Release Day | Winter Wonderland

It’s release day!!! Winter Wonderland is out today ☃️ It’s a box set containing four previously published holiday stories – Turning Wood, 24 Dates, The Setup and Once in a Snowstorm. 

They’re all standalone stories, or there are sequels to Once in a Snowstorm, but you can read it as a standalone. They’re all contemporary and part of the Up North series, which means they’re small-town romances.  

All it means to be part of the Up North series is that they take place in the same geographical area. Some secondary characters may appear in more than one book, but it doesn’t matter in which order you read them. 

What they do have in common, these four, not all Up North stories, is the snow. If you like snowed-in stories, give this a try! Two of them are snowed-in ones 😄 (Yes, I like snowed-in stories). One is about a man who falls through the ice, and 24 Dates is one of my favourite stories that I’ve written.  

I’m not good at dates, and in this, I had to come up with 24 dates. But I didn’t want them to be dinner-at-a-restaurant kind of dates, so I had to get creative! I had a lot of fun writing it, and it’s very dear to me. I’ll share one of the dates below 😊 

Winter Wonderland

winterwonderlandboxset

Winter Wonderland is a set of four contemporary small-town romances taking place during the most magical time of the year. Some of our characters do their best to escape the hustle and bustle of Christmas, others long for someone to share it with. Guaranteed is that things don’t go as planned. They never do when the snow is coming down hard and the presents are piling up under the tree. 
 
Contains the stories: 
 
Turning Wood: Otho Newcomer moved to the small village of Snowmelt to mend his broken heart in solitude. Mason Dager’s ex cleared out his bank account, sold his car and got him thrown out of his apartment. And he has no one to blame but himself. When Mason makes yet another stupid decision, Otho comes to the rescue, throwing the two men together during the most magical time of the year. 
 
24 Dates: When Victor Hill bought a house with his boyfriend, Jian Kouri it was a dream come true. Now, two years later, instead of living their happily ever after, they hardly see the other awake, and Victor fears he and Jian have already drifted too far apart. The holiday season is a time for hope, but when Victor comes home to find Jian with a plan to woo him for Christmas, is it too little, too late? 
 
The Setup: Dax doesn’t want to see anyone and isn’t pleased when a stranger turns in on his driveway, claiming he’s there for a date. Ellis risked his neck driving in the snow to meet his friend for a double date, but when Dax says he’s never agreed to a date, they realize they’ve been played. Since there’s a snowstorm, Dax invites Ellis to stay the night, but how to get their revenge for the setup? 
 
Once in a Snowstorm: Daring a snowstorm might not be the smartest thing Aiden Evans has done, but with only a few days to Christmas, he doesn’t want to be alone. Tristan Gardner is looking forward to a quiet night, but instead, he has to save an idiot from freezing to death in his forest. Aiden is going crazy from Tristan’s attitude, but will a steamy night with the surly lumberjack change his mind about leaving? 

Buy links: 

Contemporary gay romance: 94,001 words 

JMS Books :: Amazon :: books2read.com/WinterWonderlandBoxSet 

Excerpt:

December 5th

Wake up, sleepyhead.” Jian shook Victor’s shoulder and held out a cup of coffee for him before he’d blinked the sleep from his eyes.

What…” Victor cleared his throat and grabbed the coffee. “…are you doing?”

We’re late for our date.”

No more dates, Jian.” He sipped on the coffee and glanced at him. “At least not in the morning.”

Come on, babe.” He rustled a paper bag in front of him, and Victor narrowed his eyes.

What’s that?”

Your breakfast.”

He remembered the avocado sandwich Jian had made him for the ride and perked up a little. “Can’t I have it now?”

Nope. I need you to get out of bed, put on a pair of sweats and a sweater.”

Sweats?” What kind of date involved sweats? “Should I shower?” Jian hadn’t. His hair was a mess, and the dark stubble could soon be called a beard. Victor loved it when he grew it a little rugged.

Nope, you’ll get wet enough later.”

Victor scrunched his nose and took another sip of the coffee. “I’m not sure I like the sound of that.”

Jian chuckled, and it had a wicked ring to it. Victor’s nerves woke up. “Jian! Where are we going?”

You’ll see. Get your sweet ass out of bed because we’re going in five.”

Victor growled, took another sip of the coffee, and stumbled into the bathroom. Seven minutes later, he climbed into the truck, accepted the thermos cup Jian had prepared for him with more coffee, and the bag with the sandwich. As they rolled out of the driveway, Victor looked at him. “Are you gonna tell me now?”

Jian grinned and shook his head. The soft sounds of Christmas music filled the tinsel-decorated pickup and the tiny Christmas tree glowed on the dashboard. Outside the streets were mostly deserted, the snow was white and glistening.

When Jian turned north instead of toward Courtland or Whiteport, Victor frowned. North? What the heck could they do north of Northfield? Skiing? He hoped not, he’d break a bone or two hundred and six.

Where are we going?”

Jian raised an eyebrow at him.

Oh, come on, we’re on the way, you might as well tell me! Communication is a good thing, Jian.”

Not always.”

Victor narrowed his eyes. “Where are we going?”

Snowmelt.” Jian drummed his thumb on the steering wheel, a grin tugging at the corner of his mouth.

Snowmelt? There was nothing in Snowmelt… except ski slopes. “I’m not skiing.”

We’ll see.”

No, Jian, I’m serious. I won’t ski. I’ll be in the pub while you go.”

Jian nodded, his face might’ve held a blank expression, but Victor knew he was laughing at him.

Victor blew out a breath. He wasn’t looking forward to sitting in a bar while Jian was out skiing. He could drink alone at home—he never did, but if he had, it would be considerably cheaper.

For the most part, pine trees lined the road, not giving Victor much to look at other than Jian. He didn’t mind, he loved looking at Jian. He wasn’t classically handsome, but Victor loved the bump on the bridge of his nose and the dark, dark eyes where you could hardly see where the iris stopped and the pupil began. Though, he couldn’t look into his eyes when he was driving. He loved the black stubble against the olive-colored skin that grew darker in the summer.

The morning sun was streaming through the now thinning trees, giving warning about civilization up ahead, but before they reached Snowmelt, Jian turned left.

What are you doing?” There were no ski slopes down there. The mountain was on their right.

Jian chuckled. “You’ll see soon enough.”

I hate you a little right now.”

Jian nodded. “It’ll get worse before it gets better.”

What?” Get worse? What could be worse than skiing? “It’s a date, right?”

Of course.”

Aren’t dates supposed to be… pleasant?”

Jian pursed his lips. “I don’t know if pleasant is the word I’m going for today.”

Victor took a deep breath but kept his mouth shut. Jian turned in on a small gravel road and followed it for a couple of minutes before he parked in a three-car wide parking lot that had been cleared of snow. Pine trees surrounded them and silence descended in the pickup.

Where are we?”

Jian gave him a serious look. “In Snowmelt.” He opened his door, walked around the pickup, and grabbed a bag from the back.

Victor followed, his heart thudding more rapidly than it should on a Saturday morning. A few seconds later, Jian led him out on a jetty where a man dressed in thick winter clothing waited for them. He grinned and shook Jian’s hand.

Jian?” Victor stared at the rectangular hole in the ice of the lake. “Jian, what are we doing here?”

The man chuckled, and Jian grimaced. “We’re bathing.”

Oh, hell no!”

We are, Vic.”

Victor stared at him. Had he lost his mind? He must have, because he was nodding at Victor. Sawed up holes in the ice did not go with bathing. Bathing in a lake wasn’t something sane people did in December.

They say it’s healthy for you.”

They are idiots!”

Jian chuckled. “I agree, but you always seem to care about what they say.” It wasn’t true, Jian was far more concerned about what people thought of them than he was.

Come on, babe. It’s five minutes of your life, and you can curse me all the way back home.”

Victor took a deep breath, staring into Jian’s dark eyes. “I hate you.”

I love you.”

Victor sighed and shook his head, though the words warmed his heart. “I fear for my balls.”

Jian nodded. “It’s a valid fear.”

The man cleared his throat. “Undress and stand on the jetty for a few seconds before you go in. It’ll lessen the pain… some.”

Some?” Victor made wide eyes at him.

The higher the temperature difference, the greater the shock for the body.”

Of course.” He glared at Jian. This was not a date. He didn’t care what Jian called it, but a date it was not.

Jian pulled his sweater over his head, folding and putting it on a wooden bench at the end of the jetty. He kicked off his shoes and removed his sweats and socks. “Come on, Vic.” There was a challenge in his eyes, and Victor growled. He toed off his shoes, took off the sweater, and pulled down his sweats.

They stood on the jetty in their underwear gazing out over the ice and the forest surrounding the lake.

It’s about five feet deep so you should be able to stand on the ground without a problem.”

Victor half-turned. “We’re to jump in?”

Not head first.”

Victor rolled his eyes. Who jumped headfirst into five feet deep water?

Hold onto the edge of the hole. Your legs are likely to go numb, and you may momentarily experience loss of muscle control. The first two minutes are mostly about breathing through it. Talking to each other is a good distraction.”

Victor glared at Jian. “Oh, this sounds lovely.”

Jian nodded and took his hand. “Ready?”

No.” But they climbed down the ladder onto the ice. Victor’s feet burned, his toes turned red. “Fuck, it’s cold.”

Jian dipped a heel in the water and blew out a shuddering breath. “Okay, this might not have been my best idea.”

You don’t say?” Victor touched the underside of his right foot to the surface and shivered. He let go of Jian’s hand and looked at the black water. A million reasons why he should turn around swirled in his head, but he bent down, touched his hand to the ice, and slid his feet into the water.

The shock of the ice against his ass as he sat and the cold of the water engulfing his lower legs had him whimpering. Before Jian got his feet into the water, Victor slid over the edge.

The sound leaving him wasn’t one he’d ever produced before—it reminded him of a bellowing moose. Jian laughed hard, slid over the edge into the water, and all air whooshed out of him.

All Victor could process was the pain. He couldn’t say where it hurt the most or why, but it hurt. Air didn’t fit in his lungs anymore.

Jian made another sound, then he started to laugh—choppy and a bit strangled. “This is fun.”

Very. Remind me to pay you back.”

I did it for you.” Jian blew out another shuddering breath. “It’s good for circulation and prevents inflammation.” He panted. “And it’s said to help against depression.”

I’m not depressed.” He blew out a breath, the pain was still there but more endurable. And hadn’t he been a little depressed? Sad, worried about their future, disappointed in how things had turned out, but he wasn’t depressed. Was he?

Now we certainly won’t be.” The grimace might have been an attempt at a smile, but Victor wouldn’t call it one.

Jian reached for his hand and intertwined their fingers. “It’s beautiful.”

The snow glistened in the morning sun, their breaths formed clouds around them, and the trees around the lake were frost-dusted.

It was beautiful.

You can come up now.” The man on the jetty shattered the calm. “Let me know if you need help.”

Victor met Jian’s gaze before putting his palms on the ice and pushing himself up out of the water. The air caressing him was warm, his feet burned, and a sense of freedom filled his chest. Filling his lungs with air made him light enough to fly. “This is amazing.”

He looked at Jian and grinned. The air smelled of forest and winter cold, the tranquility filled his mind, and, for a moment, he believed he was the only person on Earth.

Come up here and get dressed. You shouldn’t be exposed to the cold for too long.” The man gestured at the bag Jian had brought, and Victor was annoyed by the intrusion in his ode to life.

Jian kissed his cheek and went before him up the ladder. By the time Victor reached the jetty, Jian was holding out a thick sweater to him. Victor slipped it on, groaning as the fabric caressed his skin. Next, a pair of dry trunks followed. Victor glanced at the man who had walked off the jetty and wasn’t looking in their direction, before pulling off the wet ones.

My junk is forever traumatized.”

Jian huffed and swayed a little as he pushed his foot through his sweats. “I’m sure it will be fine with the right aftercare.”

Maybe.” Victor rolled his shoulders and gazed out over the lake. His feet were numb in his shoes, but he was filled with energy. “This is great.”

Jian gave him a soft look and nodded.

Back in the car, Jian reached behind Victor’s seat and pulled out a thermos.

Coffee?”

Hot chocolate.” He poured them a cup each, and Victor moaned as the sweet flavor exploded on his tongue.

Cover Reveal | Winter Wonderland

We have a cover!!! On November 18th there will be a box set with four contemporary holiday stories. It’s called Winter Wonderland and will hopefully give you some Christmas cheer. 

The stories are Turning Wood, 24 Dates, The Setup, and Once in a Snowstorm. They’re available in the shops on their own, but now you can grab them together for a reduced price 😊 

I don’t have any links yet, but it doesn’t matter. Today, we’re only gazing upon the cover 😆 one thing at a time, right? 

Winter Wonderland

winterwonderlandboxset

Winter Wonderland is a set of four contemporary small-town romances taking place during the most magical time of the year. Some of our characters do their best to escape the hustle and bustle of Christmas, others long for someone to share it with. Guaranteed is that things don’t go as planned. They never do when the snow is coming down hard and the presents are piling up under the tree. 

Contains the stories: 

Turning Wood: Otho Newcomer moved to the small village of Snowmelt to mend his broken heart in solitude. Mason Dager’s ex cleared out his bank account, sold his car and got him thrown out of his apartment. And he has no one to blame but himself. When Mason makes yet another stupid decision, Otho comes to the rescue, throwing the two men together during the most magical time of the year. 

24 Dates: When Victor Hill bought a house with his boyfriend, Jian Kouri it was a dream come true. Now, two years later, instead of living their happily ever after, they hardly see the other awake, and Victor fears he and Jian have already drifted too far apart. The holiday season is a time for hope, but when Victor comes home to find Jian with a plan to woo him for Christmas, is it too little, too late? 

The Setup: Dax doesn’t want to see anyone and isn’t pleased when a stranger turns in on his driveway, claiming he’s there for a date. Ellis risked his neck driving in the snow to meet his friend for a double date, but when Dax says he’s never agreed to a date, they realize they’ve been played. Since there’s a snowstorm, Dax invites Ellis to stay the night, but how to get their revenge for the setup?   

Once in a Snowstorm: Daring a snowstorm might not be the smartest thing Aiden Evans has done, but with only a few days to Christmas, he doesn’t want to be alone. Tristan Gardner is looking forward to a quiet night, but instead, he has to save an idiot from freezing to death in his forest. Aiden is going crazy from Tristan’s attitude, but will a steamy night with the surly lumberjack change his mind about leaving? 

Spotlight Post | Driving in Circles by Frances Fox

Frances Fox has another book out! The third in the Reluctant Rockstar series, and below you can read an excerpt, so keep reading!


Release Date: 5th September 2023

Driving in Circles is book three in the stand-alone Reluctant Rockstar spicy MM romance universe.

An oblivious roadie and a lighting designer with self-confidence issues…will they ever manage to communicate what they want?

Driving in Circles roadie

All Dave wants is a low-stress job driving gig equipment around, loading and unloading, rinse and repeat. Then he can go home and spend what time he can with his kids, listen to music and gardening podcasts and dream about the life he’s never had. He’s known Richie for years and he’s never thought of him as more than a mate. With two ex-wives behind him, he’s never thought of himself as anything other than straight. It’s a shock when he suddenly realises he has a massive crush on a guy.

It’s more than a shock for Richie when Dave turns up at a Heggarty’s Bow gig with an empty truck instead of a van full of kit, it’s possibly career-ending. There’s no time for Richie’s usual low-key flirtation with the oblivious Dave whilst they’re sorting out how to rig the show, but there should be plenty of time to catch up with each other properly on the drive back to London. It’s not Dave’s fault the steering on the van blows out on the way home.

Thrown together overnight in a hotel, will Dave confide his attraction to Richie? Or will Richie snap first and make a move? Surely all the time they’ve spent in the van driving around the country means they’ve had plenty of time to talk. Or does it?

Buy the book: Amazon US : Amazon UK : Everywhere Else : Add to Goodreads

Driving in Circles

Driving in Circles Chapter One: Dave

It was getting light when Dave pulled the truck into the car park behind the concert hall. He’d picked up the van and left London at nine last night and he was tired, irritable, and hated the A1—standard reaction to that sort of drive. All he had to do now was get the kit tipped into the right places and he could get his head down for until it was time to load it all up again and take it back down south.

He grumbled under his breath as he slid down out of the cab onto the ground where he stretched out his stiff back. Why the hell they couldn’t have hired it from somewhere closer—Middlesborough was an actual city with actual AV hire companies, despite what this London-centric lot thought—he didn’t know. Although he supposed he wouldn’t be on the gig then, so he should probably shut up and appreciate he’d got the job rather than moaning.

They had had no obligation to ask for him to drive for them specifically, they could have simply left it to Polychromatic to put whoever was next on the rota on the job. He’d been picking up quite a lot of work courtesy of Heggarty’s Bow over the last few months. They were a good crowd to work for, professional, polite, and didn’t treat him like dog shit like some of the big names he’d worked with.

His neck was killing him. He linked his hands behind his back and stretched, twisting from side to side. He should have taken a longer break at Sheffield, but he’d wanted to crack on and get here so he could get a good few hours in a proper bed under his belt during the day, before it was time to Skype with the kids.

He looked round for the rest of the crew—they should be here by now—and saw the band’s lampy, Richie, coming toward him out of the big doors that let into the back of the venue. His heart lifted and he smiled as Richie raised his hand in greeting and Dave waved back. “Hi, Richie. How’s it going?”

“All the better now you’re here,” Richie said, shifting his bottle of water to his left hand and shaking Dave’s outstretched palm. His hand was warm and Dave could feel the calluses and little scars he always seemed to have from working with the hot lights. “Let’s get it tipped. Nick’s gone for bacon butties at the van up the road. Marcus is on his way out, he just had to speak to the venue guy.”

He’d been working closely with Richie for a few months now, since they both became regulars on the Heggarty’s Bow tour. He was a good mate. Dave always looked forward to working with him, even if there was no time to have a break and go and get something to eat or have a drink and a proper catch-up together like they’d begun to make a habit of.

“Great,” Dave said, going round to the back and switching on the tail-lift. “Let’s get going.” He locked the tail-lift into place and brought it down to a couple of feet off the ground; then he stepped up onto it and unlocked the padlock securing the roller door. “Here we go,” he said, shoving it upward.

Then he stopped dead, staring inside.

The van was empty.

“What the fuck?” said Richie, looking into the back of the van. “Dave! Where’s the kit?”

Dave put his hands on his hips and stood looking at all the empty space in front of him. He opened and shut his mouth a few times, but words wouldn’t come.

It was empty. There was no kit there at all. He blinked, shut his eyes for a second or two, and opened them again. Nope. It was still empty.

“Dave,” Richie said again. “What’s going on? Where’s the gear?”

“I…” All Dave could hear was a whirring noise in his ears. “It’s not here,” he said.

“No,” said Richie. “I can see it’s not here. Where the fuck is it?” He had jumped up on the tail next to Dave and was peering into the van as if he looked hard enough, an invisibility cloak might rise up and reveal all their equipment. “Is this a joke?” he said. “Have you really driven all this way with an empty van?”

He had turned towards Dave and was waving his arms around. He’d always seemed a placid kind of bloke, but Dave supposed this was probably enough to make anyone agitated. He was sure when he stopped being in shock, he was going to be a bit agitated himself.

He rubbed his hands over his face and pulled himself together. “It’s the right van,” he said. “The picking list was on the seat. All ticked off.”

“You didn’t check it,” Richie said. It wasn’t a question. Dave shook his head. “Bloody hell! Didn’t you think it was driving light?!” Richie asked him, incredulous.

Dave shook his head again. “No,” he said. “This one always drives like a donkey. It’s almost like it’s got no power steering at all.”

He swallowed and felt his heartrate accelerating. “Fuck,” he said again, shoving his hands into his hair. “Cock! Bollocks! What the fuck are we going to do? Even if they send someone with another van, it won’t get here till midday. There won’t be enough time to rig.”

Dave was going to lose his job over this, he could see it coming. He felt faint at the thought of it.

“Who was supposed to load it?” Richie asked him, slightly more calmly.

Dave frowned. “Ron, I think,” he said. “He signed off the sheet, anyway. Hang on.” He went round to the cab and reached across to the middle seat for the clipboard with the pick list. There it was in black and white—the pick list, all ticked off, and Ron’s scrawl of a signature on the bottom line.

“I’ll ring him,” he said. He hit speed-dial for the office, but there was no reply. It was probably still too early, so he rang Ron’s mobile instead.

He picked up immediately, his cockney-geezer accent grating in its cheerfulness in Dave’s ear. “Hello mate, all right? Did you get off okay?”

“Ron,” Dave said as calmly as he could. “I got off all right. But there’s no kit on the van.”

There was a pause.

“What?” Ron said, voice still cheerful, although it sounded slightly forced now. “You didn’t load it? I left you the pick list!”

“Yeah. You left me the pick list, ticked off and signed to say you’d done it. So…”

“Oh.” Ron’s voice was still quite upbeat. He wasn’t grasping the magnitude of the disaster. “Well mate, you should have checked it before you drove off! That’s a bit of a cock up!”

Oh. He was grasping the magnitude of the disaster. Only…he was going to hang Dave out to dry for it.

“Why did you sign off on the list if the kit hadn’t been pulled?” Dave said, and then immediately followed that with, “Never mind, forget that, it doesn’t matter now. Where’s the kit? We’ve got twelve hours to rig and no equipment. We had their drums as well, from the Wigan gig last week. What can you do?”

“I can’t do anyfink, mate,” Ron said, cheerfulness still grating. “I’m in Malaga. Flew out at midnight. You’ll have to ring Graham and get him to sort it out.”

Graham was the boss of Polychromatic. He was a decent bloke, but he didn’t like surprises. He wasn’t going to be happy to hear from Dave at all.

“Right,” Dave said. “Thanks, then.” He added, somewhat sarcastically, “Have a good holiday.”

“Yeah,” Ron said. “I will! Good luck getting it sorted!”

And he hung up.

Dave took the phone away from his ear and stared at it for a few moments.

“Ron?” Ritchie said.

“Yeah.”

“No help?”

“Nope.”

Dave hit Graham’s hot-key and raised the phone to his ears, shutting his eyes.

Buy the book: Amazon US : Amazon UK : Everywhere Else : Add to Goodreads

Driving in Circles banner

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Frances FoxFrances Fox writes contemporary MM romance. The Rockstar series is a new eight-book series of novellas following the musicians, stage-crew and friends of Heggarty’s Bow. If you like to read spicy MM stories about vulnerable guys looking for love, I’ll have you covered. I also writes lower-heat queer stories, mostly historical romantasy, as A. L. Lester.

Website: https://francesfoxbooks.co.uk

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/francesfoxbooks

Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/profile/frances-fox-e6fb0220-5282-4101-8467-cb11684c9176

Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0C4SY2W4S

Newsletter: https://subscribepage.io/He2jKq