Queer Romance

  • Convincing the Secretary

    Convincing the Secretary by Ava March is the third novella in her London Legal series. This story is set around a legal firm where Edward Fenton is a new lowly clerk/secretary to a partner in the firm, Lord Gray. Edward dislikes being a clerk and wishes to be an artist, but has no inkling as…

  • Selfie

    Amy Lane’s Selfie is part of the Bluewater Bay universe. This series consists of stand-alone novels written by different authors, all set in the same world of Bluewater Bay in Washington State, around the set of Wolf’s Landingthe television series being shot there. Following the death of the love of his life, movie actor Connor Montgomery…

  • Strong Signal

    Kai and Garrett. The soldier and the You Tube star. Two different voices written by two different authors. The setup could, if handled tritely, be eye-rolling—Kai is a semi-professional online gamer, and Garrett runs into him while playing Fallen World Online from his bunk in Afghanistan. Garrett fixes military vehicles and has been in the…

  • Home is a Fire

    Jordan Nasser’s sweet debut novel is really a romantic fantasy akin to Dorothy’s adventure in the Wizard of Oz film. It’s about seeking happiness out in the world because you can’t see it in your own back yard. Derek Walter is running away again, leaving his unbelieving boyfriend David on the downtown subway and heading…

  • Strong Signal

    Strong Signal is the first novel from authors Megan Erickson & Santino Hassell, and this collaboration is damn good. Happily, this is also the first in a series by the pair called Cyberlove. Writing in collaboration seems to mellow Santino’s usual gritty, cynical angle on love and sex somewhat, while adding a little raunch to…

  • Rising Frenzy

    Brandon Witt creates a world in his Men of Myth series that appeals to readers like me greatly. Like the Beings series by F. Cooper and the End Street Detective Agency books by Amber Kell and RJ Scott, Witt’s world posits the unseen presence of paranormal beings, interacting with humans at varying degrees of awareness….

  • Clashing Tempest

    Clashing Tempest, the last book of the Men of Myth trilogy continues with the parallel adventures of Finn and Brett, but now Brett has Lelas as his best friend and confidante, while Finn has Schwint as his sidekick and lover. Both young men are seeking the truth, unaware that their lives are on converging paths…

  • Ollie Always

    Ollie Always is a complex, character driven novel, and John Wiltshire’s writing is crisp, accurate, and full of observational humour and ‘snark’. The setting in New Zealand is described beautifully, if not always affectionately. There is a definite sense of an Englishman abroad, maybe because our eponymous is hero is just that. Oliver is named…

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