Guest Post | Lucky John by Ellie Thomas

Today we have the awesome Ellie Thomas back on the blog. She’s here to talk about the newest story, Lucky John, which is one of the JMS Books’ anniversary stories. Be on the lookout for stories published during the month with some form of luck in the title – they’re all stories to celebrate the anniversary 🥳

Lucky John FB Promo 1

Thanks so much, Ofelia, for having me as your guest again! I’m Ellie, and I write MM Historical Romance novellas. I’m popping in today to chat about my new story Lucky John, which is released today! It’s currently in the 20% off new release sale at JMS Books until July 7th.

Lucky John was written for JMS Books’ Lucky 13 submission call to celebrate the 13th anniversary of JMS Books. I’ll be very interested to read all the other July releases to learn how all the other authors taking part interpreted the “lucky” theme. I’m not sure why it immediately made me think of 17th-century England on the cusp of the Restoration of King Charles II!

My initial idea was to have an MC derisively called “lucky” and regarded as a nuisance at best and a liability at worst, which was how John came into my mind as the put-upon serving lad at a remote Oxfordshire inn. Every downtrodden character deserves their hero, and Owen Montgomery, a disillusioned ex-soldier and Royalist messenger bursts into John’s drab world to rescue him from his miserable existence.

Of course, life and relationships are never that simple, and Owen, from whose point of view the story is written, regards himself as far less than heroic. Like much of the population during the English Civil War (or any war), his life has been turned upside down. He regards himself at best as an aimless, landless drifter, with only his duties as a messenger keeping him from becoming a highwayman.

With the backdrop of a country in chaos, my focus in this story was on the central relationship and how these two very different men could find some middle ground as equals and lovers. Despite his downtrodden life before meeting Owen, John has a capacity for happiness and acceptance that Owen is sadly lacking. And in turn, by opening up to John, Owen learns to forgive himself and realise his capacity for love.

Lucky John

luckyjohn (1)Owen Montgomery has been a landless drifter since the Royalist defeat at the Battle of Worcester nine years previously when he was seventeen. Since then, he has lingered abroad as an insignificant follower in the retinue of exiled King Charles.

In the spring of 1660, Owen travels across England as an envoy on behalf of the King. Despite this important diplomatic mission, Owen regards himself as little better than the highwaymen he encounters on the lawless roads.

During a brief stop at an obscure roadside inn, he encounters Lucky John, a bullied skivvy with a sweet nature who makes a lasting impression. When Owen impulsively rescues John from his unkind employer, he has no idea of the impact the lad will make on his lonely existence.

Will Owen reject this chance to open up and share his life? And can Owen be convinced that he deserves John’s love?

Excerpt:

Owen heaped a pile of straw for his billet with his pack roll in place of a pillow. He was about to blow out the light, intending to wrap himself in his cloak to sleep, when he heard the patter of ill-shod feet coming across the cobbled yard.

John appeared at the stable door, clutching a few blankets. “I thought you and Bess might be cold overnight.” Owen was touched by the thoughtful gesture. The boy was a touch of sweetness in a harsh and cruel world. All the more remarkable when he was regarded as an object of mockery and derision by his employers and their patrons.

“Thank you,” Owen said as John designated the most worn blanket for Bess. Using his cloak as an under-blanket, Owen now had the luxury of spreading the rest of the blankets on top. Satisfied with his work, he sat on his makeshift bed to remove his high riding boots.

“Let me help you,” John said, sitting on his haunches on the stable floor. One boot slipped off easily, but the other was more stubborn. After several efforts, with one last tug, it came away abruptly. John fell backwards, laughing, with the boot in his hands. His laughter was infectious, making Owen grin. John’s innocent delight was disarming.

It was growing cold in the unheated stable. Owen removed his hat, coat, and belt, and keeping his precious messenger bag and small arms close by, he scrambled into the straw bed, expecting John to depart, taking the lamp with him.

Instead, the boy blew out the flame, shucked off his pattens, and attempted to get under the covers. “What in hell are you doing?” Owen snapped, sitting up and glaring at John in the darkness.

The boy was unrepentantly. “You have all my blankets. I didn’t think you’d mind sharing.”

Owen had survived war, skirmishes, and the machinations of great men. But he had never met anyone as disconcerting as this skinny slip of a lad.

“Very well,” he conceded, settling back down. But rather than keeping a careful distance, the boy snuggled up to him like a puppy. At first, Owen tolerated this simple need for warmth on a chilly spring night. He didn’t object to John’s tentative touch on his shirt-covered chest, but when one hand started to drift downwards towards the waistband of his breeches, Owen tensed.

“No,” he said, halting John’s progress firmly.

“I thought you might want to. You’ve been nice to me.”

“Not beyond common courtesy. You don’t have to repay me. Especially in that way. You haven’t even learned my name.”

“I know. But you seemed lonely and I wanted to comfort you. And I noticed you didn’t give our serving maids a second glance.”

Owen was startled by the lad’s unexpected perception. How could he have guessed? Even during their long exile together, his own brother hadn’t suspected his preferences, mainly because Owen had been careful to conceal his indifference to women. Excuses were easily arranged by indulging in a stupefying excess of liquor like the rest of the exiled court.

Over the years, there had been fleeting encounters, catching a man’s attention in whatever province or country he’d passed through. But there’d been at least some conversation to establish a mutual attraction, usually over a few glasses of wine or ale. John’s instant, correct assumption wrong-footed him.

“I like you and I thought you liked me. It’s not as though I haven’t been with men before,” John added helpfully. “And you are quite handsome, especially when you smile.”

Buy Links:

JMS Books :: Amazon :: books2read :: Add to Goodreads :: Add to Bookbub

Lucky John Promo 2

Bio:

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.

Website: https://elliethomasromance.wordpress.com/

Facebook reader group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/8308047409266947

Twitter: @e_thomas_author

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/19835510.Ellie_Thomas

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/ellie-thomas

Read Around the Rainbow | Challenges in Writing Queer Characters in Various Subgenres

ReadAroundTheRainbow

It’s Read Around the Rainbow time! If you’ve missed these posts before, we’re a group of authors who get together on the last Friday of every month to blog on the same topic. This month’s topic is:

Challenges in Writing Queer Characters in Various Subgenres

At first, I didn’t really know how to tackle this topic. I see myself mainly as a writer of paranormal romance, but if we’re to check the number of titles, I have about the same amount of contemporary stories as I do paranormal, then I have a few alien romances and post-apocalyptic ones as a bonus 😁 As Holly, I have more paranormal than I have contemporary, so the majority of the stories I’ve written are paranormal.

Why?

Well, the standard answer is of course that the world is no fun without monsters and magic. And I stand by that. The biggest reason why I read is reality escape, so give me the magic and the things I can’t find in real life.

But if you’re to scrape a little on the surface…

I write paranormal because there I set the rules. Writing queer characters can be a delicate matter. In a paranormal world, I get to decide how society views queer people, if there are laws against queer relationships, if it’s a more forgiving climate than the real world, and so on.

No one can say that I get it wrong because I’m the creator of the universe. It gives me a lot of freedom. A lot.

It doesn’t mean I can make it too outlandish because there has to be something we can connect with, something we can relate to, something we can understand. But for the most part, I’m completely free.

When I write contemporary, I can’t do that. And when I write contemporary, I’m painfully aware of being Swedish. We have homophobia here. We have people with fanatic and fascist opinions. But only about 20% of the Swedish population believe in a god. The people waving a bible and proclaiming love to be a sin are few and far between.

There is plenty of prejudice against queers, don’t think that there isn’t, but when I look at the US, I shake my head. I mean WTF, people?!

And there are cultural differences, of course, many, many cultural differences.

So for me writing contemporary is a struggle. Contemporary should (must) reflect the world we’re living in, but the reality I’m living in isn’t the same as the reality you’re living in. And I’m afraid of getting it wrong.

I could of course do my stories very Swedish, but… I’d be bored.

I always find it interesting what people decide to write. I write paranormal because I feel free. I write contemporary but… reluctantly. I write sci-fi, though I’d say it’s alien romances because there aren’t many sci-fi-y elements since I’d probably mess them up 😅

What you never will see me write is historical. I’m in awe of those who do, but I just can’t fathom writing a story that would take me more time to research than to write. It’s also a matter of interest, of course. And I think (those of you who write historical, feel free to correct me) writers of historical fiction find satisfaction in getting it right. They study clothes, language, events, what cities looked like back then, what people ate, what occupations there were, and on and on the list goes, and you weave it into a story. Whereas I just want the words to poor out of me, paint a world I find entertaining at the moment, and then move on.

I always have this idea that writers of historical fiction are much smarter than me 😊 And I guess I’m lazy. I research things, of course, I do. There isn’t a writer alive who doesn’t research things. But if the research takes longer than the writing, I’m out.

Check out what the others have to say on the matter!

K.L. Noone

Addison Albright

Fiona Glass

Ellie Thomas

Wrap-Up Wednesday | June

It’s Wrap-up Wednesday time and if I’ve appeared confused about what I’ve read the last couple of months, it’s nothing compared to this. I’ve reread old books, I’ve borrowed books at the library, and I’ve spent most of my money on MF Mars needs women books (Hey, I was in the mood LOL).

So allow me a moment to scroll through my various reading apps… 😆

Two Man Station by Lisa Henry

This was a new-to-me story, contemporary which I don’t read too often, but lovely. It’s set in rural Australia and is the kind of slow pace that makes you want to linger. Lovely.

Two Man StationGio Valeri is a big-city police officer who’s been transferred to the small outback town of Richmond with his professional reputation in tatters. His transfer is a punishment, and Gio just wants to keep his head down and survive the next two years. No more mistakes. No more complications.

Except Gio isn’t counting on Jason Quinn.

Jason Quinn, officer in charge of Richmond Station, is a single dad struggling with balancing the demands of shift work with the challenges of raising his son. The last thing he needs is a new senior constable with a history of destroying other people’s careers. But, like it or not, Jason has to work with Gio.

In a remote two-man station hours away from the next town, Gio and Jason have to learn to trust and rely on each another. Close quarters and a growing attraction mean that the lines between professional and personal are blurring. And even in Richmond, being a copper can be dangerous enough without risking their hearts as well.

https://books2read.com/TwoManStation

Omega Series by Eileen Glass

I reread the first three of this series. I think the first is still available (and free) but the rest has been bundled up into Omega: Liam & SkyeI have the four first and started rereading to see if I wanted to buy the rest of them, but when I got to the end of the third I was distracted. If you’re in the mood for a shifter romance, check it out.

Omega Trouble

Omega Baggage

Omega Scrape

Thirds by Charlie Cochet

Then I reread the first two of the Thirds series by Charlie Cochet. I had the idea that I was in the mood for bigger plots with a big good vs bad theme, so I started rereading. I don’t know where I left off the first time I read this series, around book five or six, I think. But… after two books I got distracted again 😆

Hell & High Water

Action. Comedy. Romance. And that one weird guy.When homicide detective Dexter J. Daley’s testimony helps send his partner away for murder, the consequences – and the media frenzy – aren’t far behind. He soon finds himself sans boyfriend, sans friends, and, after an unpleasant encounter in a parking garage after the trial, he’s lucky he doesn’t find himself sans teeth. Dex fears he’ll get transferred from the Human Police Force’s Sixth Precinct, or worse, get dismissed. Instead, his adoptive father – a sergeant at the Therian-Human Intelligence Recon Defense Squadron otherwise known as the THIRDS – pulls a few strings, and Dex gets recruited as a Defense Agent.Dex is determined to get his life back on track and eager to get started in his new job. But his first meeting with Team Leader Sloane Brodie, who also happens to be his new jaguar Therian partner, turns disastrous. When the team is called to investigate the murders of three HumaniTherian activists, it soon becomes clear to Dex that getting his partner and the rest of the tightknit team to accept him will be a lot harder than catching the killer – and every bit as dangerous.

https://books2read.com/Hell-High-Water

Blood and Thunder

Action. Comedy. Romance. And that one weird guy.

When a series of bombs go off in a Therian youth center, injuring members of THIRDS Team Destructive Delta, and causing a rift between agents Dexter J. Daley and Sloane Brodie, peace seems unattainable. Especially when a new and frightening group, the Order of Adrasteia, appears to always be a step ahead. With panic and intolerance spreading and streets becoming littered with the Order’s propaganda, hostility between Humans and Therians grows daily. Dex and Sloane, along with the rest of the team, are determined to take down the Order and restore peace, not to mention settle a personal score. But the deeper the team investigates the bombings, the more they believe there’s a more sinister motive than a desire to shed blood and spread chaos.

Discovering the frightful truth behind the Order’s intent forces Sloane to confront secrets from a past he thought he’d left behind for good, a past that could not only destroy him and his career, but also the reputation of the organization that made him all he is today. Now more than ever, Dex and Sloane need each other, and, along with trust, the strength of their bond will mean the difference between justice and all-out war.

Amazon

Whitetail Rock Series by Anne Tenino

Some time ago, I reread Too Stupid to Live by Anne Tenino, which is a favourite of mine. These two stories are about Nick, Sam’s best friend. They’re not as good as Too Stupid to Live (in my opinion) but entertaining. They were written for Goodreads MM Romance Group’s Don’t Read in the Closet event, but now I couldn’t find them. They’re on Anne Tenino’s website though.

Whitetail Rock

Nikhil “Nik” Larson is a snarky, dark-skinned adoptee from India who grew up in the Whitest Town in America. Back to visit his parents Nik meets Trooper Jurgen Dammerung, a blond, butch motorcycle cop who’s so hot he leaves a con trail wherever he goes.

Jurgen is the epitome of everything Nik hated about growing up the lone Indian boy among a town of white people. But Jurgen surprises him rather (ahem) pleasantly, in spite of — or because of — Nik’s attempts to needle him. By the end of his visit, Nik realizes he likes Jurgen. But Jurgen’s so not the relationship type.

Right?

The Fix

Confident almost to the point of arrogance, Jurgen never worried about his boyfriend leaving him until he overheard Nik telling his best friend he wants to move out of town. That’s when the macho cop realizes that maybe asking Nik to move back to tiny Whitetail Rock—where he was tormented when he was younger for being gay and looking different wasn’t Jurgen’s most brilliant idea. Now he’s on a mission to find a way to fix things so Nik will stay. Which should be no problem because he’s good at fixing stuff, right?

Nik isn’t sure what he was thinking, moving back to his hometown after graduating with his MFA. Jobs in his field are non-existent and reminders of some of the worst times in his life are abundant. But Jurgen lives in Whitetail Rock, and Nik is willing to put up with a hell of a lot to be with him. Except maybe Jurgen’s own efforts to “fix” something that’s not broken…

Change of Heart by Mary Calmes

The Reread Friday post of the month over at Holly’s was about the Change of Heart series by Mary Calmes. I believed I’d read the first three, but turns out I never got around to the third the first time I read them. I did now though.

Change of Heart

As a young gay man—and a werepanther—all Jin Rayne yearns for is a normal life. Having fled his past, he wants nothing more than to start over, but Jin’s old life doesn’t want to let him go. When his travels bring him to a new city, he crosses paths with the leader of the local were-tribe. Logan Church is a shock and an enigma, and Jin fears that Logan is both the mate he fears and the love of his life. Jin doesn’t want to go back to the old ways, and mating would irrevocably tie him to them.

But Jin is the mate Logan needs at his side to help him lead his tribe, and he won’t give Jin up so easily. It will take time and trust for Jin to discover the joy in belonging to Logan and how to love without restraint.

Amazon

Trusted Bond

Jin Rayne is having trouble adjusting to the new life he’s supposed to love. Instead of adapting to being the mate of tribe leader Logan Church, Jin can’t get past the fact that his lover was straight before they met. He’s discovered the joy in belonging to Logan but fears his new life could disappear at a moment’s notice, despite Logan’s insistence that they are forever, end of story.

Jin wants to trust Logan, but that desire will be put to the test both by a rival tribe leader and by a startling revelation about Jin’s existence. At stake is Jin’s life and his place in the tribe. If he’s going to survive to see Logan again, he’ll have to release his fear and freely accept the bond, for only then can he truly trust.

Amazon

honored vow

Jin Rayne is still growing into his frightening new powers as a nekhene cat and his place as reah of Logan Church’s tribe when he learns that a sepat, an honor challenge, has been called. Logan, who has never wanted to do anything but lead his small-town tribe, must travel around the world to Mongolia and fight to become the most powerful leader in the werepanther world.

Logan won’t be the only one making the journey. As his mate, Jin must fight with him to honor his commitment to Logan, his culture, and his tribe. But the trial is long, involving a prolonged separation between the two men, and Logan’s humanity is at stake. In order to make it through the nightmarish sepat, Jin and Logan must accept their fates, trust each other, and honor the vows between them no matter the cost.

Amazon

I think that’s all the MM stories I’ve read this month… I might have missed some. As I said above. I’m a little confused right now LOL