Music Monday | Elevator Pitch

Are you Spotify listeners? I listen to Spotify quite often (all the time). I used to write in silence, but when silence got harder to come by, I started writing with music in my ears. And I’m always listening to music when I do the dishes and most often when I cook unless I have little helpers.

Every so often, I listen the lists Spotify puts together for me from what they think I’ll like. Most often, in my case at least, they get it completely wrong, but sometimes they get it right. It might not surprise you that I’m a lyric person. My husband, who plays the guitar, hears music and cords and melodies when he listens to music, I hear stories.

All it takes is one sentence for my brain to start painting pictures, to create scenes, to wish I could’ve come up with that specific line. When that happens, I save the song to a list I’ve named Play it Again, Sam. It’s a mix of just about everything you can imagine, but every song on there triggers something in me.

One day when I was doing dishes, Spotify played TVA by Jason Isbell. As soon as I was done, I opened Scrivener on my computer and began writing Elevator Pitch.

Now, Elevator Pitch is a short story about a bear shifter and a bat shifter stuck in an elevator. It has nothing to do with a guy who grew up two hours north of Birmingham who used to fish next to Wilson Dam, absolutely nothing. And yet it has.

In the story, we have two shifter guys trapped in a dark room, and in the song, we have a young man who used to bring his girlfriend to watch the racoons. It has nothing to with each other – except they all wanted someone to want them, and the song made me write the story.

It’s ‘only’ 11k long, but it’s dear to me.


elevator pitch

Bjorn Ritter only wants one thing—to live his life away from nosey, demanding bears. That’s easier said than done when you’re the son of the female running the Bayside Bear Community.

Cecil Baxter might be a bat, but he grew up away from shifter communities and he’s doing his best to continue to keep his distance. Shifters aren’t an accepting bunch and Cecil has never fit the norm.

Already facing a dreaded meeting with his mother, the last thing Bjorn needs is a stranger using his elevator to escape a pack of werewolves. And Cecil, who’s day just seems to be getting worse and worse, could really do without the added stress of finding himself trapped in an elevator with a huge bear shifter.

Still, what could go wrong in three minutes?

Coming June 6th

Memorial Day Weekend Sale

Memorial Day weekend sale

On Monday, it’s Memorial Day, and to celebrate JMS-Books is having a weekend sale where all ebooks are 40% off. The cool thing – there are a lot of cool things, but from an egocentric perspective – both Elevator Pitch and Crazy Joe are up for pre-order!

My release schedule is pretty full (not that I’m complaining) the coming weeks, and I’m a little behind on posting about the coming stories since Black Bird just was published. But, today I’ve made pages for both Elevator Pitch and Crazy Joe where you can read a little excerpt, and here you can see the covers and blurbs.

All my books published through JMS-Books are 40% off until Monday.


elevator pitch

Bjorn Ritter only wants one thing – to live his life away from nosey, demanding bears. That’s easier said than done when you’re the son of the female running the Bayside Bear Community. Cecil Baxter might be a bat, but he grew up away from shifter communities and he’s doing his best to continue to keep his distance. Shifters aren’t an accepting bunch and Cecil has never fit the norm.

Already facing a dreaded meeting with his mother, the last thing Bjorn needs is a stranger using his elevator to escape a pack of werewolves. And Cecil, whose day just seems to be getting worse and worse, could really do without the added stress of finding himself trapped in an elevator with a huge bear shifter.

Still, what could go wrong in three minutes?

Read an excerpt.

Release date: June 6


Crazy Joe

Abe Cooper is starting over. For fifteen years he’s lived the life that was expected of him, but not anymore. He’s packed up his things, bought himself a cabin in Northfield, and managed to secure a job at the local high school teaching gym and coaching the football team. But his new beginning didn’t include running into Crazy Joe on his first trip to the grocery store.

Jonas Raghnall has everything he needs—good friends and a job he loves. He’s worked hard to get over what happened sixteen years ago, but one run-in with his past and all the memories come flooding back. Seeing Abe Cooper, The Abe Cooper, sets everything out of balance.

Abe had pictured a fresh start with no ties to his past, but now that Jonas is there, he wants nothing more than to be close to the man who had butterflies filling his belly when he was in high school. Jonas doesn’t want to come face to face with his past, but if he sees Abe every day, it’s not really meeting up with your past, is it? It’s more like a date with your future.

Read an excerpt.

Release date: June 20

 

 

 

Sci-Fi and Fantasy for the Great Pause

The Great Pause

For the Great Pause – it has a certain ring to it, does it not?

To help us all get through this time, J. Scott Coatsworth put together a Sci-Fi and Fantasy Giveaway over at Prolific Works. It’s a giveaway with everything from Hard Sci-Fi to Romance, with all colours and orientations and genders (or lack thereof) – in other words, there should be something for everyone.

It Doesn’t Translate is my contribution.  It’s a little Sci-Fi since it takes place in space, but mostly it’s romance. You’ll find an excerpt here.

The giveaway runs from May 15th to June 15th, so it’s already started, and you can grab all the books here!


It Doesn't Translate

Noir Kioko had only ever seen one human before his undercover work brought him to the diner at the Luna Terminal, and that was at a distance. Humans are rare, most of them disappear without a trace, and he hopes hanging around the restaurant will give him a lead on the smuggling ring he’s investigating. There was no way he could’ve known the human would turn out to be his mate, and no way he can let it show without putting his mate in danger and possibly jeopardising his mission.

Max Welch is the proud owner of the only restaurant within a light year’s distance. He left Earth four years ago to create a better life for himself, but he hadn’t considered the possibility of scary alien pirates making his restaurant their favourite hangout spot. As a measly human there isn’t much he can do about it, but as one of the pirates starts coming by almost every day he has to come up with something before he loses all his customers. That the giant cat man is rather nice to look at changes nothing.

When rumours of another human arriving at the space station start to circulate, Noir’s species trafficking infiltrate and observe only mission may need a revamp. But will Noir be able to protect his mate and another one of his rare species?