I answer these burning questions on Kim Fielding's Interview Roulette:
1. What's your favorite appliance?
2. What's your perfect day, time-wise?
3. You've just met an alien from a planet where there's no such thing as fiction writing. Explain to the alien why humans read made-up stories.
4. What's one event in your life or on your travels that you wish you'd caught on film?
5. In your opinion, what should be the Seven Deadly Sins?
6. One of your characters has just been arrested and calls you to bail him out. Who is it and what did he get busted for?
7. What's your theme song?
I also pimp Short Order, the last of the Foothills Pride books.
For many years, I reviewed romances. You can see some of the reviews here. But lately I've been writing romance novellas. So whether you've come to read the reviews or get information about my writing, WELCOME! Read, enjoy, and leave messages if you wish. Every day is a good day for romance.
Showing posts with label Dreamspinner Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dreamspinner Publishing. Show all posts
Friday, January 12, 2018
Thursday, October 17, 2013
Another Hit from Reed and Reviewing Gay Romances Update
Rick R. Reed's gay romances are often the highlights of my reviewer pile. Hungry for Love is no exception.
Reed travels from the general to the specific, making his almost painful story not just a story about how two guys hook up for more than sex but also a story about meaning of love in general. As he says in the book, "Love was also about taking a leap into the unknown, making yourself vulnerable. It was a chance taken. It was a cosmic gamble. It was faith. It was a belief that happy endings could happen and did, every day." The novel is a messy, all-too-human example of that.
In other news, my days as a reviewer of gay romance may be numbered. I bought a great majority of the gay fiction I've reviewed for AAR, a review job that is unpaid. But after reviewing over 40 gay novels, my retirement budget no longer supports that approach, and having publishers reluctant to send me galleys, I think it's time to go back to picking review books from the pile of those sent to AAR or those posted on NetGalley that sound interesting and are okayed by my AAR editor.
I'm pretty sure that Dreamspinner, Rip Tide, and the other gay publishers won't miss me. Perhaps some of the authors will. But who knows?
Reed travels from the general to the specific, making his almost painful story not just a story about how two guys hook up for more than sex but also a story about meaning of love in general. As he says in the book, "Love was also about taking a leap into the unknown, making yourself vulnerable. It was a chance taken. It was a cosmic gamble. It was faith. It was a belief that happy endings could happen and did, every day." The novel is a messy, all-too-human example of that.
In other news, my days as a reviewer of gay romance may be numbered. I bought a great majority of the gay fiction I've reviewed for AAR, a review job that is unpaid. But after reviewing over 40 gay novels, my retirement budget no longer supports that approach, and having publishers reluctant to send me galleys, I think it's time to go back to picking review books from the pile of those sent to AAR or those posted on NetGalley that sound interesting and are okayed by my AAR editor.
I'm pretty sure that Dreamspinner, Rip Tide, and the other gay publishers won't miss me. Perhaps some of the authors will. But who knows?
Labels:
4 star,
AAR,
Dreamspinner Publishing,
gay fiction,
gay men,
gay romance,
reviewing,
reviews,
Rick R. Reed,
Rip Tide Publishing
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