Title: Junior Willis Author: Richard Natale Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Pages/Word Count: 84 Pages Rating: 5 Stars Blurb: From the moment he leaves the Midwest in the early 1950s, Tom Larson is forced to confront his sexual and romantic desires at every turn. His awakening begins in Korea where he has an affair with his... Continue Reading →
There’s Magnetism And Murder In Rosalie Tarr’s “Bonded” – Reviewed by Lana
“Words are a pretext. It is the inner bond that draws one person to another, not words.” ― Rumi Title: Bonded Author: Rosalie Tarr Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Pages/Word Count: 166 Pages Rating: 4.5 Stars Blurb: Alec Whitehall is old-fashioned—literally. Approaching his 123rd birthday, the steely vampire has nothing better to do with his time... Continue Reading →
There's Magnetism And Murder In Rosalie Tarr's "Bonded" – Reviewed by Lana
“Words are a pretext. It is the inner bond that draws one person to another, not words.” ― Rumi Title: Bonded Author: Rosalie Tarr Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Pages/Word Count: 166 Pages Rating: 4.5 Stars Blurb: Alec Whitehall is old-fashioned—literally. Approaching his 123rd birthday, the steely vampire has nothing better to do with his time... Continue Reading →
Ira Adler and Cain Goddard…Will They or Won’t They? – A Guest Article And Giveaway From Jess Faraday
In the creative writing class I’m teaching, I start off by emphasizing how important it is to know how the story is going to go before you start writing. We map out the Triggering Event, the Turning Points, and try to bring it all to a Tidy Logical Conclusion in the end. We do outlines... Continue Reading →
We’re Awfully Glad To Have Charlie Cochrane With Us Today, And She’s Giving Away A Book!
As part of my non-writing life, I attended a development day, where one of the speakers discussed “Relationship Marketing” and the increasing loyalty as someone moves from being a prospective customer to a brand advocate. (How does this relate to the story behind “Awfully Glad”? Bear with, bear with...) I immediately could relate this concept... Continue Reading →
We're Awfully Glad To Have Charlie Cochrane With Us Today, And She's Giving Away A Book!
As part of my non-writing life, I attended a development day, where one of the speakers discussed “Relationship Marketing” and the increasing loyalty as someone moves from being a prospective customer to a brand advocate. (How does this relate to the story behind “Awfully Glad”? Bear with, bear with...) I immediately could relate this concept... Continue Reading →
Jess Faraday’s “Turnbull House” Is The Perfect Sequel To An Imperfect Affair
“The antagonism between life and conscience may be removed in two ways: by a change of life or by a change of conscience.” ― Leo Tolstoy Title: Turnbull House Author: Jess Faraday Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Pages/Word Count: 288 Pages Rating: 5 Stars Blurb: London 1891. Former criminal Ira Adler has built a respectable, if... Continue Reading →
Review: Turnbull House by Jess Faraday
Title: Turnbull House Series: The Ira Adler Series: Book Two Author: Jess Faraday Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Length: 288 Pages Category: Historical, Mystery/Suspense Rating: 5 Stars At a Glance: Drawing vivid descriptions that transport the reader back to the latter years of the 19th century and welcoming a diverse pallet of role players from the... Continue Reading →
Why Not Take A Chance On “Meeting Chance”?
“Pets have more love and compassion in them than most humans”-- Robert Wagner Wow, I needed this book. I have had several disappointing YA LGBT reads lately. Books where abusers got away with their crimes and date rape was treated as just another mistake. I told myself I was finished with YA novels. But I... Continue Reading →
Why Not Take A Chance On "Meeting Chance"?
“Pets have more love and compassion in them than most humans”-- Robert Wagner Wow, I needed this book. I have had several disappointing YA LGBT reads lately. Books where abusers got away with their crimes and date rape was treated as just another mistake. I told myself I was finished with YA novels. But I... Continue Reading →
Kings of Ruin by Sam Cameron
And then the car was beside him, not idling but panting like a deadly animal which may or may not be tamed. – Stephen King It’s hard not to automatically think of Stephen King when you read a book about possessed cars, isn’t it? No? Maybe it’s just me, and maybe I’ve just read too... Continue Reading →
Murder in the Rue Dauphine (Chanse MacLeod #1) by Greg Herren
The stage is the Crescent City; the script, blackmail and murder; the director of the action, Chanse MacLeod, ex-cop and private investigator who is embroiled in a case where prostitution and extortion crawl into bed together and end up with his client, Mike Hansen, taking a nap of the eternal variety. Mike was a hustler... Continue Reading →
Murder in the Rue Dauphine (Chanse MacLeod #1) by Greg Herren
The stage is the Crescent City; the script, blackmail and murder; the director of the action, Chanse MacLeod, ex-cop and private investigator who is embroiled in a case where prostitution and extortion crawl into bed together and end up with his client, Mike Hansen, taking a nap of the eternal variety. Mike was a hustler... Continue Reading →
Fontana by Joshua Martino
Fontana is a brilliant book. And I don’t mean that solely in the intellectually brilliant sense of the word; I mean that it is also luminous and powerful, and it made me angry and it made me cry, and it’s been some time since I’ve read a book that engendered such a strong emotional reaction... Continue Reading →
Fontana by Joshua Martino
Fontana is a brilliant book. And I don’t mean that solely in the intellectually brilliant sense of the word; I mean that it is also luminous and powerful, and it made me angry and it made me cry, and it’s been some time since I’ve read a book that engendered such a strong emotional reaction... Continue Reading →
The Marrying Kind by Ken O’Neill
There are universally accepted themes in drama that are guaranteed to, if not draw tears, at a minimum will tug a bit at the heartstrings of every well-adjusted human being. Charming a reader into loving a character and then killing that character at the end of a book—sad. Tragic romance, star-crossed lovers destined never to... Continue Reading →
The Marrying Kind by Ken O'Neill
There are universally accepted themes in drama that are guaranteed to, if not draw tears, at a minimum will tug a bit at the heartstrings of every well-adjusted human being. Charming a reader into loving a character and then killing that character at the end of a book—sad. Tragic romance, star-crossed lovers destined never to... Continue Reading →
Review: The Affair of the Porcelain Dog by Jess Faraday
Title: The Affair of the Porcelain Dog Series: The Ira Adler Series: Book One Author: Jess Faraday Publisher: Bold Strokes Books Length: 288 Pages Category: Historical, Mystery Rating: 4.5 Stars At a Glance: Sometimes happy endings are so evident they’re impossible to miss. Sometimes happy endings are so subjective that one hesitates even to call... Continue Reading →

