Renae Kaye's Blog, page 11

September 30, 2015

Guest Interview with Nic Starr

Picture Renae:  My goodness.  It’s Wednesday again?  That means it’s interview day and I have another interview where I get to find all the juicy bits about books – sometimes before they’re released.

So today I have…  **consults her notes** Oh, YAY.  **does a little dance**  My favourite author to interview.  Any guesses?  My most frequent guest… the lovely Nic Starr!

Nic:  Am I the most frequent guest? What an honour! I do hope I’m not boring everyone to death **wink**

Renae:  Hi Nic!  Nah – not boring.  Just the first person I go to, and I always have a spot for you on my blog.  What can I get you to drink?  Coffee?  (Please – no one else seems to want to drink coffee with me…)

Nic:  Sure. I’ll have a large flat white. I’m fairly basic with my coffee order. Actually that’s another thing I’m nervous about with my upcoming trip to the US. Have you seen the choices at Starbucks?! I’ll have to get someone to translate ‘large, flat white’ into Starbucks speak for me so I’m all prepared.

Renae:  Ok!  **dashes off**

Nic:  **Googles Starbucks** Venti? Grande? Huh?

Renae:  Back!  **hands Nic cup and sits down, wriggling to get comfortable**  Okay.  Now, let me see.  What are we… **gasp**  You have another release?  Wow – go you, Nic!

Nic:  LOL. I’ve been busy, but I still can’t believe how quickly October is coming around.

​Renae:  Yay.  So, More Than a Friend releases next Wednesday on the 7th.  Let me check out the blurb…

More Than: Book Two 

Tim Walker is a free man. He’s broken up with his girlfriend and is ready to move on to a new relationship. But the relationship he wants to pursue is fraught with challenges. Firstly, Scott Richardson is a man, and only Tim’s closest friends know Tim’s bisexual. Secondly, everyone knows Scott relishes the single life. And then there’s the big one: Scott is the younger brother of Tim’s best friend, Paul. 

Scott can’t deny an attraction to his brother’s friend Tim. Lean, dark blond, and blue-eyed, Tim is hot and hard not to notice—especially since Scott and Tim work together. Too bad the man is straight, and too bad Scott worries how Paul will react if Scott hooks up with his best friend. 

Tim and Scott want to see if there’s a chance for more than friendship between them, but neither of them wants to lose Paul. Together, they must find the courage to follow their hearts and find a way to have it all.
Picture Right!  So another one in the More Than series.  And more than a friend… delicious.

And WOW – going after the best friend’s brother??  Isn’t that taboo in some social rule?

Nic:  There is definitely a social code that raises questions about falling for your besties’ brother or sister. When I started writing the story, I did some online research, and found a huge volume of articles and advice columns, all expressing different opinions, but it seems a lot of people are asking the questions. Tim definitely fell into the camp where he didn’t want to put his relationship with his best friend in jeopardy.

Renae:  And Tim is bisexual?  Do you think there are a lot of guys out there who are bisexual, but we just don’t know about it because we assume they are straight when we see them with their girlfriends?

Nic:  I don’t know about a ‘lot of guys’ but you are right with the assumption part. It’s easy to see a man and woman in a couple, and assume both partners are straight. I’m sure it’s not even a conscious thought, more a given.

Renae:  So Tim is bi, and he’s just broken up with his girlfriend?  Has he had a boyfriend before, or will this be his first steady male relationship?

Nic:  Tim’s had some experience with men, but nothing serious and nothing that would be termed a relationship. His first serious relationship was with this ex-girlfriend.

Renae:  And Scott is determinedly single?  Is it just a case of having the right woman man come along?

Nic:  LOL. For Scott it’s a matter of timing. And finding that perfect man.

Renae:  Okay – now I’m thinking about the brother, Paul.  His best friend and his little brother together?  OMG – I would be terrified.  I’m sure both of them would know secrets about me I wouldn’t want the other to know.

Nic:  I’d love to know your secrets! Maybe you could introduce me to your bestie, Renae? Or you have a few siblings, so I’m sure one of them would be willing to spill the beans! 

​When things come out into the open, Paul isn’t too worried about his secrets getting out (probably because he doesn’t have too many), but there’s a natural fear that important relationships will change. Luckily, Paul wants his brother and his best friend to be happy. However, Tim and Scott hide their relationship from Paul, and no one likes to be lied to by the people they love, which creates some tension.
Picture Renae:  I was only having this conversation with someone a few days ago – there are certain people who you just don’t go after.  You cut your losses and run.  This particular scenario was the twin brother of the ex-fiance.  What do you think in real life?  Would you go for it like Scott and Tim?

Nic:  I think hooking up with someone related to an ex-lover, is a different scenario, to the one in this story. If you’ve already had an intimate and sexual relationship with one sibling, then move to another, it does have a certain taboo. For example, if Tim and Paul weren’t just best friends, rather they’d been lovers, then Tim hooking up with Scott would be seen differently as Tim would have been in a sexual relationship with both brothers. The intimacy of sex complicates things.


Renae:  Now – I need a sneak peek at the story so I can imagine… tell me, is it “I’ve had my eye on you for ages” type scenario on both sides?

Nic:  Oh yes. There’s been some unresolved sexual tension for a while now. There are hints of it in the first book.


Renae:  Do you think both characters experience the thrill of the forbidden?

Nic:  Sorry to disappoint but not really. They experience the thrill of being with each other - Scott excited to find out Tim is open to a relationship with a man, and Tim thrilled that Scott wants him. In fact, things would be easier if they didn’t have to deal with worrying about the impact of their relationship on Paul.


Renae:  Now, this is a series.  Is there more to come in the series?

Nic:  Definitely! There are three more stories planned. The next is More Than Money where the main characters have a value conflict. This story features the oldest Richardson son, James, who works in his family business. Jamie falls for Daniel, the owner of the Coffee & Sunshine café, but his father’s plans for redeveloping the small town, drive a wedge between them.


Renae:  Do you need to read the first one in order to understand the second?

Nic:  The enjoyment of More Than a Friend, would be enhanced by getting to know the characters in the first book, More Than a Superstar. It would also put the secondary characters into context. So reading the first book is my recommendation.


Renae:  What are you working on now?

Nic:  Busy, busy, busy! I’ve just finished edits for my upcoming Christmas story (The Proof is in the Pudding comes out in December – obviously!) I’ve also completed my first novel set in Australia. Rustic Melody is the first book in my new Rustic series and will be released early in the new year. I have a number of works in progress nearing completion including Patricks’ Savior (book #3 in my Heroes series) and Rustic Memory.


Renae:  Where can people find you?

Nic:  You can find me on key social media sites. I love it when readers get in touch.

Website & Blog: http://www.nicstarr.com
Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Nic-Starr/e/B00MAWRRQG/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/nicki.nicstar
Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/NicStarrAuthor
Twitter: https://twitter.com/nicstar000
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/nicstar000/
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/8139967.Nic_Starr
 
Renae:  Thanks for joining me (again!)  I promise to stop hassling you… oh, I don’t know… in about ten years time? **wink**

Nic:  I love being hassled by you so look forward to the next ten years
J

Renae:  Congratulations on the new release, and I hope it does spectacular!

​Nic:  Thank you. It’s been a pleasure chatting, as always.

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Published on September 30, 2015 06:31

September 23, 2015

Guest Interview with Beany Sparks

Picture  
Renae:  AAAAAAAAAAAAaaannnnddd – WELCOME!  Welcome back to my blog, the wonderful, the hyper, the peppy….  MISS BEANY SPARKS.

**applause**

Renae:  Hiya, Beans!  Welcome back.  What can I offer you to drink?

Beany:  Hm, how about a green tea?

Renae: Right-o.  Give me a sec.  I could really do with a coffee myself…  **runs off**

Beany:  *counts* Your second is up…

Renae:  Smart-arse.  Here you go.  **passes over cup **  So, I hear you have a new story out?  Exciting much??  Let’s look at the blurb.

An explosion sends Ethan running...straight into the arms of his mate.

Ethan White is a witch whose days are spent in his apothecary with his familiar, Beema. While making potions for the townsfolk keeps him busy, nothing exciting ever happens—until one day when a surprise visitor walks in and his world crumbles around him. Suddenly Ethan and his familiar are on the run, heading for the Fae to seek sanctuary.

Grayson is an alpha wolf. His two best friends are his betas, but there’s one thing missing—a pack. It’s for that very reason that the three of them were volunteered by the council to act as representatives. Their mission? Try to convince the Fae Queen to get the Fae involved in a battle with the Midnight Coven, the witches suspected of using the dark arts. However, the mission takes a back seat when Grayson meets his mate for the first time. 

With revelations and lies around every corner and a battle looming, they have to be ready to fight if they want to have a life together.

When a prophecy about the Shades of Power comes to light, both sides want the power for the battle against the other. The question is—who will unite them first?


Picture Renae:  So let me get this straight.  Ethan is a witch.  There is also Fae and a Fae Queen.  And Grayson is a wolf (I’m assuming a shifter).  Is this correct?

Beany:  Yup. There’s also a few other characters running around.

Renae:  So where’s the dragon??

Beany:  Uh…

Renae:  So no dragon?  **pouts**

Beany:  Uh…

Renae:  Stories are much better with dragons in them...**Gives Beany a searching look before moving on to the next question.**  


So in this world – does it have a name? – the witches and Fae are allies?  But they’re against the shifters?  Why is that?

Beany:  They’re not really against the shifters, the Fae just don’t see why they should bother helping them, or anyone else. Ethan has a connection to the Fae, but the shifters don’t and they’re the ones needing help against the Midnight Coven.

I haven’t named the world, not really… there’s kingdoms, but this book only looks at the Fae kingdom.

Renae:  And they need to unite to fight the bad witches?  Who are using the dark arts?  But aren’t the dark arts the fun ones?  When I was growing up, it was the kids in black that did all the fun things.

Beany:  Haha probably, but the ones wielding the dark arts are naughty, not fun *winks* As shifters, they don’t have much of a chance against dark witches so they go looking for an ally.

Renae:  Tell me – do you ever just look at world politics to get your story lines?  Do you think “Well this country and this country are at war, but when this country comes in…”?

Beany: To be honest, I don’t watch a lot of TV and especially not the news. Politics bore me and it seems to be just doom and gloom on the TV so I don’t really bother.

Renae:  So where do these wonderful worlds come from?

Beany:  PITA has some very interesting ideas…
Picture Renae:  So a wolf and a shifter?  Is this normal or surprising to this world?  Is Ethan going to be happy or peeved at his mate?

Beany:  Shifters are normal, at the point we’ve only heard of wolf shifters, PITA hasn’t told me it that will change. Ethan is definitely happy to find his mate, although Grayson does annoy him at times.

Renae:  Now, I understand that this is the start of a series?

Beany:  Yes. It was initially planned to be a standalone and now it’s Book 1 of at least 3.

Renae:  Who is publishing the book?  Where can we find it?

Beany:  I am, or rather, my company Rainbow Ninja Press is. Currently it’s up on ARe and Smashwords and it’ll be up on Amazon sometime this week. I’m also getting the publisher website setup and readers will be able to buy directly from there and once that’s up, I’ll have a special link for EU readers.

Renae:  What else are you working on?

Beany:  I’ve got first books in two other series that have been partially written as well as ideas for a lot more.

Renae:  So do you think you’ll ever write anything other than fantasy?  Is that what comes easy to you?  For me, I love the realism of my characters and I’m interested to hear where you think your future writings will be?

Beany:  It’s what I mostly read. I’ve written a contemporary but I have more fun writing fantasy because it gives me a lot more room to play. Plus, fantasy stories can have dragons!

Renae:  Oooh!  Dragons! **grin**  Is this a lifelong desire to write?  Have you always wanted to?  I came to write quite accidentally.  Like, “Oh, whoops – look I just produced a 60,000 word manuscript.”

Beany:  I’m the same. I have always loved to read, I devoured books from a young age. Although I have an active imagination, it wasn’t until the beginning of 2014 that I decided to try and write and that ended up as a, “I wrote a story over 40,000 words? How did that happen?” Unfortunately, now PITA won’t shut up.

Renae:  What about your other series, Paws and Magic?  How is that going?

Beany:  Jackson’s Fox is the third book in that series, but the characters are not talking to me! Grrrr! Even the Merman Tales boys are keeping quiet, it can be very annoying. Then again, other characters are popping up…

Renae:  Now, imagine this.  You’re sitting in a café having a coffee and then one of your characters turn up.  Let’s say the Fae Queen.  What would be your reaction?

Beany:  Honestly? I’d ask where’s Beema? (Ethan’s familiar) Beema is just awesome!

Renae:  What is the HARDEST part about writing fantasy?

Beany:  For me, finding the time to write in general is pretty hard at the moment. There are so many stories in my head, but not enough hours in the day to get them down!

Renae:  Where can people contact you?

Beany:  I’m on Facebook ( https://www.facebook.com/beany.sparks ), Twitter (@BeanySparks) or people can email me at beany.sparks@gmail.com

Renae:  Thanks for joining me today.  It’s been lovely to have you and your characters come to visit **grin** I need more fantasy character writers on.  I hope you had fun?

Beany:  I had lots of fun! Thank you for having me and for my tea **grin**

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Published on September 23, 2015 06:30

September 16, 2015

Guest Interview with Meg Amor

Picture Renae:  Today on my blog we’re welcoming a new guest – writer Meg Amor!  This is Meg’s first visit to my blog so we need to make it a good one.  Hi, Meg.  Come on in and take a seat.  Can I offer you a coffee?  Tea? Water?  **whispering**  It’s a new policy of mine to offer drinks, so I’m still getting used to it.

Meg:  Ooh, lovely, thanks for having me! **grin** Given we’re a couple of Australasians, I brought a bottle of New Zealand savvie blanc to sip while we chat. Would you like a cold glass of wine, Renae?

Renae:  Okay.  **whispers to Meg that she doesn’t drink alcohol, but will try it this once because it’s on a blog** Two secs.  I’ll be back with some glasses...

Meg:  Goodo. I’ll let you open that and pour us a glass.

Renae:  Back!  Here...  **hands Meg her glass**

Meg:  Thanks, Renae. Cheers! Lovely to be here. **grin**

Renae:  **sips and hopes it doesn’t go to her head** Okay – let’s get into the interview.  In March you released Hawaiian Lei, the story of a flight instructor in Hawaii meeting a man originally from New Zealand, who’d come to Hawaii via LA.  Today you’ve come to talk about your next release on the same theme, Hawaiian Orchid. It released yesterday (the 15th).  Let’s take a look at the blurb.

Blurb:

 Kulani is “The Orchid,” a young, insecure, pro-surfer who comes from a rough background on the Big Island of Hawai’i. He’s Beau Toyama’s cousin from Hawaiian Lei. But he’s also a healer and has a heart as deep as the ocean he’s part of. Like the great Hawaiians, Duke Kahanamoku and Eddie Aikau, who have gone before him—waterman and warrior Kulani Mahikoa epitomizes the spirit of aloha and love. Kulani’s not only healing his own wounds, but “The Lost Boys”—young, homeless, abandoned and abused gay boys he’s taken under his wing.

He meets the lone and lonely New Zealand widower, Rob Masterson—a wounded psychologist who’s trying to come to terms with his husband Tony’s death. When he died, they were separated but still living together. Can Rob reconcile all the pieces of guilt and love, to heal and fall in love again?

When he drops anchor in Kona Harbor and meets the exotic islander—young, bolshie Kulani—explosive heat makes sparks fly between them.

Is the age difference between them a barrier or something they’ll get past? Kulani has more layers than Rob ever bargained for. And Rob’s tangled knot of responsibility, grief and guilt with his New Zealand heritage and past life is something he needs to untangle. Two wounded men have to learn to trust and love one another. Traveling between the South Sea Islands of beautiful New Zealand and the exotic Hawaiian Islands—they forge a sea change, finding a home for their shrapnel laced souls.
Picture Renae:  **takes a moment to process the multiple layers and storylines in the book**  Wow – how many pages is this book?  Is it an epic saga?

Meg:  LOL. I do love writing in the old sweeping saga styles of old. I like the richness of them. The page count on this one is going to be around 324 I think,  with the word count about 97,000. 

Renae:  I’m fascinated with the huge varieties of different backgrounds you are bringing into these books.  You have Hawaiian, New Zealand, Maori, Japanese, Tahitian...  Tell me about your background.  Is this your heritage that you write about?

Meg:  Thanks. **grins**  Part of it is my heritage. I’m a New Zealander, born and bred but also a US citizen. My American home state is Hawai’i. I got my citizenship on the Big Island of Hawai’i over in the country courthouse in Hilo on the wet side of the island. My soul is very Polynesian, even though I’m not of that blood. Hawaiian is my soul’s home. It’s where I feel most at home in the world. I’m a real islander at heart and Hawai’i is the perfect combination between New Zealand’s own island heritage and American convenience which after living here 20 odd years, I’ve become a hybrid of the two places.

I’ve lived at home in Hawai’i twice on the Big Island and am working my way back then. My late husband Aaron was a New Zealand Maori. Much of the information for both Matt (in Hawaiian Lei) and Tony (in Hawaiian Orchid) comes from Aaron’s heritage. He really did come from the Ngati Raukawa and Tukorehe tribes. He was a Kuiti/Heremia and his family were Maori royalty. The Maori urupa or burial ground I mention, is where his mum Mereana is buried and his ashes are also. The marae I describe is his marae at Kikopiri near Ohau, Levin in the North Island of New Zealand.

I have a deep need to be connected to Polynesians and the heritage that goes with it. My best friend in NZ, is part Rarotongan and I had a Norfolk Island friend. All my life, I’ve been drawn to Polynesians. I resonate with their spirit and culture. My love of Tahiti though is something embedded in my soul. I think the Tahitians are the most beautiful of the South Sea Islands people. 

And the Japanese heritage is honouring the many Hawaiians that have that in their ancestry.

Renae:  Are you automatically drawn to writing about characters with Pacific Islander heritage?  Does it come naturally?

Meg:  Yes, as you can probably tell from my last answer. LOL. I’ve always had Polynesian people in my life, right from when I was a wee girl. Before I went to school, we lived out in the bays on Maori land. I used to go to the hangis--similar to a luau with mum and dad. I’d do my wee poi dance (badly) and someone would make me a wee flax headband to wear. I’d be the only Pakeha (white) girl there in my, then, blond hair and pale skin dancing with everyone else. I loved it. I felt right at home.

When I started school over in Christchurch city, my best friend was Tania Cleaver and she was a native Fijian New Zealander. My ‘Uncle’ Paul who lived with us for a while was Maori. My best friend who I sat next to the first day of high school when I was 12, is Rarotongan. My first real boyfriend was Maori. It just resonates with me. I think it’s because I’m essentially a cruiser myself. So, the easy island energy of Polynesians fits with my personality and way I like to live my life. I’m not a very formal person in many ways. At home in Hawai’i, despite my accent, most people assume I’m a local which is a huge compliment. I’m most at home close to the sea, like most islanders and I love the spiritual connection that Polynesians always seem to have.

Renae:  So someone picking up your book who is not aware of anything about Hawaiian or New Zealander history, are they going to be lost, or are they going to learn a lot from your book?

Meg:  Ooh, good question. Well, I hope they get to learn a lot. I like to include as much as I can about the culture, food, lifestyle, language and words as I can in my books, so people get a real sense of it. I want to take people for the ride, so they can feel it under their skin. Inhale it, live it for a while. 
Picture Renae:  Just quickly, for anyone who is not conversant with the cultures, is it taboo to be gay in Maori culture?  Hawaiian?

Meg:  No, it’s not. The Polynesian cultures are much more accepting generally of same sex relationships and people. The attitude is different. They’re much more relaxed about it and don’t see it as ‘abnormal’ – more just another side of someone. It’s treated as much more fluid too, not like Western culture which insists on someone being one or the other.

From Peter Michaud: In modern New Zealand, a common label adopted by LGBT Māori is Takatāpui, a term that has been revived from pre-European times and popularised since Homosexual Law Reform in 1986. The term roughly translates into English as intimate partner of the same sex. I think that’s lovely. Same sex relationships of mostly male types have been well documented in Maori history.

From Wikipedia: In Hawaiian history, Aikāne relationships, whether homosexual or bi-sexual activity in the pre-colonial era, was an accepted tradition and is one of the best examples of a heterosexual community accepting the practice. It was considered a natural part of life.

They weren’t governed by western religion for a long time, so their sexuality was different. More natural, no guilt or fears. Just acceptance.

Renae:  In Hawaiian Orchid you have Kulani who is a healer of the spirit, and Rob who is a psychologist.  This is similar to your own background, is it not? 

Meg:  Yes, it is. **grin**  Rob’s background is pretty much my own. I was counselling people when I was 12 years old and did some of the first psychotherapy in NZ at the time when I was 14. I trained in Natural Medicine in Australia but it didn’t give me enough of what I wanted to heal people. I could put a Band-Aid on an allergy situation and fix it for example. But it didn’t tell me WHY someone had gotten sick.

I then retrained in NLP – Neuro-Linguistic Programming so I could reset patterns in the subconscious for people. From there, I moved into emotional medicine and other modalities always creep in when you get involved with healing. I use a combination of all my training to facilitate healing with someone. I’m also a natural hands on healer like Kulani. But like Rob, I’m burnt out and now only take on the odd client. I heal through my books and stories. **grin** The lomi-lomi that is described in Hawaiian Lei is from my own Lomi practice I had at one point. Emotionally I want people to be able to heal so they can live full lives full of energy and joy.  

Renae:  Aren’t the two mutually exclusive?  The modern medicine and the ancient?

Meg:  It depends what you mean by ‘modern’ medicine. If you’re talking about allopathic medicine (Western) medicine. Then yes, I think they are mutually exclusive. I have very little time for allopathic medicine. I think it’s very good in emergency and trauma situations but generally I don’t place much store by it. I work in integrative medicine, that’s a combination of modalities. I’d call it holistic but that always suggests mung beans and alfalfa stuffed up your nose, along with huarache sandals, and these days it’s much more sophisticated and high end. Some of the most progressive medicine is coming from integrative medicine. Allopathic is always about 25 years behind everyone else and is quite closed off, not very open to different healing systems.

Obviously, this is NOT a subject you really want to get me into. LOL. I’m slightly rabid on it.

In short, I like to work with emotional medicine and energy medicine for the body and treat it as a whole unit, body, mind, soul and emotions. And that’s where you can easily combine integrative medicine and ancient medicine because they complement each other.

Renae:  Do you think it is harder or easier to grow up gay in this new modern world?

Meg:  Oh, much easier without a doubt. When I think about some of the barbaric things that were done to people because they were gay, even fifty years ago, it makes my skin crawl with horror. I think being gay now can be restrictive but it must have been stifling before. 
Renae:  I once had a nurse tell me that medical personnel such as doctors and nurses make the worst patients, because they know what’s going on.  A psychologist with a problem – is this going to be harder or easier for Rob?

Meg:  Harder. It depends who you are as a psych. I’m involved in NLP, so by our very training, we HAVE to do our own work on ourselves. Although, I know some people who have trained in it and haven’t. And I think that’s appalling. You’re given this fabulous tool and you don’t use it?

Rob is struggling on so many levels that I think it’s always harder for pyschs to some degree. We know what we’re ‘supposed’ to be doing, feeling, etc. But sometimes we can get extremely caught up in our own heads and forget to just be human and real when it’s REALLY required. And we and other people can be hard on us. Expecting us to ‘cope’ better because we ‘know’ and have the training. But at the end of the day, we’re still people going through a human experience. We have more insight hopefully but we can get caught up in the should of a situation rather than just being in it and letting ourselves BE whatever we need to be at that time.

Renae:  And Kulani is a healer – how does one become a healer?  Is it born in you?  Do you need to be trained?

Meg:  Wow, you ask great, in-depth questions. **grin** Love this. Some people train for it but I think it’s something you’re born with. Some innate internal need or structure in the soul. You choose it on your soul’s path or it chooses you, if that makes sense.

There are so many different kinds of healers too. The type of healer that Kulani is, can be trained, but most of the healers I know with those skills are born with it. And it’s often discovered by accident. I was in a store one day, buying a string of opals and the lady had a badly swollen hand. She’d had it for about half a day and she was having trouble putting the clasps on the opal string for me because of it. I don’t know what made me do it, but I took her hand and held it in my mine, and just talked to her. When I let her hand go, ten minutes later, most of the swelling had gone down and she could move it properly.

And you pick up various modalities and things over the years. Someone taught me to run my hand over the body, looking for hot or cold spots. A lot of it is being more in tune with energy frequencies so you can feel where there are gaps in the energy. I was born with a ‘polygraph’ set of hearing too. When I’m listening to clients, I can hear ‘spikes’ in people’s speech. It lets me know where something is getting to someone but they’re not able to articulate it or say it out loud. Then I go in and keep pushing that spot gently with words until it ‘pops’ and we get to what is causing someone distress or trouble.

For me, it’s a lifetime of skills I’ve accumulated along the way. I think it is for most healers. Even though I’m a New Zealander, I have an Irish background and come from a family of healers in various ways. My Grandfather was an integrative medicine doc. He was able to see when a patient would die. It wasn’t very nice for him and he drank a lot. A perfectly healthy looking patient could come into his practice and he’d suddenly think, “Oh god, they’re going to die next week.” Most of the time he couldn’t stop it or do anything about it.

I’m able to read photographs and get the core essence of someone. And have some of my Grandfather’s stuff.  

Renae:  There is mention of an age difference.  What is the gap, and do you really think it is an issue in our modern gay relationships?

Meg:  I have gaps in both books and I have to admit, it’s a bit of a theme of mine. I’m not sure why but I do like unusual pairings in relationships. They have always fascinated me. My other series is about a 68 black man who falls in love with a white woman 30 years his junior but it’s not a ‘younger model’ or ‘eye candy’ type of love. Theirs is a deep and soulful, loving respectful relationship.

With Beau and Mattie from Hawaiian Lei, there is a 14 year age difference, but they barely notice it. With Kulani and Rob in Hawaiian Orchid, it’s more pronounced. There is a 25 year age gap and they have more problems with it. But it’s more imagined issues than any real ones at the end of the day.

I don’t think it’s an issue in gay or hetero relationships per se. But it’s very individualized for each couple. I think the ‘stigma’ has become less in some ways. At one time, it was unusual for women to go out with much younger men. Now, not so much. I did read a wonderful book called Older Man, Younger Man and that showed up some interesting thoughts on both sides. But it always seems to be ‘the outside world’s’ perceptions of what is okay, rather than with the people who are involved themselves.

Renae:  Just checking – Hawaiian Lei and Hawaiian Orchid – are they HEA?

Meg:  Yes. Definitely. **grin** I don’t like reading books that aren’t, so all of mine are HEA. **grin** I always feel a wee bit robbed otherwise. LOL.

Renae:  Is there more planned for the series?

Meg:  Yes, there is. Kulani has a tribe of ‘lost boys,’ he’s taken under his wing. And their stories are now also starting to emerge. We’ll get to hear the story of each boy, with the background of Kulani and Rob (Orchid), and Beau and Matt (Lei) being the backbone for each story.

Danny’s story, Hawaiian Fragrance is up next.

Danny Lucerno is mixed plate, part Portuguese from a wealthy, plumeria farm family.  He’s a fourth generation Big Islander coming from the powerful and influential Lucerno family. His folks own substantial ranch land and are horse people up in wet, lush Waimea where the mighty Parker Ranch is. Not that the scent of his moneyed background supports him much. When he came out to his family at seventeen, they disowned him. Kulani found him living on the beach. 

Now he’s got a bad boy attitude, smokes cigarettes and is the most hurt and angry of the boys. He was raised on a horse, but he’s also an expert waterman like Kulani—another departure from his families graces. He and Zane often go head to head but develop a deeper friendship when Danny falls in love an older man, Paolo Bastini, a wealthy, sophisticated Brazilian involved in the perfume industry.

Unbeknown to Danny, Paolo has a past that entwines Danny in a dangerous game. Twenty-five years earlier, Paolo was in love with another Lucerno—Daniel Sr.—Danny’s father.  What happens when Paolo starts to resent Danny not being Daniel? 

This story is still developing, but this is the main idea of it.

Zane’s story is Hawaiian Ginger after this one. He’s a partially deaf dancer from a deeply religious family.

Then the twins story – Hawaiian Cherry. They come from an old Japanese Kona coffee family and ran away from home when their druggie mother’s new boyfriend thought they’d be nice, fresh meat.

Kaleho is the last story in this series at the moment. He’s a complete mystery at this point. **grin** But his story will come, they always come and tell me the story they want the world to hear. That is Hawaiian Mac.

Renae:  What are you working on now?

Meg:  Too much. LOL. Obviously, we’ve just put Hawaiian Orchid ‘to bed.’ Next, I want to release a trilogy set in New Orleans. I’ll be self-publishing that one and it’s due out about a month after Orchid (apparently.) According to some schedule in my head, which may not come off yet. **grin** But that’s the plan. Henry and Isolde is the first book in the series and just needs another edit, then The Chi Circle is in full edit, and Flame is the last book, half written at this stage. I’m also trying to carve out some space to write Hawaiian Fragrance. I don’t plan on sleeping for about 6 months, give or take. :)

Renae:  Where can people contact you?

Meg: 

http://www.troikaromance.com/
www.troikaromance.blogspot.com
google+  
twitter 
Facebook


Renae:  Thank you ever so much for coming and visiting me today.  I hope the release is going well and that you don’t stress out too much like me!  I’ve really enjoyed this.  Congrats on the new release, and good luck.

Meg:  Thanks so much Renae for having me. I’ve loved being here. Such in-depth and interesting questions!! The release is going well, thanks. By the time I get to the release part, I’m on cruise mode. I enjoy the release of my baby out into the world. **grin**

It’s always lovely to sit down and have a wine and natter with a fellow Australasian. Slainte as they say in Ireland. And a big aloha and mahalo to everyone. Meg **grin**

 

 

 

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Published on September 16, 2015 06:00

September 10, 2015

Guest interview with Toni Griffin

Picture Renae:  Today we welcome back to my blog, the wonderful, the spectacular, the fab-tab-ulous, the exquisite, the famous.... TONI GRIFFIN!  **wild applause**

Toni:  *blushes* Well, I can't say I've ever had an introduction quite like that.

Renae:  **bounces with excitement**  Hi, Toni.  RJ Jones interviewed me the other day and offered me coffee during the interview, and I realised that I don’t offer my guests coffee.  Did you want one?

Toni:  Egh. Umm… No, thank you. I can't stand coffee… Don't even like the smell. A glass of water would be lovely though.

Renae:  **dashes off to get it**

Toni:  *Whistles and looks around the room*

Renae:  Back.  **hands Toni her drink and takes a long slurp of her own coffee**  Now, where were we?  Ah, interview.  It’s been a while since your last release.  Why is that?  What have you been up to?

Toni:  Yeah, I had three releases all in fairly quick succession in February and then nothing since. Steps to You was a labour of love and hate for me. I started this story in 2013 and had to keep putting it aside to work on other projects, which made it all the harder to continuously pick back up again.

After A Very Holland Valentine was released I could finally drag it back out once and for all. I was determined to finish, even though I had friends laughing and telling me it was never going to happen. *cough* Freddy *cough*

Steps is the longest first edition book I've written, and it's also a contemporary. I've only written a couple of those in the past, both of which were cowboys, and neither were this long.

After I finished Steps I started work on another project, As Fire Rains Down, which also turned out to be longer than I had anticipated. Now, I'm working on the third book in my Smokey Mountain Bears series.

Renae:  And Steps to You is releasing on the 26th of September. Let’s have a look at the blurb...

Blurb : Is there something in life that you're afraid of, like heart pounding, shortness of breath, Jesus Christ I'm going to pass out, scared? For Leo Harris that something is heights.

Why his nosy sister would gift him with a pass for the Sydney Harbour Bridge climb is anybody's guess, let alone expect Leo to make it through in one piece. If it wasn't for the kindness of a sexy stranger he meets at orientation, Leo doubts he would have been able to step one foot onto the mammoth structure.

Ryan Anderson's known as a workaholic, as he has no reason not to be, that all changes in one day when he meets Leo. Ryan quickly falls head over heels as he sets out to make Leo his.

Picture Renae:  Ooh!  Sydney Harbour Bridge climb??  Yay – how Australian.  Have you done it?

Toni:  Thank you, I like showcasing this wonderful land I call home. I have actually climbed the bridge. I was in Sydney in 2013 to attend OzMMMeet and thought it would be a good opportunity to make the climb. I hadn't been to Sydney since 1998 and I'd always wanted to do it, so I did. The story came to me while I was climbing one of the 1337 stairs required.

Renae:  I’m not afraid of heights, but the thought of going up there makes me a little nervous.  But your guy isn’t just a little apprehensive?  He’s shit-scared? 

Toni:  Yeah, poor Leo. He really doesn't know why his sister would be so mean to him. She's fully aware that he doesn't like heights. Honestly, even I don't know what was going through her head when Teresa thought that gift up.

Renae:  Yeah, sisters can be mean while pretending to be nice.  **wink** I notice this is the first in a series?  Fear Series?  Oh, cool.  What other fears are we going to come across?  Spiders???

Toni:  LOL. Maybe. I haven't decided yet. There's so many different fears and phobias out there to choose from.

Renae:  How did you come up with the idea for this series?

Toni:  The idea for the book came while I was making the climb. It wasn't until I was home and typing away that I had the idea to make it into a series, revolving around different people facing their fears.

Renae:  In times of need, people often fall in love.  I’ve heard of people in hostage situations falling in love after the drama is over, maybe because they cling to that person.  Can we trust ourselves to fall in love in the middle of fear?

Toni:  I actually just watched SPEED the other day. What do they say in that movie: 'Relationships that start under intense circumstances, they never last.' My guys would disagree with this statement.

Renae:  Is there a reason Leo is scared of heights?  Is his fear reasonable, or unreasonable?

Toni:  Is any fear unreasonable? Nothing happened to poor Leo in his life to make him dislike heights, he wasn't dangled of any balconies when he was a baby or anything. However, when he gets up that high, his body just reacts, he has trouble breathing and freezes up.

Renae:  And Ryan?  He sounds like an uptight guy.  Why is he doing the bridge climb?

Toni:  He's really not. He just hasn't had anyone in his life to make him take some time for himself and relax. Ryan's climbing the bridge as he's been in Sydney for three years and hasn't done a single touristy thing. He figured it was about time.
Picture Renae:  I often find that hard-hitting, high-reaching, dedicated and powerful men don’t have patience and time for people who suffer from something as simple as an illogical fear.  Is Ryan like this?

Toni:  Not at all.

Renae:  So what draws Ryan to Leo?

Toni:  Ryan's drawn to Leo the first time he lays eyes on him. Leo looks like a scared rabbit and all Ryan wants to do is give him a hug and tell Leo everything will be alright.

Renae:  That’s a great cover!  I love the bridge.  Who did the cover for you?

Toni:  The fabulously talented Freddy MacKay created my beautiful cover.

Renae:  And where will the other stories in the series be set?  Do the readers get to travel around Australia while reading?

Toni:  Of course. I love setting my stories in the country I call home. I think the only two States/Territories I haven't covered yet are the ACT & SA. So they're both on the list for a story.

Renae:  And when is the next one out?

Toni:  The next book in this series hasn't been written yet, but I'm hoping next year if I can swing it. As for my next release after this, that will be in October/November. A Bear's Bear will be a part of the Mischief Corner Books fall anthology Travels through the Scarlet Equinox.

Renae:  For the sake of warning people, if a reader has a phobia of heights, do they need to avoid this book?  Or will they empathise with Leo?

Toni:  I think they will more empathise with Leo. I don't believe it to be scary.

Renae:  Are you sure there’s no spiders in your series to scare people??

Toni:  LOL... No spiders in this story. I can't promise for the rest of the series though.

Renae:  **pouts**  Okay, okay.  Where can people find you?

Toni:  I can be found at the EDJ or on the rare occasion I'm not there at home…. Oh you mean online. Right. Sorry.

You can find me at www.tonigriffin.net

Email me at info@tonigriffin.net

Or Facebook me at: https://www.facebook.com/toni.griffin.author

I don't have twitter/Instagram/Pinterest or anything like that. At least not yet.

Renae:  Great.  Now they know where to send the hate mail when you scare the crap out of them **wink**  Thanks for coming along today.  It’s been great.  Congratulations on the new series and I hope they do great.

Toni:  Thank you for having me Renae, I always have a blast when I get to come and visit with you. **Hands back empty water glass**

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Published on September 10, 2015 00:15

August 26, 2015

Guest Interview - CJane Elliot

Picture Renae:  Today I welcome back to my blog a wonderful writer – CJane Elliott.  I first had CJane on my blog back in January 2014 with Wild and Precious!  Wow – has it been that long?

CJane:  It doesn’t seem like it! Thanks for having me back.

Renae:  And now you have a new book out Sex, Love and Videogames.  Tell me, what have you been doing between now and Wild and Precious?

CJane:  Working, dancing, visiting my family in the Washington, DC, area. We’ve also been hosting my son’s best friend who moved back to the area, so with two 19 year old musicians in the house, it’s been lively! In the writing game, along with finishing Sex, Love, and Videogames, I also wrote a follow up novella to Wild and Precious, titled There You Are. It should be out by the end of this year.

Renae:  Congratulations on the new release that came out on the 21st of August.  Let’s have a look:

Blurb

Shy guy Jed Carter has always felt invisible next to his charismatic older brother, Kent. Kent’s master plan for Jed is simple: University of Virginia, fraternity, business, sports, and ladies’ man. None of it is Jed, except for playing on the rugby team, which he joins in defiance of soccer-loving Kent. Jed comes out in his sophomore year and starts seeing Pete, an attractive junior, who uses him for sex and videogames. Jed wants more—in life and in love—and starts making his own plans. First on the list: getting to know Charlie, the handsome guy working at the local videogame arcade.

Charlie Ambrose has always felt like an oddball, and not just for his tendency to stutter. Being gay sets him apart from his African-American community, and as a “townie,” he doesn’t fit in with the college crowd. Charlie’s inspiration is his cousin, Morocco, who’s transgender and doesn’t give a fig about fitting in. Art is Charlie’s passion, and when a local videogame designer discovers him, Charlie’s living a dream. The only thing he’s missing is love. But the last person Charlie expects to find it with is a cute, white U.Va. rugby player named Jed.


Picture Renae:  The shy guy and the stutterer?  Most stutterers I know are pretty shy themselves.  How on earth did they ever get together?

CJane:  Right? It’s pretty much of a miracle because neither one of them reeks confidence. But Jed has gotten fed up with not being the author of his own life and he’s just been dumped by his “sex and videogame” buddy Pete. Something impels him to go over to the videogame store and talk to that cute guy Charlie. On Charlie’s part, his cousin Morocco happens to be present when Jed stops by, sees the sparks between the two, and sees how Charlie is being stopped by his concern about his stuttering. She drags Charlie to Jed’s next rugby game because she’ll be damned if she’ll let Charlie get in his own way.

Renae:  Do you have any personal experience with a stutterer?  My husband and son are both stutterers (I don’t believe you are ever “cured,” you just learn to control it).  I know the emotional toll it can take on a person when they are unable to control their own mouth.  My husband is emotionally scarred by the stutter he didn’t learn to control until his late teens.  My son as well, he was only five, but it worried him greatly.

CJane:  I knew people who stuttered growing up and in courses that I took. It has to be a hard thing emotionally, like anything that makes a child “different” or subject to teasing. It was satisfying showing Charlie overcoming his concerns and ultimately not being stopped by his stuttering in love or profession.

Renae:  Coming from Australia, our ethnic groups are very different from those of America.  I therefore enjoy learning about different cultures in different novels.  Did you find it hard to write one black and one white character?

CJane:  Race in America is a hard subject. You only have to look at what is happening with the disproportionate police violence against black people to know that racism is still deeply ingrained in our culture. When Charlie emerged as a biracial character (meaning, I didn’t plan for him to be so but that’s what he was), it wasn’t so much hard to write him and his family, as daunting, only because I was afraid of unknowingly perpetuating stereotypes or racist attitudes. Dreamspinner Press has a Diversity Panel which will review manuscripts and I felt fortunate to have their feedback.

Renae:  What about college life?  How hard do you find it to write that?

CJane:  I love writing about college life. I think it’s that “new adult” phase that I find interesting. It’s the period in life when people are having to discover who they are and what they want, and unlike most teens, have the freedom to do something about it. I like writing about their changing relationships with their families and their discoveries.

Renae:  The blurb mentions “Pete” – is this Pete from the first novel in the Serpentine series?  Serpentine Walls?
Picture CJane:  Yes. Pete is the main character in Serpentine Walls. He goes through a number of bad relationship choices until finally ending up wiser and with the guy he was meant to be with. Jed was one of the guys who Pete wasn’t very nice to, not that Jed deserved that, but because Pete wasn’t ready to be with anyone in a serious way.

Renae:  So when you wrote Serpentine Walls, did you always plan to write Jed’s story?

CJane:  No. I didn’t plan ahead to write more in the series, but even before the end of Serpentine Walls I knew I wanted to write about Aidan Emery, the glamorous senior who is involved with the professor. I wanted to know why a guy like Aidan, who seemed to have everything going for him, ended up so damaged. That book became Aidan’s Journey. But people who read Serpentine Walls loved Jed and felt for him, and after I got Aidan out of my system, I decided to write his story.

Renae:  Do we need to read the first books in the Serpentine series before this one?

CJane:  Not necessarily. They’re stand-alone novels, although Serpentine Walls covers some of the same events from Pete’s point of view. Jed doesn’t even come into Aidan’s Journey at all.

Renae:  In our 2014 interview, you mentioned two more books in the Serpentine series.  Are these still going ahead?  Can you tell us a bit about them?

CJane:  The next book in the Serpentine series will be the story of Jed’s brother Kent and Kent’s college roommate Tucker. They are going off to Quantico to be in the military at the end of Sex, Love, and Videogames and neither one of them is identifying as gay. But they love each other deeply and so… we shall see!

Renae:  And what are you working on now?

CJane:  Two things. I am writing a third novella in the Wild and Precious universe on a young character that will be introduced in There You Are. And Dreamspinner just came out with a Harlequin-inspired imprint called Dreamspun Desires. I’m all over that! I’m plotting a cruise-ship romance of enemies to lovers.

Renae:  I have to ask though – rugby?  Is it a big thing in the US?

CJane:  Ha ha, not really. I picked rugby as Jed’s sport while writing Serpentine Walls. I wanted him to be a jock of some sort, someone quite different from Pete who is more of an artsy type. I did Google to make sure U.Va. had a rugby team! But I have to confess, I know next to nothing about rugby so I was praying that I could skate by on some vague references!

Renae:  I’ve googled some pictures of rugby (here in Western Australia, we tend to watch Aussie Rules over rugby – maybe I should change my mind...)  Tell me, did you pin up pics of rugby players to get you in the mood.  (You can tell me the truth **wink**  Come on!)

CJane:  Oh yes, that’s really why I picked it! Rugby players are fine!

Renae:  Okay, okay.  Tell us where we can find you on social media.

CJane:  
E-mail: cjaneelliott@gmail.com
Website: http://www.cjaneelliott.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/CJaneElliott
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/cjane.elliott

Renae:  Thanks for joining me again today.  Repeat customers are always the best.  Thanks for the fun and I hope you have a great release.

CJane:  Thanks so much, Renae! You ask the best questions. I always have fun answering them.

 

 

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Published on August 26, 2015 05:00

August 19, 2015

Guest Interview - Charley Descoteaux

Picture Renae:  Hi everyone!  On today’s blog I have another lovely Dreamspinner author joining me to chat about their latest release, which is out TODAY.  Let us please welcome Charley Dess— Dee— Day—  Dammit!  Okay – you need to tell me how to pronounce your name because I have to say Dess-Cott-Toox in my head in order to spell it.  **feels like the uneducated Australian and realises that she is**

Charley:  Hi everyone! Thank you so much for having me, Renae. Haha, sorry about that! If I’d really thought my Romances would be published I would’ve chosen a pen name that was easier to spell. It’s pronounced Des-ka-Toe. I have my love of old-school Romances and my French Canadian heritage to blame. ;)

Renae:  Right.  Thank you.  And sorry about that.  If it makes you feel any better, I can tell you I used to work for a company called Yamaatji Marlpa Barna Baba Maaja Aboriginal Corporation.  I can pronounce it easily **winks** but it was a bit of a mouthful when you were answering the phone.

Charley: Now THAT is a mouthful! When I first moved to Oregon it was so hard to remember how to say Willamette (the second syllable is stressed wil-Lam-et) and that was embarrassing.

Renae:  So congratulations!  Happy release day  **throws confetti**  Today has been the release of your new story, Buchanan House.

Blurb:

Eric Allen, thirty-three-year-old line cook, moved in with his grandmother, Jewell, after a disastrous coming-out when he was in middle school. She raised him, and he cared for her when she fell ill. When Jewell died, she left everything to Eric—angering his parents and older brother. The inheritance isn’t much, but Eric and his bestie, Nathan, pool their money and buy an abandoned hotel on an isolated stretch of the Central Oregon Coast. The hotel isn't far from Lincoln City—a town with its own Pride Festival and named for a president—so they christen it Buchanan House after James Buchanan, the “confirmed bachelor” president with the close male friend.

Eric and Nathan need a handyman to help them turn Buchanan House into the gay resort of their dreams. Eric finds Tim Tate in the local listings, and over the months leading to opening weekend, Tim reveals himself as a skilled carpenter with many hidden talents. Eric falls hard for Tim, but before he can see a future with the gorgeous handyman, he has to get over twenty years of being bullied and shamed by his birth family. It would be much easier if Eric’s brother Zach wasn't trying to grab part of the inheritance or ruin opening weekend.


Picture Renae:  **looks up from her computer screen**  Oh, sorry.  I got side tracked when I went to google facts about James Buchanan.  An interesting man.  What do you think – was he gay?  Bisexual?  Broken-hearted but straight?

Charley:  I’d like to think he was bi, but I’m a little biased that way. As far as I know he never formally came out, so until someone invents a time machine we can only speculate. He was an interesting president, it’s too bad he had to serve right before Lincoln and the Civil War. Timing is important—good ideas ahead of their time don’t always win a lot of friends.

Renae:  Do you ever think about your international audience when you write a book?  As an Australian author I’m conscious of every single word I write in a book and try to work out if it will translate.

Charley:  Interesting question! I live in Northwest Oregon, way up in the Northwest corner of the US. It’s a beautiful area which, for better or worse, a lot of people haven’t seen and know little or nothing about. Because of this, I try to be as descriptive as possible—especially with the “local flavour” bits—so everyone can enjoy the story without being confused. I hope this helps my foreign readers. I love reading books set in places I’ve never been and it would be wonderful if someone read Buchanan House and felt almost like they’d taken a vacation on the Oregon Coast!

Renae:  So in this book, Buchanan House, Eric is scorned by his parents when he comes out, but accepted by his grandmother.  Was there a reason that his grandmother was so accepting whereas his parents weren’t?

Charley:  The details about his grandmother are spoilery—you’ll have to read the book to learn those. But the reaction of his “liberal” parents is taken from my own life. Most of my family always seemed liberal, maybe even open-minded, so when my daughter came out as trans their hostile reaction was a shock to me. They didn’t bully her, that would’ve been going too far, but within a few months they had all disowned me. I’ve heard many authors say they put certain parts of themselves into their characters. I gave poor Eric some of my reactions to being bullied and it was cathartic. Hopefully it makes a good story too.

Renae:  And Nathan, Eric’s best friend, is he gay too?  Is this why they have decided to open a gay resort?

Charley:  Yes, Nathan is flamboyantly, colorfully gay. Eric and Nathan met in middle school because they were both targets for bullies. Their dream back then was to open a B&B. It took them a while but they made that dream come true, even if it’s not exactly as they’d pictured it.
Picture Renae:  I’m assuming that buying an old building and converting it to a hotel would be a horrendous amount of work.  Do you have any experience in the hotel industry?

Charley:  The camp is old, but it’s not in bad shape. They did have a lot of work to do, but I tried not to make readers slog through it all with them.  **grin**

I have a tiny bit of experience with B&Bs. A friend of mine ran one on her property and I helped her with it a few times. Just enough to know that I’m not cut out to make a career of it!

Renae:  Do you think there is a need of gay resorts?  Is it something that is a viable business?  Is it discrimination against the non-gay people?

Charley:  I don’t see anything wrong with specialized or themed resorts of any kind, as long as people aren’t turned away if they don’t “measure up.” In an area like the Pacific Northwest, with a high LGBTQ+ population and a thriving tourist industry, I think it could go over well if done right. In the case of Buchanan House the camp isn’t visible from the highway so they wouldn’t get many (if any) drop-ins. That would virtually eliminate any need to turn anyone away. I saw Eric and Nathan advertising at Pride and in gay travel guides, growing their business mostly by word of mouth.

Renae:  How much different do you think Eric’s life would’ve been if his parents had not rejected him, but had begrudgingly allowed him to continue to live with them?

Charley:  Probably it would have been a lot worse for Eric. As it was, his family was vocal about his “lifestyle choice” but he had his grandmother’s unconditional love to rely on. Without that, he would’ve had a much harder time getting comfortable with his sexuality.

Renae:  Tell me about your writing?  You write across a variety of genres, different lengths, and also in YA.  Is there a niche that you’re most comfortable with?

Charley:  Most of my stories are contemporary, and that’s the sub-genre I’m most comfortable with. But I also love reading all kinds of speculative fiction so sometimes those stories come knocking at my door too.  

Length is a tricky one. I started many years ago with short stories and still love writing them. I understand that they’re not always emotionally satisfying for readers, though. I love sinking into a world and really getting to know a group of characters and that’s not possible with shorter works. Some stories seem to want to be novellas but I’m taking extra time now to decide whether a story is truly finished or if I can tell a little bit more and give readers a more satisfying experience without that feeling of padding. 
Renae:  Does Nathan have a story to tell us?  Is there going to be a part two to the book?

Charley:  *fingers crossed* I sure hope so, because I wrote his story!

Renae:  As an Australian, I have little knowledge of American states, but I had to look up if Oregon had a coast!  I didn’t realise **yeah, please don’t laugh too hard at the Aussie**  To me Oregon is wagons and snow (I loved the movie Seven Brides for Seven Brothers which was set in 1850 Oregon **wink**).  How do you pick your settings for your book?  Do you need to have visited the place?

Charley:  Not laughing at all! We Americans have a reputation for not being aces at geography and I have to admit that I wouldn’t get an A+ on a quiz about Australia. Most of what I know about your part of the world is from movies and reading Romances.  *grin*

I set my stories in places I love, places that seem almost like characters to me.  The greater Portland area is perfect for a writer—we have everything here. If you drive two hours west you’re at the coast, two hours east to the mountains, and in between there are wetlands, forests, small towns, and five-star hotels. I love the whole Pacific Northwest, from Oregon and Washington to British Columbia, there are so many stories here!

Renae:  Is there a place you long to set a book in?

Charley:  I’d love to set a book somewhere in South America—Brazil or Colombia. Probably because I’ve always wanted to go there. My wish list would also include Japan, Australia, France and the UK—heck, I want to travel everywhere and then write a book set there! **grin**

Renae:  What are you writing now?

Charley:  I’m busy with edits for two stories so I haven’t been writing as much as usual. This year I’ll have a standalone Christmas story with Dreamspinner, Cascades. Right now I’m beginning edits and waiting for cover art. I love stories of second chances and guys who don’t usually appear in M/M Romances (like silver foxes!) and JB and Doug qualify on both counts!

Renae:  Where can people contact you?

Charley:  I hang out in all the usual places: Facebook , Twitter , Goodreads , and the prettiest timesink on the internet-- Pinterest . Rattle my cages anytime!  **grin**

Renae:  Thanks for coming along and meeting with me today.  It’s been wonderful having you visit.  Congrats once again on the release, and I hope it does fabulously for you.

Charley:  Thanks so much for having me, Renae!

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Published on August 19, 2015 16:20

August 14, 2015

36 Muscled Men

Picture Something is happening in Perth.

Something very special is happening in Perth this weekend.  Sunday to be exact.  From around 2pm.

             The Western Derby.

For those who don’t know what this is, you’re probably pronouncing it wrong too.  It’s DERR-BEE – the way it looks, not the olde English pronunciation of DAHR-BEE.

Davo from my latest release, You Are the Reason, explains it well.  Excerpt from Chapter Two:

The Tav was busy but not as crowded as it usually was. I strode to the bar and waved the owner, Charlie, over. 

“Hey, Davo. What can I get you?” 

“Corona, thanks. Where is everyone tonight?” I looked around at the slim pickings I had for the night’s entertainment. 

“Derby,” Charlie grunted as he plonked the bottle on the bar for me. 

I grimaced. I’d forgotten that the two local football teams were going head-to-head that night. It was a big deal in Perth. Bragging rights were on the line. We’re talking about sell-out crowds, marital discord, and at least one on-field fight per derby played. 

After eschewing anything girly, I’d thrown myself into the football scene. Like every man in my family before me, I’d had to pick a football team to go for. I’d looked at my local team choices—West Coast Eagles or Fremantle Dockers—and decided they weren’t macho enough. So then I looked interstate: the Magpies, the Kangaroos, the Hawks, the Swans, the Lions…. 

Finally I’d set my eyes on the Demons. Yes. That described my internal struggle. So I became a Melbourne Football Club fan, and thus I hadn’t seen a premiership flag. Yet. I was hopeful. At the core of every Australian is the inability to give up on your footy team. So what if I’d followed them for fifteen years and never seen a flag? They’d once won three premierships back-to-back. 

In the ’50s.
Picture Yes.  This weekend in my household there will be marital discord, because I go for the Dockers and my husband is an Eagle.

But wait, there’s more.

You see, my Dockers are currently on top of the AFL ladder, and the Eagles are second.  So it’s sure to be a huge game.  Any time that it is one-versus-two it’s big.  But to have the two Western Australian teams...

To understand a little more about how much of a big deal this is, I’ll tell you a little history of the game.  We’re talking about AFL here – the Australian Football League, otherwise known as Aussie Rules to differentiate it from soccer or rugby.  The sport developed from a game that has its earliest documented history in about the 1820’s.  It is said to have been created in Melbourne, which is the capital city of Victoria.  But soon the whole of Australia was playing it.  By the time I was born, each capital city had their own leagues.  The Western Australian league is called the WAFL (pronounced ‘waffle’) where our top clubs compete. Picture But by far, the most popular league was the VFL – the Victorian league.  It was run on a national level, where the best players from all over Australia were drafted into the various Victorian clubs, and the serious money and fame were involved.  But they only had Victorian teams, and I still remember my father going for Carlton.

Then, as my fellow Australian author, Sean Kennedy likes to say, the other states of Australian whinged about how they wanted to join the VFL, and so the competition expanded and became the AFL.  It was now a league that was Australian wide, with the first non-Victorian team entering the competition in 1982. 

In 1987, Western Australia got their first state team – the West Coast Eagles.  We were extremely proud of our team, and since WA has one of the strongest amateur football leagues, WCE soon became a powerhouse team.  Converting from a fan of whichever VFL club you went for, to go for your new state team was a pretty easy choice for most.  However, in 1995, Western Australia became the first state outside Victoria to be represented by more than one team.  The strong support in WA meant there was now room for another team – and The Fremantle Dockers were formed.

Oh, what a dilemma this created in the hearts of footy fans in WA.  When there was only the Eagles, we knew who to go for – but now there were two teams.  How to decide?

Perth is very divided geographically – we have a river that runs from east to west, and most people orient themselves in Perth by being North of the River (NOR) or South of the River (SOR).  The city of Perth is located on the north banks, and is technically NOR.  Our shipping port is Fremantle, and is technically located on southern side of the mouth of the river.  It was decided that the SOR WAFL clubs would lead to Fremantle, and the NOR WAFL clubs to Eagles. Picture It should’ve been easy to pick your team then – SOR people go for Dockers, and NOR for Eagles.  But no.  Since 1995 there has been a rather large resentment amongst the ranks.  Die-hard Eagles fans who refused to “switch” teams, see those who did change as “traitors.”  Freo fans see the Eagles being high-and-mighty, looking down their noses at their poorer brother.  To add to the mix, Fremantle has based their club around the history of the Fremantle ports, taking their name from the working-class dockside workers.  It is seen as a blue-collar working man’s club.  In comparison, the Eagle’s home ground is Subiaco, which is an inner city suburb of Perth, and there is a joke about the car park at an Eagles game having only the most expensive cars in it.

However you decided your team, you were frowned at by the others.  And as Sean Kennedy likes to tell me, if you live in Perth and go for a team other than the WA teams, you are even more of a social leper.

My husband’s family made the switch to support the Dockers.  His mother, father and brother are all dyed-in-wool Dockers.  I’m a Docker.  I made the switch too.  However my husband refused to give up on “his” team and has firmly remained an Eagle. Picture People often laugh at our split household and ask me how we “cope.”  I tell them (with a rather large grain of truth) about the two rules I have.
                1.  You don’t put down the other person’s team.
                2.  On derby day, the house is mine.

You may laugh, but it keeps the peace.  We don’t get angry at each other, because we’re not insulting the other team.  And when our teams play each other, he can go to his friend’s house where they can yell at their team together, because I will be in front of the TV yelling at my team.

With 20 years of history between the two teams, there is a huge rivalry.  You would think that the two teams that share so much (ie they are both hated by the teams “over east” and both have the physical disadvantage of being the teams that need to travel the longest distance in the league) would be a great support to each other.  No.  We have the greatest rivalry.

This morning I washed my Dockers jacket, ready to wear proudly for the next 48 hours.  Should they win, I will be wearing it all next week too.  Should they lose, I’ll put it away for a couple of days while I cry in shame.

In the next 48 hours you will not be able to greet someone without asking who they are going for.  

This morning on the news, three of the six top stories had to do with the derby . The other three articles were about a murder, a mining company losing $1.4b, and an extinction threat to the numbat.  Yes, the derby rated ABOVE gruesome stabbing murders and $1.4b.  

The radio gave me the latest betting stats.   Picture Cars are flying flags of their team.  

The latest craze in Perth is the great “bake off” where shops are making Eagles/Dockers themed cakes, muffins and more.

All for a game where 36 muscled men chase a red ball around the ground.

Some more stats for you about AFL:
                1.  AFL is the highest spectator attended sport in Australia.
                2.  The AFL grand final has the biggest crowd in attendance – in theworld.  Yes.  The 2014 Grand Final had over 99,000 people there.  In comparison, the 2015 FA cup in England had 89,000 and the 2015 Playoffs in the US had 85,000 people. 2015 Superbowl had 70,000.
                3.  Stats for the Western Derby are tight with the Eagles beating the Dockers 21 times, but losing 20 times.  Of the last 15 games (ie the last 8 seasons) Fremantle have dominated, with WCE only winning 3 of those games.


So there is only one thing I can say.  GO FREO!  Don’t know a thing about Aussie Rules?  Ninh explains: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mnv32s8jPz0 I had a fun morning looking at You Tube clips:
I’d like to see that: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2TO35rZjO4
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwOrUwiv4zI

Top marks, 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCoUKnswVWw

Top goals, 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7hD0-xTv2w

Hard hits:  Obviously an Eagles fan made this.  Had a bit of a buzz from the old footage, but wow it’s a hard game.   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qh5hNY83UA4
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Published on August 14, 2015 05:17

36 muscled men?

Picture Something is happening in Perth.

Something very special is happening in Perth this weekend.  Sunday to be exact.  From around 2pm.

             The Western Derby.

For those who don’t know what this is, you’re probably pronouncing it wrong too.  It’s DERR-BEE – the way it looks, not the olde English pronunciation of DAHR-BEE.

Davo from my latest release, You Are the Reason, explains it well.  Excerpt from Chapter Two:

The Tav was busy but not as crowded as it usually was. I strode to the bar and waved the owner, Charlie, over.

“Hey, Davo. What can I get you?”

“Corona, thanks. Where is everyone tonight?” I looked around at the slim pickings I had for the night’s entertainment.

“Derby,” Charlie grunted as he plonked the bottle on the bar for me.

I grimaced. I’d forgotten that the two local football teams were going head-to-head that night. It was a big deal in Perth. Bragging rights were on the line. We’re talking about sell-out crowds, marital discord, and at least one on-field fight per derby played.

After eschewing anything girly, I’d thrown myself into the football scene. Like every man in my family before me, I’d had to pick a football team to go for. I’d looked at my local team choices—West Coast Eagles or Fremantle Dockers—and decided they weren’t macho enough. So then I looked interstate: the Magpies, the Kangaroos, the Hawks, the Swans, the Lions….

Finally I’d set my eyes on the Demons. Yes. That described my internal struggle. So I became a Melbourne Football Club fan, and thus I hadn’t seen a premiership flag. Yet. I was hopeful. At the core of every Australian is the inability to give up on your footy team. So what if I’d followed them for fifteen years and never seen a flag? They’d once won three premierships back-to-back.

In the ’50s.

Picture Yes.  This weekend in my household there will be marital discord, because I go for the Dockers and my husband is an Eagle.

But wait, there’s more.

You see, my Dockers are currently on top of the AFL ladder, and the Eagles are second.  So it’s sure to be a huge game.  Any time that it is one-versus-two it’s big.  But to have the two Western Australian teams...

To understand a little more about how much of a big deal this is, I’ll tell you a little history of the game.  We’re talking about AFL here – the Australian Football League, otherwise known as Aussie Rules to differentiate it from soccer or rugby.  The sport developed from a game that has its earliest documented history in about the 1820’s.  It is said to have been created in Melbourne, which is the capital city of Victoria.  But soon the whole of Australia was playing it.  By the time I was born, each capital city had their own leagues.  The Western Australian league is called the WAFL (pronounced ‘waffle’) where our top clubs compete.
Picture But by far, the most popular league was the VFL – the Victorian league.  It was run on a national level, where the best players from all over Australia were drafted into the various Victorian clubs, and the serious money and fame were involved.  But they only had Victorian teams, and I still remember my father going for Carlton.

Then, as my fellow Australian author, Sean Kennedy likes to say, the other states of Australian whinged about how they wanted to join the VFL, and so the competition expanded and became the AFL.  It was now a league that was Australian wide, with the first non-Victorian team entering the competition in 1982.

In 1987, Western Australia got their first state team – the West Coast Eagles.  We were extremely proud of our team, and since WA has one of the strongest amateur football leagues, WCE soon became a powerhouse team.  Converting from a fan of whichever VFL club you went for, to go for your new state team was a pretty easy choice for most.  However, in 1995, Western Australia became the first state outside Victoria to be represented by more than one team.  The strong support in WA meant there was now room for another team – and The Fremantle Dockers were formed.

Oh, what a dilemma this created in the hearts of footy fans in WA.  When there was only the Eagles, we knew who to go for – but now there were two teams.  How to decide?

Perth is very divided geographically – we have a river that runs from east to west, and most people orient themselves in Perth by being North of the River (NOR) or South of the River (SOR).  The city of Perth is located on the north banks, and is technically NOR.  Our shipping port is Fremantle, and is technically located on southern side of the mouth of the river.  It was decided that the SOR WAFL clubs would lead to Fremantle, and the NOR WAFL clubs to Eagles.
Picture It should’ve been easy to pick your team then – SOR people go for Dockers, and NOR for Eagles.  But no.  Since 1995 there has been a rather large resentment amongst the ranks.  Die-hard Eagles fans who refused to “switch” teams, see those who did change as “traitors.”  Freo fans see the Eagles being high-and-mighty, looking down their noses at their poorer brother.  To add to the mix, Fremantle has based their club around the history of the Fremantle ports, taking their name from the working-class dockside workers.  It is seen as a blue-collar working man’s club.  In comparison, the Eagle’s home ground is Subiaco, which is an inner city suburb of Perth, and there is a joke about the car park at an Eagles game having only the most expensive cars in it.

However you decided your team, you were frowned at by the others.  And as Sean Kennedy likes to tell me, if you live in Perth and go for a team other than the WA teams, you are even more of a social leper.

My husband’s family made the switch to support the Dockers.  His mother, father and brother are all dyed-in-wool Dockers.  I’m a Docker.  I made the switch too.  However my husband refused to give up on “his” team and has firmly remained an Eagle.
Picture People often laugh at our split household and ask me how we “cope.”  I tell them (with a rather large grain of truth) about the two rules I have.
                1.  You don’t put down the other person’s team.
                2.  On derby day, the house is mine.

You may laugh, but it keeps the peace.  We don’t get angry at each other, because we’re not insulting the other team.  And when our teams play each other, he can go to his friend’s house where they can yell at their team together, because I will be in front of the TV yelling at my team.

With 20 years of history between the two teams, there is a huge rivalry.  You would think that the two teams that share so much (ie they are both hated by the teams “over east” and both have the physical disadvantage of being the teams that need to travel the longest distance in the league) would be a great support to each other.  No.  We have the greatest rivalry.

This morning I washed my Dockers jacket, ready to wear proudly for the next 48 hours.  Should they win, I will be wearing it all next week too.  Should they lose, I’ll put it away for a couple of days while I cry in shame.

In the next 48 hours you will not be able to greet someone without asking who they are going for. 

This morning on the news, three of the six top stories had to do with the derby . The other three articles were about a murder, a mining company losing $1.4b, and an extinction threat to the numbat.  Yes, the derby rated ABOVE gruesome stabbing murders and $1.4b. 

The radio gave me the latest betting stats.  
Picture Cars are flying flags of their team. 

The latest craze in Perth is the great “bake off” where shops are making Eagles/Dockers themed cakes, muffins and more.

All for a game where 36 muscled men chase a red ball around the ground.

Some more stats for you about AFL:
                1.  AFL is the highest spectator attended sport in Australia.
                2.  The AFL grand final has the biggest crowd in attendance – in the world.  Yes.  The 2014 Grand Final had over 99,000 people there.  In comparison, the 2015 FA cup in England had 89,000 and the 2015 Playoffs in the US had 85,000 people. 2015 Superbowl had 70,000.
                3.  Stats for the Western Derby are tight with the Eagles beating the Dockers 21 times, but losing 20 times.  Of the last 15 games (ie the last 8 seasons) Fremantle have dominated, with WCE only winning 3 of those games.


So there is only one thing I can say.  GO FREO!

Don’t know a thing about Aussie Rules?  Ninh explains: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mnv32s8jPz0 I had a fun morning looking at You Tube clips:
I’d like to see that: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w2TO35rZjO4
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rwOrUwiv4zI

Top marks, 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCoUKnswVWw

Top goals, 2014: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7hD0-xTv2w

Hard hits:  Obviously an Eagles fan made this.  Had a bit of a buzz from the old footage, but wow it’s a hard game.   https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qh5hNY83UA4
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Published on August 14, 2015 05:03

August 11, 2015

Guest Interview - Nic Starr

Picture Renae:  Hello, world.  I have survived my release and I’m now looking forward to Nic Starr’s new book – Andrew’s Promise.  It released today!  Yay!  **throws confetti** So happy release day! **grin**

Blurb

Young mechanic Andrew Campbell’s life couldn’t be better. He is about to restore a Ford Mustang with his dad before heading off on the ultimate cross-country road trip with his best friend, Tanner McKenzie.

But tragedy strikes, and Andrew’s life is shattered. Worried his family will be torn apart if he doesn’t step in, Andrew makes a tough choice between following his heart and doing what he needs to do to protect his little brother.

When Andrew pushes Tanner away, Tanner heads off on the planned trip alone. Once Tanner leaves town, his life takes a different path and it’s ten years before he returns. Now a firefighter, he’s never forgotten his first love, and no one has ever taken Andrew’s place in his heart. He’s determined to see if Andrew feels the same way. He just hopes Andrew’s excited to see him, hopes that he’s available—and finally out—after all this time.

They might not have been ready to deal with emerging feelings years ago, but now might be the time for their second chance at love. 


Renae:  This is the second book in the Heroes Series, following on from Charlie’s Hero which was released in June 2015.

Hi, Nic!

Nic:  Thanks for hosting me today, Renae. I’m so excited to be celebrating the release of Andrew’s Promise and it’s always a pleasure to visit your blog. **dances in confetti shower**

Renae:  So explain to us what the connection between Charlie’s Hero and Andrew’s Promise is.

Nic:  Charlie’s Hero is the story of Josh and Charlie. Josh was reluctant to come out to his brother, Andrew, and this put pressure on his relationship with Charlie. The reason for Josh’s hesitation was fear of losing the only family he had. Andrew had devoted his life to raising Josh, but certain things had lead Josh to believe that Andrew would push him away if he knew he was gay.

Andrew’s Promise tells Andrew’s story. It shows the type of man Andrew was before his father’s death changed the course of his life, and importantly, it gives Andrew his happy ever after.
Picture Renae:  So this book starts before Charlie’s Hero took place?

Nic:  Yes. The story starts about ten years before the events in Charlie’s Hero. You’ll get to meet Josh when he was only fifteen, and meet the young Andrew and his best friend, Tanner.  Some of the events from the first book are retold but this time from Andrew’s point of view. The story then picks up at the end of Charlie’s Hero when Andrew and Tanner reconnect. I know a lot of readers particularly loved the little glimpse of Tanner at the end of Charlie’s Hero. **wink**

Renae:  So Andrew and Tanner were best friends – but never kept in touch?

Nic:  Andrew had his reasons, perhaps misguided, but with his brother’s best interests at heart, he pushed Tanner away. It was too painful for both of them to see each other if they couldn’t have more than friendship, so Tanner left town. Tanner ended up in the military, a career that kept him away.

Renae:  A second chance at love?  What about you?  What would you do if your high school crush turned up and declared he loved you?  Do you think you’d think about it if you were single?

Nic:  To be honest, while I love the idea of second chances at love, and enjoy reading about them in stories, I don’t think it is for me. Maybe it’s because I’m thinking back on my own boyfriends and none of them are up to scratch. I like the memories but that’s where they should stay. Perhaps it’s because it wasn’t really true love?

Renae:  Ten years?  Are they even the same people?

Nic:  People change a lot over the course of ten years. Particularly when they are young at the beginning of the journey.  Andrew and Tanner were only in their early twenties when they separated. They knew in their hearts they loved each other but they still had a lot of growing up to do. Andrew faced a lot of responsibility over ten years, and some of his regrets coloured his life. Tanner experienced life away from their town and saw more of the world than Andrew did. But at their core, they were the same people, just with different experiences and a new level of maturity.

Renae:  And what about Charlie and Josh?  Do we get to catch up with them in this book?

Nic:  Of course! It was fun to write Tanner’s response to meeting the ‘grown up’ Josh and learning he was in love with Charlie. And there’s a sneak peek at Josh and Charlie’s future.
Picture Renae:  Can you tell us where your idea for the story and the series came from?  Was there something in particular that caught your attention?

Nic:  I started Charlie’s Hero in response to a story submission call for stories about love at first sight. The publisher only wanted shorter stories though, and my word count grew as Charlie and Josh’s story developed. So my short story grew to a novel. Andrew’s Promise came about because I wanted to give Andrew his happy ending. He’s such a caring and loving brother, he deserved to have the man of his dreams too.

Renae:  So you’re going to write a third?  A fourth?  For the series?

Nic:  The ending of Andrew’s Promise gives a big hint that Patrick and Simon will get their story in the next book. *grin* As friends of Josh and Charlie, they make an appearance in both books. When Patrick experienced some issues with his housemate, he moved in with Simon, a paramedic who works with Josh. They have a crush on each other but haven’t explored a relationship yet. So along with working up the courage to get together, Patrick needs to deal with some issues from this past. The book is called Patrick’s Savior. I have ideas for a fourth, and potentially a fifth book, so we’ll see.

Renae:  So in Charlie’s Hero we had a paramedic...  and now we have a firefighter in Andrew’s Promise...  Do we get a policeman in the next?

Nic:  Funny you should mention that! *grin* Patrick’s Savior’s lead characters are a paramedic and a school administrator. However, the police do get involved in the story. You’ll see some more of Duncan, a secondary character from the earlier books who is a cop. He’s the partner of Tanner’s best friend, Antonio. Antonio is an accountant by the way, so they’re not all emergency workers. And don’t forget Charlie is a schoolteacher and Andrew is a mechanic. LOL.

Renae:  C’mon – you can admit it Nic.  It’s just me (and all my readers).  Do you have a little bit of a “thing” for emergency workers?

Nic:  Yep! *grin* Doesn’t everyone?

Renae:  Okay, okay.  So tell me, was the second book hard to write when you had to match up timelines?

Nic:  Don’t remind me. Urgh! Keeping the timeline and story straight was a large focus during the writing of Andrew’s Promise. There are a number of scenes that appear in both books that needed careful consideration. But my biggest challenge was writing one particular conversation that appears in both books. It’s the scene in the first story, where Josh gets the idea that Andrew is not supportive of gay people. After this discussion takes place, Josh sees Andrew push Tanner, his best friend away, so is sure this is what Andrew would do to him. In Andrew’s Promise, this whole series of events is told from Andrew’s point of view.

Renae:  Is there any great sacrifice you’ve made in your life for family?

Nic:  Sacrifice is part of being in a family and having kids. As mothers, we always put our children first. But I don’t believe I’ve done anything any other mother or family member wouldn’t do. Any sacrifices I’ve made have been relatively small compared to some of the life changing acts I’ve seen of others. I’m grateful every day, that my family is healthy and whole, and these types of sacrifices aren’t required.

Renae:  Thanks for joining me on my blog, and sharing a bit of your journey.  Good luck with this new book and I hope it’s a great release day for you.

Nic: Thank you so much for having me. It’s been lots of fun as usual. **heart**

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Published on August 11, 2015 22:31

August 5, 2015

Renae tries to interview her characters

Picture Character interview – Davo and Lee

 

Renae:  Today on my regular interview blog spot, I thought it may be fun to interview my characters.  I’ve never done it before, so I’m not sure how it’s going to turn out, but I’ve invited Davo and Lee to come down and chat with me today, and tell me a little bit more about their story.

But...  **looks hopefully at the door**  ...they haven’t turned up.  **Checks her watch**

Umm...

Okay, look – perhaps we’ll start with the blurb while we wait.

Blurb:

Davo’s a pretty average guy. He has a decent job, owns his own home, and spends his weekends at the pub. He fully accepts that he’s gay, but doesn’t want to be one of those gays, who are femme and girly. He likes football and other masculine pursuits, and firmly avoids anything that could be seen as femme—including relationships that last beyond fifteen minutes.

Then Davo’s friend and gay idol not only gets a boyfriend, but also adopts a baby girl. Davo is seriously spooked and scuttles down to the pub in fright. That’s where he meets Lee, who is cute from her cherry-red hair, to her pretty little dress and pointy red shoes. Davo is charmed—but how is that possible? He’s gay. Isn’t he? Then Lee tells him he’s actually a guy—he just likes to wear women’s dresses occasionally. Thoroughly confused about an attraction that’s out of character for him, Davo begins the long journey to where he can accept himself without caring what everyone else thinks.


 

Renae:  So I thought it would be fun to ask Davo and Lee a little bit more about... **hears a noise and looks up**  Davo!  Lee!  I’d just about given up on you.  Come on in and take a seat.

Davo:  Sorry we’re late.  There was... uhh... traffic.

Lee:  **rolls his eyes**  You can tell her the truth, Dave.

Renae:  The truth?

**Lee and Renae look at Davo, who just grits his teeth**

Lee:  **sighs**  Look, the truth is we’re late because Davo accidentally told me that we had to be here at ten-thirty.

Renae:  **confused**  But you did have to be here at ten-thirty.

Lee:  **nods**  Which is why you should always tell me ten o’clock.

Davo:  I didn’t accidentally tell you.  I told you ten.  You snooped and found out.

Lee:  Yes.  I did find out.  And I also found out that you lied to me and told me the wrong time.

Davo:  **affronted**  But you just told Renae to lie to you and tell you the wrong time.

Lee:  That’s because I don’t know her.  I know you.  And now that I know that you lie to me, I have to go behind your back and check the real time, so that I know.

Renae:  But even when you found out the right time, like today, you’re still late.

Davo:  **chuckles**

Lee:  **glares at Renae**  Whose side are you on?

Renae:  **looks nervously between Lee and Davo** Umm...  The side of whoever is going to make people turn up to things on time?

Davo:  Exactly!  Who made us late to Maxine’s baptism?

Lee:  We were only a couple of minutes late.

Davo:  **mutters**

Lee:  **shrugs**  Okay, so we were fifteen minutes late.  We didn’t miss the important bit, did we?

Renae:  **interjects before it gets any further**  How about we start the interview?  We’re now thirty minutes behind.

**More muttering from Davo which she ignores**

Okay.  My first question is for Davo.

Davo and Lee together:  Dave.

Renae:  Huh?

Lee:  Dave.

Renae:  I though he...

Davo:  **flushes**  Leave it, Lee.

Lee:  No, it’s alright.  Renae will understand.  “Davo” is only for friends.  Male friends.  He prefers if the ladies, his family and workplace call him Dave.

Renae:  But you called him Dave earlier on. 

Lee:  I have special-special privileges.  I’ve earned them.

**Renae and Dave both blush**

Renae:  Righto.  Moving right along.  So, Dave.  The first time you met Lee, you didn’t realise he was a guy.  Why not?

Davo:  Because he was wearing a dress.

Renae:  So?

Davo:  So guys don’t wear dresses.

**Lee elbows Davo who winces**

Okay.  Sorry.  I used to think guys don’t wear dresses.  I now know better.

Lee:  Yes.  I’ve taught him well.  He can now see a lot of advantages to the custom of me not wearing pants.

**Renae and Dave both blush again**

Renae:  **clears throat**  Moving along again.  Lee, this time, you.  Why were you wearing a dress?

Lee:  **shrugs**  Why not?

Renae:  Oh, I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with it, I was just wondering if there was a special occasion as to why that night?

Davo:  He was meeting another guy.  A straight guy.

**Lee elbows Davo harder**

**Renae thinks she heard an “oomph” that time**

Lee:  Shut up.  You’re skewing the situation.  Renae is going to think terrible things now.  Yes – I was meeting another guy—

Davo:  Who is straight.

Lee:  —but not like you think.

Renae:  You mean I’m not thinking why would a gay guy dress in women’s clothing and go to a pub to meet a straight man?

Lee:  Fine.  You are thinking.  But Bobby – the guy I was meeting – is trans.  That’s why I was in a dress.

**Renae thinks maybe she got out of the wrong side of the bed and ended up in a parallel universe or something **

Lee:  That still didn’t come out right, right?

Davo:  Only a third left-hand turn could be more right.

Lee:  Shut up.  **heaves a sigh**  You see I work for this youth centre, and my special interest is in counselling trans youth.  Bobby is trans, and was trialling going out in public as the opposite gender to what he was used to.  So I dressed as the opposite gender to support him.  So yes I was meeting a straight guy while I was in a dress, but there was nothing sexual about it.

Davo:  **mutters**

Lee:  Pardon?

Davo:  I said, your thoughts may not have been sexual, but any guy that saw you in that dress...

Lee:  **gives a coy smile**

Renae:  **squirms uncomfortably**  Ok.  So obviously the dress turned Dave’s head.  What about you, Lee?  What drew you to Dave?

Davo:  Hey – how come he gets all the questions?

Lee:  Because you hogged the whole book.  People find out so much about you, but I don’t get the spotlight at all.

Davo:  Who has a whole stripping scene at the end of the book?

Lee:  **smiles reminiscently**  Oh, yeah.  True.  It was a good scene, wasn’t it?

Davo:  Yeah.  Definitely.

**Renae thinks that maybe she should give up and leave the room**

Renae:  Ahh...

Lee:  Sorry.  What was the question again?

Renae:  Don’t worry.  How about we move on?  Dave – what is one thing about Lee that annoys you.

Davo:  Tell me, Renae – did you notice us turn up on time, or not?

Renae:  Uhh – right.  How about you Lee?  What does Dave do that annoys you?

Lee:  He talks to my dad.

**awkward silence**

Renae:  And that’s a bad thing?

Lee:  Yes!  They talk about things that I don’t understand.  Like splags and sputters.

Davo:  **drops his head into his hands**  It’s slag and spatter.  And they’re welding terms, Lee.  It’s nothing hard.  I told you that I would teach you how to use the oxy if you want.  But you refused.  You also refused to learn how to make a good batch of cement, how drill a hole in a wall, and how to use a hammer without hitting your thumb.

Lee:  But I don’t need to drill a hole in the wall.  You can do it for me.  And you’re still are banned from talking to my dad.  He rings our house to talk to you.  It’s like I’ve been demoted in my role as son.

Davo:  But didn’t Jake ring you to ask about a recipe this morning?  He’s my friend, yet called you.

Lee:  He’s our friend now.

Davo:  And you can’t share your father?

Lee:  No.

**Renae wonders if she’s superfluous to this interview**

Davo:  Why not?

Lee:  It’s a rule somewhere.  I’ve seen it.  I mean, next thing I know is that Dad will be coming around to pick you up to go to Bunnings.  And you two will go off and look at tools together.

**Davo looks at the floor**

Lee:  **screeches** WHAT?  You’ve gone to the hardware store with my dad?  When?

Davo:  **looks really chagrined**  You work some Saturday mornings.  I was bored.  And when Howard offered...

Lee:  Why didn’t you tell me?

Davo:  Because I knew you would over-react.  Like now.

Lee:  I am NOT over-reacting.  **Lee crosses his arms**

Davo:  Lee?

**Lee refuses to answer**

Davo:  Lee?  Look.  I’m sorry.  I’ll wait until you’re home next time Howard rings and the three of us can go together.  And I promise to not say a word if you have to buy coffee while you’re there.

**Lee still doesn’t answer**

Renae:  What’s wrong with buying coffee at Bunnings?  I do it all the time while I wait for my husband.

Davo:  Exactly.  Only people who are bored in Bunnings buy coffee.  So Lee buying coffee when he goes with me, is telling everyone he’s bored.  It’s embarrassing.

Renae:  So you don’t stop and buy coffee there?

Davo:  Never.  I’m too busy rushing home to play with my new toys.  **Looks at his boyfriend** Lee?

**Lee pouts**

Davo:  Fine.  **Looks at Renae**  Sorry about that.  This interview will go a lot smoother now that Lee’s not talking.

Renae:  **tries to hide a smile** Right.  Umm, where was I up to in my questions.  Sport!  Yes.  Now I understand that the two of you go for different football teams?  That could make things a little hard when the two teams play each other.

Davo:  Ha.  Super hard.  I mean, I at least go for a decent team.  Lee goes for Sydney and they—

Lee:  Are the best team ever.  Hello?  Who else has a double Brownlow Medal winner playing on their side?

Davo:  **gives Lee a sideways look** Welcome back.  Did you have a nice sulk?

Lee:  Who sulked after their Melbourne lost to my Sydney in Round six?

Davo:  I didn’t sulk.

Lee:  Did.

Davo:  Didn’t.

Lee:  Did.  I was banned from watching my foreign films on your TV for a fortnight.  It was rather petty of you, if I must say.

Renae:  Shall I tell you I’m a Dockers fan and we’re on top of the ladder at the moment?  So really, my team beats both of you.

**Lee and Davo both glare at Renae**

Lee:  **whispers to Davo**  Shall we leave now?

Dave:  **continues to glare at Renae**  Yes.

Lee:  I knew there was a reason we were late.

Davo:  I should’ve trusted you.  **stands up**

Renae:  Wait?  What about the interview?  Where are you going?

Davo:  We’re going to Bunnings.  C’mon, Lee.  I’ll buy you a coffee.

**Takes Lee’s hand and leads him from the room**

Renae:  Hey!

 

You Are the Reason releases on Friday, 7th of August.
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Published on August 05, 2015 09:39