welcome, working from within to achieve real change. We paid the price of everything from public humiliation to personal snubbing. But we continued our labors.
Our hard-won success is measured by how accepted m/m erotic romance is today. How easily the newer writers to this category of romance take for granted that reviews are theirs for the asking, that entrance and winning of romance chapter writing contests, or entry into the RITAS, like their counterparts in heterosexual romance, is their expected right. They neither know nor care that those things were not available to others in this field a decade ago. They reap the fruits of previous m/m authors labors and pain without knowledge of the cost.
It's the way of the world. The new rarely appreciate the old.
But now it is time for the new to help carry the torch for m/m romance. To continue to assure equality and acceptance for their category of romance as a community united. Or to pick that torch up when it gets dropped. When discord and bickering split a community into fractions.

Let us never lose sight of the goal of every romance author writing commercial fiction for their readers. We write about love, romance, and happily-ever-afters. We need to bring that rush of effervescent emotion to our readers, to brighten their world for a few hours, and to give them characters to take to their dreams at night.

I like to think we are here to spread a little magic into the world. And if we, as m/m romance authors, manage to make a positive impact on increasing acceptance and tolerance of one another (no matter what letter of the alphabet represents our true selves) in the process, then I'm pretty sure I have the best damn job in the world.  ~ Laura


BIO: Laura Baumbach, Author, Owner/Publisher -- Laura is a graduate of Santa Ana College, Santa Ana, CA with a degree in Nursing. For thirty-four years she specialized in critical care and emergency trauma nursing. Now retired, Laura devotes herself full time to publishing and writing. She honed her business and people management skills as a hospital department head and supervisor which she puts to good use in the publishing industry. MLR Press was founded in January of 2007.

Laura is also a Romancing the Genres Alumnus. We are honored to have her back as a guest.

Saturday, April 2, 2016

BLINKERED by E.J. Russell

E.J. Russell — certified geek, mother of three, recovering actor — lives in rural Oregon with her curmudgeonly husband. She enjoys visits from her wonderful adult children, and indulges in good books, red wine, and the occasional hyperbole.

NORTHERN LIGHT

Nothing blinds us like the filter of our own experience.

In the late 1970s, I was the assistant manager at a bookstore (we still had bookstores then). At a store party one night, one of the sales clerks (a man, who was making a serious attempt to hit on me) asked whether it bothered me to supervise men.

I was speechless—it had never occurred to me that it was an issue. I mean, the modern feminist movement had existed for more than ten years! (Yes, I was that oblivious, imagining that the battle had been won because from my perspective, I saw myself as his equal.)

Needless to say, attempt at seduction was unsuccessful.

Fast forward to 2010, when, after discovering the joys of reading romance thanks to my first e-reader and a romance bundle that included both Suzanne Brockmann and Jennifer Crusie, I was hard at work plotting a romance series of my own. In the spirit of “write what you know”, my books were set in a summer theater in the Berkshires (I have two theater degrees, and met my Curmudgeonly Husband while we were both working at a summer theater in Vermont).

Six books, I thought, with the first between an administrator and an actor; the second between an acting teacher and the company housekeeper; the third between the set designer and his stage manager husband; the fourth—

Stop. Right. There.

 Because my experience had been diverse in terms of the romantic relationships in the theater community, when I was planning the series, it made sense that at least a couple of the books should be about two men. It was normal for me, normal for the milieu, a reasonable expectation. Right?

In terms of the larger publishing industry, not so much.

When I attended the spring conference given by my local chapter of RWA, Rose City Romance Writers, in 2011, the editors and agents who attended were universal in their disinterest in A) a romance between two men and B) a series that included both M/F and M/M pairings. One editor, from Harlequin, said that Carina might be the only publisher who’d be willing to look at something so outré. I mean, Suzanne Brockmann had done it inside a big publishing house, but she was a big name, with a wildly popular series, and consequently an exception.

At this time, I had no idea that the LGBTQIA romance community existed. (Experience blindness strikes again!)  It wasn’t until a presentation at an RCRW meeting, when then-chaptermate Cathryn Cade mentioned Josh Lanyon, that I had any clue that a thriving M/M romance market was out there, and that my notion of writing a happily-ever-after love story between two men wasn’t a lonely unicorn.

LOST IN GEEKLANDIA
Thanks to that presentation, I found a wealth of books like the stories I wanted to tell. I also discovered that if you look in the right places, you can find houses interested in publishing those stories. My first official sale was to Entangled—Northern Light, a M/M ghost story submitted in response to a Halloween novella submission call.

Entangled publishes primarily M/F romances, and for at least a year, Northern Light was one of only two books in their impressive catalog in which the central love story was between two men. My second book with Entangled, Lost in Geeklandia, the first in my Geeklandia series, is a M/F rom-com. But the second in the series, Stumptown Spirits (a M/M romance), just sold to Riptide, the same publisher who contracted my M/M Legend Tripping series (which makes me deliriously happy, by the way).

So, just as I imagined with my summer theater stories, I’ll have a series with both M/F and M/M pairings, although they’ll be released by different publishers (one who publishes predominantly straight romance, one who only handles queer fiction). From the perspective of readers looking for a particular type of book, this makes sense—and as an author who wants my books to be discoverable to readers who might be interested, ditto.

E.J. RUSSELL
But for me as a person, as an avid romance reader, as the mother of gay sons, and with many friends in the LGBTQIA communities, I hope that someday, within the little universe of a romance series, it won’t matter whether the primary relationship is between a cisgendered man and woman, or some other pairing. That someday, all readers will be open to—and be able to find—happily-ever-afters for any combination of people in love.

Call me naive, clueless, or hopelessly optimistic.

Although it could be that our experience blinkers simply need an adjustment. ~ E.J.

I hope you'll check out the blurb below for my upcoming novel set in Portland, Oregon!

STUMPTOWN SPIRITS, coming from Riptide Publishing, May 16, 2016

What price would you pay to rescue a friend from hell?

STUMPTOWN SPIRITS
For Logan Conner, the answer is almost anything. Guilt-ridden over trapping his college roommate in a ghost war rooted in Portland’s pioneer past, Logan has spent years searching for a solution. Then his new boyfriend, folklorist Riley Morrel, inadvertently gives him the key. Determined to pay his debt—and keep Riley safe—Logan abandons Riley and returns to Portland, prepared to give up his freedom and his future to make things right.

Crushed by Logan’s betrayal, Riley drops out of school and takes a job on a lackluster paranormal investigation show. When the crew arrives in Portland to film an episode about a local legend of feuding ghosts, he stumbles across Logan working at a local bar, and learns the truth about Logan’s plan.

Their destinies once more intertwined, the two men attempt to reforge their relationship while dodging a narcissistic TV personality, a craven ex-ghost, and a curmudgeonly bar owner with a hidden agenda. But Logan’s date with destiny is looming, and his life might not be the only one at stake.

Find E.J. on her website, http://ejrussell.com, on Twitter @EJ_Russell, or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/E.J.Russell.author 

Saturday, January 3, 2015

Debut: MR RUMPLE AND MR. GRIMM by Echo Ishii

MR. RUMPEL & MR. GRIMM
by Echo Ishii
Hi, I'm Echo Ishii, author of romance with fantasy, SF, speculative and any other weird elements that I can think of. 

Mr. Rumpel and Mr. Grimm started because of the title. That's it. I had no idea what it would be about, but I made up mock covers and fake blurbs.

During my lunch break, I wrote in a notebook to cope with a job I hated. These stories will never see the light of day. There was an epic fantasy saga featuring psychic twin bird people; an urban fantasy with a sorceress who worked night shift at Piggly Wiggly; and a high fantasy that had something to do with elves and a haunted house. Concepts like character arc and story structure had no place in those early stories. Needless to say, they were not destined for greatness.

The common theme (other than crappiness) was fantastical worlds, magic, and magical creatures. I love to read mythology and folklore. I love to walk around a library and pick out books on history, culture, and anthropology at random. All these things fed my imagination.

I've read a fair amount of fanfic over the years, which uses male-male pairings and I was familiar with the manga use of male-male pairings as a narrative convention. (This is different than gay romance with a different history and audience). I decided Mr. Rumpel and Mr. Grimm should be a romance.

There's a lot of talk about why so many women write and read M/M Romance. I can't tell you why because all people are different. I can say that I found an encouraging community of fellow writers. I can say that I write what pops into my head.

After a lot of workshops, editing, and generous help from fellow writers, I finally completed my novella. It also took many rejections, but Less Than Three Press (http://www.lessthanthreepress.com/) saw something in it so it became my debut.

I now have another great title that I can't let go of. So, for me, it's back to writing.

BLURB:

Claude Rumpel is a goblin turned human, living a quiet life in his little repair shop at the edge of town. He is in sore need of money to fund his inventions, and a cure for his hands, which he must keep covered at all times.

Daniel Grimm is half elf, descended from a wealthy family but now down on his luck. He is determined to restore his family's prestige and has a daring plan to do so.

The gold thread that Claude spins, and Daniel's ability to sell it, seems a perfect plan for their goals. The casual sex is a pleasant bonus. But they are constantly thwarted from all sides: Daniel's dealing with a powerful witch, the opposing magic of their lineages, and Claude's dark goblin desires... (Contains some explicit material.)

  
Join Echo on Pinterest (@mrsbookmark) and she will gladly follow anyone who pins about steampunk/deiselpunk clothes, desserts, and Alice in Wonderland or Wizard of Oz paraphernalia.

Or hang out with Echo Ishii on Goodreads because she's there a lot. There is also a blog (http://echoishiizone.wordpress.com) and Twitter (@mrsbookmark)

Her alter/ego RK contributes to the wonderful Smart Girls Love Sci Fi blog (http://smartgirlsscifi.wordpress.com/
and the Sci-Fi Romance Quarterly

Saturday, June 14, 2014

Unique Victorian Professions

by Kate Rothwell

I’ve been thinking about heroes and professions lately. Since most of my books are historical, I’ve done some research found plenty of jobs that sound exotic to a modern audience.

Of course, once some of the professions are described, they might not strike you as…romantic.

Victorian rat catcher.
Except don’t reject them out of hand. I wrote an article for Heroes and Heartbreakers about strange professions for romance heroes and I pointed out that if Judith Ivory can make a rat-catcher (Mick in The Proposition) one of the best romance heroes ever, why not try for something different?  Here’s a partial list: 

The canals, for a brief time a busy, vital part of Victorian life, spawned professions that vanished with the age. On the canal you’d find a…..

Hobbler--A person who was employed to tow a boat on the rivers or canals or who worked the locks.
Horse Marine--Man-handled barges on canals when horses could not be used.
Narrow boatmen--these boats became rare after 1840 when the railroads began to cut into canal trade. 

Men stopped working alone. Families that had been living ashore moved onto the boats. (They might not have made as much money but they did better than factory workers.) Those narrow boats grew wider, I guess!

Other jobs:
Lamplighter
Lamplighter --A hero in my latest as-yet-unpublished novella was a lamplighter. My guy was a switch man versus the lighter who dealt with fishtail lamps. I’m not exactly sure what that means, other than the fact that he didn’t have to climb a ladder every day and his lighter pole had a simple hook on the end. I assume it’s a matter of having to trim a wick and strike a flint to make a flame versus simply turning the gas-lamp on.
Accipitrary--falconer
Swan Upper--these people still exist, although it’s not precisely a profession. They do an annual census and count swans for the queen (according to tradition, she owns all the mute swans on the Thames). Nancy Butler had a fabulous bird-tending hero in The Keeper of the Swans, a book from 1998.
Aeronaut--A balloonist or a trapeze artist in the circus or music halls. Fairly easy to figure out but I included it because it sounds intriguing!
Bang-beggar--An officer of the parish who controlled any stranger’s length of stay in a parish. Basically a cant name for a constable. Though the job is listed in the 1891 census, these guys are associated with earlier times.
Chair-Bodger--traveling chair repairman
Gauger--A customs official who measured the capacity of imported barrels of liquor to calculate the customs duty.
Knockknobbler--A dog catcher.
Wabster--a weaver. The hero of Mary Webb’s book Precious Bane, Kester Woodseaves, is a weaver and that’s definitely a romance!
Whacker--A horse or oxen team driver.
Yatman--A gate keeper.
Toshers at work.
Tosher--as the Smithsonian magazine said, possibly the worst job ever. http://www.smithsonianmag.com/ist/?next=/history/quite-likely-the-worst-job-ever-319843/ These were the sewer hunters. They fished for treasure in London’s most disgusting sludge.

In case you’re curious, I got these ideas from a great book from 1940 called Ghosts of London by H.V. Morton and from the 1891 census http://www.census1891.com/occupations-a.htm , a collection of the occupations or job descriptions of the people living in London in the 1890's.

~*~

Kate Rothwell is an award-winning author who also publishes under the name Summer Devon. She writes romances of all sorts, but her favorite genre is Victorian-set romance. The heroes in her historicals include two New York City cops, an ex-Pinkerton man, a newspaper publisher, and a lamplighter--as well a few of the more usual gentlemen and aristocrats. With Bonnie Dee she’s created a psychic, a spy, a detective, a diplomat, a carnival owner, a bailiff, and several ne’er-do-wells.

Kate is published with Kensington, Simon and Schuster, Samhain, Ellora's Cave, Total-e-bound, Liquid Silver, Loose Id, Carina and on her own.

Kate's latest book, The Gentleman's Madness is available now from Samhain Publishing.

An imprisoned heart finds escape in forbidden love. 

No pride. No privacy. No hope.

Academic John Gilliam thought being caught embracing another man was the worst that could happen. Until he agrees to "treatment" at an asylum, where a vicious attack leaves him shaken and afraid.

But having all means of writing or reading taken from him... That is a serious threat to his sanity. Then a moment of kindness from an asylum attendant begins to restore his dignity.

Sam Tully feels sorry for the patient everyone calls "the professor", but with a back injury that cost him his job on the docks--and without the education that would have bettered his position--he tries to keep his head down, and a tight lid on his attraction to men.

As John prays for freedom, he grows closer to the gentle, innately intelligent Tully. In spite of themselves, forbidden attraction leads to touches, kisses, and more. But there's something other than curative treatments going on at the asylum. When John and Tully uncover a heinous conspiracy, their very lives are in danger.

Warning: Contains heinous crimes and frightening treatments--oh, and some sweet and loving sexy times between two healthy, not-crazy men.

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