Showing posts with label 1990s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1990s. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2019

REVIEW - Outshined (Tall Thicket Tales #1) by Clancy Nacht & Thursday Euclid

RELEASE BLITZ



Book Title: Outshined
Author: Clancy Nacht & Thursday Euclid
Publisher: Eine Kleine Press
Cover Artist: Thursday Euclid
Release Date: April 16, 2019
Genre/s: 90s (late 20th century) M/M Romance
Trope/s: figuring out he’s gay
Themes: Mental illness, first love
Heat Rating: 3-4 flames
Length: 79 000 words/ 266 pages

Goodreads Link


Buy Links - Available on Kindle Unlimited






Blurb

Fall 1993.

Well, it isn't his Plan A...

At his surgeon father's insistence, premed bad boy Cameron Lord transfers from the massive University of Texas to tiny Tall Thicket State University in small-town East Texas. After the scandal of seducing the dean’s son during their sophomore year in Austin and being diagnosed with bipolar disorder, Cameron needs a fresh start. Dr. Lord insists Cameron's lucky any school still wants him, but Cameron's more concerned with whether a certain gorgeous blond undergrad is interested.

After spotting Tim Sullivan through the plate glass window of Big Cheeser's Pizza, Cameron can't resist the opportunity to apply for a job there. Angelically handsome, Tim's also frontman for popular local cover band the Angry Goats, proving there's more to him than polo shirts and shy smiles. When Tim reveals he's on Prozac for severe depression, Cameron's convinced they understand each other. But with Tim's evangelical upbringing, the terror of the AIDS epidemic, and the casual homophobia of Tim's bandmate, will virgin Tim be brave enough to acknowledge his growing interest in worldly, reckless Cameron?



Review 
My Rating - 4 Stars!


Outshined is a tough one to review. I loved this Clancy Nacht and Thursday Euclid story, but I didn't love the writing style. I can't pinpoint what I didn't love about it, but it took me a long time to get into it, and I always felt something was off.

That said, the story itself is wonderful. Taking place in 1993, I loved this look back at how we lived back then. It is clearly evident the differences that the internet has made in our lives since then, especially as Tim has no clue about gay sex, as there was no way to learn about it online. In addition, looking back as to how homosexuality was treated then, this is an excellent representation of the need to be discreet. 

The mental illness are well written, but I was expecting more from this theme.

Outshined is worth a read, especially for anyone looking for a romance in that time setting. The authors weaved a great tale of discovery and first love. The sex scenes are fantastic also.



Excerpt

Tall Thicket, Texas. Home to Tall Thicket State and Woodpeckers football, for those who even fucking cared. Texans or not, most Thicketers knew the Woodpeckers sucked. No one with any talent came to East Texas to play ball, and honestly, the student body didn’t care. In 1993, they had other things on their minds.

Cameron Lord definitely did. Transferring junior year from the massive University of Texas hadn’t been his Plan A, but after the way he fucked up sophomore year in Austin, well, he needed a fresh start. His dad insisted he was lucky Tall Thicket wanted him, and Cameron had argued enough with his dad recently.

Besides, TTSU had a great psych department. So that worked out, probably. When Cameron had graduated high school near the top of his class, everyone figured he’d become a surgeon like his dad, but now...

Well. Fuck it. Just, fuck it, right? Psychologist was close enough, and it’d be less pressure, and he kind of knew about the field firsthand now.

What seemed entirely unfair, honestly, was that despite how much money Cameron’s dad was saving by sending him here, he expected Cameron to hold down a part-time job. On one hand, that was great. Cameron liked his independence, and he hated his dad, so not having to ask him for much suited him fine. On the other hand, if these meds didn’t pan out...

Ha.

If these meds didn’t pan out, Cameron would be losing a lot more than a part-time job. Like, oh, his mind?

After two months on them, he felt different. Not better, just different. More detached. Less moved by emotions. That was probably okay, but Cameron couldn’t tell otherwise.

Living off-campus would be nice, at least, right? He’d been in the dorms his two years at UT; at least now he had some space. His therapist, Lynette, had suggested to Dr. Lord that Cameron have somewhere to get away from over-stimulating social situations, so while he still had a roommate, he had his own bedroom with a lock on the door.

Of course, she’d also suggested he walk everywhere because he maybe shouldn’t drive on his current chemical cocktail, but Cameron refused to give up his chopper. He and his dad had built matching ones together when he was sixteen, and it was all he really had left of that part of his life, now he’d blown up their relationship. At least he still had a cool ride.

For all the good it would do him.

His apartment was a stone’s throw from campus, and walking would’ve been easier than driving a bike in the January-molasses kind of traffic moving across the sprawling grounds. By the time he’d done orientation, gotten his books, and settled in, he was convinced he should have bought sensible walking shoes instead of his heavy Doc Martens.

His dad was always telling him to choose substance over style, but what about when style had the most substance? Sometimes form followed function. Wasn’t that better than ugly practicality?

Which seemed to prove Cameron wasn’t cut out for a surgeon’s job. Psychology seemed like a better fit, personal understanding of mental illness aside.

To emphasize the point, Cameron had observed Tall Thicket was home to some improbably good-looking student bodies. The boy who’d been ahead of him at the bookstore had stolen his breath for a good ten seconds and left him light-headed. A girl who sat beside him at orientation had flustered him until he dropped his pencil. Overall, it was a pretty, pretty school—spectacularly landscaped grounds notwithstanding.

Too bad the meds he was on kind of killed his sex drive, along with numbing any other excitement he might feel. Some would argue that was for the best.

With classes starting next week, there was little for Cameron to do with his weekend besides hunker down and settle in, familiarize himself with the town. It wasn’t as dinky as the one-stoplight towns around these parts, but it was a lot smaller than Austin. He’d still been finding cool new spots there when he left. Here, a bike ride down the main drag would take him past just about everything that mattered.

Might as well get out there.

“Going out?” Mike, Cameron’s new roommate, asked as Cameron strode out his bedroom toward the front door.

Cameron grunted in Mike’s direction and shrugged. What did the guy want from him? They had to live together, and if Cameron had his way, that would mean a lot of ships-in-the-night action, not a buddy flick.

“Have fun.” Mike seemed untroubled by Cameron’s attitude and turned his attention back to his grainy recording of Seinfeld.

With two raised fingers, Cameron saluted briefly and headed out. Within moments he was pulling his long hair back into a low ponytail and settling a black helmet on his head. Then he was on his bike and pulling out of the parking lot, turning onto University and then blazing toward the four-lane highway with a roar. Within moments he’d left behind the landscaped campus for the endless rows of mom-and-pop shops intermingled with chain shops.

Clusters of students milled along the sidewalks and waited at corners to cross. Cameron watched them hungrily, the numbness inside growing teeth and gnawing at him. He longed for the belonging of kids hand-in-hand striding over the crosswalk at least as much as he despised it. Easier to dismiss it altogether, though.

Easier never to want what he couldn’t have. Better. Safer.

Lynette talked about comfort zones and stepping outside them, but Cameron wasn’t certain he could survive that much change all at once. Not right now.

Waiting at the stoplight, he caught a glimpse of golden hair through the plate glass window of a pizza place and his chest seized up. Was that bookshop guy?

Oh man, it was.

Bad idea, right? Such a bad idea. Cameron wasn’t hungry, and that guy was probably straight, and this was East Texas.

The NOW HIRING sign beckoned, and Cameron sighed and gave in. He had only so much willpower to get him through a day, and most of that was focused on basic human tasks like not driving into oncoming traffic and keeping his balls clean.

He eased across traffic and parked diagonally right in front. He wiped suddenly sweaty hands on his ripped jeans and plaid shirt and then hung his helmet from the ape-hangers.

So what if he was going to mix work and play a little?

So what if he was purposely attempting to get a job somewhere with a devastatingly attractive co-worker who’d fuck his head right up?

Self-destruction was in vogue. He’d wear it well. More to journal about, right?

Cameron wasn’t dressed for success, but what did it even matter? It wasn’t Wall Street. They probably weren’t picky, even if he could just hear his dad moaning over the situation.

Inside, the place was filled with customers. How had Cameron even spotted the golden boy from the road past all these people? Friday night dinner had to be prime time.

The blond man stood in front of the ovens, behind the counter. He held a metal spatula that he clanged against something metal above him before he shouted. “Bell, large supreme pie.”

He then slid a box on the counter in front of him. A woman, presumably Bell, joined the line at the cash register. The man squinted past the heat lamps into the lobby. Their eyes met and his brows rose briefly before he gave a quick nod and then spun around to retrieve another pizza out of the oven.

The place was slammed. As soon as one phone was answered, another rang. The woman answering the phones looked older than the rest of the staff, as if she was in charge. She handled putting people on hold with brutal efficiency, taking down orders on paper slips she stacked until someone came from the back to snatch them away, apparently to fulfill them.

For a second, Cameron considered backing out. Just turning around and walking out. He’d worked at the video store during high school, and Friday nights had been like this, but... Man, food service seemed like a whole other animal. Way more intense.

Though fewer shouting matches so far, at least.

As much as Cameron wanted to bail, the way the blond guy seemed to recognize him—had he, though, or was Cameron reading in?—galvanized him. He stood his ground, waited until he was at the counter, and then licked his lips, suddenly nervous. If he hadn’t been medicated, it would’ve been too much. As it was, he copped a swagger and grinned at the folks behind the counter.

“Saw y’all are hiring. Need help?”

“Oh, um.” The young lady at the front counter crouched down, shuffling papers. She pulled out a pad of job application forms with the company logo in the corner. Ripping one off, she handed it to him and gave him a wide, toothy smile. Her lashes fluttered over her pinkening cheeks. “Need a pen?”

The woman at the phones slung one on her shoulder as she leaned forward, squinting at Cameron. “Hey, kid, you eighteen?”

“Twenty,” Cameron countered with a smile he didn’t feel and a challenge he did. He took the application from the girl and held out his hand for a pen, although he had the sense the manager was inclined to skip to the part where she stopped being short-handed.

The metal clang rang out again as the blond man shouted another name and order. A box appeared on top of another. He paused, looking between Cameron and the manager, then whirled around to grab another pizza out.

“Can you start now? Wash a dish or fifty?” The woman smiled. There was a gap between her front teeth. Her hair was frizzy, probably with the heat and humidity. “Minimum wage, but all the pizza you can eat.”

The blond man dropped the pizza on the table, then ran a roller slicer through with lightning speed. His lithe muscles flexed under the fitted golf shirt. It was probably just the heat that made his cheeks rosy. Or was it?

“Yeah, sure, I can wash dishes tonight. I need a uniform for that?” Cameron tried his best not to stare at the hot boy, especially not in front of potential colleagues. What was he even doing?

Why was he doing this to himself?

He’d never even washed dishes, except at home. The video store had been more with the Be-Kind-Rewind and less with the suds.

“Nah, but you’ll want an apron. Tim, you got an extra apron back there for our new hire?” She glanced over at the blond guy who gave a quick nod before shouting another name.

He peeked into the back and then back to his boss. “Yeah, there’s one on the dough table. Might also need boxes later if this keeps up.”

“Shoot.” She grimaced but set the phone on the stand and then threw open the door to the right of the counter. “Well, you’re hired, um… What’s your name?”

“Cameron.” He stepped through the counter door and sized up the other employees. At least his dad couldn’t ride his ass about this now. He met the manager’s gaze and shrugged one shoulder. “Thanks, um...?”

“Nina. Cameron, great name. Don’t think you’ll need a hat for dishes, but we’ll get you one of those, and the shirt and apron. Pants are just plain black. Docs are good; anything with support will do for shoes.” She started toward the back, giving the phones a swift glance. “I’ll just show you the back quick.”

She pointed at the blond guy. “That’s Tim. At the counter is Lisa.”

She walked back to behind the ovens where a harried looking young lady was frantically making pizzas. “This is Heather. Heather, Cameron. He’s going to do dishes.”

Heather looked at Cameron briefly, went back to her pizzas and then looked back again, eyes roving more slowly. “Cool.”

There was a man facing the back wall shoving dough into a machine. It came out oblong. He ran it through again and the dough was round.

Nina scooted past him. “That’s John.”

John turned. His eyes were bloodshot like he’d been smoking not too long ago, but he seemed to be working industriously. “Great, someone else to suck up hours.”

Nina rolled her eyes. “He’s real fun.” She showed Cameron the bathroom, then the walk-in fridge, then around to the sink. Beside it stood a pile of pizza pans almost as tall as he was.

There was a clank from the front and Cameron caught a glimpse of Tim dropping another pan in a growing stack. He gave Cameron a brief smile and gestured with the metal spatula at a table against the wall where an apron lay. “There’s a dishwasher apron in the bathroom that’s more heavy duty. Just gets hot. Up to you. It’s clean.”

“Hot enough already. Thanks.” Cameron shot Tim a look, half-searching and half-bitter. He already kind of hated him. Tim. What a fucking wholesome sounding name. He was probably a real nice boy.

If Cameron had learned anything, it was to mistrust nice boys. You thought they were your friend. That you could trust them. Be real.

Then they freaked out on you and threw you to the wolves.

Turning his back on Tim, Cameron beelined for the apron and pulled it on before rolling up his sleeves and remaking his ponytail at the base of his neck to keep the wild, wavy strands under control.

“Great. Ask Tim if you’ve got questions. Soap’s up top. Sprayer powers out most everything. Don’t burn yourself. Gotta get back to the phones.” Nina flashed him a smile as she patted his shoulder. “Get you to fill out the paperwork later so we can get you paid. I’ll show you the time cards too.”

If Tim was offended by the cold shouldering, he was too busy to show it. He turned to the ovens and got back to work. A radio played the college radio station. It wasn’t loud enough to be heard in the lobby; it was barely loud enough for Cameron to hear over the sprayer.

What he could hear was the rhythmic clank of metal on metal when Tim pulled out a pizza, signaled he was calling a name, and the thump of another pan dropping into the pile. He could also hear Tim calling a name pretty clearly, which was surprising, given how loud everything was. Pretty good projection. Probably a jerk.

Jerk with a good voice though. Strong. Clear.

Cameron couldn’t help being a little intrigued, especially when he glanced over at every call to see Tim moving nimbly around his station, his muscles stretching and bunching under his uniform shirt. He looked way better in it than he had any right to.


About the Authors

Clancy Nacht
Clancy Nacht is a bisexual genderqueer person who lives in Austin. Clancy has published several bestselling romances. Many of her books have been honored with Rainbow Awards; Le Jazz Hot won for Best Bisexual/Transgender Romance & Erotic Romance. In 2013, Black Gold: Double Black was a runner-up for a Rainbow Award. In 2015, Gemini won an Honorable Mention for Gay Erotic Romance and in 2016, Strange Times won an Honorable Mention for Science Fiction. Wyatt’s Recipes for Wooing Rock Stars was a finalist in the highly competitive William Neale Award for Best Gay Contemporary Romance. The Phisher King won second place in the Rainbow Award for Romantic Suspense, 16th for Gay Book of the Year.

Thursday Euclid
The Thursday Euclid is a strange and elusive creature dwelling in the Texas Gulf Coast region. Frequently mistaken for Bigfoot, Chupacabra, or the monster of the week, he is, in fact, a 30-something black sheep with a penchant for K-pop, geekery, and hot and sour soup. When he’s not playing Dragon Age or SWTOR, he’s probably watching B-movies or talking to his best friend and frequent collaborator Clancy Nacht. You can find him on Facebook, Twitter, or email him at thursdayeuclid at gmail dot com.


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RELEASE BLITZ SCHEDULE



Monday, November 19, 2018

RELEASE BLITZ & REVIEW - The Breaths We Take (Seasons of Chadham High Book 3) by Huston Piner



Title: The Breaths We Take
Series: Season of Chadham High, Book Three
Author: Huston Piner
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: November 19, 2018
Heat Level: 1 - No Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 101100
Genre: Contemporary YA, LGBT, historical/early 90s, YA, high school, first love, coming-of-age, aging relative, family issues, weddings, HEA

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Synopsis

It’s 1992, and seventeen-year-old Ben
Carpenter has everything all figured out. He’s gay, with a supportive family;
he makes decent grades; and in Ted, Hope, and Doris, he’s got three great
friends he can always depend on. If he only had a boyfriend, life would be
perfect, and he’s working on that.

But things are getting complicated.
First, Doris drags him into an ill-fated matchmaking scheme that could destroy
their friendship with Ted and Hope. Then, Grandpa Marty moves in, throwing the
whole Carpenter household into a total uproar. If that’s not enough, the only
way for Ben to get in his community service hours is to volunteer at the senior
center, even though old people give him the creeps. And then there’s that
little matter of his feelings for Ted’s brother Adrian that confuse him and
threaten to expose a secret Ted must never know.

Ben’s journey is littered with
misunderstandings, tender moments, and unexpected ghosts from the past that
reveal a two-decades-old mystery. As events unfold, Ben is forced to reevaluate
what friendship, family, and love are really all about, and he discovers that,
sometimes, there’s more to life than a happy ending.

Seasons of Chadham High explores the
evolving experience of gay teenagers in different eras—from the psychedelic
sixties, through the me generation seventies and eighties, to the nihilistic
nineties and beyond.


Review
My Rating - 3 Stars!

The Breaths We Take by Huston Piner, is an okay read. 

Ben's in high school, the year is 1992, and we get to follow along as Ben deals with wanting a boyfriend, a secret relationship, friend issues, and his grandfather's declining health. In other words, Ben has a lot to deal with and has a lot on his mind.

I enjoyed this story, but it's also a bit choppy in it's writing and it could have used more character development. 

That said, I like that age difference between Ben and his eventual boyfriend. Their romance however, seems to just happen, without a ton of build-up. I did enjoy the secretive aspect though. 

I found the friend storyline a little strange. Yes, it was something teens would do, but it just went too far, in my opinion. 


On a side note, we also get to see a middle age romance, as two former lovers are reunited. It's sweet and inspiring. I appreciated a lot of the nursing home moments and characters.

Overall, The Breaths We Take had a lot of promise, and I'm glad I read it, but it definitely feel short.



Excerpt


The Breaths We Take
Huston Piner © 2018
All Rights Reserved

Chapter One
September 1992

There are certain days when everything
just seems to come together. Then there are those days when things all fly
apart. Well, there’s also the kind when things begin to change. For me, a sunny
day at the start of my junior year of high school was such a day. It began like
any other, but before it was over, my life had taken a turn, and soon,
everything—from my relationships with friends and family to what I thought I
knew about love—would be changed forever.

So there we were, at one of the tables
outside the lunchroom, just back from Labor Day weekend. Doris and I were
sitting across from Hope and Ted, all of us soaking up the sunshine. The wind
was a little gusty, but nobody was complaining. At least it drove the stench
off. (Only Chadham High would put the dumpsters right around the corner from
the school’s one outdoor eating area.)

“Hey Ben, pass the salt.”

I cut Ted a reproachful glance. The only
shaker was two tables away.

“Why am I always the one who has to get
the salt?”

“Don’t be such a whiner. It’s like
social contract theory. You do little things for us, and we all do little
things for you.”

“Such as…?”

Hope flicked sandy-brown bangs out of
her face. “Such as making sure you find the right guy to hook up with.”

“The right guy?” I said, depositing the
shaker just out of Ted’s reach. “What do you mean the right guy?”

“Oh come on, Ben. You know when the
right guy comes along, we’ll all chip in to help you get him.”

“Yeah, yeah, like that’s ever going to
happen. Here. At Chadham High. In this lifetime.”

Doris nudged me in the side. “You’ve
just got to be patient.”

“Patient? My high school career’s
already halfway over, and I’ve got nothing to show for it. ‘The right guy.’ At
this point, I’d be happy to have any guy show even a hint of interest in me.”

I hadn’t even finished speaking when
Grant Framingham shuffled past us. Doris raised a sarcastic eyebrow and
snickered, watching me grimace at his weasel-like nose and mousy brown hair.

“Really? Any guy?”

“Uh, no. On second thought, I’ll wait
for the right guy.”

“You mean Colby Ryder,” Hope said in a
playful, mocking tone.

As if on cue, Colby emerged from the
lunchroom, that luxurious ebony hair of his floating in the breeze, those
dark-chocolate eyes gleaming in the sunlight. My heartbeat quickened, and my
skin tingled at the very sight of him. He was so hot you could get burned by
just touching him—not that I’d ever had that opportunity.

I watched him pass us, my shoulders
slumping, while various fantasy images danced through my head.

“Oh God, what I could do to that boy.
Why oh why couldn’t he be gay?”

“Benjie,” Doris chirped in a singsong
voice. “Whining.”

“It’s just not fair,” I said peevishly.
“And I’m not a whiner.”

They all laughed.

Okay. The truth was, maybe I did whine a
bit—every now and then. But whining just came with the territory when you were
seventeen years old, gay, and devilishly handsome, and you had about as much
chance of finding a boyfriend as winning the lottery.

My problem was a question of
demographics. Chadham High was one of those places where everybody fit into
neat little boxes. We had the snotty I’m Involved in Everything and All the
Teachers Love Me association. Then there was the I’m a Jock and I’ll Punch Your
Face if I Want To crew. We had the obligatory I’m Smart and You’re Not guild,
the My Religion Says You’re Going to Hell congregation, and any number of the
I’m a (fill in the demographic group of your choice) and I’m Better Than You
societies. And of course, what self-respecting high school would be complete
without the Dude, Pass that Joint tribe? As for the rest, they all fell into
the Please God, Just Let Me Live Long Enough to Get Out of Here nation. That’s
the box Ted, Doris, Hope, and I were all in.

But what we didn’t seem to have at good
old Chadham High, at least as far as I’d been able to tell over the past two
years, was more than the one lone gay student—me. Now, they say statistically,
at least five percent of any given population will be homosexual. That meant
there should have been about a hundred or so young gay people running around,
and therefore, at least a few of them should have been healthy gay males. But
if there were any other queers at Chadham High besides me, I’d long since come
to the conclusion they were masters of disguise. I mean, sheesh. Talk about
keeping a low profile.

I plopped my elbow on the table and
cupped my chin in my hand. “Why can’t any of the beautiful guys around here be
gay?”

“Well,” Ted said, “good looks are God’s
compensation for not giving us straight guys a good sense of fashion.”

Doris leaned back in her chair with her
mouth hanging open and stared at him.

“Oh Ted, I’m so sorry, and you lost out
on both.”

She burst into a fit of laughter, and
Hope and I snickered.

Ted ignored her, stretched for the
shaker, and sighed when he had to half stand to reach it. Then he
unceremoniously dumped an ungodly large mountain of salt on his food.

Doris scowled.

“Ted, I swear you’re going to give
yourself a coronary.”

He raised a sodium-laden fork to his
mouth. “It’s the only way I can stand to eat this crap.”

She shook her head as Hope picked up the
shaker and poured a liberal mound of salt onto her own plate.

“You know, you could just get an apple
or an orange.”

“Even the fruit here stinks,” he said
through a mouthful of whatever it was he was eating.

He was right. I glanced at the orange
peel lying in my tray. There’s sour, and then there’s sour, but the sour in
that orange had just been plain off.

Doris twiddled a strand of wavy black
hair. “Has anybody had any luck finding something for their community service
project?”

“I was hoping to do the Y,” Hope said,
“but they told me all their volunteer openings were already filled weeks ago,
and they’ve got a waiting list a mile long.”

“Yeah,” Ted said. “I got the same answer
when I called the city park service Friday afternoon. Apparently, the school
board didn’t take into consideration there are only so many volunteer positions
available in Chadham County. Adding juniors and seniors to the number of
underclassmen already required to do CS was an idea bound to fail.”

“Well,” Doris said with a grin, “I’ve
got mine all set and ready. I talked with my priest, and she said I could help
out preparing the Saturday meals-on-wheels plates.”

“Hey,” Hope said, “do you think I could
help out there too?”

“I can ask. I don’t know how much help
they need though. She told me they’ve got a pretty large group of people
working it. But yeah, I’m sure they’ll let you. And even if they don’t, if I
drive you there Saturday, they’ve at least got to give you credit for the time
you’re there with me.”

Hope smiled. “Cool. What about you, Ben?
Are you having any luck?”

I folded my arms and sighed. “Oh yeah,
I’m having great luck—all of it bad. Last week, I went to city hall, and they
said no to everything, even the neighborhood beautification program.
Apparently, you’ve got to have some kind of advanced degree in agriculture just
to pull up weeds around here. And Saturday, I even checked out the library.
Nothing.”

“Well,” Doris said, “you’d better come
up with something. Two hundred hours is a lot of time to fill, especially if
you’ve got to limit it to weekends and after school.”

“Don’t rub it in,” Ted said.

Hope patted him on the wrist. “Aw, I’m
sure you’ll both find something.”

I scoffed. “Tell me something, Hope.
Your middle name wouldn’t happen to be ‘Springs Eternal’ by any chance, would
it?”


Purchase

NineStar Press | Amazon | Smashwords | Barnes & Noble | Kobo




Meet the Author

Huston Piner always wanted to be a writer but realized from an early age that learning to read would have to take precedence. A voracious reader, he loves nothing more than a well-told story, a glass of red, and music playing in the background. His writings focus on ordinary gay teenagers and young adults struggling with their orientation in the face of cultural prejudice and the evolving influence of LGBTQA+ rights on society. He and his partner live in a house ruled by three domineering cats in the mid-Atlantic region.


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Wednesday, November 14, 2018

RELEASE BLITZ & REVIEW - Rocky Road Of Love...In Heels by Liam Livings


Title: Rocky Road of Love...in Heels
Series: Kev, Book Two
Author: Liam Livings
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: November 12, 2018
Heat Level: 3 - Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 63200
Genre: Contemporary, contemporary, cross dressing, drag queen, family drama, coming-of-age, gay, romance, 1990s

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Synopsis

Still single, despite his best efforts,
Kev is a gay cross-dressing teenager, searching for love in the late nineties
in Wiltshire. He may not know whether to put Yours Sincerely or Yours
Faithfully at the end of a letter, but he sure can belt out a show tune in a
pair of heels and a frock.

Looking after his worrying mum, who
refuses to slow down despite having a funny turn and ending up in hospital,
Kev’s working in a shop to support the household now his dad has left.
Irreconcilable differences. His dad said Kev needed fixing and Kev and his mum
thought he was perfect as he is.

Tony, his best friend and Human League
fan agrees, although he thinks Kev’s a chaotic big-hearted, trusting mess. But
he’s Tony’s mess and they’re there for each other through useless boyfriends,
jobs, and studying. Because that’s what friends are for, right?

Contains an inordinate amount of singing
on stage, many costume changes, lashings of heart, family and friendship, an
almost complete absence of the internet and a big dollop of optimism.



Review 
My Rating - 5 Stars!

This book. Wow. Rocky Road Of Love...In Heels is an absolutely spectacular novel by Liam Livings.

I had no idea when I started this book, how positively amazing and powerful it would be. Kev's journey is a heart-wrenching, emotional ride that I will never forget.

So many tough topics are discussed. There's abuse; mental, verbal and physical. There's also the struggle to be accepted as a cross-dresser, as well as the struggles with opening yourself up to friends. Everything is perfectly developed, amazingly written, creating a riveting story.

All I can say is - thank you Liam Livings for this book. It is truly a gift to have read it.  



Excerpt

Rocky Road of Love…in Heels
Liam Livings © 2018
All Rights Reserved

Chapter One
May 1999

Still no sign of Kieran. He was in
Australia with Jo, living it up in the sun, enjoying the fun with the surfers
and costumes and whatever else they had planned. And where was I? I was still
in the same little village just outside Salisbury, with Mum. Who was better
now. On the mend the doctors said. Making a full recovery, was another phrase
they used at her review meeting.

I knew my luck was going to change
because it was my birthday. Nineteen. I was in the final part of those teenaged
days. This time next year, I’d be twenty. A proper adult. Probably.

Anyway, that’s a year away.

I was at the bar, of the Sailor’s Arms
pub, in Southampton, getting Tony and Donna a drink.

Tony said, flicking his fringe from his
eye, “One round, and then it’s back to us paying. This is your night. I told
you how it was going to work, didn’t I?”

Donna sipped her lime and soda, the
designated driver for the night. “Same again. Stack ’em up baby and I’ll glug
’em down.” She slapped her thigh. “If half as much has happened to you as he’s
told me, you should be selling the rights to your story to a film company,
love. Get back sharpish I want to hear all about your last gig. He said
everyone stood and clapped at the end and asked for an encore.” She turned to
Tony.

He nodded, flicking his fringe again.

So, in preparation for regaling them
with the story of my past glories, I went to the bar for my one round of the
night.

No Jo and Kieran because, oh yes, I told
you that. The bar was three deep and I stood politely, waiting my turn, trying
to catch the eyes of the bar staff with a smile. Much better than waving money
at them. Oh no, never do that.

I wore a very understated and normal
pair of flared jeans, platform trainers and a grey T-shirt with three-quarter
length sleeves, Chinese wording across the front. Goodness only knew what it
said, but its bright yellow and white had caught my eye in the shop. It had
been a busy week of performing, lots of different costume changes, sets to
learn, so tonight I wanted a night off from all that. And a night off from
looking after Mum—not that I begrudged her it, not at all, but I wanted a night
of not having to worry or think about her and taking her to appointments,
picking her up, having to slip off work early to collect her, fitting eighty
minutes of things into an hour. All that. And the Plan. I definitely wanted a
night off from the Plan. And aren’t they always the nights when something
unexpected happens? Like when you’re really gagging for it, and really on a
manhunt, it’s a barren desert, but when you’ve sworn off men, it’s like a
real-life underwear catalogue for Calvin Klein.

Well, this was one of those nights, this
was the night, he came along.

And there in front of me, all six feet
six and a bit of him, dark blond hair, dark jeans and a red and white plaid
shirt, was a man who reminded me of He-Man.

“What have you done to mean you’re
getting all the drinks?” He smiled, and his teeth were almost as white as
He-Man’s too.

I smiled at him weakly. Now was not the
time for men. Now was the time for friends, that was what we’d agreed a while
ago, since my run of terrible luck with boyfriends over the past year.

He held his hand for me to shake.
“Aaron.”

Another weak smile. I really wanted him
to leave me alone, but part of me, and I was well aware which part, wanted to
see if he still looked like He-Man under the plaid shirt, or whether he was
wearing one of those fake muscle stomachs I’d read about in Gay Times. I caught
the eye of a barman, shouted my order and thanked him.

Aaron’s hand hung in the air between us,
not quite limp, he didn’t look like the sort of man who’d have anything limp
about him, no, it was more in anticipation. He had a light dusting of mousy
blond hair on the back of his hand, and his nails were perfectly clean and
trimmed. “Why are you here tonight? Look, if it’s with friends, I’m just making
conversation, I’ll leave you alone once I’ve got my drinks. I’m only having
one, and then I’m off. I’m here on my lonesome.” And he did the smile thing
again, and this time his blue eyes did something too, a sort of smile with the
eyes, and I knew he wasn’t lying.

My stomach fluttered with butterflies.
Shit, I think he might be my next mistake. I shook his hand. His handshake was
firm. A good pump up and down. Smooth hand. It smelt of hand cream. He didn’t
roof houses or shift pianos for a living. I looked up to his face. “It’s my
birthday.” I was still holding his hand and found myself smiling back at him,
staring into his greeny-blue eyes.

“How come you’re buying the drinks?”

“They’ve already got me a few, and I
don’t want to take the piss. They did say it was my night, I could do anything
I wanted, I didn’t have to pay for a thing. But I don’t want to freeload off
them. Not with friends. You know?”

“I’ve just left an old friend’s
twenty-first. Not that old. He wanted a pub crawl in the city centre, so we
started at Above Bar and worked our way down towards St. Mary’s street.” He
paused, told the barman what drink he wanted, then returned to staring at me.
“He’s not that old, this friend. Twenty-one’s not old, is it?”

I laughed. “I’m nineteen, so you’re an
old man as far as I’m concerned. Once you’re in your twenties, it’s downhill
all the way. So I’ve heard.”

He knocked my shoulder playfully.
“Cheeky. Anyway, after all that beer swilling in the sports bars. We ended up
at the one by the river. They all wanted to go, so I followed alone.”

I knew of it well. It had a TV to rival
the cinema and was always full of men in brightly coloured sports shirts,
shouting at the TV and drinking pints of lager. I usually avoided it. “So you
thought you’d grab yourself a bit of gay before going home.”

He laughed, his white teeth flashed.
“No, nothing like that. I’m not on the pull. I just wanted to be. Without
having to think about where I was.”

I looked him up and down. “Wouldn’t
think you’d have too much problem blending in those places.”

“You’re hardly Julian Clarey yourself.”

Little did he know. I smiled, handed
over my money as my drinks had arrived. “Still, better get back. My friends’ll
be wondering what’s happened to me.” I started to leave.

He put his hand on my shoulder. “Wait
until my drink’s here, eh? Keep me company a bit longer. I was enjoying talking
to you.”

Is he really? Or is that just a line.
“Five minutes.” I put the drinks back on the bar and sipped mine. I peered
through the crowd to try and catch a glimpse of Tony’s lopsided black haircut
but couldn’t see anything.

“What do you do?”

I rolled my eyes, internally, at his
wonderfully original question and told him about TK Max and some singing work
too, leaving out the dressing up part.

“I love coming here for the cabaret.
That’s why I came here. Needed something to balance all the sport in the other
pub. I hoped there’d be one of the drag acts on. I enjoy them. The put-downs,
the songs. I’m a fan of it all.” He leant forward and whispered, like he was
going to say something illegal. “It’s a bit of a guilty pleasure of mine as it
goes. Do you like all that stuff?”

I smelt his aftershave. A sweet musky
scent. His cheek had brushed against my ear as he’d whispered to me. The finest
dusting of a weekend beard grazed my ear. Maybe I’ll stay with him just another
five minutes, just until I’m a third through my drink. “Funny you should say
that, I do actually. You know the singing I told you about?”

He nodded, accepting his drink and
paying, taking a sip and listening to me as I told him about the Plan, and
performing at that pub, and others in I’d visited on the circuit.

He asked me how I’d got into it, and how
did I know I could perform.

“I’ve been performing all my life
really,” I said with a smile. “Always loved karaoke, so singing on stage was
pretty obvious for me.”

He chinked his now almost empty glass
against mine, which was almost finished too.


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Meet the Author


Liam Livings lives where east London
ends and becomes Essex. He shares his house with his boyfriend and cat. He
enjoys baking, cooking, classic cars and socialising with friends. He has a
sweet tooth for food and entertainment: loving to escape from real life with a
romantic book; enjoying a good cry at a sad, funny and camp film; and listening
to musical cheesy pop from the eighties to now. He tirelessly watches an awful
lot of Gilmore Girls in the name of writing ‘research’.

Published since 2013 by a variety of
British and American presses, his gay romance and gay fiction focuses on
friendships, British humour, romance with plenty of sparkle. He’s a member of
the Romantic Novelists’ Association, and the Chartered Institute of Marketing.
With a masters in creative writing from Kingston University, he teaches writing
workshops with his partner in sarcasm and humour, Virginia Heath as
www.realpeoplewritebooks.com and has also ghost written a client’s 5 Star
reviewed autobiography.


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