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Archive for the tag “Piper Vaughn”

Gay and Lesbian Coffee Break Quickies Is Shorthand Sex That’s Long On Subtext

Quickie: Syllabification: (quick•ie)
Pronunciation: /ˈkwikē/
noun
a rapidly consumed alcoholic drink.
a brief act of sexual intercourse. – Source: Oxford American English Dictionary

And sometimes, quickies are had even in that order.

At any rate, we all know they’re that intense and spontaneous moment when foreplay is defined as the quickie: the sex is red-hot and is entirely about getting in, getting it on, and getting out before you get caught. Not to be confused with the nooner, the quickie’s less spontaneous cousin, these transactions of the hit-and-run variety, conducted online, in a cubicle, in the knee-space of a desk, or a locker room, are made all the more combustible by that element of danger in being caught with your pants down—quite literally—and ups the ante, turning the risks into a roleplayer in the game.

Storm Moon Press has gathered all that erotic potential and put it together in a compilation of short stories about sex in the workplace, which has nothing to do with harassment and everything to do with heating things up when the 9-to-5 gets altogether dull.

Thirteen authors have contributed their individual takes on workplace romance, and include:

Skype Wars by Rob Rosen (M/M)
Hands On by K. Piet (F/F)
One Week by L. Alonso Corona (M/M)
Working Lunch by Ann Anderson (F/F)
Personal Assistance by K. Lynn (M/M)
She’s the Boss by Angel Propps (F/F)
The New Guy by John Amory (M/M)
Stair Walking by Harper Bliss (F/F)
1-800-Boredom by Raven de Hart (M/M)
Fair Play by Anna Hedley (M/M)
His Non-Existent Coffee Break by Lor Rose (M/M)
Tele-Romance by Erik Moore (F/F)
Three Strikes by Piper Vaughn (M/M)

It’s extra tempting to tell you what my favorite stories in this erotic collection are; yes, I did have a few favorites, but rather than do that, I’ll say in all honestly that each of them was sexy—sometimes playful, sometimes all business—in its own way, not to mention a few of them having some very nice little twists in roleplaying and role reversal, making them just that little bit more enjoyable for the effort.

I can say with some confidence that if the idea of quickie shots of caffeinated sex are your…err…cup of tea, you ought to find this anthology every bit as much fun as I did.

And in case you missed it, check out K. Lynn’s interview HERE, in which she discusses her story “Personal Assistance.”

You can buy Gay and Lesbian Coffee Break Quickies here:

In Which One Reading Just Wasn’t Enough – Asylum by Piper Vaughn

The only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it. Resist it, and your soul grows sick with longing for the things it has forbidden to itself. – Oscar Wilde

Johnny Cairo knows a thing or two about temptation. He’s been attracted to his best friend’s little brother for a while now, after all, though he’s resisted the urge to do anything about it because risking a years’ long friendship on what’s at best an unsure thing, and at worst, a resounding disaster waiting to happen, isn’t a chance Johnny’s been willing to take.

Too bad Brennan didn’t get the memo about his brother’s best friend being off limits, because Bren damn sure isn’t going to let a little thing like that stand in the way of him getting what, or rather, who he wants. And once Brennan sets his sights on Johnny, well, there’s nowhere the man can try and hide but behind his own fears. But Brennan isn’t known as one of Fear Asylum’s best Infiltrators for nothing.

Asylum is Johnny’s story, the story of his family legacy—a traveling haunted house called Fear Asylum, though this isn’t your average, small-time, one man sideshow operation. No, they don’t call Johnny the Scaremaster for nothing. This is a full-on production, and it showcases the man’s reputation and talent for putting the fear of the things that go bump in the night into its patrons. It’s also, in a lovely turn of the tables, a story that shows how sometimes those nighttime bumps can put a fear like no other into the heart of a man with a reputation for being the master of fright.

Asylum is a full-on erotic and romantic—it’s sexmantic, even—short story that illustrates how a man learns very quickly that just because his head says there are no-strings-attached it doesn’t mean his heart is bound to listen, especially when he’s faced with the possibility of losing the one to whom he realizes he wants nothing more than to be tied.

I’ve read this story more than once, and really, really would love a sequel. You can use that as an indicator of how much I loved it.

Buy Asylum here:

Moonstruck (Lucky Moon #3) by Piper Vaughn and M.J. O’Shea

The road to true love is awash in the tears of the brokenhearted. – Unknown

Aw. Just…aw. If you’ve been following the Lucky Moon series, at all, then you’re pretty familiar with the formula: a healthy dose of lust plus a dash of conflict equals the recipe for true love. It’s a formula that’s worked for me since the moment I met Shane and Jesse. It’s a formula that’s continued to work for me with Nicky and Luka, and now Surya Patel and Emmanuel Cortez have earned their rightful place among this angsty crew of musicians and the men they love in Moonstruck.

There was nothing easy about Sur and Em’s romance, one that started with sex and running away, moved on to more sex and more running away, gave rise to a need that moved on to friendship and a love that became a heartbreaking study in even more running away and avoiding issues and coming out and living with the unbearable silence of fear and hurt and misunderstanding. If there were any two people who needed a manual on Relationships and Communication 101, it’d be these two guys. For them, silence is its own form of communication, and theirs fairly screams with the pain of their mistakes. They were the perfect examples of how sometimes very intelligent people do not so smart things, of how we all know what we should do but often don’t because pain and pride wreak havoc on common sense, and that while there’s no right or wrong way for a person to feel, there is most definitely a right or wrong way to act on and react to those feelings. But nobody’s perfect and what counts is that, in the end, you’re willing to keep saying you’re sorry until it becomes the indisputable and unavoidable truth.

I think one of the most difficult things about a series like this, where each book features a different couple, is probably the natural tendency to make comparisons between those couples and the sharing of their romantic ups and downs. I’m likely one of the few people who preferred Shane and Jesse’s story to Nicky and Luka’s, though I loved them both. I loved Sur and Em’s story too, but Shane and Jesse still remain the couple against whom I’ll compare all the rest, and that being the case, none have quite compared so far, but they’ve both come so very close, close enough that I’d definitely say if you’re a fan of this series, add this one to the TBR pile.

Buy Moonstruck here:

One True Thing (One Thing #2) by Piper Vaughn and M.J. O’Shea

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http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/images/cover_images/OneTrueThing.jpg

Everyone spends their lives trying to balance their world between good and evil. – Laurell K. Hamilton

Poor Dusty Davis. So, he’s landed himself in California, with Rue and Erik and baby Alice, hoping to leave all the hard times behind him and looking for a fresh start. But then, stumbling headlong into a single moment in time that brought him face to face with his future, Dusty discovered that destiny has two faces, and though those faces are identical, they are also reflections of utter goodness and unfettered evil. Okay, maybe not evil, but kinda nasty, that’s for sure.

And contrary to what seems to be popular opinion, I liked that nasty, evil face just a little bit and want him to take a blindsided hit to his withered and shriveled little raisin of a heart, a hit that knocks him ass-over-end zone into love. But apparently, that’s just me. ::sigh:: Maybe there is no redeeming the seemingly irredeemable, but I’d sure love it if Piper Vaughn and M.J. O’Shea were game to give it a try.

Anyway, Asher Kyriakides, the aforementioned destiny and said goodness, is the face of Dusty’s happiness, a fleeting face that came into and went out of Dusty’s life so quickly he never even had the chance to give Mr. Happiness a name. Unfortunately, Dusty’s unhappiness has the exact same face, which looks good on the surface but feels so different that poor Dusty tries to force the unhappy in with the happy, and it’s just not working, and he’s really, really confused… Until he discovers that the unhappy is actually called Archer Kyriakides. Then it all becomes crystal clear that twins don’t always share that eerie sameness we’ve heard so much about, and that Archer totally missed the good-guy gene. He also missed getting a conscience when those were being passed out. We’re talking no moral compass whatsoever here. Zero. Zip. Nada. His nickname should be Lucifer. You get the picture. Archer’s a super-creep. But I loved his repugnant self just a little, even though I want him to suffer untold tortures. Go figure.

One True Thing (One Thing #2) is a sweetly romantic story of the sometimes lightning strike, often inexplicable but explicit moment when you realize you want someone, and that it’s possible to fall for that someone without really knowing him all that well, and that sometimes it takes little more than finally discovering this person wants the same things you do to make you start thinking about a future. Those things get a little complicated by other things, such as the way Asher feels about his job, his fear of the way Dusty might feel about his job, as well as by the obligation he feels to try and keep his brother from drowning in the cesspool of his many shortcomings. Seriously, Cain would approve. But Asher is not his brother’s keeper, and once he realizes that one true thing, his and Dusty’s lives become one very good thing.

I knew I loved Dustin Davis before I ever read the first sentence of this book, and I love his sweet self even more now. And while his and Asher’s story didn’t have quite the impact on me that Rue and Erik’s did—maybe that’s just a given simply because of Erik himself and of how much I loved him—I have no problems at all recommending this as a lovely follow up to One Small Thing.

Buy One True Thing here: https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSE7_y7N3k5HhrSUqqgylmDMcElk2tvnN45VMc9QBn3YmuJY33tMA

And I’m Off To GayRomLit Land…

It’s early. Early! ::yawns:: But there’s something a little less difficult about getting up at 4:00am when you know you’re off to the airport for a long weekend of fun, right? Sure, that’s my story and I’m sticking to it. ::Starbucks::

I want to take a minute to do two things. First, to say thank you so much to all the authors who very generously donated their immense talents to my GayRomLit Countdown Celebration. Without the help of Eden Winters, Rhys Ford, Amy Lane, K. Piet, Piper Vaughn & Xara X. Xanakas, P.D. Singer, and Geoffrey Knight & Ethan Day, there wouldn’t have even been a celebration to be had, so I will forever be grateful for your kindness and participation.

Second, I want to take the opportunity to say thank you to the fans of all these authors, who stopped by and left comments. I’m sure your interest in them and their work is greatly appreciated and extremely gratifying to each and every one of them.

And last but not lease, a big congratulations to all those who have received, or will soon be receiving, their prizes!

Here’s a recap of the lucky winners:

Winner: trisha2144




















Winner: Boxtersushi






Winner: Rosie M






Winner: K. Piet’s “Surrender” and one backlist book: pearls

Winner: Melora






Winner: Anna






Winner: Nancy




















Ready or not, Albuquerque, here I come!

Piper Vaughn and Xara X. Xanakas Are Here To Offer You A FREE Guide To Love And Romance!

“In the arithmetic of love, one plus one equals everything, and two minus one equals nothing.” – Mignon McLaughlin

Ashley Byrne is the consummate party boy, the pretty guy who takes sex wherever he can find it, with whomever catches his attention at just the right time. He’s the apprentice tattoo artist who dreams of bigger things with his best friend Ty. The question, however, is whether he has the focus and can summon the motivation to make that dream happen.

Felipe Navarro is to geeks what Ash is to players—he represents. Fee is the guy who speaks binary code, very likely knows Han Solo’s birth date, can debate in great detail who the better Enterprise captain was: Kirk or Picard. In other words, they don’t even come close to speaking each other’s language. But… There’s always a but, isn’t there?

But the laws of attraction are more guidelines than dictate, and sometimes breaking the rules is well worth the effort to discover that something that may appear to be inconceivable can be something entirely amazing because even though it feels like you’re mostly dead in the water, mostly dead is still slightly alive and true love is a miracle worth living and fighting for.

The Party Boy’s Guide to Dating a Geek is the sweet, funny, and utterly charming story of two guys who really just shouldn’t add up but manage to find the missing variable—trust—and solve the equation of how to fall in love with someone who is on the opposite end of his spectrum. It’s a story about changing who you are, not for anyone else but yourself, if for nothing else than because you’ve found someone who makes you want to be more than what others see. Ash and Fee are a slow and steady build up to something much bigger than themselves, because really, you just can’t rush miracles.

There are fire swamps to survive, rodents of unusual size to slay, Humperdinks to defeat… No, wait, that’s the wrong book, but The Party Boy’s Guide to Dating a Geek is no less about finding and fighting for true love, and knowing, in the end, that there’s plenty of magic to be found in faith.

Wish you, too, could get your hands on a Clumsy Cupid Instruction Manual?

As you wish…

All you have to do is leave a comment on this post and you’ll be automatically entered to win a FREE copy of The Party Boy’s Guide to Dating a Geek (coming October 10, 2012, from Less Than Three Press). One winner will be drawn at random and contacted by Piper Vaughn or Xara X. Xanakas, so be sure to leave your email address in your comment. Good luck!

**Contest ends at 11:59pm Pacific (2:59am Eastern) on Wednesday, October 10, 2012**

Piper Vaughn and Xara X. Xanakas are both GayRomLit particiating authors. You can find their blogs HERE and HERE.

You can buy The Party Boy’s Guide to Dating a Geek Here.

Here’s What’s Coming Up In My GayRomLit 2012 Countdown!

The excitement continues, as give-away after give-away leads up to October 18th’s “Desire in the Desert”. Here’s a rundown of what you can expect to see in the coming weeks.


Eden Winters’ Diversion contest ends tonight at 11:59pm Pacific time (2:59am Eastern), so if you haven’t entered to win, hurry and do it before it’s too late!





Beginning tomorrow, Wednesday, September 26th, Rhys Ford will be bringing her Cole McGinnis Mystery series to the show, where sex and murder are intimate acquaintances. Rhys will be offering one lucky reader the chance to win both books in the series, Dirty Kiss and the upcoming Dirty Secret. You won’t want to miss it!


On October 1st, it’s all Amy Lane, folks, and she’ll be here to offer up the chance to win two books to one lucky contestant–Chase in Shadow, as well as the newly released (10/1/12) Dex in Blue, starring Dex and Kane, two characters who were introduced in Chase and Tommy’s book. Click HERE to see what Amy had to say about her boys and their story on Mary Calmes’ blog. And make sure to stay tuned!


Piper Vaughn & Xara X. Xanakas have a new release coming on October 10, 2012 from Less Than Three Press, called The Party Boy’s Guide to Dating a Geek, the first book in a news series, the “Clumsy Cupid Guidebooks”. Beginning on October 6th, you’ll have the opportunity to register to win a FREE copy of the book, which will be awarded to one lucky reader. Be sure to watch for it!


And finally, capping off the celebration, P.D. Singer will lead things into the homestretch with a two book give-away to one lucky contestant, Fire on the Mountain and Snow on the Mountain, the first two books in her series “The Mountains”, starring Jake Landon and Kurt Carlson, two fire rangers whose passion ignites one hot summer in the mountains, and carries on to the snowy slopes of Wapiti Creek Ski Resort. You won’t want to miss this contest, coming on October 11th!

It’s a hellagood time to be a fan of M/M romance!

Countdown To GayRomLit 2012

In exactly one month from today, I’ll be heading to the Indianapolis airport at the bootie-crack of dawn to catch a flight to Albuquerque for the second annual GayRomLit convention, Desire in the Desert. I’ll be showing up at the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino with my roomie, Rhys Ford, and a heaping helping of fangirl squee to be spread around equally, guaranteed. I can’t even begin to tell you how excited I am to be going—check out the list of attendees HERE, and you’ll see why.

Between now and the time I leave on October 18th, I’m going to concentrate all my efforts on reading books written by the authors who’ll be attending the retreat. I wish I could say that I was going to read at least one book by every author showing up this year, but that’d be humanly impossible. In spite of my mad reading obsession, I do need some sleep in order to function. But in celebration, I’m going to be hosting some GREAT GIVEAWAYS from some of the authors who’ll be there, including Rhys Ford, Piper Vaughn & Xara X. Xanakas, Amy Lane, and Eden Winters just to name a few, so make sure to stay tuned in.

Trust me when I tell you that for me, this is like the holy grail of fandom. I am going to make every effort to conduct myself with at least a modicum of dignity, but I’m making no promises. As long as I don’t get maced or no one calls hotel security on me, it’ll all be good.

That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

Small Gems – An Oral Fixation by Piper Vaughn

Reading An Oral Fixation made me wonder what Dr. Freud would’ve thought about it. He’d have likely come to the diagnosis that Cooper Bradshaw had suffered from some sort of neglect or trauma during the oral stage of his development which has now caused him to be a little bit obsessed with getting the taste of his best friend Quinn Reed’s skin all over his tongue. Pish. I think Cooper’s just fixated on licking and kissing and nibbling on the man he loves. Completely and totally normal.

This sweet little short is a story of best-friends-turned-lovers, though the course to true love was not without its share of complications along the way. Timing has been a huge obstacle for the two men, as either Cooper or Quinn, or both, seemed to have always been in relationships with other people, and breaking up with a sure thing in order to take the risk on something that didn’t come with any guarantees of success seemed like a really bad reason for a break up. Of course, staying in a relationship with someone when your heart and focus belongs to someone else isn’t exactly being honest either, but nobody’s perfect.

As Cooper, Quinn, and their friends Patrick and Lonnie set out on a road trip to SoCal, both Cooper and Quinn find themselves free for the first time, at the same time, in…well, ever. Quinn begins to believe in the possibility of this being their time. Finally. But it’s Cooper’s inquisitive tongue and roving lips that convince Quinn the possibility is much more like a sure thing.

Nineteen pages (that’s nineteen FREE! pages) is all it took for me to become entirely absorbed in the story of a couple of guys who, for some time, seemed to be the only two not to realize they were head-over-heels in love. It’s a good thing they both finally got with the program, and it’s a good thing I didn’t have to wait long for Piper Vaughn to make it happen.

Download An Oral Fixation HERE.

One Small Thing (One Thing #1) by M.J. O’Shea and Piper Vaughn

I don’t normally gravitate toward books in which the story revolves around babies and/or children, not because I don’t like kids but because I have three of them; so while I can commiserate—been there, smelled that—there isn’t that sense of the unknown I look to escape into when I read. But what’s a girl to do when one of her favorite writing duos decides to go there? I jump onboard and enjoy the ride.

Rue Murray is maybe one of the unlikelier candidates for fatherhood, at least in the traditional man/woman/sex way, but when there’s enough alcohol and curiosity involved, anything’s possible; and nine months later, this man’s full but solitary existence is suddenly overcome by a tiny bundle of a human being who’s utterly dependent upon Rue for everything. Being a parent holds its own challenges, to be sure, but being a single parent presents an altogether different set of demands. Rue has dreams and goals that he’s been working toward; he has a lifestyle to which he’s become accustomed. But there’s one certainty in life that can be counted on: change happens and you better learn to flow with it or it’ll surely overwhelm you.

Erik Van Nuys is a writer who has recently moved into Rue’s building. He’s isolated and insecure and suffers from any number of mannerisms that have left him socially withdrawn, and though his affliction isn’t specifically named, if I had to guess, I’d say he suffers from a disorder on the autism spectrum. Erik doesn’t cope well with change, doesn’t do well with strangers, stutters when he’s nervous, finds comfort in routine and repetition, and does not like to be touched. Erik’s life is all about order and structure and when that foundation is rocked, he suffers from severe anxiety attacks. But there’s one small thing named Alice who comes along and touches Erik and draws him out of his isolation and into a world where disorder and sometimes a little chaos is a guarantee.

A single father’s desperation and a struggling author’s need to supplement his income is what ultimately brings Rue and Erik together, as Rue struggles to find acceptable daycare for his daughter and Erik struggles to accept that if he’s going to survive, he’s going to have to find a source of supporting himself when his book sales flag. It’s a synergetic meeting of two diametrically opposed planets that come together to orbit around a small but bright sun, and what grows there is an imperfect but beautiful new world filled with possibilities.

One Small Thing is a heaping helping of awwww, with a generous side of sigh and a soupçon of angst to top it all off. A man whose life has changed drastically begins to wonder if the dreams he had before he became part of a small but wonderful family, which includes his best friend Dusty, still have a place in his life.

A man whose life has never included anything that resembled a connection like love and a sense of hope and belonging begins to wonder if he can be a part of that small but wonderful family when all his doubts and insecurities come back to haunt him.

One Small Thing is a touching and heartwarming opposites attract story about finding that single unlikely bond that can bring two people together in spite of the odds. I devoured it in a single sitting because I wanted very much to be sure Rue and Erik would find a way around the obstacles in their relationship. And now I’m anxiously awaiting Dusty’s story, keeping my fingers crossed that he’ll finally find his own happily ever after.

Buy One Small Thing HERE.

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