L.A. Witt's Blog, page 14
May 20, 2012
COVER ART: Where Nerves End

Welcome to Tucker Springs, Colorado: Population, 70-something-thousand. Home to beautiful mountain views, two respected universities, and a ridiculously high cost of living.
Jason Davis can handle a breakup. And an overwhelming mortgage. And a struggling business. And the excruciating pain that keeps him up at night thanks to a shoulder injury. Handling all of it at once? Not so much. When his shoulder finally pushes him to a breaking point, he takes a friend’s advice and gives acupuncture a try.
Michael Whitman is a single dad struggling to make ends meet. When a mutual friend refers a patient, and that patient suggests a roommate arrangement to alleviate their respective financial strains, Michael jumps at the opportunity.
Living together would be easy if Jason wasn’t so damned attracted to Michael. Good thing Michael’s straight, or the temptation might just be too much.
Where Nerves End will be available from Amber Allure on June 3.
Well, their mutual friend says Michael is straight…
May 14, 2012
New body graffiti!
Eddie opted for a gecko on the back of his arm:


A woman asked me about the bandage on my arm. I casually told her I'd just had a conjoined twin removed, then went back to my conversation with Eddie. Hardest poker face I've ever had to maintain, but totally worth it. She's probably still wondering if I was bullshitting her.
May 9, 2012
Searching for the Elusive Lava Bunny.
Since everyone had been raving about the lava fields toward the south end of the island, we decided that was a good place to start. After all, this is where the elusive lava bunny lurks. A shy creature by nature, this rarely photographed rabbit comes in colors ranging from lightly dusted gray to nearly black. I guess you could say they come in fifty shades of gray, minus the thinly-veiled plagiarism and bad BDSM.
They're ridiculously hard to find, owing mostly to that evolutionary imperative called "survival." With numerous natural and unnatural predators, it's a miracle the lava bunny hasn't gone extinct. It's bad enough they have to deal with the creatures nature saw fit to plant in the lava bunny's habitat: the basalt lizard, the obsidian weasel, and the pumice lion. Then they have non-native dangers such as car tires and sugar cane bats, the latter of which were introduced to the island some years ago to eat rats.
So basically, the lava bunny is screwed, and will probably die out before long. Naturally, this means we need to find them and photograph them to prove we've seen them. Pics or it didn't happen, after all.
So, in the glorious Minivan O' Destiny that the rental agency saw fit to give us, we drove south to the lava fields.


Well, when we weren't distracted by trying to take pictures of waves:




Oh yes. Water. Lava bunnies. Searching.

WAVES!



Interesting bit of trivia, though: When walking on basalt, it sounds like you're walking on Cap'n Crunch.


WAIT. OMG.
THERE IT IS! ON TOP OF THAT ROCK!
*SNAP*
*checks preview screen*
Man, these things are fast. I had it, I saw it, it was RIGHT THERE, but once I took the picture...
It was gone.

One day...
May 8, 2012
Feeding Birdies and Watching Dolphins. Oh, and a Flying Fish.
In between family stuff (like, you know, my cousin's wedding) and just generally relaxing, we've been of course exploring the island. On the second or third day, whatever day it was, I hopped on a boat with Eddie and my mom, and along with 30-some-odd strangers, we embarked on a voyage of whale-watching and general awesomeness.
Now, the humpback migration through this area winds down around early/mid May. And as you've probably gathered, it's...May. So instead of being knee-deep in whales, the area between Lanai, Maui, and Molokai has about 12 whales left. (The naturalist made sure to rub it in by saying that in February/March-ish, the harbor is often referred to as "whale soup". Bitch.) Surprise surprise...we didn't see any whales.
But you know, it's kind of hard to be bummed out about anything when your boat encounters a pod of about 80 spinner dolphins.

Especially when those dolphins are cruising along with your boat and playing in the waves right off the bow (which of course we were leaning over).

And holy hell, look at the size of the remora attached to this guy:



After our 2-hour voyage, we returned to Lahaina and drove up north to do some snorkeling. As luck would have it, I wasn't feeling all that well by then, and much to my curse-laden frustration, had to bow out of snorkeling. (WTF. Seriously, WTF? Growl.) While my parents and husband floated facedown in the crystal clear waters (and that jerk I'm married to actually saw a sea turtle *grumbles*), I sat in the shade of a palm tree and kept an eye on our stuff.
Circumstances are what they are, though, and while I would have loved to snorkel, I wasn't about to just sit there feeling sorry for myself.
There were some cute little birds wandering around. I had crackers.
So, I made some friends.



Seriously.


In which we hunt the elusive Lava Bunny in its natural habitat.Wandering aimlessly around Lahaina and KiheiPics from the awesomest lagoon everWe're still here for a few more days, and naturally, we've planned those days to the gills. Tomorrow, we're going up in a helicopter to check out the Haleakala Crater. Then we've got a kayak trip out to...um...some bay or another where we will snorkel amongst sea turtles and other sea creatures. And, one of the things I've been DYING to do since I researched Maui while writing Infinity Pools: snorkeling Molokini. Hellz yeah. Pics to come, of course!
And as I sign off, I leave you with a little nugget of knowledge I picked up this morning:
It is incredibly awesome the first time you see a shark while snorkeling.
It is mildly unnerving the first time you don't see that same shark.
That is all.
May 4, 2012
The Clampetts in First Class
First off, sorry for the "meh" photo quality. I was using my phone, and it just doesn't quite have the chops for photography. Still, for the purposes of recording things for posterity, it'll do. Onward!
So the vacation continues in earnestly earnest fashion, with beach shenanigans, taking pictures of everything in sight, and returning to our room to find our toilet paper mysteriously folded into a cryptic downward pointing arrow. Our hotel, in spite of its gloriously accommodating façade, has ridiculously horrible wireless internet, so my updates will be a little sparse. Aside from the slow wifi, which is truly a minor issue and a first world problem, all is well and it’s going to take a small army to get me on a plane to leave Maui when the trip is over.
Speaking of planes, I’d like to share with my loyal blog minions a tale of air travel madness so shocking, it’ll…I mean, it’ll shock you. Or something.
The tale begins with Eddie and me in the lovely Denver International Airport. We had driven all day the day before to get there, and arrived after stopping twice to scrape the entire insect population of Nebraska and Colorado off the windshield. Seriously, CO and NE, I was in awe. Truly in awe.
And here is a photo of the Denver Airport, or at least its parking garage, with a giant white caterpillar passing by in the background:

“Would you like to upgrade to first class for $[so stupid cheap it should have been illegal]?”
Bitch, please. Of course I want to upgrade to first class for $stupid. With the click of a button (well, okay, the tap of my finger on a touchscreen), we were launched from the back of the plane with all the peasants and livestock to the elite rows in the front. Clearly this was an error, since if the airline had any idea who we were, they would have instead stuck us in the luggage compartment where we wouldn’t disturb or terrify the other passengers. Since I saw two bound-and-gagged elderly people in nice clothing squirming on their way up the conveyor belt between two duffel bags and a guitar case, it’s entirely possible this was the result of a colossal mix-up. Naturally, I just pulled down my window shade, pretended I never saw the old people, and leaned back in my ill-gotten seat in first class.
Once we were in the air, it became clear this was not a universe to which we were accustomed. I had heard the legends, and thought that was all they were, but no. No, they were not just legends, and now we were privy to secrets of this strange, alien world, secrets which we can’t forget. And probably shouldn’t tell. In fact, they’ll be beating down my door in no time for revealing them to you, so let this blog be my legacy should they find me.
So what was the first tip-off that we weren’t in Kansas anymore?
Nuts.
Not the foil-wrapped, over-salted peanuts they used to hand out in coach before replacing them with foil-wrapped, over-salted pretzels. No, these were almonds. Almonds presented to us in ceramic cups. Which fit neatly into the cup-holder in the mile-wide armrest between us, along with our drinks.
Our drinks that came in actual, legit glasses.
Made of fucking glass.
No joke, people. I saw it, and I photographed it:




Now, before I go on, I must tell you another story from past air travel. You see, I have spent many a flight shoehorned into coach, and during one particularly cramped, miserable flight, my seatmates and I were commiserating. I mean, when you’re crammed together so tightly you become temporary conjoined triplets, you really have no other choice but to commiserate.
As we peeled back cellophane on our molten hot meals made of the carcasses of unidentifiable animals mixed with the sauce of melted plant matter, we mused that in first class, in the nebulous Great Beyond just past the mysterious curtain at the front of our section, they couldn’t possibly be tolerating such treatment.
“I’ll bet they even have desserts,” my seatmate-to-the-left grumbled in between taking long drinks to extinguish the third degree burns his salad had inflicted on his teeth. “Like, real desserts that don’t taste like sand.”
“No doubt,” my seatmate-to-the-right said as he shanked a roll with a plastic knife. “They probably have ice cream.”
“With sprinkles,” I growled, narrowing my eyes at the curtain as if I could suddenly gain X-ray vision to the paradise beyond. “You know they have motherfucking sprinkles.”
“Yeah,” my seatmates both said. “Those bastards totally have sprinkles.”
Skip ahead some years to this moment when I have infiltrated first class, when my back is to the curtain and my ass is parked in the no-longer-so-nebulous Great Beyond. The flight attendants have removed our dishes, but advised us to keep our table cloths. After all, there’s more coming.
More? I thought. What could possibly be—
No. No, it can’t really be possible. Can it?
Then I heard some clinking. And clattering. And general sounds of food-making.
I leaned out of my seat and looked ahead.

Holy shit.
Ice cream.
Glass bowls of goddamned ice cream.
Moments later, the flight attendants emerged from their little hidey-hole with a cart. A cart covered in those bowls of ice cream, but not just that. Oh no, they don’t just give you vanilla ice cream in first class and then call it a day. You don’t upgrade to first class and get a pristine, unembellished dessert of plain plainness like a very plain thing.
No. No, my loyal blog minions.
You get…
…toppings.

Damn right I want some more.

April 30, 2012
Updates, and going to be MIA for a little while.
Before I go, some updates!
I've made a change to my website to make it easier for people to find books that interest them. You can now browse by genre, by length, by series, and see what's available in paperback.
In other news, I'm pleased to announce The Closer You Get took first place in the New England Reader's Choice Bean Pot Award's Erotica category. The trophies are uber-cute, so I'm looking forward to having that on my desk.
Also, I now have paperback copies of Search Me, and should have For The Living and the Master of Mine BDSM Anthology soon. Perhaps a giveaway in the near future? ;) Stay tuned.
Speaking of For The Living, it is on Amazon now, but thus far only in paperback. I'm not sure when the Kindle version will be available on Amazon, but I do know those with the technical know-how are working on it. In the meantime, it can be purchased in Kindle formats on AllRomance as well as the Amber Allure website. Thank you all for your patience!
And speaking of paperbacks, Damaged Goods will be available in print soon. Stay tuned for release info!
That's all for now -- expect some radio silence while I'm on vacation, but I'll be back and rarin' to go soon!
April 20, 2012
COVER ART: Who's Your Daddy

April 18, 2012
COVER ART: Conduct Unbecoming
This is one of those covers.

April 8, 2012
To Chicago!
While I'm there, my blog will probably be relatively quiet. Okay, so it's been pretty quiet recently anyway. Never fear! I'm hoping to start updating it more often in the near future -- it's just been a little hectic trying to juggle some deadlines in between getting ready for a panic-inducing amount of travel over the next two months.
Now, off to attack two sets of edits, pack too much crap into a too small suitcase, and try not to stress myself out.
Oops, too late...
April 3, 2012
Lambda Finalists Reading in Seattle and Chicago
In April and May, I'll be joining other Lambda Literary Award finalists in Seattle and Chicago, where we'll all be reading from our nominated books. If you're in either city, please drop in and join us -- the more the merrier! (There are also readings going on in other cities -- the entire list is here)
SEATTLE – WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25
(On Facebook)
Vermillion Art Gallery and Wine Bar
1508 11th Ave, Seattle, WA. 98122
7:30 pm Reading
Confirmed authors: L.A. Witt, Qwo-Li Driskill, Dean Spade, Peter Boag
Peter Boag is the author of Re-Dressing America's Frontier Past (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011), finalist for the 2012 Lambda Literary Award in the category of Transgender Nonfiction. Peter is a native of Portland, Oregon, and holds the Columbia Chair in the History of the American West at Washington State University, where he teaches courses in American history, the history of sexuality and gender, and the history of the American West.
Dean Spade is an assistant professor at the Seattle University School of Law. In 2002 he founded the Sylvia Rivera Law Project, a non-profit collective that provides free legal help to low-income people and people of color who are trans, intersex and/or gender non-conforming and works to build trans resistance rooted in racial and economic justice. Dean's book Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Trans Politics and the Limits of Law, published by South End Press, is a finalist in the Transgender Non-fiction category.
Qwo-Li Driskill is co-editor along with Daniel Heath Justice, Lisa Tatonetti, and Deborah Miranda of Sovereign Erotics (University of Arizona Press, 2011), a Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award in two categories: BISEXUAL — Nonfiction and LGBT Anthology. All proceeds from the sale of this collection benefit the Two Spirit Society of Denver.
L. A. Witt is a romance author and a Seattle area native currently living in Bellevue, Nebraska. Her novel Static is a 2011 Rainbow Award winner for Transgender/Bisexual Science Fiction, and is also a Lambda finalist in both the Transgender Fiction and LGBT Fantasy/Sci Fi/Horror categories.
More information about the Chicago reading will be posted soon:
CHICAGO – THURSDAY, MAY 24
Gerber Hart Library and Archives
Please note: the library is currently moving locations. We will announce the venue address soon.
7 pm Reading
Confirmed authors: L.A. Witt, Katherine Scott Nelson, Martha Miller, David Trinidad, Lesley Gowan (Anne Laughlin), Karleen Pendleton Jimenez