PEACEMAKER: by EM Hamill ~ Blog Tour and Excerpt.

Peacemaker - E.M. Hamill

E.M. Hamill has a new queer sci fi book out, book two in the Dalí Tamareia series: “Peacemaker.”

Third-gender operative Dalí Tamareia thought their life as an ambassador ended when they joined a galactic intelligence agency. When they’re yanked out of the field and tapped to negotiate the surrender of deadly bio-engineered warriors who crashed into hostile territory, Dalí is thrust headfirst back into the tumultuous world of galactic diplomacy.

Dalí has faced Shontavians before, but not like these. The stranded mercenaries are highly intelligent and have an agenda of their own. Dalí can’t afford to be distracted from the negotiations by their own demons or the presence of a charming diplomat with a mysterious past.

As a brewing civil war threatens to derail the entire mission, Dalí must use all their skills to bring this dangerous situation to a peaceful end—but the Shontavians may not be the biggest monsters at the table. Someone is determined to see Dalí and their team dead before they discover the brutal truth hiding in the wreckage.

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Giveaway

E.M. is giving away a $15 Amazon gift card with this tour. Enter via Rafflecopter:

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Excerpt

Peacemaker

I took a quick turn in the cleanser to rid my skin and hair of the tacky residue left by the decon spray. In the warmth and vibration, I shuddered as the last of the physical characteristics I’d adapted to pass as male shifted back into my neutral, sexless state. My crewmates didn’t expect me to assume a gender, something for which I remained grateful. Without hormone stimulation to drive the change, the process was more painful, and my shoulders complained against the grind of bone and muscle.

I tamed my wavy brown mop as best I could, drawing it into a short, braided queue at the back of my neck before putting on the dress black uniform hanging in my quarters. The white starburst of diplomacy blazed in holographic relief on my left shoulder with the multiarmed spiral of the Remoliad’s sigil on the opposite sleeve.

To be back in the uniform of an ambassador felt strange. Transient reflections in the narrow window showed a me I hadn’t acknowledged in over two years. I barely recognized the echo of who I used to be, a transparent ghost against the stars outside.

The reason I had been pulled out of the field began to make sense, though I still didn’t know what the assignment entailed. Time to find out.

At the closed door of Sumner’s ready room, I tugged at the tunic’s high collar, squared my shoulders, and tapped on the panel to request entry.

“Commander. Permission to enter?”

“Granted.” The door slid aside with his verbal acknowledgment. I stepped through.

Silhouetted by the flicker of busy data screens behind the desk, Sumner wore a black uniform with insignias of diplomatic service similar to mine but without the starburst rank of ambassador. Instead, he wore the pips of an officer in the Remoliad Fleet on the high neck of his collar. He stared at the screen of a PDD, his expression dark and troubled.

Sumner glanced up and a crooked grin formed on his lips as he rose. “Ambassador Tamareia. I haven’t seen you in a while.”

His vocal inflections sounded almost normal, but his eyes still held frost. We were never this formal with each other, a sign of the tension between us.

“I haven’t seen me in a long time either. It feels very strange.” I took a deep breath. “I would like to apologize for my insubordination, especially for what I said in med bay, Commander. I was out of line.” Embarrassment burned in my cheeks, and I lowered my gaze. “I owe Melos and Ziggy more than an apology. I was under the influence on a mission, and I put the lives of my teammates in danger. I will accept the consequences of my actions as you deem appropriate.”

“Grab a chair.” He gestured opposite his desk, and I sat. “I think I owe you an apology as well. I’ve gotten used to autonomy. When some bureaucrat tells me to drop whatever I’m doing and pull my operatives in the middle of a potentially productive mission, it pisses me off. The order to recall you came from so far over my head I got vertigo. The rest is just the frost on the comet, and it pushed me over the line.” He cleared his throat. “I’m sorry for the vendetta remark.”

“No, you were right. I needed to be reminded why I’m here. You promised only that I will be involved when we take them down, not that I would be the instrument.” No matter how badly I wanted the privilege, I had a bigger job to do. “Who told you to recall me?”

His mouth twisted in an ironic smile. “The Remoliad security council.”

My eyebrows threatened to merge with my hairline. “The security council has authority over the Penumbra?”

“Technically. My superior answers to the secretary general, but it’s almost unheard of to receive a direct order from any office.”

“I don’t understand.” I frowned. “Did my mother have anything to do with this?”

“No, Ambassador Urquhart isn’t involved as far as we can tell. We checked since the order was so specific. But I just received more details.” He handed me the data device he’d been scowling at when I came in. “Against all previous declarations of disdain for galactic alliance, the Ursetu recently issued an emergency petition for their planet to become a member of the Remoliad.”

I narrowed my eyes at him and took the PDD. “I saw something about that in my debriefing file. The crown princess is dead?”

“Yes. The queen and her grandson, Prince Razaxha, are still alive.”

“What happened? Was the planet attacked?”

“Yes and no.” He swept his hand and a heads-up display swirled into view between us. “I’ll warn you up front, this is brutal.”

The wreck of some immense ship blighted the forested grounds of a ziggurat-like palace, silhouetted against the backdrop of a sharp black mountain. Columns of smoke and flames traced the outline of warped and twisted debris. The recording lens zoomed in on a section of the disaster where tiny flashes of light sparked and died. As the picture enlarged, I sat forward in shock.

“Enhance this area.” Sumner circled the spot on the heads-up and spread his fingers. The portion of the holovid expanded, grainy, blurred, and blocked by foliage, but I made it out plainly enough. Enormous, gray-skinned figures piled out of the wreckage.

Shontavians.

The four-armed beings appeared unstoppable as they swatted aside the Ursetu and their guns, snatched up the soldiers with their sharp-taloned hands and—

A psychic memory of the taste of blood and entrails hit me so hard I fought the urge to vomit.

“Stop the playback!” I drew heavy breaths through my nose until the nausea passed and my heart stopped pounding. Sumner swept his hand over the enlarged holo, reducing details to a safe distance as my mind attempted to process what I’d seen.

A ship hadn’t crashed in the middle of an Ursetu city. It was the orbiting laboratory where Shontavians were engineered and kept isolated until their sale to whomever bought their mercenary services. It crashed into the planet or was deliberately brought down.

By whom?

The Ursetu faced monsters of their own making—huge, intelligent creatures with the serrated teeth and claws of a predator, created solely for fighting wars. And they had a craving for sentient meat.


Author Bio

E.M. Hamill

Elisabeth “E.M.” Hamill is a nurse by day, unabashed geek, chocoholic, sci fi and fantasy novelist by nights, weekends, and whenever she can steal quality time with her laptop. She lives with her family, a dog, and a cat in the wilds of eastern suburban Kansas, where they fend off flying monkey attacks and prep for the zombie apocalypse.

Her other books include the acclaimed sci fi novel Dalí, the snarky urban fantasy Nectar and Ambrosia, and several short works of fiction. Visit www.elisabethhamill.com for a full list of literary work.

Author Website: https://www.elisabethhamill.com

Author Facebook (Author Page): https://www.facebook.com/EMHamill

Author Twitter: @songmagick

Author Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/16592440.E_M_Hamill

Author QueeRomance Ink: https://www.queeromanceink.com/mbm-book-author/e-m-hamill/

Author Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B00JY0FV8S

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Blog Tour—Raider Captured; by J. J. Lore—Author Interview and Giveaway

It’s always a bit of a thrill to get to have guest authors who write Sci-fi/Fantasy, so I was pleased to be a part of J. J. Lore’s blog tour and to have a chance to interview her. Find out more about J. J., check out the new release and then go enter the giveaway at the end.

-AQG
AuthorInterview

Welcome JJ! Since this is the first time you’ve been a visitor, tell everyone a bit about yourself.

Hello and thanks for having me! I’m an Ohio native, married with one child, and I tend to have a eclectic outlook on life. Dark and gritty appeals as much to me as farcical comedy. I’d rather have a cheese plate for dessert than a gooey brownie sundae.

You write mostly science fiction, do you have a technical background?

My degrees are in liberal arts, but I took a heavy load of science classes as electives in college, purely for love of the subject matter. I’ve also always kept up with my reading in the areas I enjoy such as epidemiology, human evolution, and animal behavior. The NOVA and Nature series on PBS are must watch for me, and have been since I was in elementary school. Let’s just say I tend to do very well in the science related categories on Jeopardy.

Your Planet Alpha Series is MFM, but the MM pairing is already established when they add the F to their relationship.  Talk a bit about that series.

Planet Alpha was a specific submission call from the publisher, but I hesitated since I’d never written menage before. That lasted about twenty-four hours until a story popped into my head. Bondmate turned out to be the first in the whole Planet Alpha series, pretty amazing considering it was my first ever attempt at the genre. Evernight publishing set up parameters for the books as far as length and the characteristics of the two alien species. Past that, it was up to the writer’s imagination.

What works for me in constructing a menage story is to have the men already comfortable with and trusting each other so their seduction of a woman can be the main focus of the romance. As I wrote more of these stories and became more comfortable with the process, I gradually deepened the male relationships into intimate sexual partnerships. The real challenge for me was creating a MM relationship that was perfectly fulfilling, but would be enhanced by the addition of another person.

Raider Captured is MM Sci-fi Romance, how difficult was the transition from the MFM pairings in Planet Alpha?

It was a relief, actually! Keeping track of three POVs per story can be mentally challenging, so being able to focus on two characters was very nice. I’d impulsively decided to write menage, and by the time I’d finished several up them, I realized I was ready for a new challenge. That might have meant a MF erotic romance, but these two guys were in my head and anxious to find each other, so I had to write their story next.

Are there more books planned in the Raider Captured universe?

Absolutely. I have one completed and it’s been submitted to the publisher, and I am just finishing up a third as part of my NaNoWriMo project this year.

Where did the inspiration for Sagiv and Daran come from?

Daran was easy; he was sort of an amalgamation of every idealistic and intelligent character on Star Trek. He’s proud of his work, curious about everything, and very honorable, all things I admire in a person. Loved him. Sagiv was different. His character came from all these dark issues regarding child soldiers, how boys are raised, and the way societies usually segregate those who are deemed different. So he was withdrawn and cautious, as well as resigned to his imminent death. He was very fun to write, and I hope his perspective will make readers think about the price some people pay to serve a society who would like to ignore their existence.

Which part of the story do you enjoy writing the most; the sci-fi or the romance?

It depends on the scene I’m working on. I really like writing about the settings in sci-fi, so if I have to describe a space station or alien planet, I’m in heaven. I also like to write romance when the characters are relaxing their guard and getting to know each other. That gives me some great dialogue and can really let the reader get to know them outside of all the space battles and slime monster attacks.

Tell us something interesting that is not in the blurb?

There’s actually a minor character in Raider Captured who I plan on writing about soon, but his story will definitely be MF. I’ll let the readers guess who it might be.

What’s your favorite part of the writing process?

Dialogue. I love talking of any sort, whether it be aggressively posturing before a fight, or witty back-and-forth, or one of those conversations where both parties are misunderstanding each other the entire time. Dialogue is something I can write very quickly.

What’s your least favorite?

Submitting to a publisher. It’s horrible because you sweat over all the guidelines, and as soon as you hit send, you notice a typo or mistake. Then you wait and wait for a response, which sometimes you never get so it feels like your story is lost in the woods with no way to come home.

Since there is always another story to tell, what are you working on now?

I am nearly finished with a third MM set in the same universe as Raider Captured. Once the last two scenes are written, I believe I’ll go in a completely new direction with a post-apocalyptic set on Earth after an alien invasion.

What have you read lately that most people haven’t read but should?

Oh, there are so many good books out there. One I always recommend is Gospel, by Wilton Barnhardt. It’s a travelogue/ancient diary/academic quest/socio-political book of massive proportions and is highly entertaining. Plus it’s filled with accurate footnotes, so a perfect read if you want to learn something about Catholic history, the Middle East, a lost Apostle, or American televangelists.

If you could meet any writer, alive or dead, who would it be and why? 

George Macdonald Fraser, who has sadly passed away. He was a U.K. officer in WWII and wrote some fantastic satire of his time in the armed forces, plus a series of historical fiction works featuring his caddish Victorian hero, Flashman. Again, he used a lot of footnotes, which seems to be a recurring theme in the fiction I like, go figure.

Besides reading and writing, what else do you enjoy?

I’m a fiend for thrift stores; I can’t go a week without stopping in at least one. My want list is constantly evolving. When I was younger and furnishing my home, I looked for housewares like Spode china and crystal goblets. Now I’m in the process of renovating my personal style to get away from the standard t-shirt and jeans. I’ve been shopping for funky jackets and vintage sweaters as we head into fall. My latest great find was a blue, handwoven wool coat, with a hood, made in Ireland. It’s simply gorgeous and I can’t wait for a cold snap to wear it.

Last question is all yours – feel free to talk about anything you want your readers to know about you, your book, anything at all.

Goodness, that’s a tough one. I’m not very interesting! Here are a couple of fun facts: I once won a chili cookoff and I keep a machete in my coat closet, just in case
AboutTheBook

RaiderCaptured_FINALTITLE: Raider Captured

AUTHOR: J. J. Lore

PUBLISHER: Dreamspinner Press

COVER ARTIST: Brooke Albrecht

LENGTH: 90 Pages

RELEASE DATE: November 11, 2015

BLURB: Is love possible between sworn enemies when the universe seems determined to tear them apart?

Sagiv, a genetically modified Atavaq fighter, is captured when his master’s raid on a Domidian ship goes wrong. Daran, a young Domidian science officer, claims the warrior for ransom and as a subject for study. As they spend time together in the close confines of the shipboard cabin, both learn more about the other’s culture, and against all odds, a fragile trust begins to form. But the ship is approaching a frontier outpost, where Daran will be expected to ransom Sagiv—even though it means condemning Sagiv to die for the dishonor of his defeat or suffer in the fighting pits. That’s if bounty hunters don’t find them first. Daran’s risen up the ranks through hard work and always following protocol, but he sees something in Sagiv that might be worth breaking the rules for the first time in his life—maybe even something worth sacrificing everything to keep.

Excerpt

His cheek was pressed to the soft rug on the floor. The material smelled faintly of perfumed wood, and he wrinkled his nose, unhappy something pleasant was intruding on his misery. To be the leader of the finest Creig raiding party one day and reduced to a worthless prisoner the next was a fate he’d never envisioned for himself. Sadness at his lost fellows settled over him in a cold wave, and he closed his eyes tightly until the sensation passed.

A sudden awareness of warm moisture on his body roused him, and he jerked upright as far as his immobilized arms would allow. Was the Domidian urinating on him? With a growl he sought the source of the sensation and was shocked to silence when he saw the young officer trying to apply a wet cloth to the phase wound on his hip.

“What are you doing?”

“Cleaning this up. It might become infected if I don’t.” The pretty boy gave him a measured glance, then concentrated on the rent in his skin. Sagiv took a breath and tried to hitch away but was brought up short by the manacles yet again. The Domidian’s vigorous application of the cleaning cloth hurt, but Sagiv was determined not to react. He might have fallen from his hard-fought stature as a skilled warrior, but at least he wouldn’t flinch like a weakling when someone washed his body.

“It looks as though you endured blade cuts, blunt instrument strikes, and some sort of percussion volley,” the Domidian said in a conversational tone. Sagiv gave him a glare that would have sent one of his minions cowering to the floor. At least it would have worked yesterday, when he still had underlings. Now his brother Creig were dead, wasted in this futile raid made at the whim of an impulsive master or three. His current condition didn’t matter; he was bred and trained to serve and fight, not to think of his fate or wish for any different life. The Domidian, for his part, merely absorbed the scowl with a slight smile. Superior bastard. “I’m going to work on the most severe injuries first. Basic triage. I have several accreditations in first aid and battlefield medical treatment, so don’t worry for your health.”

The young man moved on to the welts that covered his back, and Sagiv endured the ministrations with teeth clenched, both to stop himself from making a pained sound and to prevent the conversation this bare-chinned youth seemed to desire. As the Domidian’s words sank in, he couldn’t help the question that sprang to mind.

“Heal me for the execution?” Sagiv shook his head once. These damned Domidians had such perverse notions. If only he’d been lucky and taken a phase bolt to the forehead yesterday. The young officer stopped touching him, and his skin twitched.

“Execution?”

“Death to pirates, that’s the code in the cold reaches of space.”

The Domidian laughed. Sagiv craned his head to observe him. Even though he was brought low by his defeat and loss of his collar, there was no way he was going to be mocked by a spoiled boy.

“I follow a different code. The Domidian code.” The young man moved closer and pressed his fingers around the edge of the throbbing injury on Sagiv’s head.

Sagiv refused to flinch and instead decided to scoff. “Oh, yes, the code whereby you decide everything you do is correct and expect every other race you encounter to bow down before your magnificence.”

The Domidian’s full lips tightened and a spark lit up his eyes. “We cannot be other than what we are.”

“Arrogant whelp.” Sagiv’s stomach dropped when the young man smiled broadly. What was he doing engaging in conversation with the enemy? He was behaving as if they were at a rim world tavern sharing a flagon, far from the concerns of Domid and Atavaq politics. “Why are you treating me?”

He wanted to bite back the words, especially when he saw the intent expression of the other man.

“It is my duty to care for you. I have taken you as hostage proxy, and any ransom paid for your return will be mine.”

“Then you will be sorely disappointed.” Knowing that this boy would be deprived of even a small sum was the only achievement he could muster at this point. A Creig was worth nothing without the recommendation of a pleased master, without victories to bolster his reputation. The Domidian shrugged and pulled out a small case. He flicked it open, and Sagiv couldn’t help but look inside, sure he was going to see implements of torture. Instead, there were bandages and creams. The Domidian was going to help him. Pulling together the last shards of his dignity and rage, Sagiv decided to remain silent. No need to treat the youngster as if they were equals.

“You have a lot of bruising and contusions. Did all of these wounds occur in the altercation yesterday?”

Sagiv stared at the red carpet. Altercation. What a fine word for a muddled mess that had cost him so much. No, the majority of his injuries had been administered by his former masters as they’d assaulted him in the brig after their humiliating capture. No need to reveal that, or anything, to the Domidian. The young man waited a polite interval, then continued to speak as if there was a normal conversation to be had, all while he administered first aid.

“My name is Daran, of the Eridia clan. If you tell me your name, I’ll be able to initiate contact with your people and set up an exchange.” Daran waited for a response, but Sagiv pressed his lips together. He didn’t have a people, only assignments. Creig fighters existed on a different plane than civilian Atavaq, housed in exclusive barracks and given the finest in weapons, nutrition, and training. He jumped at the sensation of a warm ointment being carefully applied to the edges of one of the throbbing welts on his back. The wounds felt ugly, but he hadn’t been able to inspect them. Exactly what he deserved.

“I’m in service as a science specialist. I’m hoping you can teach me more about your kind. I’m very curious about you.”

Teach his enemy about Creig ways? Betray Atavaq? He’d die first. As the Domidian continued his treatment, Sagiv’s stomach boiled with regret and frustration. He slanted his eye toward the officer to detect what he was about and saw the other man frowning. Daran of the Eridia glanced up and hurriedly put a smile on his face.

“Your wounds, though painful I’m sure, are going to heal well now that you are under care. I was merely thinking about something else.”

The urge to ask what was strong. Sagiv wasn’t sure if he was interested in gaining more information about the enemy or genuinely intrigued by his unusual captor. The other man was treating his wounds and speaking to him as if they were partners. Equals. As if Sagiv wasn’t merely a tool to be repaired and sent back into service.

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AuthorBioJ. J. Lore has been interested in the dashing men who roam outer space since she was transfixed by Han Solo piloting the Millennium Falcon a long time ago in a theatre far, far away. Sadly, there is no way for her to join in the fun of intergalactic adventures unless she writes them, so that’s what she does whenever she isn’t taking care of the business of life. If you can’t find her typing madly on her sluggish keyboard, she’s probably poking around in a thrift store searching for the perfect pair of worn jeans or a vintage kachina bolo tie. These days she puts her anthropology degree to work when she whips up dishes from many different cultures, most of which benefit from a liberal dose of sriracha or a smear of green curry paste. Her favorite reading topics are costume history, epidemiology, and permaculture, all of which she’d like to work into a story if she’s suddenly overcome with a brilliant idea someday.

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TourSchedule

November 11: Frosty’s Book Corner || Sue Brown

November 12: Cia’s Stories || Fangirl Moments and My Two Cents

November 13: Scattered Thoughts & Rogue Words

November 16: Drops of Ink

November 17: Queer Sci-Fi

November 18: MM Good Book Reviews 

November 19: The Land of Make Believe

November 20: Loving Without Limits

November 21: Love Bytes Reviews

November 23: Diverse Reader || World of Diversity Fiction || Nautical Star Books

November 24: Eyes on Books || Bayou Book Junkie

November 25: Divine Magazine

Guest Author Anna Butler—Interview and Giveaway

Today, I’m please to have Anna Butler stop by for an interview. I love finding new Science Fiction and Fantasy authors and Anna writes great Sci-Fi. I convinced her to sit down for an interview and she’s coming to my blog with two different giveaways. Be sure to read through to the end for more details.

Interview:

Welcome Anna, let’s start with you telling readers a little about yourself.

Thanks for hosting me, Andrew!

Well, I’ll start with the obvious: I’m British and female. Possibly the most interesting things about me is that I live in London, which is one of the most vibrant and exciting places in the world. There’s always something interesting going on if you have an interest in the arts, writing and theatre. I’ve lived here with my husband, David, since university. We don’t have children, although we have seven nephews and nieces between us. A couple of years ago, we brought my mother here to live with us, and another recent addition to our household has been an over-energetic cockapoo, whose demands for exercise at least keep me fit. At least Mum doesn’t make me take her out twice daily for walks!

I worked for many years in communications for the UK government. My main speciality was in Internal Communications, but I’ve also run some successful public information and marketing campaigns. I chose early retirement recently and now I’m focusing on writing as a full time career.

When did you know you wanted to be a writer?

I can’t remember not being a story teller, although writing them down came later. I’ve written stories since childhood, starting with the adventures of Jimpy, the toy chimpanzee I took everywhere with me. I moved on to fanfiction in early adolescence, with some shamefully Mary Sue stories set in the Star Trek universe. I still dabble in fanfiction, now and again.

What was the first story you wrote?

I’ll take that as the first piece I thought was good enough to share with the world. I self-published FlashWired a couple of years ago. It’s a sci-fi novella set in a future where Earth is expanding across the galaxy. The Carson is a Pathfinder-class starship, committed to planetary exploration and designating planets for development as human colonies. Cal Paxton and Jeeze Madrid are the top scouting team on the Carson. They’re wingmen, best friends and lovers. When Jeeze is shot down over a planet inhabited by a race Earth has never before encountered, it’s weeks before the Carson can finally mount a rescue mission. Cal and his brother Noah lead the rescue, only to find things are not going to be as simple as they hoped…

Describe how it felt when you saw your first book published?

Gilded Scarab

I was dizzy with it! I had The Gilded Scarab (a steampunk romance published by Dreamspinner) published on the Monday, and Gyrfalcon (Wilde City Press) followed on the Wednesday of the same week. I barely had time to breathe for a month! Honestly, my main impression is of being slightly punch drunk.

 

I will admit that when the ebook popped into my in box from the publishers and I went to look at my Amazon page, I may have got a little tearful. The sense of “I’ve done it!” was very strong.

Let’s talk Taking Shield. Tell us about the series and Book 1, Gyrfalcon.

The series is set thousands of years in an alternate universe. Earth’s a dead planet, dark for more than ten thousand years; lost for so long no one even knows where the solar system is. Her last known colony, Albion, founded long after the destruction of Earth, is fighting a last-ditch battle for survival in a war that’s dragged on for generations.

Albion has become a regional galactic power in its own right, but its expansion has brought it into conflict with an alien race, the Maess. No one has ever seen a Maess and lived to tell the tale. All they see are fighting drones, cyborg constructs that have slowly become more humanoid in appearance. Bottom line: humanity is losing.

The series combines science fiction adventure with an intense love story (although I wouldn’t call it a romance). Shield Captain Bennet is both a warrior on—and behind—the front line and an analyst with the Military Strategy Unit. He not only leads behind-the-lines raids, he plans them. Over the Taking Shield arc, Bennet will see the extremes to which humanity’s enemies, and his own people, will go to win the war. It won’t leave him unchanged and some days, he won’t even sure what victory looks like.

gyrfalcon_cvr_f-businesscardTo quote the blurb for Gyrfalcon, the first book of the series: Bennet has planned a dangerous infiltration mission behind enemy lines to garner priceless intelligence. His task is complicated by the changing relationships with his long-term partner, with his father—and with Flynn, the new lover who will turn his world upside-down. He expects to risk his life; that’s acceptable, to give Albion a military advantage. He expects that what he brings back from the mission will alter the course of the war against his people’s faceless enemy, although he’s realistic enough to know it may not necessarily be the outcome he hopes for. What he doesn’t expect is that it will change his life and that Flynn will be impossible to forget.

Who are the main characters?

Shield Captain Bennet, who is the second child and eldest son of a prominent member of the Fleet (i.e. the space navy). He has a very strong military background. He says that ‘duty, honour and service’ make up the family’s triple goddess. He’s dedicated and serious, committed to finding ways to help Albion survive and win the war. He’s also gay, which has been a source of conflict with his religious, more conventional father.

Fleet Lieutenant Flynn is an orphan following a raid on Thorn, one of Albion’s largest and oldest colonies. Although he and his mother survived the attack and returned to Albion, she never recovered and committed suicide when he was 8. Brought up in an orphanage, Flynn won his way into the Military Academy on a series of scholarships. He hides his intelligence and hard-work behind an insouciant, devil-may-care exterior, claiming his greatness derives from being the best Hornet pilot in the entire Fleet. He may be right, there!

Book Two, Heart Scarab picks up with the main characters from Book One, what’s happening now?

It’s set around a year and a half after Gyrfalcon. Bennet and Flynn have not met since.

Bennet’s Shield unit is involved in the evacuation of a small colony planet in the teeth of a Maess invasion. Injured in shellfire as the last cutter leaves, Bennet is left behind, believed dead. In reality he’s found by colonists who’ve also missed the last boat out, and he builds up a small collection of people for whose future he becomes responsible as he tries to find them a way home.

The book covers the reactions of his family, of his partner Joss, and of course, of Flynn to his supposed death. When Bennet’s found and brought home, the impact of his return from the dead changes a lot of relationships, not all of them for the better. But it also gives him and Flynn another chance to be together, for a short time.

How many books do you envision in the series?

Five or six. I’m wavering, because the last section of the series is proving difficult! It all depends on how long book 5 turns out to be and where I can, reasonably, end it. There’s a lot to cover in it, but it looks like it may be one of those odd animals that will make either one very long book or two unsatisfying shorter ones. Believe me, I am glaring at the first drafts and swearing a lot.

The third book, Makepeace, will be published next January, and I’m currently finalising book 4, The Chains of Their Sins, which should be out sometime next July.

Tell us something not in the blurb.

You get a much deeper insight into Bennet’s relationship with Joss, what started it and what’s sustained it for over nine years. Joss wasn’t a sympathetic character in Gyrfalcon, but I hope that in this book, his anguish as well as his faults are in better balance. Joss comes to represent Bennet’s past, and he gets what I think are some of the most poetic sections of the book as he reflects on what he’s lost.

What’s your favorite part of the writing process?

The moment when I fire up Scrivenor, and Bennet and Flynn spring up to grin at me and press in close to make sure I get the story right. I never get over how lucky I am to be able to do this.

What’s your least favorite?

Fighting my tendency to want to go over the previous day’s writing before I start today’s, and tinkering. I could spend hours worrying over a few sentences, polishing and honing them, when I should be just getting the words of the next section down. I suspect we all have to fight against this bad habit.

Since there is always another story to tell, what are you working on now?

The fourth Shield book, The Chains of Their Sins. In book three, Makepeace, Bennet has recovered from his injuries and is now on his rotation out of Shield, the regular ‘rest’ Shield officers are given in the normal services. Bennet chooses Fleet, and is sent to the dreadnought Corvus for a year. While there, his analysis of the T18 data he got in book one leads eventually to a horrific discovery on Makepeace, once a colony owned by Albion and now a Maess base. In Chains, the political and personal consequences of that discovery start to unravel, and Bennet has the added pressure of being sent to the Gyrfalcon for his final year of his rotation out, where he has not only to cope with his father’s expectations, but manage his relationship with Flynn. Remember that Bennet is dedicated and serious and won’t break the fraternisation regulations. That doesn’t make things easy.

What have you read lately that most people haven’t read but should?

One of the most under-rated books I’ve read recently is Elin Gregory’s A Taste of Copper. It’s not a long book, a novella really. I like historicals where I get a real sense and feeling for the time being written about. All too often, it’s modern people in fancy dress pretending to be gay men in Regency London or the American Civil War. But this is a perfect little gem that just feels right. Elin’s caught so much of the period that I was never jarred out of the narrative. And a big, big plus point for me is that Elin treats her readers with respect, paying them the compliment of respecting their intelligence by not dumbing down the language or the terminology. A lovely little book, and highly recommended.

If you could meet any writer, alive or dead, who would it be and why?

Barbara Pym. She wrote books on a narrow canvas, set just after the war or in the 50s, and her heroines live quite narrow lives, revolving around church or around anthropology (and sometimes both). It’s hard to explain, but she reminds me of Jane Austen. She takes the same premise of a very few people as her cast, and writes with the same sort of ironic mind and eye. Her books are populated with wonderful characters and funny situations. They are very English, I suppose, but I reread them constantly.

Besides reading and writing, what else do you enjoy?

Gardening and embroidery, although I don’t have a lot of time for either now. I designed our (very small) London garden and I’m looking forward to a bigger challenge when we move to the country later this year.

Last question is all yours – feel free to talk about anything you want your readers to know about you, your book, anything at all.

Woah, but that’s a hard one. The most revealing one, too.

I’ve pondered what to say here, but I think I’ll end with something that smacks of a little irony. I write science fiction set in a future so many thousands of years hence that Earth is gone. Yet my deepest and most abiding love is history.             If you’ve read any of the Shield books, you’ll have noticed that they’re laced through with references to classical Greece (all the provinces have Greek names) and, most of all, with Egyptology. Their gods are the Egyptian pantheon, the leaders who led their ancestors from a dying Earth were Pharaohs. I had a lot of fun with that!             I love museums, and of course London has dozens, from very large to small. For several years now I’ve been a volunteer docent at the Geffrye Museum, one of the smallest. I love meeting and talking to people, and taking them on tours of the museum certainly gives me lots of opportunity. Sadly for my museum work, as I mentioned above, we’ve just made the decision to move out to the country. I’ll have to find a local history museum there that needs a talkative writer on staff!

About the Book:

HeartScarab_cvr_f (1)Telnos is an unpleasant little planet, inhabited by religious fanatics in the festering marshlands and unregistered miners running illegal solactinium mines up in the hills. But the Maess want Telnos, and Shield Captain Bennet’s job is to get out as many civilians as he can—a task that leaves him lying on Telnos while the last cutter of evacuees escapes in the teeth of the Maess invasion.

Bennet is listed missing in action, believed dead on a planet now overrun by Maess drones. His family is grieving. His long-term partner, Joss, is both mourning and guilt-ridden.

And Fleet Lieutenant Flynn? Flynn is desolate. Flynn is heart-broken… no. Flynn is just broken

Heart Scarab: Book 2 in the Taking Shield Series

(series should be read in order)

Release Date: July 22, 2015

Publisher: Wilded City Press

Cover Artist: Adrian Nicholas

Excerpt:

Flynn liked kissing. In fact, Flynn considered himself something of an expert in the art of kissing. He’d tried it in all its forms, from the first tentative pressing together of juvenile lips that had you wondering what all the fuss was about, to the discovery that if you just opened your mouth and, you know, kind of moved everything, your tongue suddenly had a lot more positive uses than just allowing you to articulate clearly and swallow things without choking. Flynn got the hang of it, ran with it, and never looked back.

Soft kisses and hard kisses; kisses that were wet and slobbery with people who didn’t know exactly how to hold their lips to get the best and sexiest effect, and wet and sexy kisses with people who did. Kisses that turned the blood to molten lava and kisses that cooled you as you came down. Kisses that inflamed and kisses that soothed; feverish kisses and languid after-sex kisses. Kisses that meant only good fellowship and casual affection, and kisses that were desire incarnate.

Flynn had not only tried them all, he’d made them his own. He was considered by all the relevant authorities to be rather a specialist in the area.

Flynn really liked kissing. He had been gratified by the discovery that Bennet liked it too. Because now he could add slow kisses to the repertoire. Kisses so leisured and intense the world came to a stop while a hot tongue moved over his lips, explored each and every tooth down to the last molar, while teeth pulled at his bottom lip, biting it gently until it was swollen and hot and heavy, and he had to lick his lip to cool it and met Bennet’s tongue with his. Only then, would Bennet’s mouth close over his and start a real in-earnest kiss that lasted several more centuries. Those were kisses Bennet seemed to specialise in.

Flynn was always willing to take tips from another expert. A man should always try to extend his technique.

Sales Links:

From Wilde City Press as an ebook or paperback.

From an Amazon near you (Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk links)

About the author:

Anna Butler was a communications specialist for many years, working in UK government departments on everything from marketing employment schemes to running an internal TV service. She now spends her time indulging her love of old-school science fiction. She lives in the ethnic and cultural melting pot of East London with her husband and the Deputy Editor, aka Molly the cockapoo.

Where to find the author:

[email protected]

Website and Blog

Facebook

The Butler’s Pantry (Facebook Group)

Pinterest

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Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7037247.Anna_Butler

Tour Dates & Stops:

22-Jul

Prism Book Alliance

29-Jul

Just Love Romance

Bayou Book Junkie

5-Aug

Scattered Thoughts & Rogue Words

12-Aug

Andrew Q. Gordon

19-Aug

My Fiction Nook

26-Aug

Joyfully Jay

2-Sep

The Hat Party

9-Sep

Inked Rainbow Reads

16-Sep

Velvet Panic

Molly Lolly

23-Sep

Emotion in Motion

30-Sep

BFD Book Blog

Jessie G. Books

7-Oct

Wicked Faerie’s Tales and Reviews

14-Oct

MM Good Book Reviews

21-Oct

The Novel Approach

28-Oct

Amanda C. Stone

4-Nov

Butterfly-O-Meter

Giveaway:

Anna is doing two different giveaway:

Leave a comment to be entered for a chance to win a copy of her novella, FlashWired (epub, mobi or pdf). Anna is giving away one copy at each stop, so check out the other stops for more chances to enter.

Also, click the Rafflecopter link below to be entered in the a drawing for the following:

                      (i)   top prize of an Amazon gift voucher (is $50 overdoing it? It makes for a decent prize!)

                      (ii)  second prize, winner’s choice of a Heart Scarab ipad cover or kindle cover

                      (ii)  third prize, a Gyrfalcon iPad cover

 

a Rafflecopter giveaway