Cover Reveal | The Snowflake

Cover-Reveal

We’re all like snowflakes—unique and one of a kind.

Time for another cover reveal! Not many books left to re-publish now, I’m afraid. Today we have The Snowflake. I love this. It’s not your ordinary romance. The main character, Theophile Lekas, tends to kill people, he’s a stalker, and talks to his cat – who responds. But… few books have been as fun to write as this one. 

It was first published in Buried Desires 3 together with Amy Spector and Neptune Flowers back in 2018. 

Theophile is an ice sculptor who wants to blow the world away with his talent, but mostly he gets to do swans for weddings and other get-togethers which he hates. But then there is Dylan Mincer – Theo’s muse and the man he’s been stalking for the last seventeen years.  

Theo loves Dylan – who says murderers can’t fall in love? – and he’ll do anything to make Dylan happy. To prove it he’s gonna make the best sculpture in the history of mankind.  

Ready to see the cover? 

 

thesnowflake

Blurb:

Nothing inspires art like love. 
 
Theophile Lekas has spent the last seventeen years trying to build a name for himself as an ice sculptor. Ice is his world, but he lives for Dylan Mincer. 
 
But loving from afar isn’t enough, and if Theo wants to win Dylan’s heart, he’ll need to sweep him off his feet. And what better way to do it than with a sculpture that will leave Dylan breathless and the world in no doubt of Theo’s genius? 
 
After an argument leads to murder, Theo is hit with true inspiration. And he has the perfect block to begin his project. For Dylan, Theo will create his masterpiece. And it will be as unique as a snowflake. 
 
Great art requires the perfect muse. 

Release Day | Silent Woods

Release-Day

It’s release day! Silent Woods is out today, and it’s one of the first stories I wrote – or not wrote, you know how it is with writers, we have written for years before we first publish something. It was one of the first stories I ever published.

In Sweden (maybe all of Scandinavia) we have this myth of a male water nymph called Näcken, or The Neck. He’s this lovely, lonely creature – though in some old text he’s hideous – who appears in lakes and rivers, playing the violin. When he plays, people walk into the water and drown themselves or they dance until they die, unable to stop.

If you give The Neck a gift – booze, snuff, blood, or a dead black cat – you can bargain with him. He’ll not only spare your life, but he’ll also teach you how to play the violin.

Silent Woods is about an established couple with children who goes camping. It’s all very Swedish, we’re camping/tenting people. We love being in the woods… or many of us do LOL
When one of the children goes missing, weird things start to happen.

Excerpt:

Daniel.”

I jerked up into a sitting position, absolutely certain we were surrounded by wild boars. It took a while for my brain to take in the forms of our sleeping children next to me, and the cold light of dawn.

Yeah?” My voice was nothing more than a croak.

I’m gonna run up to the centre, shouldn’t take long, but do you know how to start the mini stove if the kids wake up?”

Erm…I think so…but do I have to cook anything for breakfast?”

Yeah. It’s oatmeal porridge mixed with bilberry powder.”

I scrunched my nose in dismay, and Anders chuckled softly.

It’s good for you.”

It’s disgusting.”

Nah. Everything tastes good when you’re hungry, and you’re gonna need it.”

I sighed, thinking about the hike he had planned for us today. Anders kissed my forehead.

Get some more sleep if they don’t wake up when I leave, okay? The weather isn’t as nice today. It’s almost dark so I thought it was earlier than it is, but it’s already a quarter past six.”

Already, I scoffed internally. It had been one of the longest nights of my life. My body ached, my muscles were stiff, and I had grit the size of walnuts in my eyes. I did not fit in this tent—no matter what Anders said about quality. It might be fine if you are five-eight like he is, but I’m six-three. Both my feet and my head touched the canvas without me even being stretched out. Normally I fell asleep in Ander’s arms and woke up sprawled over the bed with at least one arm above my head, but that was impossible here. And the canvas had a damp feel to it, as if condensation had formed during the night—it wouldn’t surprise me if it had, since it had been like we were sleeping in a sauna at one point.

I think I’ve had enough of this for one night.” I glared at him. My body screamed in protest as I tried to move. He watched me with no small amount of amusement in his eyes—cheeky bastard. “You can show me how to light the stove, I wouldn’t want to be responsible for burning down the entire forest.”

We sneaked out of the tent, miraculously succeeding in not disturbing the children. The morning was chilly—far more so than they had been recently—or maybe I was imagining. The cloudy sky gave the woods an almost unearthly glow. Where the tree trunks had looked warm yesterday, they now look cold and grey. I shivered as the niggling feeling of wrongness grew stronger.

The wet spider webs and the light mist that could be seen between the trees should’ve made a beautiful picture, but the atmosphere in glade was nothing like the day before. It was closed off, as if someone had put a giant glass bubble over us. The woods were silent, no rustling winds, and no tweeting birds. The eerie stillness surrounding us was oppressive. I couldn’t help but whisper as I turned to Anders. “Is it always this quiet in the mornings?”

Anders frowned. “I’m sure the birds will start to sing as soon as I make my way out of here.” His uncertainty did not ease the wrongness I sensed. “Probably just means that there isn’t anything close by to alert them.”

I didn’t buy it. Birds sang in the morning. And I could tell he only said it to comfort me—his gaze kept searching the tree line, and he had a little crease between his brows. He lit the mini stove, gave me what I’m sure was supposed to be a reassuring smile, and headed out of the campsite.

I couldn’t shake the unnerving feeling, and it only grew more intense the longer Anders was away. It wouldn’t take him more than twenty minutes or so to cover the distance. He was a practised runner, and this little round was nothing compared to what he normally ran in the mornings. Still, I found no comfort in that. I tried to distract myself by preparing breakfast on the stove.

Blurb:

silentwoodsDo you believe in myths and ancient creatures? 
 
Daniel has never understood the need to leave the city, so when his husband suggests a camping trip for their holiday, he agrees with reluctance. Even before they step out of the car, trepidation crawls over Daniel. Something is wrong. There is something about the forest that turns his stomach into knots. 
 
He wants nothing more than to return to the safety of their home, and when their five-year-old son goes missing his fears turn into full-blown panic. What awaits them in the depths of the forest is far more sinister than anything Daniel ever could have imagined. With a missing child, it’s a race against time. Will they be able to find their son before it’s too late? 

Buy links:

Paranormal M/M Romance: 18,772 words

JMS Books :: Amazon :: books2read.com/Silent-Woods

Fridays at Ofelia’s | Reworking Celtic Myths with A.L. Lester

Guest-Post

Today, my dear friend A.L. Lester is here to talk about Celtic myths. Welcome, Ally ❤


Firstly a big thank you to Ofelia, for inviting me visit today! I thought I’d talk a bit about the inspiration for my Reworked Celtic Myth short stories.

Celtic Myths

I live in the UK and although I’m Somerset born-and-bred (that’s a county in the south-west of England and traditionally we are all expected to wear farming smocks, hobnail boots, chew straw and talk with a very rural accent) I have spent quite a bit of time living in more Celtic-rooted Wales, another of the countries that make up the United Kingdom.

Wales is a small, hilly country with a beautiful language, that is full of lovely people, wonderful countryside and lots and lots of fantastic myths. Many of them are to do with the Christian church, many of them are to do with ancient Welsh history. Welsh, Cornish and Brittany in north-western France all have Brittonic languages that are broadly similar. They’re all forms of the Celtic Languages. The areas also share traces of a Celtic Christianity that is separate from the Roman Church that was brought to Britain by St Augustine in the sixth century AD. So there are lots of minor saints that might originally have been pre-Christian deities. In addition, many secular ancient oral tales were written down in The Mabinogion in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries after being handed down for centuries from person to person.

In addition, Scots, Irish and Manx (spoken on the Isle of Man) all share forms of Gaelic and likewise have a deep seam of ancient myths.

For writers looking for inspiration, the stories are rich and plentiful.

But they’ve been there all the time I’ve been alive. Why did I suddenly decide to start writing about them now?

Well. A little while ago during lockdown I started trying to make more professional links online; and so I joined the UK Romantic Novelists’ Association. There are various chapters. The Welsh one is called Cariad, the Welsh for love. And because of my connection to Wales, I was allowed to join their online meetings.

In January, we talked about celebrating St Dwynwen’s Day on the 25th of the month with relevant stories. St Dwynwen is a Welsh saint who over the last few decades has become known as the Welsh St Valentine. I read up on her and found I had a story to tell. Playing Chicken is the first in the series and I had great fun playing with a retelling in a contemporary setting. St Dwynwen’s story is actually a bit random and not in the least romantic—a chap hits on her and she freezes him into a statue before unfreezing him and forgiving him and ends up with a chapel in north Wales with a magical well full of eels. It’s all a bit confusing, so I picked out the interesting bits and wove a story from them.

Before I began writing with Ofelia and Nell Iris in the Online Office in the mornings (horrifically early for me, because 6am Swedish time is 5am UK time), I didn’t really think I had a handle on short stories. But with their encouragement I was confident enough to try and the story came in at just under ten thousand words. Because I had such fun, I thought I’d have another go and this time I picked St Kevin, patron saint of crows. He’s Irish rather than Welsh, but I transplanted him (sorry, Kevin) and gave him a lonely cottage on the Welsh coast instead of a damp cave in the Irish hills. Again St Kevin’s legend is a bit gruesome—he nearly drowns a woman who tries to seduce him, and when he doesn’t, quite, she’s so grateful, or likes him so much, or is into rejection…or who knows?…that she becomes a nun. Again I took the bits I liked out of the legend…the crows!…and made a story, As the Crows Fly.

Then I had to take a couple of months and write an actual full length novel I’d set a date for at the beginning of the year and had been looking forward to for ages (The Fog of War, coming on the 10th of July from JMS Books!). Once I turned that in a couple of weeks ago, though, I began to think about the next myth.

This time I’m going with a tale from The Mabinogion about Brânwen, sister of King Brân of Wales. Her brother marries her off to Matholwch, King of Ireland, but the marriage goes bad for complicated reasons to do with horses, and he banishes her to the kitchens. She tames a starling and sends it with a message to her brother and there are battles and a resurrection cauldron and warriors hiding in flour bags and all sorts. I knew I wanted to write about the starling, but to begin with I was trying to hitch him up with Brân. And then I realise that it would be a better story if it centred the Brânwen character, who is very much an object to be moved around in the original story and is very much not so in my own version.

I’ve also cut out the battles and the resurrection cauldron. Sorry.

Anyway. I don’t have a name for it yet, but if you’re interested in the other two, you can find a bit about them on my website. I’ll be posting buy-links to the starling story there as soon as I have a cover sorted. I’m really enjoying having a contemporary side-line to my usual historical stories and I can see myself adding to them as and when I have the time!

Queer short stories

About A. L. Lester

AllyAlly Lester writes queer, paranormal, historical, romantic suspense and lives in the South West of England with Mr AL, two children, Morris the badly behaved dachshund, a terrifying cat, three guineapigs, some hens and the duckettes.

She likes permaculture gardening but doesn’t really have time or energy these days. Not musical, doesn’t much like telly, likes to read. Non-binary. Chronically disabled. Has fibromyalgia and tedious fits.

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