Irresistible Release Day!

Strike up the band and fire up the roman candles because Irresistible release day is here!

via GIPHY

That means you can get your very own copy at any of the big retailers.

Or, most definitely, you can order it at your favorite independent bookstore. Here are the particulars:

Brandon thinks he’s won at life when he hooks a guy so gorgeous he parts crowds walking down the street. But he and Cal will have to overcome a jealous BFF, Romanian mobsters, hermit widowers, and a dictatorship on the brink of revolution. Their dream wedding in the Greek isles turns into a madcap odyssey in this modern, gay salute to Chariton’s Callirhoe, the oldest extant romance novel in the world.

ISBN:  978-1-949340-40-2

Publisher: NineStar Press

Date: August 13, 2018

All this month, I’ll be sharing behind-the-scenes info about the book. For today, I thought I’d talk about how the story came to be in answer to a likely question: Why’d you write a contemporary romance? I thought you peddled in fantasy and ancient world mythological style stories?

So yes, it’s true, Irresistible is the first modern romantic comedy most readers have seen from me. I’ve published some modern, realistic short fiction, but anything on the romance side has been experimental and unfinished, and only shared with a few writing buddies.

The idea for writing Irresistible actually emerged from research I was doing for The Lost Histories series (The City of Seven Gods). I was looking for translated religious texts and other writings from the classical age to hone my ear for the way people from the ancient world talked about their lives. I knew about plays and histories and epic poetry, but I was surprised to discover the novel form has its origins in the Roman era.

On reflection, that certainly stands to reason since the French word for novel is roman. My Western Civ and English lit from college is a fairly distant past of its own, and I thought the invention of the novel was typically attributed to the Medieval age with works by Chaucer and Norse sagas and Beowulf and all that. Already, I digress.

I learned about a number of first-century novels, and my curiosity was immediately drawn to Callirhoe by Chariton of Aphrodisias. Callirhoe is acknowledged by scholars as the oldest, extant romance novel in the world, and I could digress again about the technical distinctions concerning “romance” in the study of literature, but I don’t really have to because Callirhoe can be easily categorized as a romance by scholars and lay-readers alike. The excavation of the text had to have inspired the same jaw-dropping reaction that struck archeologists who discovered the buried city of Knossos with its uncannily modern-looking artwork. The story has the strident themes of a Harlequin romance — true love at first sight, star-crossed lovers, a hero risking life and limb to refind his beloved — while also having many of the nutty conventions of a soap opera. Unlike the epic poems, no gods figure in to manipulate the fates of the characters nor do any mythical creatures. It’s a story about real life people, fictionalized of course, but portraying their everyday grapples in a much more straight-forward manner than say Homer’s Iliad or Virgil’s The Aeneid. I’ll give you the quick summary.

Callirhoe is the daughter of the ruler of Syracuse, and a renowned beauty beset by many suitors. But when she passes by a handsome, young nobleman Chaereas, the two immediately fall in love and quickly make plans to marry, pretty much on sight. Her jealous suitors try to sabotage the wedding by breaking into her home and making it look like she threw an orgy when Chaereas was away. Chaereas is indeed incensed by their trick, and he kicks Callirhoe in the stomach, knocking her into a coma while her fiancé and everyone else believes she’s dead.

Devestated, Chaereas presides over her funeral, but before she’s buried, a band of grave robbers come by at the moment she wakes up. They take her and sail off, and then their captain becomes spooked by her beauty, fearing they have stolen a goddess. He sells her as a slave at the nearest port, and Callirhoe’s irresisitbility leads to a string of misadventures with men vying to claim her until eventually her repentant and ever-loyal Chaereas refinds her.

It’s incredibly melodramatic in a remarkably unselfconscious way. Callirhoe is given to frequent asides bemoaning her tragic beauty, which like Helen of Troy has led her into disaster. Chaereas is so overwhelmed by her beauty that: “like a hero mortally wounded in battle, he was too proud to fall, yet too weak to stand.” When they are finally reunited after an absurd series of events, they rush into each other’s arms and immediately faint and collapse to the floor. The story has the flavor of a campy Shakespearean comedy, or a Monty Python skit.

Now, in revealing this inspiration point, I may be doing little to sell my book, but I was immediately intrigued by the notion of retelling the story in a modern context and as a gay love affair. Setting aside the story’s absurdities, I was charmed by its unapolegetic assertion of the power and inevitable triumph of love, the beguiling mystery of beauty. On one hand, I felt a sense of purpose in reclaiming a story of idealized love, recast with gay men as the heroes because it’s true we fall in love this way; or I should say the essence of that is true. Love overwhelms us, makes us weak, makes us manic with joy, crazy with desire. It’s a universal condition, but gay love doesn’t get the chance to shine on the literary stage as often as it should.

I also felt the beauty theme had particular meanings for gay men which were worth exploring. The idealization of youth and beauty is deeply embedded in our culture, whether for good or ill, thus in some ways it was easy to imagine a gay male Callirhoe who had guys falling over one another to claim him.

Equally, to return to the story’s absurdities, I was excited about imagining what comic possibilities could happen with such a story brought into the twenty-first century. I think you will find the result remains absurd but hopefully enjoyably and redeemably so. I describe it as a gay mash-up of There’s Something About Mary and My Big, Fat Greek Wedding.

So, you see there is an ancient world, folktalish theme hidden within this modern rom-com. Let me know how you like it, and as always, thanks for your support. 🙂

 

 

 

 

And now, the big reveal…

I’ve been coyly hinting at an upcoming release, and frankly been neck deep the past few weeks working with the production team on copyediting, proofing and conceptualizing the cover design.

The ARCs are out, and the title is up at the publisher’s website, so at long last, all can be revealed!


Ka-bam!

The book releases everywhere on August 14th, and I’m designating August as “Irresistible Month,” with a bunch of posts about the story-behind-the-story, book extras, and fun stuff like that. Here’s the back cover blurb:

Brendan Thackeray-Prentiss is an Ivy League-educated trust-funder who Gotham Magazine named the most eligible gay bachelor in New York City. He lives for finding his soulmate, but after walking in on his boyfriend of three transcendent months soaping up in the shower with an older female publicist, he’s on a steady diet of scotch, benzodiazepines, and compulsive yoga. Men are completely off the menu.

Callisthenes Panagopoulos has a problem most guys dream of. With the body and face of a European soccer heartthrob, the vigorous blond hair of a Mormon missionary, and a smile that makes traffic cops stuff their ticket books back in their utility belts, he’s irresistible to everyone. But being a constant guy-magnet comes with its discontents, like an ex-boyfriend who tried to drive his Smart car through Cal’s front door. It makes him wonder if he’s been cursed when it comes to love.

When Brendan and Cal meet, the attraction is meteoric, and they go from date to mates at the speed of time-lapse photography. But to stay together, they’ll have to overcome Cal’s jealous BFF, Romanian mobsters, hermit widowers, and a dictatorship on the brink of revolution during a dream wedding in the Greek isles that becomes a madcap odyssey.

A gay romantic comedy of errors based on Chariton’s Callirhoe, the world’s oldest extant romance novel.

You can get in on pre-ordering the e-book at NineStar Press. 

Here’s the link at Goodreads to add it to your shelf.

Last but not least, I’m hustling to get reviews, so if you do that kind of thing, the title is available at NetGalley, and I’m also happy to share the e-ARC with folks who are interested in writing early reviews. Just hit me up!

Werecat #3 Cover Reveal

WerecatTheFugitiveRETAILCover700x1066p96dpiRGBComing soon: My third installment in the Werecat series.

This one is titled: The Fugitive. The story picks up from Jacks’ flight from New York City to try to outpace The Glaring. Here’s the back cover blurb:

On the run after killing a Hunter from The Glaring, Jacks travels to the Bahamas with his only clue to what the secret society’s assassin was after: his maker’s key to a safety deposit box at an offshore bank. A thirty-day legal procedure holds Jacks up from uncovering what could be a hidden treasure.

Meanwhile, Jacks meets an alluring ex-pat from South Africa named Maarten who hosts a nonstop pleasure cruise for disaffected werecats who have no interest in the politics of their kind. With his nerves scratched raw from living on the run, it’s too tempting of an escape for Jacks to turn away. But while he’s cruising the Caribbean and spending nights in an orgiastic cuddle pile, The Glaring lays siege to New York City in a night of terror. Jacks’ boyfriend Farzan fights for his life and tries to reach Jacks overseas.

Jacks needs to emerge from a binge of drugs and flesh to defend his boyfriend. But can he give up the chance to be with his own kind for the first time in his life? When the secret in the safety deposit box is revealed, Jacks realizes that it’s up to him to get it before The Glaring uses an arcane magic that could destroy humankind.

I’m really happy with the cover art, and I must thank Maggie Ward from Vagabondage Press. We went back and forth with some ideas, and she found an excellent model to represent Jacks’ loyal and long-suffering boyfriend Farzan. He’s pictured on the right.

 

Jacks is Back: Release Day for Werecat, Book 2

I’m happy to announce that the next installment in my Werecat series is out today.

Werecat: The Glaring continues Jacks Dowd’s adventure in the terrifying and erotic world of shifters.

Werecat: The Glaring

Free from Benoit, the man who made him a shifter, twenty-two-year old Jacks tries to get on his own two feet while crashing with Farzan, the only person who knows about his werecat nature. It will take a grueling schedule of off-the-books jobs and a steady mantra of self-control.

Then a raid on a bodega pushes Jacks to transform into his mountain lion self to fend off a group of gun-wielding gangbangers.

Jacks scrambles to disguise the truth, but the incident leaves a thundering wake of questions. The police want to know what really happened to a freaked-out young thug in custody. Farzan, who has been crushing hard on Jacks since they met, begins to doubt that it’s safe to have Jacks living with him. Jacks wants to know where he belongs: with the man who took him in when no one else would or among his own kind. As he searches for answers, Jacks is confronted by a secret shifter society The Glaring. They have come to avenge the death of Jacks’ maker and to claim a powerful item that Benoit left behind.

You can buy the e-book for $2.99 at All Romance E-Books, Amazon, and Barnes & Noble. Some fun promotions will be coming soon!

Many thanks to the team at Vagabondage Press for bringing this latest project to life: my editor N. Apythia Morges, book cover designer Maggie Ward, and managing editor Fawn Neun.

Werecat, Book 2 Cover Reveal!

I just received the final cover art for the second installment in my Werecat series.

It now can be revealed…

WerecatTheGlaringCoverFinal3

It’s the same model from The Rearing with a new profile and a hint at what’s to come in Jacks “Cherokee” Dowd’s latest adventure. All credit to Maggie Ward at Vagabondage Press. We went back and forth a bit conceptually, but Maggie put in the real work making the cover come to life.

Werecat: The Glaring will be available for purchase February 28th. I’m hugely excited about it. Some more hints about the story and promotions will be coming soon!