Tag Archives: Cat Grant

Flawless by Cat Grant


Title: Flawless
Author: Cat Grant
Publisher: Riptide Publishing
Pages: 91
Characters: Steve Campbell, Gil Alvarez
POV: 3rd
Sub-Genre: Contemporary Romance, Transgender
Kisses: 5


Blurb:

Steve Campbell used to be a player, until a mid-life crisis opened his eyes to his long-repressed love for Connor, his soon-to-be-married best friend and business partner. Coming out at thirty-eight means learning how to date all over again, and this time, Steve’s not willing to settle for empty one-night stands. He wants the real thing.

Gil Alvarez has never had it easy, struggling through childhood and rejected by his family for a body that didn’t match who he was inside. A skilled driver and mechanic, he’s working hard to make his auto shop a success. The last thing he needs is a rich white guy in a candy-apple-red Ferrari tempting him, but Steve’s ready smile and easygoing manner prove irresistible.

One brief, intimate encounter leaves them both hungry for more. Gil’s not ashamed of who he is, but he’s terrified that Steve will reject him—or worse—when he discovers what Gil can’t find the courage to tell him.

Review:

I’ve read several books by Ms. Grant and I’ve enjoyed them all. She has a way of really getting to the heart and soul of her characters and she always writes an interesting, compelling story. The blurb does an excellent job at describing what the book is about, so I won’t rehash it. Instead, I thought I’d write about why I liked this book and why I recommend it.

Since the blurb hints at what’s going on with Gil, I don’t think I’m spoiling it by confirming he is a female to male transsexual. Unfortunately, there are not enough books written about transgendered heroes and I admit I couldn’t wait to read this one! I’m very glad I did! Ms. Grant does an excellent job at portraying Gil’s fear of rejection because he is a transman. Even though Gil is afraid of being hurt, I quickly found myself admiring his strength to live the life he’s meant to live, as well as, his willingness to give Steve a chance to win his heart. Gil is definitely a memorable, honorable hero and I truly loved him.

Like Gil, Steve is another likeable, interesting character. I thought his patience and determination to be with Gil was an honorable one and I loved the way he cared for Gil. It was so easy to fall under the spell of these two men and I enjoyed every minute I spent reading about them. My only gripe about the book is that I wished it had been longer. I do hope Ms. Grant will one day revisit these characters and allow us to watch these two men really achieve the happily ever after that they truly deserve.

Flawless is a beautifully told story that lived in my heart and mind long after I finished reading the story. If you are looking for a well-told romance between two very special men, this is definitely the book for you! Highly Recommended!

Reviewed By: Gabbi

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Cat Grant and Rachel Haimowitz from Riptide Publishing and a chance to win!

One quick thing, the BEAUTIFUL handmade chainmail bracelet being given away to one lucky blog tour commenter can be seen here: http://freiainguz.weebly.com/power-play-chainmaille.html It’s handmade by the talented Amara Devonte.

Thank you for taking the time to answer our questions, Cat Grant and Rachel Haimowitz, can you tell us a little bit about your background?

Cat: I’m a California girl, born and raised. I’ve lived in Northern California, Los Angeles and now I reside in beautiful Monterey.

Rachel: And I’m from the liberal bastion on the other coast, born and raised in Jersey, quite close to the amazing center of art and culture and weirdness that is New York. I suspect being exposed to all that as a child played a big role in me wanting to go into the arts as an adult, and seeing so much diversity and so many people from so many walks of life so comfortable in their own skin definitely contributed to my own comfort with myself, my peculiarities, my kinks and my desires.

What was your first book and how long did it take to get it published?

Cat: My first published book was The Arrangement, in 2008. How long did it take to get published? How about my whole life? LOL! Becoming a published author had been my dream ever since I was a teenager.

Rachel: My first book was a far-too-ambitious dystopian wherein America, after a catastrophic war, turns into a theocracy. I started writing it when I was 17, declared it as done as I knew how to make it when I was 25, and am terrified to even peek at it now because I completely lacked the skill to do so much worldbuilding (or much of anything else, really) at that age. So, it never got published, but it holds a very special place in my heart, and I’d love to fix it one day and try. As for my first published book, that was Counterpoint: Song of the Fallen #1, and I was actually fortunate enough to sign a contract for that before it was even finished.

When did you start writing m/m romance? What about this genre interested you the most?

Cat: I wrote slash fan fiction for a couple of decades (Kirk/Spock, Mulder/Krycek, Clark/Lex). So when m/m romance became a hot genre in pro-fic, I knew I’d found my home.

Rachel: Heh, I also started in fanfic—X-Files, Buffy, Star Trek Voyager, Stargate Atlantis, and now X-Men First Class (which just turned a year old—happy birthday, you crazy kinky fandom, you!)—where I mostly lurked for about five years, and then cut my slashy teeth. There are so many things to love about this genre that I hardly know where to begin, but two of the biggies are the lack of ossified genre tropes, and the similar lack of ossified gender expectations.

How long did it take you to get published? How many books have you written thus far?

Cat: It took about five years from the time I decided to get serious about becoming professionally published to selling my first book. Power Play: Awakening marks my fifteenth published book.

Rachel: I’ve been writing ever since I can remember, and writing seriously with the intent of publication since I was 17. I sent out my first round of agent queries at the age of 21 or so, with that dystopian mess I mentioned earlier. Obviously it got roundly rejected, which was a good lesson for me for sure. My first book was published not quite two years ago, and since then, I’ve put out . . . hmm, Power Play: Awakening marks my fifth novel, and I’ve also done two novellas and two collections of shorts.

Do you write full time?

Cat: I’m trying to make writing a full-time career, but it’s difficult. Like any other new business, you don’t make a whole lot of money your first few years.

Rachel: No, but I’m in publishing full time. Most of my work hours these days are spent on Riptide Publishing, and I don’t have nearly as much time to write as I wish I did. The unfortunate truth is that it’s remarkably difficult to scrape by even a modest living off nothing but your royalties, especially in a genre as small as this one, but I do hope that as my backlist builds and as I connect with more readers, the day may come when I could write full time if I wanted to.

Looking back was there something in particular that helped you to decide to become a writer? Did you choose it or did the profession choose you?

Cat: I’ve loved telling stories my whole life, and I love reading. So I guess it chose me!

Rachel: I’m with Cat on this one. I really can’t imagine not writing, so I suppose there’s nothing for it but to obey the voices in my head.

On a typical writing day, how would you spend your time?

Cat: I’m not much of a morning person, so I usually write in the afternoons and evenings – sometimes until 2 or 3 in the morning.

Rachel: Again, what Cat said. When I get really into something, I can lose track of time and end up on these manic writing jags that run 20 hours. Mostly, though, I’m eking out an hour here and an hour there between the day job.

Do you write right through or do you revise as you go along?

Cat: I revise as I go along, but that doesn’t stop me from having to do a couple more passes either before or during the editing process.

Rachel: Curiously enough, I do the same. Every time I sit down to write a new scene, I read the last couple/few before it, and tend to poke at them just a little, then move on. The bulk of my revisions come during the edit process.

When it comes to plotting, do you write freely or plan everything in advance?

Cat: I plan, but I don’t outline. And then I end up going back and changing everything anyway. LOL!

Rachel: Okay, I’m starting to sound like a parrot here, but yes, I’m the same as Cat on this one too—sort of a hybrid plotter/pantser.

What kind of research do you do before and during a new book?

Cat: It depends. Some books don’t require that much research. But if it’s going to have an impact on the character and/or plot development, I try to do as much of it as I can before I start writing. Otherwise I can do it piecemeal as I go.

Rachel: I do as much as I need to do to shape the overall sense of the world, and then I do a ton of research as I go. I can get lost in it sometimes, though, so I have to be jealous and guard my time.

How long does it take for you to complete a book you would allow someone to read? Do you write straight through, or do you revise as you go along?

Cat: I can usually bang out a novel-length book in about 4-5 weeks. Then it takes at least that long to edit it.

Rachel: It depends how much time I have to spend on it and how insistent the muse is. Aleksandr Voinov and I wrote Break and Enter (a 27,000-word novella) in three days of just nonstop write-eat-write-sleep-write, though it then took ten more really aggressive workdays to self-edit before we felt it ready to submit. Other books I’ve poked at for a year or two before I’ve finished with them.

Writers often go on about writer’s block. Do you ever suffer from it, and what measures do you take to get past it?

Cat: For me, writer’s block is not knowing what project to write next. Or being stuck because there’s a problem with the manuscript, but I haven’t identified it yet.

Rachel: I don’t really believe it’s a thing, but I think there are a lot of things that can make writing much harder. Low energy, poor sleep, emotional turmoil, unsolved issues with plot or character, not thinking through the arcs ahead of time, a desire to do something or be somewhere else, distractions, etc.

When someone reads one of your books for the first time, what do you hope they gain, feel or experience?

Cat: I hope they love my characters as much as I do.

Rachel: I hope they enjoy themselves and can lose themselves completely in the experience, maybe get a chance to experience or think or feel something new or intriguing or thought-provoking or just plain fun.

Can you share three things you’ve learned about the business of writing since your first publication?

Cat: Every book is a new puzzle to solve – and no, it never gets any easier.
A skilled editor can turn an okay manuscript into a great book.
Writing’s not an easy job, but it’s the only one you can do in your pajamas. 

Rachel: I think a lot of writers dream about how if they can just make that first sale, it’ll all be smooth sailing from there and they can quit their day job and write full time and live the dream. Except, for 99.9999999% of published authors, it doesn’t work that way. So don’t quit the day job, but do keep the dream. Your time may yet come.

Does the title of a book you’re writing come to you as you’re writing it, or does it come before you even begin the first sentence?

Cat: Depends. Some titles spring into my head perfect and fully-formed. Some are like pulling teeth.

Rachel: Titles are almost always the very last thing I write.

How would you describe your sense of humor? Who and what makes you laugh?

Cat: I have a t-shirt with “I heart irony” on it. Does that answer your question?

Rachel: My humor’s pretty dark and cerebral. I love shows like Family Guy, American Dad, the Simpsons, the Daily Show, the Colbert Report—those things all pretty much never fail to make me laugh.

What is the most frequently asked Cat Grant question?

Cat: When will the Courtland Chronicles be available again?

What are you working on now?

Cat: A short story called Doubtless. It’s the story of one of the secondary characters in Priceless. Then I plan to spend the summer revising the first 3 Courtland books.

Rachel: A Belonging-verse story about a college student whose parents die suddenly and leave him with a mound of debt and custody of his eleven-year-old twin sisters. He has some hard choices to make and some serious struggles ahead to keep his family together.

What was the best piece of advice you’ve received with respect to the art of writing? How did you implement it into your work?

Cat: Don’t follow trends, and don’t try to imitate what other writers are doing. Write what you want to write. Pour all your passion into your work, and readers who like what you do will find you.

Rachel: Write what you love, but if you want to get published, be aware you must please your audience. Which is basically a way of saying “Don’t be self-indulgent.” Just because you’re obsessed with that particular shade of hazel that is your hero’s eyes doesn’t mean your readers will be, so when it comes time to edit, don’t hesitate to cut those two-hundred lovingly-crafted sentences about them that you’ve sprinkled through the manuscript. Or, as one of the best editors I’ve ever had the pleasure to work with used to say, “Nobody cares but you.” I still write what I love, but I do my best to make sure I’m writing things other people care about, too.

Writing is obviously not just how you make your living, but your life-style as well. What do you do to keep the creative “spark” alive – both in your work and out of it?

Cat: I try to read as much as I can – not necessarily other fiction, but definitely non-fiction. I also try to keep abreast of current events. You never know what’s going to jump out at you from the headlines.

Rachel: I am a voracious consumer of all sorts of media, and also a habitual people-watcher. Sometimes the strangest things will spark the muse. I also like to get away, go on long hikes through some very remote places, just get back to nature and recharge the batteries, so to speak. I had three days off a few weeks ago—it was the first time in a year I’d been away from work for more than half a waking day at a clip—and the place I chose to go was on a three-day hike on the Appalachian Trail from High Point State Park. I came back feeling practically like a new person. Also sore :-)

What kind of books do you like to read?

Cat: All kinds! These days I read mostly for research purposes, though. When you write fiction for a living, there isn’t much time to read it for pleasure!

Rachel: I’m obviously a huge fan of the genre, but I read very little for pleasure anymore between research for my writing and acquisitions for Riptide. On the plus side, acquisitions reading is almost always a pleasure, and sometimes quite a remarkable one.

If you weren’t a writer what would you be?

Cat: In my pre-writing life, I was a bookkeeper. World’s most BORING job!

Rachel: An editor. Which is what I was doing before I started selling my writing and what I’m still doing even now.

When it comes to the covers of your books, what do you like or dislike about them?

Rachel: OMG we have the most amazing cover artists at Riptide. The cover for Power Play: Awakening is the best cover I have ever had the pleasure of getting for a book. I can’t think of one negative thing to say about it.

Aside from writing, what else do you enjoy doing?

Cat: Reading (obviously!), watching TV, going to the movies, listening to music. Drooling over the latest Michael Fassbender photos. 

Rachel: Um, ditto. I also love hiking/camping, and I love to sing. I spent a lot of time in musical theater in my younger years, and some in my adult years too, but sadly nothing in the past couple years. I’m anxious to get out there and start doing it again, but it’s a big time commitment, so . . .

Any special projects coming out soon we should watch for?

Cat: Last month I had a new novella out from Riptide, entitled “Priceless.” It’s from their new rent boy collection. And of course, the first book in the Power Play series, Power Play: Resistance, came out last April.

Rachel: Honestly, Power Play: Awakening may be the last book from me for the year. I’m hoping to get the Belonging-verse story I’m doing now wrapped by the end of the summer, but writing time’s been very short :(

New writers are always trying to glean advice from those with more experience. What suggestions do you have for new writers?

Cat: Pretty much the same advice other writers gave me – be true to yourself. Find your own voice. Don’t imitate other writers or follow trends.

Rachel: Learn your craft. You might be writing the greatest story ever told, but if you can’t construct a sentence, nobody will stick around long enough to realize how amazing your story is. Study hard, read craft books, get betaed by people who are markedly better than you, ask your editor a million questions, and never, ever get complacent.

What future projects do you have in the works?

Cat: The Courtland Chronicles will be reissued, but the timeframe’s not set in stone.

Rachel: Just the Belonging-verse story for me. At some point in the upcoming year, I hope to write the Break and Enter sequel with Aleks Voinov, and I have about 10,000 words of a new Nicky/Devon novella that I’d like to finish too. But for the moment, after 185,000 words of Power Play, I think I’m all kinked out :-p

Can you please tell us where we can find you on the Internet?

Cat: Sure! Here’s a list of my most frequent hideouts:

Website: http://www.catgrant.com
Blog: http://catgrant.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cat.grant
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/CatGrant2009
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1912055.Cat_Grant

Rachel: I’m at:

Website: http://rachelhaimowitz.com/
Blog: http://rachel-haimowitz.blogspot.com/
Twitter (I’m very active here): http://twitter.com/#!/RachelHaimowitz
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/user/show/4110966
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/rachel.haimowitz

Could you please share your favorite excerpt(s) from one of more of your stories with us?

Here’s a steamy little excerpt from Power Play: Awakening:

Brandon’s eyes seemed to take up half his face as he took in the contraption—a black box about a foot square, a long cord, a telescoping pole with a sparkly purple cock on the end.

Brandon did his best imitation of an owl as Jonathan circled round him and placed the fucking machine on the floor right behind the spreader bar. He lubed up the cock, lined it up with Brandon’s hole, and adjusted the pole height until the dildo was buried all the way inside him. He angled it to hit Brandon’s prostate and plugged it in.

A startled gasp as the machine began to do its thing. The cock slid slow and steady from Brandon’s body until just the tip remained inside, then rocked back up inside him at the same pace. Jonathan dialed up the speed—not too much, not yet, but not a torturous tease, either—and Brandon’s head fell back on a moan, fingers tightening into fists around the suspension cuffs. Jonathan spat into his hand and circled back round to Brandon’s front, grabbed his cock and gave it a few firm pumps. Brandon’s chest heaved, and his hips thrust forward into Jonathan’s hand in time with the thrusting of the dildo. If he remembered he had a punishment coming, not a hint of it showed on his face.

Not a hint of embarrassment either, and though it’d been Jonathan’s intention to erase such self-consciousness all along, he’d not dared to hope that Brandon would take such a big step forward so quickly. To be fucked by a machine while tied hand and foot and not so much as blush about it? To let himself get lost so quickly and so thoroughly in the pleasure . . . It was almost a pity Jonathan would have to break the spell with pain. But that too was part of the plan—that perhaps, in this way, Brandon might mix the two successfully. Might get lost and stay lost. Find subspace again.

Still lost in his pleasure, Brandon didn’t even seem to notice when Jonathan stepped away to the toy rack, scanned it for the perfect implement. Ah, there it was—a ten-inch leather strap, not too soft, not too heavy, not too wide. He plucked it off the rack, tested it against his palm with a satisfying slap. Brandon’s shoulders jerked at the sound, eyes flying open, shaking off the pleasure haze in a fit of nerves.

He’d be jerking even harder in a minute or so. Jonathan circled back to where Brandon hung in his bonds, reached out for his cock and began stroking him again. “Focus on this,” he said softly, “Keep your mind on the pleasure. That dildo in your ass, my hand on your cock.”

Another stroke, and then a snap of the strap on the underside of Brandon’s bound balls, hard enough to make him bark a loud, “Fuck!”

A bit early to be heedless of the swear jar. “Language, Brandon; that’s a dollar,” he said, then turned his attention back to the matter at hand.

Brandon’s cock had deflated—not all the way, not with that rawhide cord around the base—but enough to disappoint Jonathan a little. “Breathe,” he whispered, brushing a kiss across Brandon’s heaving chest, stroking him back to hardness. “You can do this. You’re strong, Brandon. It doesn’t have to hurt.”

Brandon coughed out a laugh at that, like Jonathan had just told him the most un-funny joke in the world.

Jonathan twisted his hand round the crown of Brandon’s cock—hard again, rock hard—and said, “I mean it.” Leaned in, flicked his tongue across a nipple. “The pain can make this better. Take it, use it. Feel my hand on you, that cock fucking you. When you reach sixteen, I’ll take the cording off; I’ll let you come. Would you like that?”

He hit Brandon’s balls again before the man could answer. Just as hard as last time, and Brandon still shouted like Jonathan had tasered him, but this time, remarkably, his cock didn’t wither in Jonathan’s hand.

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Where did Cat Grant get the idea for Priceless you ask? Well we have the answer.

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Thank you for joining me on my blog tour for Priceless, written for Riptide Publishing’s 2012 Rentboy Collection. Hope you enjoy this little peek into what (and who!) inspired the story, and be sure to leave a comment for a chance to win your choice of books from my backlist!

Blame It On the New York Times . . .

I always try to do something different with each new book – be it experimenting with alternating 1st/3rd person points of view, exploring a new setting, or even giving my main characters unusual occupations (such as opera singers or m/m romance writers!). So when Riptide announced their “Love For Sale” submissions call, I thought, “Great idea, but I’ve already written a rent boy story.” (The First Real Thing, published by Ellora’s Cave, and winner of the 2012 EPIC Award for erotica.)

Then I stumbled across a New York Times article entitled, “Keeping Up With Being Kept” – all about college students literally prostituting themselves to pay their tuition. Once I got over my shock, the idea for Priceless grabbed me by the throat.

Of course, it didn’t hurt that I already had the perfect physical inspirations for Connor, my socially-inept, workaholic physics professor, and Wes, the brilliant young student/rent boy his buddy secretly buys him as a 35th birthday gift. (And if you follow me on Twitter, you know exactly which perfect physical inspirations I’m talking about – their initials are M(ichael) F(assbender) and J(ames) M(cAvoy). With the images of these two gorgeous men fixed in my mind, the story practically wrote itself.

Despite the similar theme, Wes is quite different from Cameron, my male escort protagonist from The First Real Thing. Cam’s an experienced professional, whereas poor Wes is just making it all up as he goes. I felt so bad about the hell I put him through, I wanted to wrap him up in a blanket and cuddle him —but, luckily for my readers, I left that to Connor instead.

I’ve got several more rent boy stories rattling around in my brain – including one set in Paris in the 1920’s (*shudders at the thought of all that research!*). Somewhere in between revising my Courtland Chronicles series and writing my gay opera singer story (which may or may not also be historical!), I’ll probably get around to writing at least a couple of them.

In the meantime, enjoy Priceless!

Blurb:

When love’s for sale, who really pays?

Connor Morrison is a 3D optics pioneer, the star of the UC Berkeley physics department, and a socially-inept workaholic. And with his dear friend and business partner, Steve Campbell, handling their investors, he’s content to remain in the shadows. That is, until he meets the gorgeous and starry-eyed physics student Wes Martin.

Wes is brilliant but broke. Ever since his scholarship fell victim to the financial crisis, he’s had no choice but to sell his body to stay in school. Already half in love with Connor, Wes initially resists Steve’s offer to be Connor’s thirty-fifth birthday present. But in the end, Wes is too broke—and too smitten—to say no.

Connor has no idea Steve bought Wes’s attentions, and he quickly falls under the young man’s spell. Yet after one night together, Wes disappears. He can’t bear to hook with a man he could so easily grow to love, but he also can’t bear to tell him the truth. Besides, if he sleeps with Connor again, there’d be no way to hide the bruises one of his regular johns loves to inflict. Only one thing to do: let Connor go. Walking away is painful, but not nearly as much as building a relationship on lies.

EPIC Award-winning author Cat Grant lives by the sea in beautiful Monterey, California, with one persnickety feline and entirely too many books and DVDs. When she’s not writing, she sings along to whatever’s on her iPod, watches lots of movies, and fantasizes about kinky sex with Michael Fassbender.

Where to find Cat:

Website: http://www.catgrant.com
Blog: http://catgrant.blogspot.com/
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cat.grant
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/CatGrant2009
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1912055.Cat_Grant

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Priceless A Rentboy story: by Cat Grant

Title: Priceless
Author: Cat Grant
Publisher: Riptide Publishing
Pages: 81
POV: 3rd
Sub-Genre: Contemporary/Angst/Romance
Kisses: 5




Blurb:

When love’s for sale, who really pays?

Connor Morrison is a 3-D optics pioneer, the star of the UC Berkeley physics department, and a socially inept workaholic. And with his dear friend and business partner, Steve Campbell, handling their investors, he’s content to remain in the shadows. That is, until he meets the gorgeous and starry-eyed physics student Wes Martin.

Wes is brilliant but broke. Ever since his scholarship fell victim to the financial crisis, he’s had no choice but to sell his body to stay in school. Already half in love with Connor, Wes initially resists Steve’s offer to be Connor’s thirty-fifth birthday present. But in the end, Wes is too broke—and too smitten—to say no.

Connor has no idea Steve bought Wes’s attentions, and he quickly falls under the young man’s spell. Yet after one night together, Wes disappears. He can’t bear to hook with a man he could so easily grow to love, but he also can’t bear to tell him the truth. Besides, if he sleeps with Connor again, there’d be no way to hide the bruises one of his regular johns loves to inflict. Only one thing to do: let Connor go. Walking away is painful, but not nearly as much as building a relationship on lies.

Review:

For anyone who isn’t aware, this title is part of Riptide’s Rentboy collection. It’s my first one in fact and I have to say that I really enjoyed it. Once I learned where Cat came up with the idea for the story itself, it meant more to me, it allowed me to connect with the characters on a deeper level of understanding.

This is a story about a young man, Wes Martin who is doing all he can to put himself through college, this is a young man full of will and determination and he’s willing to do what it takes to stay in school and while he’s there he gets the most of it. He’s not there to fool around like so many of our college students are these days. Partying and drinking until he passes out isn’t his idea of a good time. As we all know, an average job working at a burger joint doesn’t pay enough to cover an electric bill, never mind school tuition, food, gas for his car, clothes and the like. His parents died when he was very young and was raised by an aunt and uncle who had their own kids to put through college. So, really Wes is on his own and putting his self through college.

Our next character is Connor Morrison, a professor at the same college Wes attends. In fact, Wes appears at all of Connor’s presentations, lectures and tries to learn all he can from the older man. Connor is a single gay man, living in the dorms I do believe, among the same minded students as himself. He’s a physics professor and has come upon something new and exciting that he and his best friend Steve Campbell are trying to get investors involved in helping them see this come to life. However, because Connor is focused on his work and such, he rarely if ever goes out to socialize.

Well one evening there is a surprise birthday party for Connor that Steve arranges for him, and Connor is less than thrilled. He argues that they could have just done the dinner thing like they do every year and Steven won’t have it. So, during that party, Connor escapes to a balcony where he could be by himself. Crowds and all that don’t sit well with him and I totally get that. Suddenly there with his is a stunning younger man and he’s polite, charming, talkative and before Connor realizes what in the hell is going on, he’s being kissed by the younger man.

This at first went very well with Connor but all too soon he comes to his senses and shoves the younger man away, he can’t do this and a rejected Wes just disappears from the party. Now, oddly enough Wes has a room just a few doors down from Connor at the campus, and they sort of avoid one another until a big conference comes up where Connor is the guest speaker, again, trying to sell his idea and Steven, who just won’t give up offers an aide for Connor, because quite frankly, Connor is a frazzled mess. Who does Steven offer up? Wes of course.

Yes, Wes is super as Connor’s aide and then so much more as they end up in bed together and come morning, Wes, who is so full of guilt for some odd reason (you’ll find out when you read it.) takes off before Connor even wakes up. Now Connor is lost and just shrugs it off. He goes back to work, and again, sees Wes on occasion but they go about their business. Now Wes still has bills to pay so this is when we find out how he makes his money. And boy-oh-boy. The shit he goes through and don’t think Connor doesn’t notice the changes in Wes because he does. He sees bruises and such on the younger man and bless the man, he comes to Wes’s rescue.

Overall it’s a good story, just the right amount of angst, sex, and a great plot. I call it great because you would not believe the amount of kids who do exactly this to get through college. I mean even girls do it. They are that determined to make something of their lives and if that means dong things they don’t exactly like, they do it because they have a goal and that goal is to climb above and go for the gold.

Reviewed By: Michele

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Power Play Resistance by Rachel Haimowitz and Cat Grant

Title: Power Play Resistance
Author: Rachel Horowitz and Cat Grant
Publisher: Riptide
Pages: 267
POV: 3rd
Sub-Genre: BDSM
Kisses: 5






Blurb:

Brandon McKinney has scraped and sacrificed for what little in life he’s ever had. Though it’s been fifteen years since he escaped his father’s abuse, the damage remains. Trust seems as far out of reach as his dream of becoming an architect, and though he’s come to accept being gay, he can’t deny the shame and confusion he feels at other urges—the deeply-repressed desire to submit.

Jonathan Watkins is a self-made Silicon Valley billionaire whose ex-wife took half his money and even more of his faith. Comfortable as a Dominant but wary of being hurt again, he resorts to anonymous pickups and occasional six-month contracts with subs seeking only a master, not a lover.

When a sizzling back-alley encounter cues Jonathan in to Brandon’s deep-seated submissive side, he makes the man an offer: Give me six months of your life, and I’ll open your eyes to a whole new world. Brandon doesn’t care about that; all he wants is the three million dollars Jonathan’s offering so he can buy the construction company he works for. But he soon learns that six months on his knees is no easy feat, and shame and pride may keep him from all he ever wanted—and all he never dreamed he had any right to have.

Publisher’s note: This title contains heavy BDSM play and total power exchange. While consent is clearly established and frequently reaffirmed, some moments in Power Play push hard against the outer edges of consent.


Review:

What a book. What a story. I think this is one I need in paperback just to put on my shelf along with the others that I know are coming. This isn’t a story that is full of love, not by any means of the word. This is a hardcore BDSM story that revolves around a Sadist, whose name is Jonathan and the man he finds a sudden interest in, Brandon McKinney. Now Brandon isn’t, when he met Jonathan into the scene at all. He’s a hard-working young man who is striving to make something of his life. As a child his father abused him, many times he ended up bloody, a couple of times in the hospital. Bran, as he wants to be called, fights an inner battle over how he was treated as a kid. Once his mother died, he received the full brunt of the beatings. He left home as soon as he could and ended up in Chinatown and worked as a foreman on a constructive crew. He wasn’t making the best money but he made enough to keep his bills paid and food, if he was careful with it.

Jonathan is a billionaire, money is not an issue for him and he worked hard to get that. It wasn’t handed to him by any sense of the word and he was raised in a loving if not odd environment. His parents lived like perhaps gypsy’s or naturalists. Jonathan was home schooled until he went to college and ended up creating a bright future for himself. He married but was unhappy, as he needed more from his partner. He is all Dominate/Sadist.

Bran is an average man, that is until he meets Jonathan. They meet in a bar in China town and it’s somewhat funny because Bran is not a stupid man by any means of the word. And he’s sitting in this bar, drinking a warm beer, as that’s how the Chinese drink it, and Jonathan tries to order some expensive drink that this bar doesn’t carry. Funnier yet, they don’t understand English. Bran had a good laugh off of that one, watching Mr. High and Mighty trying to get a drink. He ends up helping him out, talks for a few with him and then when he sees Jonathan isn’t going to drink the warm beer, he takes it and goes and sit elsewhere, only Jonathan had other ideas.

Now, Bran is very head strong, he’s a man of his word, he’s determined and he’s troubled. He’s troubled because his boss is selling the company and Bran wants to buy it and wants to expand what the company can do for it’s clients. The man is smart, he wants to take it to a level that far surpasses other construction companies but he needs money to buy it. Where is a man like him going to get 3 million dollars?

Well, two or three beers later, has Bran in the alley on his knees giving Jonathan a blowjob, or better term here, Jon is actually forcing him to his knees, forces Bran to deep throat him, forces Bran to service him and Bran found himself hard and very turned on by this. Drunk as a skunk he was, but the next morning he wakes up on his bed, still in the pants he came in, dirty and in need of a shower.

Jonathan ends up finding Bran again at that same bar a week later and they strike up a conversation, they enjoy each other’s company and at that time Jon is an interesting man and Bran loves having sex with him. Then one day everything changed. Bran told Jon of his goals for that company and Jon, a man with oh so much money offers Bran a deal. Six months of his life and Jon will give him the money he needs to buy the construction company.

This is where the story really starts. This is where we see the true Sadist Jonathan is. And this is where we see how the power play comes to be. Bran is not a submissive man, and Jonathan is a Dominate man, and he has this need to hurt his partner/sub. It’s just how he’s wired. It’s what he needs and that’s not to say that he doesn’t care about his partners, it’s to say it is a part of who he is.

This story is much like the frog and the scorpion. I’m sure you’ve heard of that fable? Let me re-freshen it for you. There’s this frog and this scorpion sitting on the river bank, and they both need to get across. Scorpions can’t swim, frogs can, so the scorpion tells the frog to give him a ride to the other side and the frog says no way, you’ll sting me and the scorpion says no. No I won’t sting you so the frog says okay, hop on and he does and off into the river they go…midway guess what the scorpion does? Yep, he stings the frog and the frog says, now why did you do that? You promised you wouldn’t do that and now we’re both going to drown and the scorpion says…”It’s my nature.”

It’s my nature. Jonathan is that scorpion. It’s his nature to be a sadist. It is what and who he is, so he offers this Bran 3 million dollars to become his 24×7 slave. Bran says no, no way. But 3 million dollars is a LOT of money and it’s enough to buy him that company he so desperately wants. And what was six months of his life for that kind of money? He could withstand anything the short bastard could put out.

Now, I have to say here that the internal dialogue or the internal thoughts coming from Bran, funny as hell. Talk about stubborn pride? He’s full of it and Jon, he saw it and he set out to break him down, make him see that Bran IS a submissive man. However, Bran, in my opinion is anything but. He does it for the money, however, he could be taught to be that. His body does react, and Jon does turn him on, especially when he’s being a nice Dom/Sadist. Bran begins to respond and react as a good sub would. But he went through hell to get to that level. I’m not talking spankings and floggers here. I’m talking much more. Though there is NO BLOOD, no body fluids of any sort. Things get intense to break Bran and wow. The instruments Jon uses.

Don’t think that Jon is a cold-hearted bastard, he’s not. He does care for Bran more than he wants to admit and when Bran does leave him he is torn up. He does have feelings and that’s something I am hoping to see more of in the next book.

This is not by any means a light BDSM read. If you aren’t familiar with what the Sadist part of it is, look it up. If you think it’s more abuse than a D/s, spanking, bondage light play, hang this one up. This is a hardcore BDSM book that kep me flipping pages as quickly as I could.
Now, I love BDSM, love to read it. And this is the first story that goes to the levels it does in that lifestyle. A pure sadist working with a man who may or may not even be a submissive man. Is Bran in this only for the money OR is it something more? The ending when Bran goes back to him…I am thinking I had my answer but only the next story will tell.

Looking forward to it, ladies. Looking forward to it.

Reviewed By: Michele

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Filed under Cat Grant, Rachel Haimowitz, Riptide Publishing

Cat Grant Wants To Give Away Goodies! Check It Out!

Thanks so much for taking the time to be with us today, Cat. Why don’t we start by having you tell us a bit about yourself and your background?

I’m a California girl, born and raised. I currently live by the sea in lovely Monterey, California with my cat and way too many books and DVDs.

When did you discover your passion for writing? Was there someone in particular who encouraged and inspired your love of storytelling?

It was my late husband who encouraged me to start writing for potential publication when I became disabled in 2004. I’ve written off and on my entire life, but never thought I’d ever be professionally published. His belief in me got me through four solid years of rejection.

What was your first book and how long did it take for it to be published?

The Arrangement came out in May 2008. Took me over a year to write and another year to sell.

Is there a particular sub-genre in which you enjoy writing more than others? (i.e. paranormal vs. historical vs. contemporary)

Male/male is my favorite, with m/m/f ménage a close second.

Do you prefer writing in the 1st or the 3rd person? What advantages do you see in writing in one vs. the other?

Oh, I’ve written both 1st and 3rd – a couple of times in the same book! In fact, my new m/m contemporary Once a Marine is told from one 1st person POV and one 3rd. Some readers don’t care for 1st person, but I absolutely love it. There’s no better way to draw readers into a character’s head.

How long does it generally take for you to finish a manuscript?

Obviously that depends on how long of a manuscript it is. But I can usually bang out 50K in a month.

How much creative input do you have in the cover design for your books?

I fill out the cover art form and try to give the artist as much detail as possible. Riptide Publishing’s cover artists are terrific in that they keep the author in the loop every step of the way, whereas with other publishers, sometimes you’re stuck with whatever the artist comes up with.

Do you write full time? If not, how many hours per day do you attempt to dedicate to your writing?

I don’t look at the time factor as much as the word-count factor. My minimum word count is 1,000 words per day. I’m pretty slow until I get past the 10K mark, then I can usually do two to three times that every day.

Do you typically outline your plots before you begin the writing process, or do you write in a more freestyle fashion?

Oh, freestyle, definitely – which doesn’t mean I don’t plan out my stories. I just don’t outline. It completely kills the magic of writing every time I’ve tried.

How much do your characters resemble you and the people you know?

I usually model my characters (physically, at least) on whatever actors or musicians I currently have a crush on. Cole and Marc from Once a Marine were inspired by Alexander Skarsgard and Darren Criss.

How much do you draw upon your own life experiences in your writing?

Well, family seems to be an important theme in my writing – more specifically, dysfunctional families, which I have TONS of experience with.

What has been the most difficult topic you’ve ever approached in your writing?

Probably PSTD, which I explore in Once a Marine, and to a different extent, in Appearing Nightly.

Of all the characters you’ve created, do you have one in particular who stands out among the others as a favorite? If so, who and why?

I would have to say Eric Courtland, the hero (or maybe I should say, anti-hero) of my Courtland Chronicles books. He’s difficult to like sometimes, but I simply adore him.

When someone reads one of your books for the first time, what do you hope they take away from it?

I hope they’re entertained and feel they got their money’s worth.

Are you surprised by the ever growing female fan-base of Male/Male fiction?

Not really. I wrote slash fan fiction for many, MANY years, so I knew there was a huge untapped audience for male/male fiction, should it ever go commercial. And thankfully, it has!

When did you begin writing in the Male/Male genre? What about it interests you the most?

I started out writing Classic Trek fan fiction (Kirk/Spock) way back in the 80s, then I segued to X-Files (Mulder/Krycek) and Smallville (Clark/Lex). So it’s been awhile. Making the transition to writing commercial m/m fiction was relatively simple.

What was the best piece of advice you’ve ever received with respect to the art of writing? How did it change the way you approach your craft?

Treat writing like a job – show up every day, whether you feel like it or not.

Will you share three things you’ve learned about the business of writing since your first publication?

1. You have all the time in the world to write your first book, but after that, the clock starts ticking. If you want to make it as a published author, keep a steady stream of work coming.
2. Don’t let bad reviews get you down. Learn what you can from them and move on.
3. Eyes on the prize. Keep writing. Stay focused on the work.

If you were to offer a word of advice to a new author just starting out, what would it be?

Everyone will try to discourage you. Don’t listen. Keep writing, keep sending out your work. Don’t quit!

Do you generally have the titles of your work planned before you begin writing, or does that occur later on in the writing process?

Depends. I’m about to start a new story, and I have no idea what to title it. Other times the titles have come to me with no problem.

What is the question you’re most frequently asked by your fans?

When’s your next book coming out?

What is your most memorable fan experience?

I just got back from Authors After Dark in Philadelphia, where I was surprised how many readers recognized me. Every day I had people coming up to me and squeeing, which was… a bit bizarre. I’ve been to other conferences where nobody even said hello to me, so this kind of reception was completely unexpected. Now I know how famous actors feel!

Digital media—the e-reader/tablet computer/Android apps—is changing the way people access and enjoy books. What pros and/or cons do you see surrounding the business of e-publishing? How do you see digital media evolving in the years to come?

When e-readers reach the $99 price point, everybody will have one. That’s what happened when VCRs and DVD players came out. Give it another year or so, and e-readers will be as commonplace as cell phones.

When you have the chance to sit down and enjoy some quiet reading time, what sorts of books are you most likely to pick up? Who are your favorite authors?

I’m usually reading research material in my downtime. As much as I adore my colleagues, I simply don’t have time to keep up with what everybody else in my genre is doing.

If you weren’t a writer, what would you be?

I was a full-charge bookkeeper before I got published. Most boring job in the whole world! I hope I never have to go back to it!

Aside from writing, what else do you enjoy doing? Do you have any hobbies?

I watch TV and go to the movies a lot. Never know when an idea will literally leap off the screen at you.

If time travel were possible, what time period(s) would you most like to visit? Why?

Elizabethan and/or Regency England. Although I’d be sure to bring plenty of antibiotics with me!

If you had the opportunity to sit down to dinner with one famous person, either past or present, who would you choose and why?

Michael Fassbender. Because he’s a brilliant actor on the brink of stardom, and I’ve got a HUGE crush on him. :)

If we were to look around the desk where you sit to write, what would we find there?

I’ve got my book covers tacked up on the wall over my laptop, a couple of Impressionist prints, a couple X-Men First Class promo posters, my printer, a box of Kleenex, my iPad, my phone… lots of stuff.

How would you describe your sense of humor? What makes you laugh?

Oh, I think everything’s funny – or ironic, at least. It’s the rest of the world that doesn’t get the joke.

Do you have a favorite personal mantra, quote, or saying that describes your outlook on life and the way you approach each day?

Nothing in this life comes free. If you’re not willing to work for it, you don’t deserve it.

Do you speak more than one language? If so, which one(s)?

I used to speak fairly fluent French twenty-odd years ago. Now I’m lucky if I can follow French language movies without subtitles!

Of all the modern conveniences, which one would you most likely say you couldn’t live without?

The water heater and the flush toilet.

Do you have any new projects coming up you’d care to share with us?

I’ll be working on a hot m/m BDSM book with Rachel Haimowitz this winter, as well as a story for Riptide’s rentboy submissions call. That should keep me pretty busy!

Thank you again for spending some time with us, Cat. Will you tell us where we can find you on the Internet?

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Cat-Grant/123354784391947
Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/CatGrant2009
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/1912055.Cat_Grant
My website: http://www.catgrant.com/

And we’d love if you’d share a favorite excerpt from one of your books with us.

Here’s a short scene from Once a Marine:

No sooner had Cole scrambled to his feet and started unbuttoning his fly when there came a loud crack-pop outside, and the room flickered with bright white light. Pure panic kicking in, he dropped to his knees and crouched down low, covering his head. He trembled all over, adrenaline surging through his veins at another near-blinding flash.

“Hey,” came a voice from right above him, gentle fingers closing over his shoulder, rubbing his back. “Don’t be scared. It’s just lightning.”

A familiar rumble echoed in the distance, followed by another a few seconds later. Thunder, not bombs. Instantly, he realized he was in his own living room. Not Baghdad or Fallujah, with artillery shells raining down around him. Oh, holy fuck. If there’d been enough space under the couch, he would’ve crawled into it gratefully. Good thing the room had gone dark again. Maybe Marc wouldn’t notice how fucking mortified he was.

“S-Sorry,” he murmured, wincing at the apology, even though this one was definitely warranted. Shivering, he took Marc’s hand and let him pull him back up on the couch and tug the blanket over him. “I never wanted you to see me like that.”

Marc’s arms went around him, holding him close, one hand sliding up to stroke his hair. A simple gesture of kindness and comfort, yet it came that close to breaking Cole in half. Is this what he’d been reduced to—accepting someone else’s protection, when that was supposed to be his job? He dragged in a shaky breath, one after another, until the worst of it passed.

“Take it easy,” Mark murmured. “It’s nothing I haven’t seen before. You’re not the first Marine I’ve dated, remember?”

“Even so, I thought you would’ve been out the door by now.”

“Give me a little credit. I don’t scare that easily.” They sat back together with Marc’s head on Cole’s shoulder again, one hand tracing idly over his chest. Warm, steadying and reassuring. Exactly what he needed. “Does this kind of thing happen often?”

“Not as much as it used to, but… well, it’s not like I can control it.” He sighed and tried to relax, but even with Marc touching him, there was nothing stirring below his belt. Figured. After what’d just happened, he’d need a forklift to get it up again. “Talk about killing the mood, huh?”

“Don’t worry about it.”

“But I wanted you to have a good time.”

“Do you hear me complaining?” Marc chuckled. “Nothing wrong with saving the best for later, right?”

“You mean, I didn’t mess this up so bad you never want to see me again?”

“Will you stop trying to second-guess me? God, you Marines are all such fucking control freaks.” He sat up straight. “Listen, Thanksgiving’s next Thursday. Why don’t you come over to my place? I’ll cook us dinner, and we can spend the whole afternoon and evening together. And all night too, if you want. No pressure either way. Unless you already have plans.”

“Other than catching up on my sleep?” Cole smiled. “Nope, no plans at all.”

Leave a comment on Cat’s interview before 11:59pm Eastern time today (11/10/11), and you’ll be entered for a chance to win your choice of one of the following titles:

Allegro Vivace
Sonata Appassionata
The First Real Thing (Icon Men #1)
Appearing Nightly (Icon Men #2)
A Fool for You (Icon Men #3) or
Entangled Trio

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Filed under authors, Cat Grant, publishers, Riptide Publishing

Once a Marine by Cat Grant


Title: Once a Marine
Author: Cat Grant
Publisher: Riptide Publishing
Pages: 175
Characters: Cole Hammond and Marc Sullivan
POV: Mixed: 1st person for Marc, 3rd person for Cole
Sub-Genre: Contemporary Romance
Kisses: 5






Blurb:

Discharged under Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, former Marine major Cole Hammond is struggling to find a new identity. But PTSD casts a pall on everything, and his hard-nosed, homophobic father can’t even bear to look him in the eye. To top it all off, he’s pretty sure he’s flunking out of law school.

Marc Sullivan is a kind, sensitive romance author-slash-waiter with a thing for men in uniform. Cole’s not wearing his anymore, but there’s no mistaking the warrior Marc meets in the diner one rainy afternoon. Cole’s sexy smile and Carolina drawl prove irresistible, but Marc’s played this game before, and he always loses. Once a Marine, always a Marine, and if there’s one thing Marc knows about such men, it’s that they all leave him in the end. It doesn’t help that Cole’s practically closeted in public, or that he refuses to seek treatment for his PTSD.

But like any good Marine, Cole’s willing to fight for what matters. And like the characters in Marc’s stories, he’s certain that if only they try hard enough, together they can find their own happily ever after

Review:

How much a man has to suffer to reach his golden moment of peace and love? How much a man can wait until the man he is falling in love with is finally free of all his ghosts and guilt he is carrying within his head? A lot? Enough?… sometimes in life some things are worth an “everything and forever”. Cole and Marc found each other by destiny. Each one has what the other needs.

Cole is a brave, handsome man, one of those men from the South with manners taught by his mother. He is returning to college to study law after almost twenty years in the Marines. After a terrible situation in Iraq, a dishonorable discharge because of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell, a PTSD that is driving him mad, a homophobic father, and losing his mother from a degenerative disease, he is lucky to have found Marc.

Marc is a former college professor, now busing tables at a diner to pay the bills while working his real job as a gay romance writer in his free time with hopes to soon be a known author. He already has a couple of published stories when he meets Cole. Marc has a thing for Marines. He himself is a Marine’s boy—although he has never known his father—but maybe that’s the reason he carries in his blood this high attraction for them. After two bad breakups with Marines, he is yet attracted to Cole and wants to give one more try. But he is disappointed after an awful moment with him the first night they were together.

From that moment, both men start a voyage in which each one is willing to open his heart to the other. However, each one, as well, have spaces the other is not allowed to cross. For Cole, it is his PTSD and for Marc, it is his writing.

Cole and Marc begin sort of a relationship. Nothing is said for sure, but we know they are falling for each other. They spend time together; the sex is hot (woohoo!), and they get to know each other more and more. Both share their secrets, their fears, theirs hopes. And little by little, they fall in love.

I loved both characters. Cole learns to open himself to others and grows emotionally along the way. He really sees and wants a future with Marc. Sometimes I want to have Marc near and smack him in the head for acting silly. But in the end, when one needs the other, both are there with their presence and support.

Once a Marine is, at the same time, a lovely and complicated romance. It’s a great story where we can see characters blossom for love, where the call of duty, a career, or the call of the family can be a struggle. Cat Grant, again, did a great job writing this book. I think it took a lot of work to write a story in both POVs. Well, that’s why she is one of the great authors. Maybe we can see more of this couple?? I only can hope.

I want to congratulate Riptide Publishing for the presentation of the book… fantastic. The cover is elegant representing Cole and Marc, I liked a lot to find the synopsis in the initial pages (very useful) and I loved very much the interior decorations (in this case a sword) to separate scenes from both characters in most of the chapters.

Reviewed By: Reggie

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Filed under authors, Cat Grant, publishers, Riptide Publishing