Guest Post | Spells and Sensibility by K.L. Noone and K.S. Murphy

Guest-Post

K.L. Noone is back! Yay. Welcome 😊


Hello again—K.L. Noone popping in to chat about a new release, co-authored with the marvelous K.S. Murphy! And thank you to the awesome Ofelia for letting me drop in! It’s always a pleasure.

Spells and Sensibility is the first of our Regency magicians trilogy—m/m historical fantasy romance, in which a former spy needs the help of the new head librarian at the Royal College of Wizardry to lift a curse, and there are complicated puzzles and mysteries to solve, and bibliomancy alongside earth-power, and a threat to England’s magic, and tea and scones, and first kisses under starlight…

This trilogy owes a great deal of inspiration to Patricia C. Wrede, in particular her delightful Mairelon the Magician / Magician’s Ward duology as well as her co-authored Kate and Cecelia series (Sorcery and Cecelia, The Grand Tour, The Mislaid Magician), written with Caroline Stevermer. But there’re tons of other little sneaky references and influences, sometimes more or less in disguise—from Aleister Crowley to the Minerva Press, from John Constantine to Suzanne Akbari, from Susanna Clarke to Jane Austen, and more! We hope you have as much fun exploring this world as we did writing it—and we’ll see you soon for book two!

Buy Links:

JMS Books :: Amazon

Author Bios: 

K.L. Noone teaches college students about superheroes and Shakespeare by day, and writes romance – frequently paranormal or with fantasy elements, usually LGBTQ, and always with happy endings – when not grading papers or researching medieval outlaw life. She is currently the servant of a large black cat named Merlyn, who demands treats on a regular basis.

K.S. Murphy was born and raised in New York with their rather large Irish/Italian family always encouraging them to go for their dreams. Over the past decade+, they’ve been a cook, a professional cleaner, a teacher, a nurse, a chauffeur, a photographer, and a librarian for their two mini-humans. One of their favorite things about writing is creating a world that readers will want to see and touch and know more about. In their spare time, they enjoy superheroes, epic space adventures, magical worlds, happily ever afters, and thunderstorms.

Blurb:

spellsandsensibilityTheodore Burnett has never been a hero. He prefers comfort to combat-spells, and jam-slathered scones to muddy boots. Fortunately, as the youngest-ever head librarian at the Royal College of Wizardry, Theo can spend his days with books and bibliomancy in place of battle-magic or politics — and in any case Napoleon’s been defeated and the war’s been won.

But now there’s a wounded captain of the Magicians’ Corps in Theo’s library. And he needs Theo’s help. And Theo can never resist a mystery, especially when that mystery’s tall and tempting and handsome.

Captain Henry Tourmaline, formerly of His Majesty’s Army and the Magicians’ Corps, requires assistance. He’s returned to London with scars on his body, soul, and heart — war, after all, will do that to anyone. But one of those scars refuses to heal, a curse that’s slowly draining Henry’s magic and eventually his life. The physicians have no answers, so Henry turns to the College’s books … and the College’s attractive head librarian. But the curse is unpredictable, and the last thing Henry wants is to drag someone else into the line of fire, particularly someone as kind and innocent and brilliant as Theo.

Theo wants to save Henry. Henry wants to keep Theo safe. Together, perhaps they can do both … while uncovering a perilous secret behind a spell, a deadly puzzle in the archives, and their own heart’s desires.

Excerpt: 

Henry had remained sitting right where Theo had left him, eyes open but visibly not-asleep in the manner of someone too tired to drop off. He was watching — or gazing vaguely into — the fire, but turned fast when the door closed. A soldier, Theo thought again. Someone who’d seen battlefields.

 He said, “Tea, and bread and cheese, and some slightly elderly apples? Or not, if you’re not hungry. If not, I’ll eat the lot, never fear.”

Henry focused on him more sharply. Murmured, “You would say that …”

“About eating? Guilty, I’m afraid. I have an unfortunate weakness for iced cakes and scones with clotted cream, which is why I’ve not got any at the moment, in fact.”

“No,” Henry said. “Not that. You want me to feel comfortable.”

“You are my guest.” Theo settled into the softest chair, the large one with brocade cushions that invited his shortness to curl up in a terribly unprofessional manner. He would’ve done, if he’d been alone; he did not, just now. “Here you are. Drink this. I shall just toast some cheese, and you may join me or not. Were you looking for something specific in the College’s most bone-dry historical survey? I am your librarian, you realize, and I might be of assistance.”

 “Professional curiosity?” Henry took a sip. His hand did not shake, but Theo had the sense that this was only because iron-clad self-possession refused to permit it. “I hadn’t planned to inconvenience you any further. I did spend the requisite endless sleepless hours in the library while finishing my final apprentice’s showcase piece, under Honoria Merrill, if she’s still here and terrifying undergraduates. I can manage research.”

 “Professor Merrill is indeed still here. I quite liked her classes.” Theo stabbed bread with a toasting fork. Pointedly. “She appreciates tidy spellwork.” Honoria Merrill, silver-haired and straight-backed despite her age, refused to supervise more than one or two final apprentice’s projects each year, claiming she had neither the time nor the inclination to indulge anyone not gifted, dedicated, and disciplined. Henry, the opposite of neat and tidy, must have been impressive.

 Theo himself, of course, had already been good friends with Sir Roderick. He had, under that kindly grey-whiskered supervision, taken on a book-protection spell that’d extended the library’s fireproofing spells to each individual volume, even when checked out.

 He wondered what Henry had done to demonstrate sufficient magical comprehension; that would’ve been before a summons to war, wouldn’t it? “And I am quite good at my job. I’d like to help.”

 Henry drank more tea, and gazed at him across the teacup. “This is excellent. Not just mint, but a hint of blue vervain?”

 “Thank you, and yes, it is. Are you avoiding my offer?”

 “I was thinking that we must have just missed each other at school. I’d’ve remembered you.”

 “Oh, no, you wouldn’t. I’m hardly memorable.” Theo retrieved toast, shining gold and molten with cheddar; slid it onto a plate, began another. “Good at research and history and retrieval spells, but sheer rubbish at College sport, competitive Fool’s Football, enhanced underwater rowing, and so on. I expect you were a splendid magical submersible oarsman or something of the type. I think you’re right, though, and you’d’ve been a few years ahead of me.”

 “Submersible Rowing Captain,” Henry said. “Three years running. I grew up near a lake. Of course you’re memorable. And talented, if Sir Roderick left you the library. I didn’t mean any insult.”

 “None taken. I know I’m young.” He casually picked up a slice of toast, nibbled, watched Henry unconsciously do the same: mirroring the motion. “But I’ve always been good at finding things. Solving puzzles. Sorting out tangles. I enjoy that.”

 He also sliced an apple — getting softer, a late-autumn sort of apple, here at the edge of December — and idly held out a piece. Henry took it, apparently without thinking about it, and ate it, and then looked surprised.

 “Where were you staying,” Theo inquired, “before this? If you don’t mind me asking. Should we send a message along?”

 “Honestly?” Henry sighed. Then coughed. And pretended he hadn’t, drinking tea. “A week or two in hospital, a week or two at Apsley House … I hadn’t planned it out much past that. I’d hoped — I had thought I’d be going home.”

 But you didn’t, Theo noted but didn’t say aloud. You didn’t go home. And you’ve apparently stayed with the Duke of Wellington, briefly or not. You weren’t any sort of common soldier, and you weren’t common even among the Magicians’ Corps; aide de camp, you said. Personally reporting to the commander. But that can mean anything he needed you to do.

Anything, indeed. In war. In France, among mud and rain and army-trodden paths. And given what had happened to the Corps, given the blood and the pain and the losses — before the treaties, before they’d been formally disbanded …

He said, “Well, you’re welcome to stay. I won’t ask for details if you’d rather not discuss it, but — as far as having been in hospital, and recovering, as you’ve said — is there anything I might do to make you more comfortable?”

Henry, who’d eaten a second slice of apple in the meantime, hesitated. “If you’re concerned I might light your bed on fire if startled –”

“Hardly. I’d never hold an accident against you. And I’m not convinced you can light more than a candle, at the moment.” Theo paused. Regretted his own words. “That’s part of it, isn’t it? What’s missing. My apologies.”

Henry lowered his teacup without taking a sip. Cradled warmth in hands. Gazed down for a moment, as if mint and steam and water might lend him strength.

 When he looked up his smile was wry, raw, laid bare and resigned to surrender, not without some humor. “You did say you were good at puzzles.”

“Should I not have guessed? And you were looking into the origins and sources of English magic. Looking for ways to restore it, perhaps?”

 Henry looked as if he wanted to draw a deep breath, bracing himself, but perhaps he couldn’t, with that cough. He met Theo’s eyes as if preparing for some sort of judgment, a flogging or a court-martial or another doom. “I thought I might find something to help.”

Giveaway | February

Book Giveaway

It’s giveaway time! Last year I did book birthdays, and then last month, we didn’t have a giveaway because I didn’t know what to do. I thought about doing giveaways with books in alphabetical order or according to season or whatever, but nothing felt right.

Then I thought, why not do something with Holly. I have this split personality that I more often than not just mash together as one – I don’t have the brain capacity to pretend to be two different persons LOL.

Since Holly had one release a month last year, I thought I’d do a giveaway where I take Holly’s 2021 release of the month and match it with something similar from my backlist. It won’t be perfect matches, but similar themes, at least.

Since it now is February, Holly had a Valentine’s Day story – Be Still, My Heart. I don’t have a Valentine’s story, but in Be Still, My Heart we have Dimitri who suffers from PTSD. At first, I thought I’d match that with Once in May since John also has PTSD, but I changed my mind. I’m going with #Pictabook instead.

Jules in #Pictabook doesn’t have PTSD but he has some anxiety issues, and there is a book theme in both stories, so I thought they’d go well together.

If you want to join the draw, hop on over to kingsumo and type in your email address. You’re not subscribing to anything and make sure you use an address you check because it’s the one I’ll contact you on if you’re the winner.

Join the giveaway!

The Books

bestillmyheart

Four years ago, Dimitri Petrov had his leg blown off by a landmine while in military service. Suffering from PTSD, he doesn’t do crowds, and he doesn’t do people. If he had his way, he’d never leave his house at all. Dimitri’s sister, Irina, runs a dating agency, and despite that it would be better for business if they had a pretty woman working the front desk, Irina insists Dimitri’s the man for the job.

In a whirlwind of pink shirts, flapping hands, and outrageous flirting enters Elian Hubert. Elian needs a date. Invited to speak on love through time in fiction at a Valentine dinner, there is no way he’s showing up alone. When Dimitri tells him The Single Pursuit is unable to help on such short notice, Elian suggests Dimitri be his date.

Dimitri doesn’t do dates, and he doesn’t do dinners, but Elian’s made him happier in the last few minutes than anyone’s been able to do in years. He might not do Valentine’s, and he might not do gatherings, but maybe he can do Elian … a favor and accompany him to his presentation? If things go too badly, he can always hide behind a curtain and pretend he’s somewhere else.

20,843 words

Read an excerpt

pictabook (small)

Jules Rose leads a quiet life working as a librarian. He’s happy to spend his spare time reading books and talking to his homicidal cat. What more could he wish for? But when his cozy Friday night is shattered by a friend request on his book community app, politeness gives him little choice but to accept. Jules doesn’t want to talk to anyone, but he can’t be rude. Besides, if he had to talk about something, books is the topic he’d pick.

Phoenix Ford is dyslexic and avoids everything that has to do with the written word, but when the colleague he’s trying to impress calls him stupid, he decides to convince the other man, he’s mistaken. All he needs is the right book to make him look smart, a perfect balance between intelligent and short. And who better to ask for help than a guy who loves books so much, he labeled one boner-worthy on a book app?

When Jules finds out Phoenix never has read a book from start to finish, he’s on a mission. He will find the right book, the book that will make Phoenix fall in love — with reading. Phoenix’s plan might have been to listen to the book Jules picked for him to impress his colleague, but that was before he got to know him. Talking about books is a sure way to Jules’ heart, but is it enough for him to agree to go on a date?

36,559 words

Read an excerpt

Now on Kindle Unlimited

Looking for some weekend reading?? KU? Yay? Nay? Since I’m in Sweden I can’t get Kindle Unlimited, I can’t even see which books are in KU unless I go incognito, but I figured some of you might be on there.

My lovely publisher has fixed it so I now have 16 books that you can read through KU. They’re available wide too, so all of us not on KU can enjoy them too should we want to. I’ll list them below, and you can check them out.

black bird

Paranormal Gay Romance

58,124 words

Fated Mates, hurt-comfort, interspecies, abduction.

Amazon

ninestones

Paranormal Gay Romance

24,139 words

Fated Mates, hurt-comfort, interspecies, men with pets

Amazon

 

Pine Tree Mary

Paranormal Gay Romance

28,907 words

Hurt-comfort, interspecies, mythology

Amazon

bangerchallenge

Contemporary Gay Romance

31,122 words

Road Trip, Hurt-Comfort, Cop, Coming out

Amazon

Crazy Joe

Contemporary Gay Romance

17,001 words

Hurt-Comfort, Past Bullying, Second Chance

Amazon

quinnyfocus

Contemporary Gay Romance

11,433 words

Mistaken Identity, Social Distancing, Humorous

Amazon

souleater

Gay Paranormal Romance

51,577 words

Fated Mates, Enemies to Lovers, Interspecies, Mystery

Amazon

elevator pitch

Gay Paranormal Romance

11,197 words

Interspecies, Claustrophobia, Stuck in an Elevator

Amazon

 

Jaeger's Lost & Found

Gay Paranormal Romance

28,641 words

Interspecies, Anxiety, Dystopian

Amazon

Worth His Salt

Gay Paranormal Romance

12,812 words

Ghost, witch, tattoos

Amazon

 

cuposugar

Gay Paranormal Romance

3,993 words

Fater Mates, Interspecies

Amazon

when skies are gray

Contemporary Gay Romance

16,356 words

Age Gap, Military, Reunited

Amazon

It Doesn't Translate

Gay Sci-Fi Romance

25,883 words

Fated Mates, Interspecies, Aliens

Amazon

Eight Feet of Magic

Gay Steampunk Romance

18,797 words

Christmas, Mythology, Hurt-Comfort

Amazon

24dates

Gay Contemporary Romance

38,008 words

Christmas, Established Couple

Amazon

turning wood

Contemporary Gay Romance

13,893 words

Christmas, Hurt-Comfort, Small Town Romance

Amazon