Q&A with Josh Lanyon discussion

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message 2201: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Cleon wrote: "Also, most Asians (with the exception of the Japanese) are very very conservative when it comes to sex. Women who lost their virginity before marriage are still considered second hand items here. Even at more modern and liberal places like Hongkong or Singapore, sex is supposed to be with people you love. And if you see how awkward their mouth to mouth kissing scenes on movies even on erotic scenes, you'll understand what I am talking about. "

I know very little about Japan -- most of my personal experience is with China -- but I was told by someone that the sexual 'freedom' in Japan is more of the underground type. Like, go ahead and do what you want, but keep it a dirty secret. Is that true, or ist it more open than that?

We were just in China last month, and I was surprised at how far Beijing has come (although it's been almost 17 years since the last time I was there, so my judgment may be whack). The police weren't shutting down gay bars (much) anymore, and teenagers held hands in public.


message 2202: by Anne (last edited Apr 23, 2011 08:57AM) (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Merith wrote: "In fact, when I was young and impressionable, I really wanted one of those men that were so right (with God, with the world with what-have-you) that I could just give myself over to them and let them rule my life. Now that I'm old and know better, there ain't such an animal."

LOL -- this is why I read romance! That's the fantasy, that there is someone perfect for you out there. I'm not saying the Husband isn't perfect for me, it's just that what I thought was perfect in fantasy and what I thought was perfect in reality are different things. I like to revisit the fantasy. :)

ETA: Except I'm not sure about that 'rule my life' thing anymore. I think I edited that out of the fantasy man a while ago.


message 2203: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Anne wrote: "Cleon wrote: "Also, most Asians (with the exception of the Japanese) are very very conservative when it comes to sex. Women who lost their virginity before marriage are still considered second hand..."

Glad that things are looking up at China! Let's hope the government doesn't try to squash it. Taiwan is a lot more liberal now. Things are progressing slowly.

I don't have personal experience with Japan, but my yaoi friends tell me there are serious perverted stuff there, although they're underground, but BDSM in Western countries is still underground too, right?


message 2204: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Merith wrote: "Yesterday, I spent some time trying to catch up on reading my Time Magazines. One of the issues (I think it was the April 11th issue) had an article that immediately made me think of it being part ..."

Wow, that does sound intriguing.


message 2205: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Becky wrote: "Cleon wrote: "Yup. Either the teroriests have big big mouth or it is "God's will" or whatever, but here I am still annoying you guys. lol."

You're not annoying. The flock of geese that are a-honk..."


:D. Perhaps one of the geese is a duck shapeshifter? lol.


message 2206: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Cleon, I'm glad you (and all your neighbors) are still here.


message 2207: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Merith wrote: "Yesterday, I spent some time trying to catch up on reading my Time Magazines. One of the issues (I think it was the April 11th issue) had an article that immediately made me think of it being part ..."

Wow, that does sound intriguing.


message 2208: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Dee wrote: "One book we will not be reading is I Will Follow You . An obvious case of a JL Langley book being plagiarized, "

Criminals are so stupid sometimes. I spent a month on a grand jury once and it was astonishing how dumb some of them are. The only brilliant criminals are in books. As if no one's going to notice a bestselling author has been plagiarized.


message 2209: by [deleted user] (new)

Just finished The Locker Room by Amy Lane today...it's the best Amy Lane book I've read so far...

And now back to the elves Counterpoint (Song of the Fallen, #1) by Rachel Haimowitz


message 2210: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Cleon wrote: "Anne wrote: "Cleon wrote: "Also, most Asians (with the exception of the Japanese) are very very conservative when it comes to sex. Women who lost their virginity before marriage are still considere..."

I think things are better, but it's Beijing. In some ways it's a great indicator for what's going on in the rest of the country, but in others it isn't.

I don't know how underground BDSM is, here. I didn't think about it much before I started reading erotica, so I didn't notice it before. Now, I think I've maybe 'detected' it once or twice in the last couple of years. People can be very protective of their sexual identity, even in the fairly liberal city I live in. OTOH, it's not their entire identity, so I guess it would be silly to advertise it all the time....


message 2211: by Dee Wy (new)

Dee Wy (deewy) The only thing that is safe to "copy" are basic plots. How many titles have we read with Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, etc themes that have all been good reads, which the authors have made their own in an interesting way? Look what Kim Dare was able to do with Duck! and the Ugly Duckling story.

One book on writing that I read suggested that you pick your favorite movie and use the basic plot for your story. Personally, I'd love to retell the story of "Mists of Avalon" which was a book and a movie. Hmm, maybe some day.

Yeah, plagiarism is stupid. I'd say that writer's career is in the toilet.


message 2212: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Anne wrote: "Cleon, I'm glad you (and all your neighbors) are still here."

Me too! I'd be devastated if I were gone before reading all my books or write best seller M/M or M/M/M/M/M/M... smut. lol. Yeah, yeah, sort out your priority, girl! Anyway, I am kind of surprised I am not more frightened by it. I guess we have been all desensitized here.

By the way, I am reading our May read, Dash and Dingo, and err... well, in short, it's boring.


message 2213: by [deleted user] (new)

Dee wrote: One book we will not be reading is I Will Follow You (Avatar, #1). An obvious case of a JL Langley book being plagiarized, and Samhain pulled it. See post here - http://www.teddypig.com/2011/04/hello-sa... "

I don't know if this is the saddest or dumbest thing I've seen in a awhile...Probably both...but the publisher not catching this may be the worst part.


message 2214: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Dee wrote: "The only thing that is safe to "copy" are basic plots. How many titles have we read with Beauty and the Beast, Cinderella, etc themes that have all been good reads, which the authors have made thei..."

Would you retell it (Mists of Avalon) as a M/M or some other non-trad combo, (Guinevere, Morgan and Arthur -- you'd hit all the taboos) or just the, um, 'straight' story?

Joan Wolf did an interesting Arthurian trilogy. It's M/F, and a little 'sweet' but I like the non-Arthur stories.


message 2215: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Dee wrote: "Yeah, plagiarism is stupid. I'd say that writer's career is in the toilet."

Snort. Or it's all in prison stories.

Actually, I doubt they jail you for plagiarism....


message 2216: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Cleon wrote: "Anne wrote: "Cleon, I'm glad you (and all your neighbors) are still here."

Me too! I'd be devastated if I were gone before reading all my books or write best seller M/M or M/M/M/M/M/M... smut. lol..."


Do they let you read in the afterlife? Maybe you'd have more time for it.

Dash and Dingo. Yeah, read it. I actually made it all the way through. Meh.


message 2217: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Lauraadriana wrote: " the publisher not catching this may be the worst part. "

I know. Their reputation just went in the toilet. For a while at least.


message 2218: by Cleon Lee (last edited Apr 23, 2011 09:42AM) (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments For the subject of plagiarism, as I said, that author is one of the laziest persons alive.

I am writing website content as part time job, and most of the assignments are to write an article on a topic and then rewrite it twice while keeping the content on each paragraph the same, so that the 2 rewritten articles can pass Copyscape test. Rewriting to escape Copyscape test is very very easy. (that is why the pay is very very low too, but hey, the job subsidize my M/M addiction) Change the word order, use thesaurus, change the name, change the scene order, and BAM, you get "original" article/ content. If you;re too lazy to do it yourself, you can even hire someone to do it for you for very low price, esp if you outsource it through online job desk sites.

And the publisher should have run every manuscript they get through Copyscape. The process is automatic and very fast, and the subscription fee is very low for industry standard.


message 2219: by Susan (last edited Apr 23, 2011 09:43AM) (new)

Susan | 807 comments Cleon wrote: "I am reading our May read, Dash and Dingo..."

I thought Dash and Dingo was the April read and that today was the day the book discussion was supposed to begin. Three Wrong Turns in the Desert was chosen for May, right?


message 2220: by [deleted user] (new)

Anne wrote: "Lauraadriana wrote: " the publisher not catching this may be the worst part. "

I know. Their reputation just went in the toilet. For a while at least."


As well it should...cause seriously...anybody doing any checking over there?


message 2221: by S.J.D. (new)

S.J.D. Peterson (sjdpeterson) | 14 comments I just finished my first Kim Dare book The Mark of an Alpha (Pack Discipline, #1) by Kim Dare I know many rant about her BBDSM Titles and I'm not sure what I was expecting but an amazingly tender love story wasn't it. Truly enjoyed this book and now I'm reading The Strength of a Gamma (Pack Discipline, #2) by Kim Dare


message 2222: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Susan wrote: "Cleon wrote: "I am reading our May read, Dash and Dingo..."

I thought Dash and Dingo was the April read and that today was the day the book discussion was supposed to begin. Three Wrong Turns i..."


Oops, I mean for April.


message 2223: by Cleon Lee (last edited Apr 23, 2011 10:02AM) (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments S.J.D. wrote: "I just finished my first Kim Dare book The Mark of an Alpha (Pack Discipline, #1) by Kim Dare I know many rant about her BBDSM Titles and I'm not sure what I was expecting but an amazingly tender love story was..."

Actually, she can write a tender loving BDSM relationship. i read Christmas Spirits The Gift by Kim Dare a while back and it is very very sweet and tender. the 3some scene is kind of inappropriate though.


message 2224: by Dee Wy (new)

Dee Wy (deewy) Lauraadriana - I wondered about that myself. If reviewers and Lit teachers are using software to look for plagiarism, why wouldn't a publisher want to do the same to help protect themselves. Certainly they can't count on each of their editors having read everyone's books to be able to catch it.

Anne - Actually I gave writing a go a couple of years ago and drafted a m/f/m story, with the premise of "what would Avalon and it's leaders look like today?" I was delighted with the result for a while, but in editing I realized it needed some serious plot adjustments to hold the tension to the end and never went back to fix it. And the two males were twins, which made the love scenes tricky in a menage with brothers. If I ever pick it up again to work on it, I think I would change that.

I love the Arthurian legends. So inspiring.


message 2225: by ns (new)

ns (vedi) Susan wrote: "I thought Dash and Dingo was the April read and that today was the day the book discussion was supposed to begin. Three Wrong Turns i..."

It is. Anyone going to post their Dingo and Dash thoughts on the April read thread? I'm really, really interested in what your reactions are to this book, given how disparate mine were, compared to the positive feedback it's received on Amazon.


message 2226: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments ns wrote: "Susan wrote: "I thought Dash and Dingo was the April read and that today was the day the book discussion was supposed to begin. Three Wrong Turns i..."

It is. Anyone going to post their Dingo and..."


I haven't finished it, only 1/3 through the book. I am glad I read it while having nothing else to do while waiting for my sister, or I'll just put it down and play games or rambling here.


message 2227: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Anne wrote: "Cleon wrote: "Anne wrote: "Cleon, I'm glad you (and all your neighbors) are still here."

Me too! I'd be devastated if I were gone before reading all my books or write best seller M/M or M/M/M/M/M/..."


Depends on where I'll end up. In heaven, I can probably read all stories without worrying I break my credit cards or I can even read unpublished stories by my favorite authors. (And those hot angels? mm....)

If I end up in hell, maybe they let me read until the cliffhanger and snatch the book away from me. lol.


message 2228: by Susan (new)

Susan | 807 comments ns wrote: "Anyone going to post their Dingo and Dash thoughts on the April read thread?"

I am also eager to see what the reactions were to this book. I was not one who voted for it, and could not make myself read past the Kindle sample. The subject just did not interest me. But, like you said, with the positive feedback already out there, it will be interesting to see what the readers got from the book.


message 2229: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl | 232 comments Cleon, I'm glad to hear you're OK!

The good news about the plagiarism is that after following the link and reading both excerpts, I can see that the original was the better written book, and am adding the JL Langley to my to-read list. Hopefully the publicity brings a few new readers her way!


message 2230: by Cheryl (new)

Cheryl | 232 comments If I end up in hell, maybe they let me read until the cliffhanger and snatch the book away from me. lol.

What a great description of hell!

BTW, Lauraadriana, I have to warn you that Counterpoint does this a little bit, ending on a bit of a cliffhanger. It's still a good book, though. I actually liked it better the second time around.


message 2231: by [deleted user] (new)

Dee wrote: If reviewers and Lit teachers are using software to look for plagiarism, why wouldn't a publisher want to do the same to help protect themselves. Certainly they can't count on each of their editors having read everyone's books to be able to catch it. "

It's really amazing and it was the EXCERPT!! I do not know how there any justification for that...


message 2232: by Jordan (new)

Jordan Lombard (jslombard) | 15348 comments Mod
I'm pretty sure it was someone on this thread who recommended Syd McGinley's Dr. John Fell series for good BDSM. I looked into it, and it appears that there's like, a hundred books in the series! And I can't determine which one comes first? Is there a list so I know what order they're in somewhere? Thanks! These do look really good!


message 2233: by Susan (last edited Apr 23, 2011 02:19PM) (new)

Susan | 807 comments Jordan, you're correct. The ebook selections are numerous. This is a time where the better choice is to go with the print option. All the stories are in 3 books - The Complete Dr. Fell Volume I Lost by Syd McGinley , The Complete Dr. Fell Volume II Found by Syd McGinley and The Complete Dr. Fell III The Boys of Fell by Syd McGinley . Enjoy!


message 2234: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments Dee wrote: "Anne - Actually I gave writing a go a couple of years ago and drafted a m/f/m story, with the premise of "what would Avalon and it's leaders look like today?" I was delighted with the result for a while, but in editing I realized it needed some serious plot adjustments to hold the tension to the end and never went back to fix it. And the two males were twins, which made the love scenes tricky in a menage with brothers. If I ever pick it up again to work on it, I think I would change that."

If you want to run it by someone, PM me.... I like the Arthurian legends, too, although I'm not that up on them anymore.


message 2235: by Anne (new)

Anne Tenino (annetenino) | 3156 comments ns wrote: "Susan wrote: "I thought Dash and Dingo was the April read and that today was the day the book discussion was supposed to begin. Three Wrong Turns i..."

It is. Anyone going to post their Dingo and..."


I'm skipping it -- I read the book last Fall and couldn't be bothered to read it again.


message 2236: by Jordan (new)

Jordan Lombard (jslombard) | 15348 comments Mod
Susan wrote: "Jordan, you're correct. The ebook selections are numerous. This is a time where the better choice is to go with the print option. All the stories are in 3 books - [bookcover:The Complete Dr. Fell V..."

Awesome! Thanks Susan! That's a great help.


message 2237: by Josh (new)

Josh (joshlanyon) | 23709 comments Mod
Cheryl wrote: "LOL! I've never ever ever ever thought to make a connection between BDSM and oraganized religion! Church is going to be so much more interesting now!"

:-D A new convert every day.


message 2238: by Jordan (new)

Jordan Lombard (jslombard) | 15348 comments Mod
You know, if someone had told me about BDSM when I was five, and told me there was a connection to organized religion, I think going to church might have been more interesting to me as a child. ;-)


message 2239: by Josh (new)

Josh (joshlanyon) | 23709 comments Mod
I just finished reading the first three books in Ginn Hale's Rifter. This is a spec fiction serial you can subscribe to through the Blind Eye Books website.

I have to say this is one of the most fascinating and gripping stories I've read. The romance is fairly neglible, at least at this point, but the story itself is so powerful. I'm not sure when something has captured my imagination like this.

http://blindeyebooks.com/rifter.html

The fact that it's as long as it is (I think it's supposed to be ten installments) fills me with alarm because I fear Hale's going to do terrible, terrible things to these wonderful characters (well, frankly, she's already done terrible things to them) but I can't stop reading, and the thing has haunted me. I truly can't wait for the next installment -- and I don't know when I've felt like that.

I'm filled with envy over both her imagination and her mastery of these really complicated timelines.

Anyway, is anyone else reading along? I think there's even a Rifter group here at Goodreads, although I admit I joined but never had time to check in.

Really, if you like spec fiction, I can't recommend this highly enough.


message 2240: by Jordan (new)

Jordan Lombard (jslombard) | 15348 comments Mod
Ooohhh, that sounds good! If it captivated you that much Josh, I'll have to check it out! Though I might wait until the whole thing is available. The pile of books on my coffee table doesn't need to get any bigger! lol.

btw, for those who care to note, just because I know some of you were worried you'd get confused, I finally updated my headshot to my most recent pic.

I just finished two really great books recently, and now I'm terrified to pick a new book from the piles. I don't know what could top Plakcy and Beecroft at the moment. I'm still living in both those worlds in my head, that's how good they were!


message 2241: by Cleon Lee (new)

Cleon Lee | 2235 comments Josh wrote: "I just finished reading the first three books in Ginn Hale's Rifter. This is a spec fiction serial you can subscribe to through the Blind Eye Books website.

I have to say this is one of the mos..."


Wow, that's a high recommendation from you, Josh! However, I am also with Jordan and wait until it is all available. The subscription fee is not cheap and with FW sale this month, I've really spent too much than I have to. lol.


message 2242: by ns (new)

ns (vedi) Josh wrote: "I just finished reading the first three books in Ginn Hale's Rifter. This is a spec fiction serial you can subscribe to through the Blind Eye Books website.

I have to say this is one of the mos..."


I happened to like Hale's Such Heights, so I was trying to find stuff by her (sadly, Wicked Gentlemen isn't available for Kindle). I did order the Rifter series (starting with the prev issue) but that transaction seems to have died somewhere along the way, and while I have the Paypal receipt, I can't actually get my account with Weightless Books going. I'll have to bug them about it again shortly...


message 2243: by Josh (new)

Josh (joshlanyon) | 23709 comments Mod
Cleon wrote: "Josh wrote: "I just finished reading the first three books in Ginn Hale's Rifter. This is a spec fiction serial you can subscribe to through the Blind Eye Books website.

I have to say this is one..."


It's cheaper if you just subscribe to the whole thing because the installments are $3ish apiece, so it's quite a good deal to just sign on for the serial.


message 2244: by Josh (new)

Josh (joshlanyon) | 23709 comments Mod
I see sexuality as one aspect of the character, and BDSM with it's dark nuances tends to draw me in.

There's no denying it's great popularity in this genre.


message 2245: by Candice (last edited Apr 24, 2011 06:10PM) (new)

Candice Frook (cefrook) | 374 comments Okay, Josh, thank you; you said perfectly what I was trying so hard to say, and much more to the point of what has frustrated me for so many years with gay writers. Often, they're so serious that I'm depressed from page one or they're so flamboyantly silly that nothing is there that I can sink my teeth into. In the former case I felt guilty for not liking it, this obviously earnest discussion of gay life. In the latter, I didn't know what my problem was, but these days I speculate that a lot of the gay "fluff" that came out for a while attempted to be funny while not putting off a straight reader which, in my opinion, was a mistake. At any rate, you said it better than I knew how to.

On a different note, if I may, I just finished reading Meant for Each Other by D H Starr. It was only fair; actually began better than it went on. I realized, as I was reading, that I was trying to experience Map of the Harbor Islands again which also tells of a lifelong friendship/love but does it so beautifully. Silly of me. I guess that was like if, say, I picked up a book about a family man/lawyer in the south and thought I would get another To Kill a Mockingbird.


message 2246: by Mariana (new)

Mariana (mearias) Just finished The Locker Room by Amy Lane and this woman just slays me with her books. This was another book that really touched me and made me cry. I loved it :)


message 2247: by Mariana (new)

Mariana (mearias) Josh wrote: "I just finished reading the first three books in Ginn Hale's Rifter. This is a spec fiction serial you can subscribe to through the Blind Eye Books website.

I have to say this is one of the mos..."


I read the first and loved it, but now I'm going to wait until I have 3 or 4 to read, the waiting is not so much fun.


message 2248: by [deleted user] (new)

Mariana wrote: "Just finished The Locker Room by Amy Lane and this woman just slays me with her books. This was another book that really touched me and made me cry. I loved it :)"

OMG Mariana, I LOVED this book!...By far my favorite Amy Lane book, and I absolutely love all her stuff...this book killed me...I LOVED it...Xander and Chris are gonna be on my mind for a long time...


message 2249: by Candice (last edited Apr 24, 2011 06:23PM) (new)

Candice Frook (cefrook) | 374 comments Lil Grogan, thank you for your gracious reply. You express yourself so well; are you a writer? Is that a stupid question?


message 2250: by Candice (new)

Candice Frook (cefrook) | 374 comments Blaine D. wrote: "I've finally started Luck in the Shadows.

I've had it sitting on my harddrive for a while, but kept forgetting about it.
I just reached chapter ten and I LOVE it!!!"

I just started it, too. It's been around; I've read the reviews, was unsure. Finally got and started it.

Wow, she's so good, isn't she?, this Flewelling. I can't remember what it was in the reviews that made me hesitate for so long, but I'd love to hear from anyone in this forum who has read the series. Will this love relationship come out of the shadows, so to speak, or will it be assumed or something? I'm very tempted to jump headlong into these books, but I guess I'd appreciate either some encouragement or a headsup.


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