The lovely Ellie Thomas is back on the blog!!! She’s here to talk about her new release, Town Bronze. Welcome, Ellie! đ„°

Thanks, lovely Ofelia, for having me as your guest again! Iâm Ellie, I write MM Historical Romance novellas, and Iâm here today to chat about my new story Town Bronze which is currently in the 20% new release sale at JMS Book until August 18th. Â
Town Bronze is the first in a new series. I wrote the story as a one-off for the JMS Books Silver Foxes submission call and then it dawned on me that it could be expanded into a trilogy! This series takes place in Regency London, which may feel familiar to readers of my Twelve Letters series. Town Bronze is set in 1812, two years before the events of Twelve Letters but shares a similar setting. So I had great fun name-dropping some of my Twelve Letters ensemble cast! Â
The characters in my Twelve Letters stories are established in society before the series starts. But in Town Bronze, I had the idea of taking a young, gauche character and observing how the London Season impacts their entire worldview in a hopefully humorous way. Â
Jasper Goodhew, my MC in Town Bronze, has left university and has been kicking his heels in his family home in rural Somerset for several months. After receiving an invitation from some university friends, he gets the opportunity to escape to London for the spring together with a generous allowance from his parents. He anticipates endless parties, entertainments and adventures with the ladies.Â
But Jasper is totally unaware of his inner desires, and rather than a comely female, these are exacerbated by Sir Mortimer Cleverly, a man almost twenty years his senior.Â
I had great fun writing about Jasperâs awakening and his rabbit-in-the-headlights moment! However, it felt important to contrast Jasperâs clueless confusion with Mortimer’s measured and experienced point of view. This provided balance to a story about an unlikely couple embarking on a tentative romance that might surprise them both by proving to be lasting.Â
Blurb:Â
At twenty-one, Jasper Goodhew is delighted to be freed from his parental constraints in rural Somerset and enjoy the delights of Regency London during the Season. As a follower in the fast set that runs around young buck Julian Buchanan, Jasper encounters many pleasures, from the elegance of Mayfair parties to the tawdry entertainments of Covent Gardenâs taverns and brothels. However, when he meets silver fox Mortimer Cleverly, he discovers a hidden propensity for spanking.Â
Sir Mortimer is a seasoned and experienced gentleman who can spot a confused innocent at a hundred paces. Yet heâs unable to resist Jasperâs clueless appeal at least once. He feels a lurking sense of responsibility when Jasper returns for more. Aware of the dangers of such a connection with a confused young man, Mortimer attempts to mentor Jasper, leading them onto the safer ground of friendship.Â
But will the combination of his increasing attachment and Jasper’s irresistible compulsion foil their best intentions?Â
Excerpt:Â
The next part of Jasperâs evening passed in patchy coherence. The older gentlemen departed with dignity almost immediately after Jasper’s inadvertent blunder. With his wine glass replenished more than once by a luscious attendant, Jasper almost forgot about the impact of that searing gaze.  Â
He was vaguely aware of some of his companions departing with young ladies. Others were content to remain, drink deep, and dandle a damsel on their laps. Minutes or hours progressed in a pleasant haze until Jasper reached the point where he had drunk himself sober. Â
Relatively clear-headed and suddenly thirsty, Jasper rose on remarkably steady legs to fetch a glass of water from the drinks tray on the capacious sideboard.Â
This gave him a clear view of the entrance hallway. The vestibule was empty, apart from the three gentlemen earlier expelled from the drawing room by an excess of wit. Â
The gentleman with the remarkable hair was shaking the hands of his companions with a few congenial words. In that instant of seeming sobriety, it was terribly important for Jasper to make amends. He couldnât have fathomed if this was due to his basic good manners and general inoffensiveness when not as drunk as a wheelbarrow. Or perhaps he was prompted by the infinite unimaginable possibilities in those haunting eyes.Â
He entered the hall as the gentleman escorted his companions towards the exit. Jasper stood uncertainly in front of the central staircase, awaiting his opportunity. Once his companions had departed, the remaining gentleman approached a further another doorway off the hall.Â
âExcuse me,â Jasper said, belatedly adding, âSir.âÂ
The gentleman turned, raising an inquisitorial dark brow that made him no less forbidding. Â
During Jasperâs formal education, he occasionally got into trouble. To be fair, these incidents occurred either from absent-mindedness or when he tagged along in the wake of more exuberant and imaginative students. Any resulting discipline, a removal of privileges or corporal punishment, was a matter of course and not taken personally. His sporadic visits to the principalâs study were desultory and instantly forgotten by the disciplinarian and the culprit. Â
This charged confrontation was entirely different. Jasper was unnerved by the swooping feeling in his belly as he faced his unknown foe. The older man drew closer but remained silent, his face expressionless, that implacable glare holding a sense of threat and thrill.Â
âI think I was somewhat discourteous earlier, and I wanted to say I was sorry. I didnât mean to be rude. We were all getting rather carried away and had too much to drink. I know it was a bit much, and we were rather close to the mark concerning you and your friends. But I suppose you were young once too, eh?âÂ
Jasper tried and failed to raise a placating smile. The gentleman didnât move a muscle and stared at Jasper as though regarding a failed scientific experiment.Â
“I mean to say, I was a bit bosky, and I wasnât thinking straight. Anyone with decent eyesight could tell thatâs your natural hair. Youâre nowhere near old enough to be wearing a wig. Youâd have to be in your dotage. And youâre not. Naturally. No one would think youâre wearing a cauliflower of the wig variety, and it doesnât remotely resemble an actual cauliflower. I donât know why I said that. You have very nice hair.âÂ
Jasperâs ramble stuttered to a stop. Without softening his expression, the gentleman said, âYou were insolent.âÂ
Jasper blinked. He suddenly grasped his opponent was slightly the taller and his lean build held latent strength. He felt paralysed, like a snake to its charmer, in thrall to the depths of that gaze.Â
âI think you deserve to be punished.âÂ
Jasper gulped.Â
The gentlemanâs voice was persuasive. âYouâve earned a good thrashing.âÂ
In a husky tone Jasper didnât recognise as his own, he said, âIâll let you be the judge of that. Iâll do anything you require.âÂ
That eyebrow rose again. A glint of humour lit those night-dark eyes.Â
âAnything?âÂ
âYes. No. I donât know.âÂ

Book Links:Â
Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CDPG4VPY/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=town+bronze+by+ellie+thomas&sr=8-1Â
Universal Book Link: Â
https://books2read.com/u/baq0P2Â
Publisher: Â
https://www.jms-books.com/ellie-thomas-c-224_420/town-bronze-p-4795.htmlÂ
Add to Goodreads: Â
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/195672906-town-bronzeÂ
Add to Bookbub:Â
https://www.bookbub.com/books/town-bronze-by-ellie-thomasÂ
Bio:Â
Ellie Thomas lives by the sea. She comes from a teaching background and goes for long seaside walks where she daydreams about history. She is a voracious reader especially about anything historical. She mainly writes historical gay romance. Ellie also writes historical erotic romance as L. E. Thomas.Â
Website: https://elliethomasromance.wordpress.com/Â
Facebook reader group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/8308047409266947Â
Twitter: @e_thomas_authorÂ
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19835510.Ellie_ThomasÂ