Wanting by ML Rhodes

Wanting by ML Rhodes

Blurb:
It started with one kiss. Which led to another. And another. And then to a mind-blowing night of intimacy Jeremy Reynolds can’t forget. He can’t stop thinking about the gorgeous, smart, compassionate man who tilted his world. Can’t stop seeing warm, sexy eyes gazing at him with breath-stealing intensity.

Jeremy tries to tell himself to let the incident go, move on, and chalk it up to a life experience. After all, what transpired between him and his best friend and roommate, Ben Cross, can never happen again. Ben is gay, and Jeremy…isn’t. At least he’s never thought he was before. But now he’s torn and confused and not sure what the night with Ben meant—for either of them. Already stressed about final exams before the holidays and his difficult family situation, Jeremy doesn’t know how to deal with the conflicting feelings he’s having. And the one person he’s always been able to talk to about everything, and who’s always been there for him, is the very person he’s been avoiding for the past week because he doesn’t know how to face him after waking up in his bed.

Afraid he might have already screwed up his and Ben’s friendship beyond repair, Jeremy is haunted even more by the backlash he could face if he admits to Ben, or even to himself, how much the night they spent together really meant to him.

And how much he still wants Ben even now…

wanting more of that ass on the phone…

Fire on the Mountain by PD Singer

Fire on the Mountain by PD Singer

Blurb:
When Jake signs up for a season as a forest ranger in the high country of Colorado, it seems like a great way to take a break before continuing his education. The mountains are beautiful, he gets to live in a cabin near a small lake where he can fish, and his partner Kurt is coaching him in archery. It’s heaven, with the occasional forest fire.

Kurt’s a good partner — confident, competent, experienced, just what a rookie like Jake needs. He’s also good looking, not modest, and always around. Jake’s living in the closet, not just in the great outdoors, but is Kurt trying to get him to come sniff the fresh air? Jake can’t tell, but when a small fire whips out of control, things could really heat up!

masturbating too much can cause forest fires….

All’s Fair in Love & Advertising by Lenore Black


All’s Fair in Love & Advertising by Lenore Black

Blurb:
The life of a creative genius isn’t all it’s cracked up to be, not when said genius is Max Tomlin, hotshot creative director of his own New York ad agency and slightly neurotic headcase. Still reeling after a painful divorce, he’s been taking a walk on the gay side, but that hasn’t gone much better. At least his agency is in the running for a new account—even if the prospective client is from rural, backward Montana!

Max’s big-city prejudices go by the wayside when he meets Joe Bennett, aviation innovator and self-made businessman. Joe is smart, passionate, good-looking in a Marlboro Man way, and Max is hopelessly smitten. But business comes first, and Max can’t afford any distractions, not when he has an account to win and Joe’s legacy to protect. It’s going to take all of Max’s quick thinking, fast talking and sheer determination to win the account, save Joe’s company—and keep their budding relationship from becoming a casualty of corporate warfare.

when being a prick gets you more dick…

TLC 101 by Janey Chapel

TLC 101 by Janey Chapel

Blurb:

Sports psychologist Kip Rigsbee feels like an outsider, not part of the players’ circle and not accepted by the coaches of the college team he’s been hired to help. But that hasn’t kept him from feeling the gravitational pull of defensive coordinator Greg Browne, despite the fact that Greg dismisses Kip’s methods as “motivational bullshit.” An accident brings the unacknowledged attraction between the two men to the surface, but the common ground of their erotic connection may not be enough to help Kip overcome Greg’s determination to keep his personal life separate from his job.

not as good as the first book…

Advocate Days & Other Stories by Mark Thompson


Advocate Days & Other Stories by Mark Thompson

Blurb:

What does it mean to be an advocate? To become a person who speaks out and defends a cause? In this collection of moving essays, longtime journalist Mark Thompson charts his own journey of becoming both a witness and participant in the gay liberation movement. He then goes on to describe other advocates of personal and political freedom he has known and how these friendships further informed his activism.

His story begins in 1968 when, as a curious teenager in the throes of coming out, he accidentally discovers one of the first issues of The Advocate, a tiny Los Angeles newsletter that would grow into the gay movement’s most important national journal of record. Little did he know that only in a few more years he’d be working for the publication ~ first as an enterprising young writer and then, after nearly two decades, as its Senior and Cultural Editor.

Filled with historic eye-witness accounts of a movement and its primary chronicle always in flux, as well as profiles of artists and activists who have made a difference, "Advocate Days and Other Stories" is more than the sum of its parts. Taken together, these keenly observed tales offer a stirring testament to the significance of living a life graced with meaning and purpose.
very interesting …

Channeling Morpheus Series by Jordan Castillo Price


Channeling Morpheus Series by Jordan Castillo Price

Summary:
gritty, urban vampire tales

These novelette-length stories are scary as hell and packed with freaky sex. Michael is a waif in eyeliner who’s determined to wipe vampires off the face of the earth. Wild Bill’s got his eye on Michael, and he’s willing to do anything to go home with him. If the romance between Gomez & Morticia gives you goosebumps of delight, if you look forward to Halloween movie marathons all year long, if you’ve got a soft spot for fake fog and black lights, then Channeling Morpheus is the series for you!

more addicting than any of practiced fuck-me eyes

An Improper Holiday by K. A. Mitchell


An Improper Holiday by K. A. Mitchell

Blurb:
He followed all the rules…until one man showed him a dozen ways to break them.

As second son to an earl, Ian Stanton has always done the proper thing. Obeyed his elders, studied diligently, and dutifully accepted the commission his father purchased for him in the Fifty-Second Infantry Division. The one glaring, shameful, marvelous exception: Nicholas Chatham, heir to the Marquess of Carleigh.

Before Ian took his position in His Majesty’s army, he and Nicky consummated two years of physical and emotional discovery. Their inexperience created painful consequences that led Ian to the conviction that their unnatural desires were never meant to be indulged.

Five years later, wounded in body and plagued by memories of what happened between them, Ian is sent to carry out his older brother’s plans for a political alliance with Nicky’s father. Their sister Charlotte is the bargaining piece.
Nicky never believed that what he and Ian felt for each other was wrong and he has a plan to make things right. Getting Ian to Carleigh is but the first step. Now Nicky has only twelve nights to convince Ian that happiness is not the price of honor and duty, but its reward.

2 men and a vial of lavender oil.. fruity even then

Games with Me Volume 1 by Tina Anderson and Lynsley Brito


Games with Me Volume 1 by Tina Anderson and Lynsley Brito

Blurb:
Ex Civil-War surgeon George Callahan is a man haunted by his past. Unwilling to deal with the demons of his childhood he turns to opium, and finds back-alley employment with the heartless brothel keepers of San Francisco’s Chinatown. In Volume 1 of this gorgeously illustrated gay historical drama, Dr. George Callahan searches for a Chinese woman from his past, and soon finds himself unwittingly drawn to dim-witted male prostitute Jun, whose own life is complicated by the unwanted attentions of an aggressive bouncer named Roan Baxter.

Review:

I saw this graphic novel reviewed by Sarah of Rain on the Roof and the two panels depicted caught my eye. I wanted to buy this novel right away but it’s currently only offered through Amazon Kindle. Well since I don’t own a kindle, there is an option to “rent” the book through another website – emanga. I’ve never shopped there before and apparently you buy points to rent a book for 72 hours. For ~$1 per 100 points you can read the graphic novel through adobe flash. If you spend 300 points you can “keep” the book in your emanga library with no time restrictions. I’m not a fan of this as I’d pay more to physically own the book, either in print or electronic form, but this novel is absolutely worth renting. If you have a kindle, buy it today.

The novel is set in San Fransisco’s Chinatown in the 1860’s. George Callahan is a complicated man. He administers abortions to women during the day and drowns his demons in opium at night. He struggles with his past in the Civil War as well as his family’s abusive history. He has an unwilling attraction to a young man at an all male brothel, Jun, which may have much darker implications.

The author admits at the back of the novel that all-male brothels didn’t exist at the time but I don’t consider that a detriment to the story at all. The details added in are incredible from the setting to the dialogue and the side storylines occurring simultaneously. The time period comes alive rather vividly with the great artwork and the corresponding writing. The characters are well crafted, which is always interesting in a novel that relies on nuance and subtly rather than elaborate writing to convey meaning. Here each character has more complexity and depth than shown on the surface.

There is the sweet, and seriously cute Jun with an innocent mind but very pragmatic and sexual body. The balance of Jun’s sweetness and innocence against his cleverness shows a complicated character that goes beyond just the shy, simpering uke. I loved the scene where Jun barters for the toy train. I wanted to cry for Jun but at the same time, his innate cleverness just shines through. Likewise, George struggles with doing the right thing in his mind versus his needs and desires. He has a past filled with images and deeds he’d rather forget, yet mires himself in them each night as he tries to smoke himself to oblivion. Even the bodyguard is given more depth as he struggles with his attraction to Jun, but his inability to know what to say or do thus acting out in frustration.

The artwork is very interesting and portrays the story very well. Although I’m certainly no expert, there doesn’t seem to be a uniformity to the panels, which keeps interest from page to page. There are enough classic yaoi elements that make the artwork familiar but the story has a dark edge that definitely peaks my interest more than classic yaoi.

If you’re a fan of graphic novels or just want something really pretty to look at with a darker theme, definitely check this out. It’s worth the $3 “keeper” fee even if you can’t own it like those lucky kindle folks.

Get it HERE on Kindle or HERE on emanga!

Love, Like Ghosts by Ally Blue

Love, Like Ghosts by Ally Blue

Blurb:
Truth. Lies. A century-old mystery. What a tangled web…

A Bay City Paranormal Investigations story.

At age eleven, Adrian Broussard accidentally used his mind to open a portal to another dimension. Now, ten years later, he’s successfully harnessed his strong psychokinetic abilities. In the process, he’s learned the lessons which have become the guiding principles of his life. Absolute truth. Absolute control. Always.

Sticking to his personal code of ethics has never been a problem, until two chance meetings—one with a hundred-year-old ghost, one with a handsome, very-much-alive man—turn his orderly existence upside down.

Having grown up in a family of paranormal investigators, Adrian is intrigued by the spirit of Lyndon Groome and determined to solve the mystery of his death. Greg Woodhall, however, affects Adrian in unpredictable ways. Not only does his every touch challenge Adrian’s hard-won control over his abilities, his company quickly becomes a light in Adrian’s lonely life.

As the mystery surrounding Lyndon’s death turns sinister, Adrian’s relationship with Greg deepens into something serious. Something Adrian wants to keep. But intimacy isn’t as easy as honesty, and when the heart’s involved, the line between right and wrong can blur.

can a ghost -really- get it up?

DeVante’s Coven by S.M. Johnson


DeVante’s Coven by S.M. Johnson

Blurb:
When Roderick abandons new vampire Daniel to the care of his sire, DeVante, Daniel flounders under DeVante’s attitude of benevolent neglect. He establishes an after hours party house, which becomes his primary source for blood, and wonders how much autonomy DeVante will actually allow. Yearning for guidance and supervision, Daniel pursues Reed, a mortal man, and finds himself ensnared in a relationship rich with elements of BDSM.

Meanwhile, Roderick has fled to Las Vegas, where he saves the life of a young man named Tony by changing him to vampire. Only something goes wrong, because when Tony wakes up he doesn’t act like a fledgling vampire should. And when the sun rises and Roderick sleeps his vampire sleep, Tony walks out into the daylight and goes home, where he accidentally changes his roommate Lily to vampire. Roderick wakes to find that he now has two brand new fledglings, neither of whom he can control. He panics and does the only thing can think to do; bring them to DeVante in San Francisco. When they arrive, Roderick is shattered to learn Daniel has a new lover.

Vampires, mortals, and Tony, who’s something else altogether, are all beholden to DeVante for protection, though each has a special talent. DeVante notices this and begins to suspect that an outside force has brought all these children to him for some nefarious purpose. Before he can put the pieces together, the whole group is snatched and held for ransom. The price? Help a vicious vampire from DeVante’s past take over the mortal world. The monster would use their talents against them, but the coven discovers that together they can defeat even the strongest evil.

[Originally reviewed for Rainbow Reviews.]

Review:

DeVante’s Coven is actually a sequel, yet neither the summary nor the book clearly state that. However when reading the book, there are clear gaps in background, information, and characters mentioned that the story expects the reader to already know. Due to these problems, this book shouldn’t be read as a stand alone even though it can be if you can get past the obvious holes. The first book in the series, DeVante’s Coven, deals with how Daniel is turned into a vampire and the relationships between Daniel, Roderick, DeVante, and Emily. DeVante’s Coven starts with Daniel struggling to understand his new vampire life as his creator, Roderick, has run off without him and DeVante doesn’t want to be bothered with Daniel. Each vampire ends up making a bit of a mess but create intricate relationships and bonds that evolve into an interesting new family.

The story is told from alternating third person point of view. There are several different storylines that the book bounces between until finally merging together towards the end for the final climatic scene. The first storyline is the plot involving the new vampire Daniel and his relationship to an emotionally stunted Reed. Daniel pursues Reed single-mindedly while Reed runs hot and cold towards Daniel. Eventually the two settle into a BDSM dynamic that works well for them both but takes some learning and growing. The second storyline involves Roderick who creates a new fledgling vampire in a beautiful left for dead boy named Tony. Unfortunately Tony turns out to be different from any other vampire and causes havoc in Las Vegas. All the while the Master of them all, DeVante, is dealing with his own frustrations over his love for the very human Emily and unwilling attachments to his new vampire children.

The various stories are mostly well executed but jumping between them is somewhat frustrating. Just when the stories are getting good, the point of view jumps to another vampire, leading to a slightly frustrating reading experience. However, each story is rather absorbing and interesting on its own and together produces a page turning, enthralling book about a group of fascinating individuals, which offsets any frustration. The writing is solid with good prose and evocative description. There are a few areas where the scenes could be tighter without jumping around so much and the storyline with Daniel and Reed dominates the book so much that Roderick and Tony’s storyline needs more development and depth. DeVante’s obsession with Emily is very empty as there is no additional context and information offered in this book as to their history, relationship, or bond making this element essential to having read the previous book. Emily herself is never introduced in the book until the very end yet referenced numerous times without giving more information about who she is and how she fits into the story and characters.

For the most part the characterization is decent, although the best developed characters are those newly introduced. DeVante and Roderick suffer from the least amount of characterization and that is likely due to the previous book which I can only assume spends significant time on their personalities. Part of their appeal and interest shines through in this book but there are gaps in the characters and actions that don’t make sense yet the story relies on previous knowledge of the reader to overcome this. The characters of Daniel, Reed, Tony, and Lily all are all well crafted and great introductions. Tony and Lily are not given the space they deserve but no doubt will grow and flourish in future books. Daniel and Reed are a dynamic couple with explosive sexual chemistry, vibrant personalities, and hopefully will also continue to develop. Daniel is slightly less interesting than Reed as his actions tend to be flatter and more predictable whereas Reed’s history and damaged emotional state set up a wealth of opportunity.

This is a pretty balanced story that has many more good aspects than poor, but the final climatic scene is troublesome. The identity of the classic evil-doer is suspect and doesn’t have enough context to explain the motivation and purpose. Furthermore the paranormal and magical actions seem arbitrary. The scene lacks an inherent reality that would tie the magical aspects to the vampires. Why do Lily’s actions have such an effect? Why is DeVante basically powerless during the scene? How is Roderick injured? The supposed reasons of the villain are ridiculous and his coaxing of the Coven even more so. This scene is especially disappointing given the strong story up to that point. However, this climax is easy to ignore and just move on in the book. Thankfully it’s rather short and forgettable.

I really enjoyed reading DeVante’s Coven, even though I hadn’t read the first book. I’m definitely curious enough about the characters to see where they came from and how they came to be and I also am interested in reading the next book to come, showing where they go from here. The story and large cast are engaging and engrossing with a touch of horror and BDSM. The writing keeps the story somewhat light without a hard intensity that would truly make this story shine but I can recommend this offering regardless. I would suggest reading the first book in the series, DeVante’s Children, prior to reading DeVante’s Coven for greater context and understanding.

Get it HERE!