Title: Inked Music
Author: Sean Michael
Release Date: April 9, 2019
Category: BDSM, Erotic Romance
Pages: 193
Cover Artist: L.C. Chase http://www.lcchase.com


Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words
Daydreaming! Reviewing LGBTQIA Books, all formats ! Binge Watching A World of Romance



RATING 5 out of 5 stars
Two men, each with a hidden destiny. Can they defeat a web of deceit and dark magic to ensure their fates intertwine? Bedouin Isra al-Grayjaab’s dreams lead him to Janan, an amnesiac beggar on the street of Qena—one who steals his heart and starts him on a seemingly hopeless quest. With only their wits, Isra’s knowledge of the desert’s secrets, and the aid of a mercurial djinn, they must recover Janan’s past. But neither can predict his true identity or the lengths others will go to see that his mind remains broken and his true power out of his reach. In a sweeping romantic adventure that takes them across the Eastern Desert to the modern streets of Cairo and on to the luxurious Red Sea Coast, Janan and Isra seek a truth that will either bring them into each other’s arms or tear them apart forever.
Each time I read a new story by August Li I am in awe by the author’s talent. I already said this but he is one of my favorite authors and his name has become a guarantee, I don’t even read blurbs anymore, I simply go in fan mode and just need the book in my hands. When I saw the cover of this new release, I was very curious about it. Nomad’s Dream is very different from my usual mm readings, starting with the setting and the main characters. Plus I found this novel a little different from what the author usually writes, it was more sweet and romantic, not too much, just that little bit more that perfectly balanced the magical and mysterious part.
The story is set in the desert for two third’s and I completely lost myself among the bedouins tribes, the camels and the dunes. I was deeply engaged with Janan mystery and the love for Isra. I found everything so real and true although the magical elements and the character of Flicker (I adored him and never doubted of his attachment to Isra).
I have to confess my heart went to Isra since the first pages, I saw his clear soul, his loyalty and devotion to his family and himself. I saw how troubled he was until he finally reached the man that was hunting his dreams. And then my heart ached for Janan, being so lost and poor and later seeing him flourishing beside Isra was very heartwarming.
The author developed a beautiful plot, there is some action, some mystery, and then there are many times where Isra and Janan are alone in the desert that were my preferred moments. He did a so great job I breathed the peace they were living. I fell in love with quite a few secondary characters too, some of them would deserve their own HEA, they were well defined and interesting, all of them so brave and generous.
I feel to recommend Nomad’s Dream, in my opinion the author delivered another amazing success. I felt a sense of loss when I finished the novel but it gave me some serenity I needed.
The cover art by Tiferet Design is well done, I like the colors and it perfectly fits the book.
Sales Links: Dreamspinner Press | Amazon
Book Details:
ebook, 200 pages
Published January 29th 2019 by Dreamspinner Press
Original Title Nomad’s Dream
ISBN 139781644050149
Edition Language English
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
How do I describe this book? It’s romance and adventure, a sprinkling of poetry and wisdom, a generous dash of fantasy and magic, all set upon the primal struggle between good and evil. In short, amazing!
Isra is a Bedouin, a true creature of the desert in a way that transcends time (and initially had me thinking this was a historical book). Granted, this book presents a very romanticized, Western view of the Bedouin culture, but the interaction between Isra and other people, and between Isra and the desert, gave an amazing depth to his character. He knew he was attracted to men, and had resigned himself to being alone and refusing to take a wife, but he wasn’t truly lonely. The desert provided him with all the nurturing he needed.
He had another secret from his clan members, and that was his friend Flicker, an arafrit, a creature of fire and air, who came to Isra from time to time, and with whom he shared all of his deepest thoughts and desires. When Isra started to have recurrent dreams of searching, that eventually culminated in the face of a man, he turned to Flicker for help. Flicker led him to an ancient temple, then disappeared. And Isra found the man he’d been dreaming of – a beggar, a man with no name, no memories. Isra bestowed the name Janan upon him, meaning heart, and took him to his home.
For Isra, taking this man into his home and into his protection felt destined. And despite Janan’s distressing amnesia, he could feel that Janan was a good man. They grew close, and then they fell in love. They would have been content to continue living with the Bedouin, but Janan continually had a feeling of something left undone, some person left behind, and tantalizing but enigmatic glimpses of who he used to be, that would not leave him at peace. He and Isra enlisted Flicker to help them find the secret of Janan’s past and identity, and set off on a quest to recover his memory.
I haven’t read an MM romance in this setting before, and I loved how the dedication was to “a certain Publisher and Chief Development Officer who lamented the lack of sexy sheikh submissions”. I am sure that person is fully satisfied with this submission. Both men are sexy, but more than that, they are truly heroic, although in a quiet, humble way. They came across as authentically muslim, but from an Islam that is quite different from the fundamentalist sects that we in the western world associate with terrorism. The desert itself is almost another character in the book as well, a place of stillness, potential, and abundant life to those who know how to find it. In Isra’s words, life in the desert “granted freedom and, maybe even better, time. Making a living didn’t cost a man’s every waking moment….One could ruminate on the meaning of life and God and fate and love and feel nothing had been wasted.” Even through the violence and danger the men encountered as they found and confronted the person who ripped Janan’s life away, there was still a sense of the vast and eternal desert biding its time until the men returned. My own personal experience of the desert included scorching heat and scorpions, and I am absolutely not a fan, but this book almost made me want to try it again – the writing was just that good. Again, in Isra’s words: “Stories are important. They tether us to the past, to our place in time and the world. They help us understand life and ourselves.”
Overall, highly recommended. This is an author I will be looking for more from!
Cover art by Tiferet Design is perfect for the “sexy sheikh” the author was going for. I pictured both MC’s a little scruffier myself, but this works…
Sales Links: Dreamspinner Press | Amazon
Book details:
ebook, 200 pages
Expected publication: January 29th 2019 by Dreamspinner Press
Original Title Nomad’s Dream
ISBN 139781644050149
Edition Language English
Rating 5 stars out of 5
Temptation lurks around every corner in worlds sometimes dark, sometimes lurid. Giving in is both dangerous and satisfying, though never in the ways one expects. While these enticements offer a vast range of benefits and boons, the cost is a soul and the devil expects his due. Sometimes suave and charming or calculating and cruel, these devils have schemes and desires of their own. They can be creatures to run away from… or toward.
Join the most unique and celebrated authors of LGBT urban fantasy and paranormal fiction for a fast-paced and unpredictable ride, from a city on the other side of reality, to a world suspended in dusk, to a twisted version of the 1960s and 70s.
Meet devils in top hats and waistcoats, a defrocked motorcycle-riding priest, and a genderfluid antihero—among many more. Full of humor, romance, horror, action, intrigue, and magic, these stories have one common element….
They’re one hell of a good time.
5 Stars ~ just 5 stars because even if the ratings sorts of varied up and down ever so slightly in my mind per tale this is an exemplary collection of stories from a group of authors who know their way around the supernatural narrative. Boy howdy, how they delivered. Chilling, humorous, thought provoking, wildly imaginative, and filled with love and loyalty that borders on horror, every tale here is one to be savored. So no ratings from here on out, they are just incredible in their own way.
Infernal Affairs by Jordan L. Hawk
Jordan L. Hawk launches the collection with a tale that’s one of my favorite’s. A demon Ralgath, on his first assignment as a crossroads demon, gets played by a gorgeous mortal, Chess, who screws Ralgath (literally) into giving them a contract for superhero powers so they can go out into the world and fight for good. Ralgath’s boss is not happy with him, and the subsequent funny actions and events lead to Ralgath meeting up with Chase again. This is a rich story, full of laughs, love, adventure, redemption, and heroes. Done with in the wonderful Jordan L. Hawk style, with outstanding plot and characters so well done you wanted more.
Collared by TA Moore
“Sometimes, when you couldn’t change what was going on and you didn’t want to understand it, all you could do was shove it under the bed and make sure your toes didn’t stick out from the covers.”
TA Moore has become an author whose stories I look out for. They twist and turn with the unusual and the edgy. That’s very apparent here with Collared and the relationship between Jack and Meth. It evolves, or better the truth of their relationship is slowly revealed over the course of the story. However, it’s not so evident at the beginning when Jack sets out to track down a missing child. It’s an horrific case, one that grows worse the more details that are gathered. Jack’s background too is shown and the dynamics between Jack, Meth, and the other players becomes more complicated and fascinating.
This story had a way of sending me running off for more of this author immediately because everything was so spot on. The world building, characters, storyline and ending. Even down to the small chilling details that would come in the future. Just amazing. Would that I see more of this world, Jack, and Meth. More cases, more of their haunting and haunted relationship. I would tell you this is a favorite of mine (it is), but that is going to get redundant after a while.
Counterfeit Viscount by Ginn Hale
.The Viscount Archibald is leading a double life. Since he’s soll his soul to Nimble, he becomes Archie and descends into the underbelly of the town to pay his due every three months. This allows him to keep his title and have his revenge against his uncle. This is alternative history where Prodigals, the descendants of fallen angels who have been converted by the Church, live alongside humans. A prodigal boy in service to a lord is afraid a fellow servant who’s gone missing was murdered at the Dee Club after its Sunday fights.
This story was one of the ones that was a little dense at the beginning. It took time to get into. Although once Archie and Nimble’s background become clear, I become more connected to them and this story. The last section contained most of the action and held my attention. This was probably the one story that I scrambled through.
11:59 by C.S. Poe
“He is all that stands between the innocent and the flesh-eating monsters who were once human. Because Asuka no longer dreams, he cannot be chased into consciousness by one of the nightmares.”
CS Poe is another name that’s landed on my must read list. Such a marvelous, surprising author of great narrative depth. This story is a perfect example of why you should search out their tales. Incredible worldbuilding, endlessly fascinating, it starts with Asuka, who sold his soul to the devil so he would never dream again, lose the nightmares, and prevent him from becoming a monster. But like all contracts with the devil, there’s the fine prints, and all the dreams are lost, including the ones that bring the hope, and the wishes, and much more.
Next up is Merrick, who has spent his time studying mythology and believes he knows the source of the nightmares and how they can be destroyed if he and Asuka work together.
What follows is an exciting, tautly constructed tale, full of mythology, gripping with suspense and action, twists and turns, plus an ending that will leave your jaw hanging open.
Wonderland City by Rhys Ford
“Back before I met the Devil and bled my soul out into his hands, I’d have thought chasing a cigar-munching white bunny with pink eyes was something I’d only run into after I chewed on a few peyote buttons.
Now it was a typical Tuesday.”
A Rhys Ford story can bring out the fangyrl in me and Wonderland City is a perfect example why. Ford takes Lewis Carroll’s ‘Alice in Wonderland and gives it a warped, wonderful further twist Here the Queen of Heart’s has been executed, Xander Spade sold his soul to the Devil because, hey, he was a very naive and dumb kid at the time, who ended in down the Rabbit hole.
Then the Devil,Az, says he will return Xander’s soul if he will just do a favor…yeah, right.
This is my all time favorite story here. You meet all the characters you might expect to meet in Wonderland…just don’t expect them and it to look and things to go as you would think. Things here are convoluted, masterfully warped, the scenes vivid and sharp, and, each twist more memorable than the last.
Dark Favors by Jordan Castillo Price
“The driver looked me up and down and said, “You strike me as a perceptive young man.” That really should’ve been my first clue that I was dealing with the Prince of Lies.”
Johnny Lockheart has been offered the chance to get his soul back from the Devil if he murders a TV star, but her bodyguard Adam is going to have something to say about that. Both of them are Chosen, which means that they trade favors for power and know how the world really works stripped of illusion by the Sight. The flashbacks help us understand how Johnny ends up the way he is, and are well timed to pack a punch. This book makes better use of the idea of evil being seductive, whereas the other books focus on the grotesque, or horror elements.
Dark Favors was the perfect way to end this collection. Strong, effective, and, for me, it held just that ever so fleeting hint of bittersweetness or darkness one needs when reading a collection of stories dealing with men who have sold their souls to the Devil. It is exactly how this story should end and what I would expect from Jordan Castillo Price, that extra depth that makes a story so memorable.
Greg Tremblay did a superlative job with all the many voices here. From little girls to white rabbits, to various demons to gender fluid humans and much more, he handles each one effortlessly. It was such a pleasure to listen to each and every story. The time just flew by. He was the perfect match for this collection!
Cover art: Reece Notley. That model does draw your eye. What does it represent to you? One of the 7 deadly sins? Could be….
Sales Links: DSP Publications | Amazon | Audible |
Audiobook Details:
Audible Audio, Unabridged
Published December 27th 2018 by Dreamspinner Press (first published October 16th 2018)
Original TitleDevil Take Me
ASINB07L5Y3M59
Edition LanguageEnglish

Dreamspinner Press
Cover Artist: Kanaxa
Release Date: January 29, 2019
Book Links:
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/41104641-the-case-of-the-voracious-vintner
Dreamspinner Press: https://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/books/the-case-of-the-voracious-vintner-by-tara-lain-10132-b
Kindle: https://amzn.to/2WdQFXN
Amazon Paperback: https://amzn.to/2S8KYLk
Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-case-of-the-voracious-vintner
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/the-case-of-the-voracious-vintner/id1440935141?mt=11
Hi everyone! I’m so happy to be celebrating the release of my new mystery, The Case of the Voracious Vintner. As you can imagine from the title, the heroes of the book are both winemakers and the story is set in and around the major wine producing areas of California – the central coast and Napa Valley. I had a great time writing the book because I love wine. Though I’m not much of a drinker, when I do drink, it’s going to be wine (except for a very occasional margarita). I’m definitely no connoisseur, but I thought it would be fun to share a few of my favorite wines.
I’ve recently moved from California to Oregon. While I absolutely love my new State, I haven’t had time to delve into Oregon wine. It should be a fun adventure, but if I don’t find Oregon wine favorites, I only have to remind myself that Napa is less than five hours away.
I hope you enjoy some great wine while reading The Case of the Voracious Vintner.
https://www.booksamillion.com/p/Case-Voracious-Vintner/Tara-Lain/9781641081382?id=7482908349026

Book Blurb:
A Middlemark Mystery
Where Bo Marchand comes from, gay men are just confirmed bachelors who never found the right girl. But now Bo’s a successful winemaker on the central coast of California, supporting his whole damned Georgia family, and all he really wants is the beautiful, slightly mysterious Jeremy Aames.
Jeremy’s vineyard is under threat from Ernest Ottersen, the voracious winemaker who seems to know all Jeremy’s blending secrets and manages to grab all his customers. Bo tries to help Jeremy and even provides a phony alibi for Jeremy when Ottersen turns up dead in Jeremy’s tasting room. But it’s clear Jeremy isn’t who he claims, and Bo must decide if it’s worth tossing over his established life for a man who doesn’t seem to trust anyone. When Jeremy gets kidnapped, some of the conservative winemakers turn out to be kinky sex fiends, and the list of murderers keeps dwindling down to Jeremy. Bo has to choose between hopping on his white horse or climbing back in his peach-pie-lined closet.
Giveaway: $10 Gift Card
https://widget-prime.rafflecopter.com/launch.js
Rafflecopter Link:
http://www.rafflecopter.com/rafl/display/b4c0001d384/?widget_template=57632a0204f50f8c0cf21a68
Series Info
Link above image to: https://www.goodreads.com/series/237216-the-middlemark-mysteries

Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/38371895-the-case-of-the-sexy-shakespearean
Dreamspinner Press: https://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/books/the-middlemark-mysteries-9784-s
Amazon: https://amzn.to/2MD5ddX
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/the-case-of-the-sexy-shakespearean/id1408817801?mt=11
BAM: http://www.booksamillion.com/product/9781641080156
Kobo: https://www.kobo.com/us/en/ebook/the-case-of-the-sexy-shakespearean
About the Author

Tara Lain believes in happy ever afters – and magic. Same thing. In fact, she says, she doesn’t believe, she knows. Tara shares this passion in her best-selling stories that star her unique, charismatic heroes — the beautiful boys of romance — and adventurous heroines. Quarterbacks and cops, werewolves and witches, blue collar or billionaires, Tara’s characters, readers say, love deeply, resolve seemingly insurmountable differences, and ultimately live their lives authentically. After many years living in southern California, Tara, her soulmate honey and her soulmate dog decided they wanted less cars and more trees, prompting a move to Ashland, Oregon where Tara’s creating new stories and loving living in a small town with big culture. Likely a Gryffindor but possessed of Parseltongue, Tara loves animals of all kinds, diversity, open minds, coconut crunch ice cream from Zoeys, and her readers. She also loves to hear from you.
Author Links:
Website: http://taralain.com/
Blog: http://www.taralain.com/blog
Twitter: https://twitter.com/taralain
FB Author Page: https://www.facebook.com/taralain
Bookbub: https://www.bookbub.com/authors/tara-lain
Amazon Author Page: https://amzn.to/2ICPcCZ
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4541791.Tara_Lain
Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/taralain/
Reader Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/255111391312743/

More results from last week’s polls on book covers. I really did sort of expect these tbh. Yes readers to look and choose books by their covers, yes, they look at the names of the cover artists, and while they say they might not have a preference over type of cover, when it comes right down to it? They love a “painted” cover over of photograph. Maybe I should look at demographics on that one as that is my preference as well.
This week Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words is sending out our questionnaires to publishers and cover artists, to get a feel on the state of book covers today, how many of these artists came to be book cover artists and much more. I have included the questions I received from our readers in our form. I can’t wait to get back the answers!
If you have more questions, please continue to send them in, it’s never too late to revise our form as we send it out to more people.
With stories these days, you might see the same or re-released/revised story several times. That means multiple covers, eBook and audio formats too. Each time it’s job is the same. Reach out to readers, grab their attention, make them want to read or listen to that story with a cover that looks fresh and vibrant! Dramatic, current, and catchy. Wow! That’s an artistic job and a half.



Above are three different covers for Andre Norton’s Witch World. One from 2016 and the original from 1963. At the end there was one more version. 1986. Each era leaving its mark on the design and style of the cover. And yes, mine is the 1963 version which I still have. I have to admit each speaks to me in a different way. What do they say to you? Which do you prefer? And if you aren’t familiar with Andre Norton, what a fantastic author awaits you!
When covers are done beautifully, we remember them. And the artist that made that cover sing to us. And of course, we picked that book right up, perhaps even again, to dive into the story and get lost in another world of an author’s creation. This from someone who was up til 4am with a new Rhys Ford story…lol Yes, the cover of that story is fabulous!
So yes, along with all of you, I’m dying to know what answers will be coming back our way from these amazing artists and the publishers. What wonderful Sundays we have ahead of us!









Rating: 4 stars out of 5
Sometimes true worth is well hidden.
Ellis Campos is a successful divorce lawyer with little to no time for a personal life. His predictable routine is disrupted when he inherits a coffee farm from an estranged aunt. There’s no room in his life for all the complications that come with managing a farm in another state. But his plans to quickly sell it and go back to the big city fall apart when he’s manipulated into spending a week on the estate.
Adding to the unexpected surprises, he meets Rudá, a native Brazilian who works on the farm, and while teaching him about his aunt’s home and family, also tempts Ellis like no one ever has.
He doesn’t expect his life to change in such a short time, but as he finds value and comfort in the farm’s routine, Ellis quickly realizes that, like the land itself, Rudá has secrets that could send him running back to Rio.
Beneath These Fields by Ward Maia is another story from the World of Love line at Dreamspinner Press. This time the location is Brazil , specifically a coffee farm far away from the comforts of Rio. That the author himself is from Brazil and loves his country from the city to the rolling hills of farmland gives Beneath These Fields a warmth and depth lacking in other stories. Familiarity will do that as will fondness when you write what you know.
When he writes of the heat, the character sweating so badly that the clothes are sticking to his back, or the little used air conditioning of an older truck spraying dust and insect wings over Ellis, it feels authentic …and funny. Or of a man smelling like the very coffee he raises. That too feels real, believable, and incredibly sexy.
For me there was so much I really connected with and enjoyed. The coffee farm, its employees and inhabitants itself,right down to the dog Duke. The daily natural feel of the place, including the harvest of the beans and the way Ellis was learning to love the place his aunt built as he learned about her from her books and the people around her. It was charming, fluid, and easy. Maia made us see this place as though it was real, he gave it charm, a solidity, and heart.
Less satisfactory was some of the mystery surrounding his aunt, her lost connection to one side of the family which to my mind was never really explained. It was made a big element and then sort of left there. Also the ending felt rushed after all the marvelous story that came before. It was nice. mind you, but, left you with too many questions.
Overall, I enjoyed this story. It had a wonderful framework, some outstanding elements and characters, and I found myself many times wanting to know more about Ruda’ tribe or the region. I wanted to go exploring because this story pulled me there and made me love the people and place. That includes the couple.
Cover Artist: Brooke Albrecht. Not my idea of Ellis in dress or age, or background. Doesn’t really work for me.
Sales Links: Dreamspinner Press | Amazon
Book Details:
ebook, 144 pages
Expected publication: January 25th 2019
Original Title Beneath These Fields
ISBN 139781640809758
Edition Language English

Cover Artist: Brooke Albrecht
Sales Links: Dreamspinner Press | Amazon
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words is happy to host Ward Maia here today on tour for his latest novel Beneath These Fields. Welcome, Ward.
Scattered Thoughts and Rogue Words Interview with Ward Maia
I try to pour as much of my experiences into my characters, but not a lot of myself.
I don’t understand the question, sorry.
Yes, I like to read a lot of History and Mythology books, so research definitely plays an important role. But I enjoy doing both. Research is always fun and finding out about different cultures is always interesting. But making up new worlds, creating different sets of rules and tossing your characters into that mix also makes for interesting stories.
Not really, I grew up reading the classics and science fiction, but I prefer to write contemporary and fantasy novels.
Yes, that has happened. Coming to terms with being transgender was very difficult for me, so some of the stories I was writing I didn’t really know how to process or how to properly finish because it was difficult to unpack all the emotions tied to the characters and the story I was trying to tell.
I think HFNs are valid, but I’d much rather read a book with a HEA. It might sound a little cliché, but I think real life is difficult enough, so I like my fiction to make me happy. Also, I’m a helpless romantic, so it’s HEA for me all the way.
Do you read romances, as a teenager and as an adult?
I read a lot of classical books as a teenager and now, as an adult, I read a lot more romance, especially contemporary.
Growing up, Herman Melville. Moby Dick is hands down one of my favorite books of all time. Also The Lord of The Rings Trilogy; the first time I saw a map of Middle Earth, was the first time I realized creating an entire different world with an entirely different set of rules for your characters was possible.
At one point in my life, I was the proud owner of over three hundred books, so printed books will always have a special place in my heart. Having said that, I love ebooks because they completely changed how I accessed books and even the books I had access to. There’s not a lot of printed transgender representation where I’m from and ebooks are easier to access than physical ones.
I like covers to reflect some essential aspect of the story, whether it’s explicit or not. In my case, the farm played a very important part in Ellis’s journey so I chose a cover I felt reflected the dichotomy between Ellis-the-city-boy and Ellis-who-inherited-a-coffee-farm.
I don’t like to play favorites, but there are always characters that stay with me for longer than others. Ellis was one of those characters. I thoroughly enjoyed writing about him and his journey of self-discovery.
I want to write epic stories with unapologetically-queer trans masc main characters because I feel it’s an important representation that’s lacking in fiction. Especially in Brazil.
I think the concept of flaw varies greatly depending on which character you ask. What one might perceive as a flaw, another sees only as a personality trait. Having said that, I don’t think there’s such a thing as making a character too “real”. I enjoy reading about all-powerful characters with world-changing destinies just as much as the next person, but I also enjoy seeing just your average trans guy, doing average things and navigating the ins and outs of a romantic relationship like everyone else.
The traits I find most interesting in people are the ones they sometimes don’t even realize they have. For instance, how someone reacts to shocking news, if their eyes go wide, or they bite their nails, bounce their knees or even laugh. I do actually write them into my characters, because I feel it makes them more “believable’, so to speak, seeing as they can be traced to a real trait of a real person.
Yes! The first serious story I sat down to write was a contemporary romance with a best friends-to-lovers trope I started writing when I was seventeen. Recently, almost a decade later, I’ve picked the story back up and decided to develop it. It ended up turning into a duology and I have just finished writing the first Book. But who knows if it will ever see the light of day?
Yes, I have. Writing helps me deal with my anxiety – it’s kind of like therapy. So whenever I have a serious issue to work through, I usually try to write it out. Maybe I’ll write a scene similar to what I’m going thorough, to try and see how I’d feel or react in a given situation.
I once imagined a scene where the main characters are breaking up and one of them is sneaking out of the house when his partner wakes up and ends up running behind his car, shouting for him to come back and not leave. It hasn’t made it into any of my stories yet, but who knows? Maybe I’ll write a second chance romance and include that scene.
I’m a very boring guy, meaning I don’t drink anything remotely alcoholic. So no, I’ve never written a drunk chapter, but anything is possible. I tend not to pull back my punches when it comes to my characters, so writing drunk could end up being an interesting experience.
I love writing in my back yard, or just by the seaside. But maybe one day I’ll have a private writing room, overlooking snowy mountains and quite possibly the sea or a lake.
I write because my words demand to be given life and space to breathe. But also, because most people have severe misconceptions about transgender folks and how being transgender varies from person to person. And if I can clarify some of that while maybe entertaining a couple of people, why not?
And of course, I write because it’s something I love doing.
Like I said, I want to write about everyday trans masc individuals accomplishing both extraordinary and everyday feats. I don’t want to change the world, I just want to share my words with it.

Blurb:
Sometimes true worth is well hidden.
Ellis Campos is a successful divorce lawyer with little to no time for a personal life. His predictable routine is disrupted when he inherits a coffee farm from an estranged aunt. There’s no room in his life for all the complications that come with managing a farm in another state. But his plans to quickly sell it and go back to the big city fall apart when he’s manipulated into spending a week on the estate.
Adding to the unexpected surprises, he meets Rudá, a native Brazilian who works on the farm, and while teaching him about his aunt’s home and family, also tempts Ellis like no one ever has.
He doesn’t expect his life to change in such a short time, but as he finds value and comfort in the farm’s routine, Ellis quickly realizes that, like the land itself, Rudá has secrets that could send him running back to Rio.

About the Author :
Ward Maia was born and raised in Brazil and has seen almost every corner of that great and beautiful country. With a M. in Geology and Metamorphic Petrology, spending time in underground labs was more commonplace than interacting with real humans, which lead to the creation of entire fictional universes. The heroes that populate those universes are usually flawed and find love in unexpected places.
Having travelled throughout the country, from North to South, Ward now calls the Northwest of Brazil home. Alongside a grumpy sixteen-year old poodle (that insists on always having the last word) and hundreds of paperback novels, Ward lives five minutes from the beach and enjoys drinking copious amounts of coffee and feeling the ocean breeze while writing about unexpected places and people.
Social media links
Twitter: @_WardMaia
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ward.maia.583
Buy links

Dreamspinner Press
Cover Artist: Kanaxa
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Hello. Thanks to the Scattered Thoughts and Rogue words crew for hosting me and The Devil’s Breath today!
Birch and Henri are characters close to my heart. If readers connect with them even in a fraction of the way I do, I’m sure they’ll enjoy The Devil’s Breath.
Do you feel there’s a tight line between Mary Sue or should I say Gary Stu and using your own experiences to create a character?
Main characters just kind of present themselves to me. When I have tried to invent one, they usually turn out completely different—sometimes everything right down to the colour of their eyes has changed by time they’ve fully emerged. But that keeps them from being ‘text-book’. I have stories that aren’t going anywhere because the characters aren’t the right ones to highlight a particular storyline.
Does research play a role into choosing which genre you write? Do you enjoy research or prefer making up your worlds and cultures?
I’m always researching something—although not necessarily a useful something. For me, it is a fabulous procrastination tool because it steals me away for hours. I go off to determine what drug is used for a particular disease and find myself reading about the type of adze Vikings used in boatbuilding. I know I’m not alone in this.
I do like to mix and match between real and imaginary worlds and cultures, and I will on occasion, cross that line when it’s not meant to be crossed. But that’s all part of the fun.
Have you ever had to put an ‘in progress’ story aside because of the emotional ties with it? You were hurting with the characters or didn’t know how to proceed?
I have never put a story aside because I was hurting with the characters. That is part of the beauty of writing, just as it is with reading. We want to experience that emotion right along with the characters. If I can elicit emotion in me, then it might work for others as well—at least I hope I can write it well enough so others can experience it too.
I wrote a scene once where tears came to my eyes the first few times I read it. After that, it was just tingles through my body.
Have I put a story aside because I didn’t know how to proceed? Yes, yes, and yes. It’s always a good indicator that something has gone awry earlier in the story.
Do you like HFN or HEA? And why?
I’m not a HEA kind of person and unless a book states otherwise, I always assume it is a HFN ending. Anything else is just stretching credibility. I really don’t know why some people think I’m cynical. 😉
How do you feel about the ebook format and where do you see it going?
I LOVE ebooks. I grew up with paperbacks and while I found the transition hard, I couldn’t imagine going back to paperbacks (except with reference books where physical copies are still the preferred).
I always keep a paperback around in case of power outages, unexpected flat batteries etc. But the thing I love most about ebooks is you can take an entire library with you…even overseas! And you don’t have to pay extra luggage, don’t have space shortage, don’t have to lug the weight around.
On the plane and want to read something else? Not a problem. You don’t have to disturb those sitting next to you so you can get to your hand luggage. Just click to the menu and you’re done. No complete rearranging of passengers required.
What’s next for you as an author?
I have another book due to be released mid 2019 through DSP, entitled the Shaman of Kupa Piti. Although classified as paranormal, it’s more magical realism. There is a strong blending of crime and culture(s)—not to mention the budding relationship between two men whose core beliefs clash. It is very different to anything I’ve read in the romance genre.
Writing it was interesting, educational, and entertaining. I hope others have a similar experience when reading it.
If you write contemporary romance, is there such a thing as making a main character too “real”? Do you think you can bring too many faults into a character that eventually it becomes too flawed to become a love interest?
Absolutely! If something is too real then it loses its shine. There’s an art to transmitting enough information to elicit empathy, but not so much that it’s going to wear the reader down. This is why writing enduring situations or characteristics have to be treated very carefully (e.g. mental illness, addictions, etc). There is nothing sexy or romantic in those topics, yet a good writer can utilise certain aspects while downplaying the reality, and create something entertaining from it. People want to experience these situations, not suffer them—which is the reality.
It is even harder when you know everyone’s line is drawn in a different place. One reader can endure a lot, where the mere mention will send another reader scuttling for cover (i.e delete the book, or throw it across the room).
Have you ever had an issue in RL and worked it through by writing it out in a story? Maybe how you thought you’d feel in a situation?
I can’t say I have consciously worked through an issue by writing it out in a story, but I’ve felt I have. For example, I’ll be consumed by a story, but I’ll reach a point where I don’t need it anymore. To me that indicates I’ve moved on from there and whatever was ‘owning’ me has been dislodged.
Ever drunk written a chapter and then read it the next day and still been happy with it? Trust me there’s a whole world of us drunk writers dying to know.
Hmm, I have written in that accursed state that lingers between drunkness and hangover. And no, it didn’t make it through the next day never mind to the next draft. The non-sense, the repetition…it was terrible.
If you could imagine the best possible place for you to write, where would that be and why?
Right now I’m imagining a sunlit room with floor to ceiling windows that are open out onto a beach. The water is turquoise, the sand white. A warm breeze wafts in carrying the scent of frangipani. A waiter is just now mounting the two long, shallow stairs to deliver the tropical juice I ordered. He wipes his feet and lays a gentle knock on the window frame to draw my attention.
Why? Because it is much preferred to the overcast and windy day right outside now.

Blurb
Henri’s stalker has left him with a paradoxical legacy: his mind rebels at the thought of being touched—the very thing his body craves.
For three years Henri has fought to overcome the horrors of the past. Now on the other side of the world—after leaving Australia for Canada—Henri’s nemesis is hunting him with maniacal focus. Trying to escape, he meets Birch, a kind horse trainer, who’s confounded by Henri’s idiosyncrasies even as he is drawn to him. But when Birch discovers the truth, he encourages Henri not to just survive, but to live.
Maybe even to love.
House Line Perchance to Dream
Genre Contemporary
Words: 65,021 (200pp)
About the Author :
A. Nybo has tried conventional methods (a psych degree and a GC in Forensic Mental Health) but far prefers the less conventional, such as the occasional barbecue in the rain, four-hundred-kilometer drives at 1:00 a.m. for chocolate, and multiple emergency naps in any given twenty-four-hour period.
Western Australian born, she has been spotted on the other side of the planet several times—usually by mosquitoes. She’s also discovered Amazonian mosquitoes love her just as much as they do in her home state.
Social Media:
Twitter: https://twitter.com/anybo5
Dreamspinner: https://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/authors/a-nybo-1078
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/18395772.A_Nybo
Rating: 4 stars out of 5
On the Island of Misfits, Artie waits. As a teddy bear toy, no one wanted him, and he yearns for love and his forever home. When finally taken back to the human world, Artie doesn’t find a child waiting to claim him. Instead he has a life he never dreamed of and a niece to care for as Christmas fast approaches.
He’s given an opportunity for love but only has until Christmas. If he fails, he’ll lose not only the memories of his past life, but the chance to be united with his soul mate.
In a magical antique shop, Artie finds the man of his dreams. With time running out can Artie not just have his own happy ever after but save the shop from the owner’s unscrupulous nephew.
This was a cute story. I thought the idea of these were interesting, the toys have both a human and a toy body that they can in either at any time but not shifting just seemingly shifting consciousness.
I felt for Artie and how lonely he felt but loved how willingly he took the reins of the new life he is given. Cody is so adorable sweet and it is wonderful that he had Jeremy to support him and that Artie came to help him too. Chrissy was also so adorable, even though she wasn’t around that long. I enjoyed this story but didn’t feel a lot of depth in it, it felt like a nice fluffy story which was perfect for me right now.
The cover art by Kris Jacen is nice and liked the visual of the characters and the all so important Christmas tree.
Sales Links: MLR Books | Amazon | B&N
Book Details:
ebook, 21,000 pages
Published: November 9, 2018 by MLR Books
ISBN: 978-1-6412-21924
Edition Language: English
Series: Isle of Misfit Toys