Read Around the Rainbow | Would You Rather…

ReadAroundTheRainbow

It’s Read Around the Rainbow time! On the last Friday of every month, we’re a group of authors who get together and blog on the same topic. We figured we’d answer three ‘Would you rather’ questions on this first of last Fridays of the year.

Let’s dive in, shall we?

Would you rather publish one insanely great-selling book and never write again … or publish a string of 15 average-selling books over a 20-year period?   

Never write again isn’t an option. Simply reading this question has me breaking out in a sweat. I’d go insane. I published about 15 stories per year, so even 15 in a 20-year period would leave me severely depressed and anxious.

Writing is my outlet. It’s therapy and reality escape all in one, not to mention it’s a lot of fun (at least when the characters cooperate). I can’t see myself living without writing most days of the week. I get sad and snarly when I don’t get to write.

If it was a question of publishing one insanely great-selling book that would earn me enough money that I’d never have to have a day job and I could write and not publish, that’s something I could live with. I would be lying if I said I don’t care about my readers because I do. There is no greater feeling than knowing that my words have touched someone. But I could live without readers as long as I get to write.

Would you rather be recognized wherever you go… or live a quiet (monetarily successful) life of anonymity?   

Anonymity! Is there seriously anyone who’d want to be recognised wherever they go? Monetarily successful AND unknown. It’s a dream come true.

Maybe I should let you know that I have some social anxiety and hide and pretend not to be at home if someone is knocking at the door. The vast majority of my friends live online, and my husband is the one who takes the kids to the doctor, the dentist, the conferences at school and so on. It goes weeks between the times I talk to anyone who isn’t hubby or my kids face-to-face, and when I do, it’s most often my sister who knows all about me freaking out if I have to leave the house. Once every third month or so, I go grocery shopping with my husband just to get a change of scenery. I have some 70-year-old ladies as neighbours that I stop and talk to if I meet them on dog walks. They’re pretty non-threatening.

Would you rather write in a rooftop garden surrounded by city noises — or in a quiet studio with cows as your neighbors?  

Cows. Where I live now, only one neighbouring house has people in it living year-round. I don’t have cows, just forest around me, and that suits me fine. If I have a say in the matter—and it’s my life so I should, right?—I’ll never live in a city again.

I’d take cows over people every day of the week.

See what the others rather would do!

Nell Iris

Fiona Glass

Amy Spector

Ellie Thomas

K.L. Noone

Addison Albright

Guest Post | Flashes by K.L. Noone

Today, we have the lovely K.L. Noone on a visit. They’re here to tell us a little about their flash fiction collection, Flashes. I love short stories and flash fiction. Welcome Kristin!

Flashes Guest Post

Hi there – and many thanks to Ofelia for letting me drop by!

My new release, Flashes, has just come out from JMS Books – I’m excited about this one, because it’s something I’ve always rather wanted: having enough short stories of my own to fill up a collection!

Flashes is unusual because it exists, or will exist, in two slightly different versions: the ebook contains only previously unpublished short stories (at least, unpublished – until now – by JMS Books!), but the paperback will contain those plus my previously published flash fiction with JMS! So those stories that’d be too short for print, otherwise – will get to be here and tangible and physical! So I’m thrilled.

Some of these are new stories with brand-new characters, and some are old friends; I thought about the order, and how we move from contemporary to fantasy to sci-fi and back…it was such a fun puzzle to fit together. The final story, which is new, actually makes official the crossover, or rather connection, between two sets of characters whom I love – we’ve had little nods and references before, like Wes and Finn from the Seasonal Stories watching a movie that stars Colby and Jason from the Character Bleed trilogy, and here we finally get them getting to work together, which I’ll admit just makes my little author-heart happy!

You also get a short story that’s really the first chapter of a novel-in-progress, which right now is a delightful first-meeting story, but eventually will be a whole high fantasy m/m romance, with King’s librarian Ember and book-thief Serenity (and yes, the name is ironic – he’s certainly disturbing Ember’s peaceful night!). I’ll include a snippet of that first meeting below!

I hope you enjoy these stories – I’ve loved writing all of them, little windows into characters and worlds and places, all with happy endings, of course – or in some cases new beginnings.

Buy links:

JMS Books :: Amazon

Bio:

K.L. Noone teaches college students about superheroes and Shakespeare by day, and writes LGBTQ+ romance – frequently paranormal or with fantasy elements, and always with happy endings – when not grading papers or researching medieval outlaw life. She also likes cats, craft beer, and the sound of ocean waves.

Flashes

flashes

From holiday decorating at a historic castle to werewolf FBI agents, from nightmares aboard a starship to a book-thief encountering a king’s brother in a fantastical library, from hurt and comfort and cinnamon pancakes to a cozy afternoon full of wedding planning, these collected stories bring together K.L. Noone’s flash and short fiction for the first time!

Some familiar characters make an appearance — Jason and Colby from the Character Bleed trilogy and Wes and Finn from the Seasonal Stories — and brand-new characters and stories await, including Ember the royal librarian, detective-fiction novelist Patrick, and interior decorator Rory.

Find all their happy endings, and more, in the sparkling short stories of Flashes!

Snippet from “Book-Thief”:

Emberly Lyon, reshelving the third volume of Gruyere’s History of Empire, startled a book-thief in the back room of the King’s library at half-past three in the morning.

Ember, one hand still clutching leatherbound pages, blinked at the intruder in lantern-light. The book-thief recovered from surprise first, and demanded, “What are you even doing here?”

I was—” Instinctive guilt—he’d always been capable of losing time in a book, about which Chance teased him mercilessly, in the way of younger brothers—lost out to baffled anger. “I’m the King’s librarian! What are you doing?”

I don’t suppose you’d believe I wanted to borrow a novel of seafaring navigation, shipwreck, and improbable feats of adventure?” The book-thief had a voice that laughed: wind over water, copper chimes in arched doorways, melody in sunshine. Ember couldn’t see much of him in library shadow, only the glance of a single dark-lantern’s rays across slender build, petite height, dark hair.

And that laughter. Beckoning.

He glared. “No one’s allowed in here after hours. No one’s allowed in here without my permission. And you’re stealing that!” Book-walls spiraled upward around them, a supportive tower sketched in silken grey, gilt-lettered spines, curious hollow spaces. He and Chance had been filling in those gaps as best they could for the past three years; the late King Brassen hadn’t cared much for reading. Every volume, and not only those in the more valuable back room, was his friend. “Put it back.”

I’m afraid I can’t. A commission, you see.” Light as chatter across a ballroom, casual as a rowing-party on the Sweetwater; but this river glinted with robbery and danger. The book-thief had quite sensibly worn dark grey and green, fitted and shadowy under a hood; he wasn’t tall, and his voice sounded cheerful and irritatingly blithe, caught red-handed. Literature-handed. Mid-narrative. “Did you say you were the King’s librarian? The King’s librarian is—” He stopped.

Yes,” Ember agreed, “you were saying?” and shifted weight, ever so slightly.

He and Chance did, in some ways, look alike—the tilt of eyes, that straight Lyon nose, the expressions on his half-brother’s face that Ember had glimpsed on his own in a mirror—but most people never saw that. Never saw past the height, the shoulders, and his skin, midway between King Brassen’s aged tawny gold and the shimmering onyx of the Araly dancer who’d caught the lion’s eye. Chance had the late Queen’s fairness and got sunburnt under rainclouds. Ember had waited in his chambers with aloe creams for years, after Brassen ordered his only legitimate son to keep up on all-day hunts.

His book-thief must be new to Lyonheart. Any person in the city’s market would’ve known. The King’s librarian was the King’s bastard older brother, and at a glance they did not resemble each other.

Ember tended to get stares in that market less because of his coloring specifically—though that was a part of it; traders came by from the Southern Continent often enough to be unusual but not singularly so—but because he loomed. Couldn’t help it. Their father’s muscles.

The King’s librarian is someone who spends his days indoors with books, I was going to say.” Pale eyes flickered over him. Up and down. Lingering, Ember realized with a shock of thrilled outrage, on his shoulders, waist, below his waist. He couldn’t tell what color those eyes were under the hood, only that they danced in a ray of lamplight. “You, on the other hand, should be rescuing virgins and valiantly slaying monsters in perilous forests. Have you seen your arms, lately?”

That tone was either genuinely honest admiration or outrageous flattery; Ember choked on unexpected absurd laughter. “I’m preventing a crime, aren’t I? Put it back, please.”

Do you know how difficult it was to break in here? You’ve actually got decent wards up. How’d you manage that?”

Valiant monster-slayer secrets. Learned in a perilous forest. How did you—stop that!” His thief had begun inching toward the rear—and open, he noticed—window. Lyonheart sprawled sleepily outside, dreaming with the restlessness of an island city-state in the hours before dawn. Morning marketers and broadsheet-vendors and primrose-sellers would be stirring soon, bakeries opening, the drifting scents of strong tea and hot pies and fish-hauls and the clatter of early voices like a hundred melodies at once. Beyond darkened windows the sea lapped at shore, purring, wine-hued.

Guest Post | The Dragon’s Prisoner by Holly Day

The Dragon's Prisoner FB

Hiya! I’m here as Holly today 😊 I have a new story out, The Dragon’s Prisoner 🥳 And you might have guessed it already, but we’re going back to Dragon Row!  

Doing the Dragon Row stories is always fun. I love stepping into this world where a group of exiled dragons are living among humans. They don’t like humans much, most often they talk about eating them (and I told my editor that if I ever write Major the Maneater’s story, he almost has to eat someone). What they do like is gold and gemstones in true dragon fashion.  

This is the third story in the Dragon Row series, but they do not need to be read in order. Some of the supporting characters show up in all stories, but not to the extent that you need to know them.  

The other Dragon Row stories are The Book Dragon’s Lair and Mated to the Fire Dragon if you feel like taking a dive into Edge.  

I wrote this to celebrate Appreciate a Dragon Day, and it isn’t hard to appreciate a dragon. I mean Saxon the Sinful might be an arse who doesn’t give a damn about anyone but himself, but he’s quite magnificent when you look at him LOL  

We have Kasper too, who is a simple thief. He wants to be free of his boss and the boss has agreed to let him go if he does one last job. Kasper has never heard of Edge, and he doesn’t believe in dragons, so why wouldn’t he? It seems like a good idea until he sees Saxon whom he’s going to steal from.  

Check it out if you’re in the mood for dragons!  

The Dragon’s Prisoner

thedragonsprisoner

Stealing from a dragon is bad, getting caught is worse. 
 
Kasper Cobalt is a thief who wants to quit, but his boss forces him to do one last job. He has, of course, heard of dragons, but he isn’t sure he believes in them until he’s standing in front of a guy who breathes smoke and has weird eyes. 
 
Saxon the Sinful is bored out of his mind. Running a jewelry store on Dragon Row should be pleasing. He is, after all, surrounded by gold and gemstones. But he’s also surrounded by humans, and one of them has the audacity to try to steal from him. 
 
After having caught Kasper, Saxon locks him up in his basement. He should kill him, and he might, but first he’ll feed him. He looks hungry. Kasper can’t hang around and play dragon’s prisoner even though Saxon takes great care of him. His boss will kill him if he doesn’t finish the job. Kasper is reluctant to betray Saxon, but a thief and a dragon can never have a happily ever after, can they? 
 
NOTE: The Dragon’s Prisoner takes place on the same street as The Book Dragon’s Lair and Mated to the Fire Dragon but can be read as a standalone story. 

Buy links: 

Paranormal Gay Romance: 36,967 words 

JMS Books :: Amazon :: Books2Read 

Excerpt:

Saxon leaned over Kasper, who was kneeling on the floor. His eyes were wide and a scent of fear emanated from him—as it should. 

Saxon growled again. He’d flown home, had entered through the tower, and the moment he’d shifted back to his human shape, he’d heard a sound from the shop. He’d hurried down the stairs without a stitch of clothing on, had been greeted by the scent of human, and had found the door into the shop unlocked. He’d locked it before leaving. 

The rage made him blow out a tiny flame. He had to be careful not to set the shop on fire. Scales appeared on his arms as he fought the urge to change into a dragon. There was no room for a dragon in here, and he didn’t want to shatter the glass displays. 

“I can explain!” Kasper held his hands up in the air, but before he could speak again, Saxon snarled and curled his talons around Kasper’s wrist. He dragged him out of the shop, through the door to his private quarters, and down the basement stairs. 

It wasn’t until they started their descent that Kasper tugged at his arm. Saxon snarled in reply and pulled hard enough to make him slip. He crashed into him, his free hand sliding over Saxon’s bare back before he managed to find his balance again. 

“Saxon. Please.” 

Saxon allowed another blaze of fire to leave him, and for a moment, the staircase was lit. Saxon didn’t need the light, but Kasper gasped, though it could be from the fire rather than being able to see. 

He steered them toward the unnatural treasure cave. He could kill him. No one would look for him in Saxon’s basement, and if they did, he’d kill them too. He could eat him. Maybe humans were tasty. He’d never felt the urge before—he didn’t now either, if he was being honest. He was too angry to eat. Some measly human believed he could steal from him, steal from Dragon Row. 

He pushed Kasper roughly enough for him to fall. He didn’t care. If he hit his head hard enough to shatter his skull, Saxon didn’t care. Stomping out of the cave, he ran up the stairs to the second floor and grabbed a chair, then he grabbed some rope he had on the third floor before he rushed down into the basement again. 

Kasper was standing but hadn’t left the room. Saxon growled, pleased to see him flinch. The way his eyes moved had him suspect humans couldn’t see well in the dark. If he was feeling favorable later, he’d bring down a candle. Right now, he wasn’t feeling favorable. 

He grabbed Kasper’s arm, his claws pricking him through the fabric of his shirt, making him hiss. Saxon hissed too and covered him in a cloud of smoke, which made him cough. Then he pushed him down on the chair, cut a suitable length of rope off using his teeth, and tied his hands behind his back. Next, he tied his legs to the legs of the chair, one at a time. And lastly, for good measure, he wound the remaining rope around his middle and the backrest of the chair. He didn’t think he could get out, but Saxon would keep an eye on him. 

Tomorrow, he’d bolt the door, so he’d be unable to leave the basement if he got out of the rope while Saxon was in the shop. The thought made him grin. He’d like to see him try to escape. 

“What… eh… what will happen now?” 

Saxon stilled. He wasn’t sure. He hadn’t planned any further than this. 

“Saxon?” Kasper turned his head in his direction, but his gaze didn’t lock on him. Saxon kept quiet, and Kasper took a shuddering breath. 

“I… it wasn’t for me.” 

Saxon didn’t care. He’d tried to steal from him. He should be burned alive. 

“Saxon, please. I understand you’re angry—” Saxon cut him off with a snarl. Whirling around, he headed for the door. 

“Wait! Are you leaving me here?” He struggled against the bindings. “What’s down here?” He yanked on the ropes again. “Saxon?” 

Saxon kept quiet and watched him jerk and tug without getting anywhere. 

“Saxon!” There was a note of panic in his voice, and Saxon tilted his head to the side. What was going on? He hadn’t been this afraid when Saxon had been snarling in his face. Maybe it was a delayed reaction. 

“What?” 

Kasper stilled. “What’s down here? I don’t do well in small spaces.” 

Saxon snorted. It wasn’t a small space. It was his treasure cave, and it was gaping empty. Mostly. 

About Holly Day 

According to Holly Day, no day should go by uncelebrated and all of them deserve a story. If she’ll have the time to write them remains to be seen. She lives in rural Sweden with a husband, four children, more pets than most, and wouldn’t last a day without coffee.  

Holly gets up at the crack of dawn most days of the week to write gay romance stories. She believes in equality in fiction and in real life. Diversity matters. Representation matters. Visibility matters. We can change the world one story at the time.  

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