Archive for the ‘Meet Our Authors’ Category

Fantasy Chains

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Much of the writing at loveyoudivine is cross genre. We do red hot erotica, but it frequently turns up in the context of murder mysteries, historicals, paranormals, science fiction, fantasy, romance, horror and soap opera!

Many of our regular authors dabble toes, if not more interesting body parts, into the strange, swirling waters of speculative fiction. Talking amongst ourselves, we felt it would be an interesting thing to explore. And this is what happened.

First I interviewed Max Griffin    - http://blogs.myspace.com/brynneth_n_colvin then he interviewed M. King

http://maxgriffin.blogspot.com/

At this point in the process it gets a wee bit complicated! M King interviewed Alex Morgan 

http://lavengra.wordpress.com/2010/02/19/alex-morgan/ and Nix Winter

http://lavengra.wordpress.com/2010/02/16/nix-winter/

Nix then wet on to interview Jon Michaelsen

http://www.jewlsthelucky.com/2010/02/interview-with-jon-michaelsen.html?zx=6fc015dc7cef3dc1

and he interviewed Adrianne Brennanhttp://www.jonmichaelsen.net/?p=467

Now we get a bit of a hop, and we pick up with Melissa el-Hajjar who interviewed Dawne Dominique - http://blogspot.loveyoudivineinfo.com/?p=288 (which you may have spotted already as we put that one on this blog!)

Dawne interviews Jaime Sammshttp://dawnedominique.blogspot.com  and then Jaime interviewed Crymsyn Hart -  http://dontkickmycane.livejournal.com/138383.html

This is not an exhaustive list of speculative ficiton writers at loveyoudivine, and it may in fact grow if more interviews are sparked. Do wander about a bit and have a read!

Dawne interviews Jaime!

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

INTERVIEW WITH loveyoudivine’s MULTI TALENTED

s JAMIE SAMMS s

Hi, Jaime. Thank you for joining us today. What actually inspired you to become an author?

Really? I was poor. Not that writing nets me a very big paycheck, but at fifteen, before Internet—yes, I said before Internet, and those so inclined can do the math—I ran out of books to read. I had no money to buy more, or to pay my library fines, so my only option was to write my own. Turns out, I was pretty half decent at it. Of course, these early efforts were pretty bad as far as the craft goes, but the love of creating something from nothing but words got its claws into me and never really let go. Now I do it for kicks and giggles, and the occasional hard dollar.

 Can you describe how you felt when you received your first publishing contract, and what did you do?

It was pretty cool. I have to admit, and here’s where fellow authors might glare at me, but the first thing I ever subbed was accepted. I sent a short story to a now defunct Yaoi publisher called Iris Print, for their first anthology, “Connections”. I didn’t get a huge pay out for that story, but it was a pretty big rush, knowing I wasn’t the only one who wanted to read it. And before anyone gets too upset, the next thing I subbed to them was rejected, so it just goes to show, this industry is never a sure thing. I will say that rejection was also my first, and the story in question, after another sub and a re-write, is now safely and contractually in the hands of Drollerie Press, release date forthcoming.

 How would you describe yourself as a person?

 Wow. Talk about your blanket questions. Um…I guess busy and a little bit on the artsy/flaky side, which probably explains the pink hair and addiction to caffeine. I can be practical when it’s required, but it really is not my default setting. I like creating—stories, crafts and such. I’m pretty handy, so I guess in a word, I’m creative, and everything else kind of flows from there. My family has learned to live with the chaos and the cats, for the most part.

What genres do you write in and why?

I suppose most of my stories hinge around gay romances. Some of them are firmly told in the contemporary world we all know, and some are pretty fantastical, but the main thread is always what’s going on in the hearts and minds of a pair of lovers, or three. As for why, I honestly couldn’t tell you. I just know whenever I got around to writing about the heroine, she turned out to be a sister or a best friend, and the guys had eyes only for each other. It’s a mystery. Probably best explored by someone versed in ferreting out past lives.

What is your biggest fear?

And once again, no pulling punches. I suppose right now, finding myself alone with two kids would be a biggy. I don’t think I’m qualified to be that responsible. Luckily, I have a great husband, who happens to be a fully fantastic father.

 If you could have one wish, what would it be? And you’re not allowed to wish for unlimited wishes.

 Geez. Take all the fun out of it, why don’t you? I guess, first off, I’d like the world to be a safe place for my kids. Failing that, I ‘d see what could be done about having more hours in the day to get everything done, or at least, another couple a days just to read a good book.

You’re about to be stranded on a desert island, but you have just enough time to grab two books from the ship’s library. What two would you chose?

The practical side of me says grab the survival guide and the first aid book. The rest of me says something by Tanya Huff, because she always entertains, and the newest of Allie Blue’s Bay City Paranormal Series (and if it’s on an e-reader with a couple hundred other m/m romances, so much the better).

Immortal Fire is about to be released in print. Can you tell us a little bit about your two contributions to this wonderful anthology, Black Roses and Windblown. What inspired you to write them?

Hmmm…Black Roses. Actually, I was bored one day, and dwelling on some critiques of another story that demanded more and better descriptions. It’s always been a weak point in my writing. I don’t generally do description. If you’ve ever read Mercedes Lackey and her lavish and indepth descriptions of everything from palace ballrooms to someone’s lunch plate, well, I would be almost the anti-Lackey. So, I decided to just describe a garden as an exercise in stretching my abilities. I had no idea there was a soul-devouring immortal living in it at the time. Imagine my surprise…

 

As for WindBlown, I really was standing by the highway waiting for the bus on a cold, windy Saturday morning, watching the snow swirl and drift behind the cars. Once again, the immortal drifting with the wind came somewhat as a surprise. Most of my stories are like that though, starting from something very simple and growing in a very organic fashion.

 The cover art for Black Roses and Windblown is amazing. Who was the artist?

Nix Winter. She created all the covers in the Immortal Fire series, as well as the cover for the print Anthology. Not only is she a fantastic cover artist, but the photography on Black Roses is her own photography; the paintings on Timeless and the print cover are also her artistry, and all of the rendering on M. King’s cover was her work as well. And she can write a fiercely lyrical story, besides. The woman has talent.

 

 

 

What’s in the future, Jaime Samms? Is there a special project you’re working on? 

Well…I do have a release coming from lyd on Dec 11th titled Muse’s Vacation. The cover is another of Nix’s photography creations. It’s a nice, heartwarming holiday story, which might also make you a bit hot under the collar. There will be a longer story, much darker and less sexy in the near future, but I hope still entertaining, and I have a few releases coming out with other publishers.

 

Thank you so much, Jaime. I’ve learned some wonderful things about you. We could be soulmates! We’ll definitely be looking forward to more wonderful tales from you. Now, who will you be interviewing next for lyd’s Authors Chain Reaction?

I’ll be interviewing Jen Hart, and you can find the interview at my blog:

http://jaimesamms.blogspot.com

JAMIE SAMMS

To learn more about Jaime, you can visit her at:

 www.loveyoudivine.com

 www.jaime-samms.net

Dalia Craig Interview

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010

Dalia Craig writes for the Femerotica line although she’s also made a forray into m/m/f with ‘Hold Me Tight’

Bryn: I gather you went all the way from Scotland to America for a book event last year. How did that work out?

Dalia: Last month actually.

It was a spur of the moment thing that actually started out as a bit of a joke…

When Cheri Crystal first publicized her Fresh Start reading at Bluestockings bookstore in New York I said something like “I would if I could but…” There’s this small pond called the Atlantic Ocean in the way.

Then the more I thought about it the more the idea grew on me. So I found a flight and a hotel and off I went. I’m a bit crazy like that.

Poor Cheri got such a shock; she didn’t know a thing about my plans until I arrived in New York.

I had a great time on my first visit to New York; walked miles, did all the touristy things and attended the reading. Sadly, my short stay ended all too quickly but I’m sure I’ll go back. I’m definitely going to Ptown in October and possibly to something else before that.

It was good to meet up with Cheri again; she’s a lot of fun.

The readings with Cheri Crystal, JD Glass and Rachel Kramer Bussel on Saturday were well attended despite the bitterly cold weather. Cheri, in particular, gave a show stopping performance with her excerpt from “Does The Butch Come With The Recipe?” I’ll never tire of hearing her read from that story; the humor comes over so well when read aloud–maybe she ought to think of doing an audio version.

 Bryn: That is a wonderful thing to do. I can see how that willingness to just go for it comes through in your characters too. What’s the wildest thing a character of yours has done on impulse?

Dalia: That’s a difficult question.

Possibly Bryana, in Taming Bryana.

Bryana meets Cassie, a total stranger, in the middle of nowhere and is persuaded to mount a horse and ride to Cassie’s home. However, when Bryana steps inside Auchtercairn, Cassie’s seventeenth-century castle, she soon finds there’s more to this sexy, rugged, butch than meets the eye. They share a common interest: a mutual love of bondage. This discovery leads Bryana to risk everything for one night of erotic pleasure at the hands of Cassie.

I want to write a sequel to Taming Bryana, when I have the time. I’m sure these two women have more to tell than just a one night stand. Who knows; they may be soul mates.

Bryn: That sounds well worth re-visiting. It’s always interesting to see how a relationship pans out over time. What defines a soul-mate relationship for you?

Dalia: You do ask some difficult questions.

I’ve yet to meet mine… I’ll try to answer as best I can. I believe it goes way above sex or being in love.

More a true meeting of minds where no words are needed and the couple are tuned into each other on a higher level.

Bryn: Let’s head in an easier direction then! Are you structured about your writing, or do you just work when the mood is upon you?

Dalia: I try to structure my days; I really do but too often life gets in the way.

My ideal day would be writing from 8am – 4pm then again from around 10pm ‘til midnight. Often, despite promising myself I’ll start writing first thing in the morning, it’s mid afternoon before I get anywhere near the computer.

As to setting myself targets–I do have a spreadsheet that calculates the words per day required to write a specific story length in x days. If you don’t meet your target for a particular day it recalculates the shortfall over the remaining days.

I suspect I’m not alone in having off days when everything I write reads like garbage. Thankfully I usually have several stories in various stages of production so if I’m struggling with one story I’ll put it aside for a day or so and work on something else. Also, I’m not a fast typist; my fingers rarely keep pace with my brain and by the time I catch up the perfect word, expression or whatever has evaporated.

 Bryn: I find hopping around helps, although these days I hop to other people’s stories and edit. Is there anything you particularly like to do when you aren’t writing?

Dalia: Yes, even working on other genres can help free the cogs. I for one find critting very stimulating, although these days I only work with one author on a regular basis.

Online, I help moderate both a busy crit group and a romance writing list where I also post a weekly talk prompt. I’m moderately active on various lists and social networking sites.

My spare time is pretty full though not particularly exciting…

Aside from being a carer; I love to both cook and garden. I grow a lot of fruit and vegetables for my own use. During the fruit season I also make jam (100 pounds last summer) to help feed a family of badgers, and five pine martens who’ve adopted me as their primary food source. They come to my patio each evening to eat homemade bread & jam, cake and biscuits.

If I could make a wish I would like to have more time to read but something has to give.

 Bryn: You have a badger family? That is so cool, and I’m deeply envious. Do you have any photos of them?

Dalia: I’m really lucky in addition to badgers and pine martens I’m surrounded by lots of interesting birds and small furry creatures. One night last summer the whole badger family came together, usually it’s just mom and the kids. Mr. Brock gave no quarter to his wife or children, hogging all the best food for himself even if it meant sitting on it. Sadly I didn’t have my laptop set up that night.

I do have videos of the pine martens and of Basil the female badger on MySpace. The picture quality isn’t marvelous as it’s filmed through glass on a laptop set up inside the patio doors.

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=&release=103530073

http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&videoid=&release=103530246

The badgers aren’t very active at this time of year but when they’re out & about in the spring I’ll try to get some more footage.

Bryn: That’s so cute!  So, where can people find you online?

Dalia: You can connect with me online at…

daliacraig.com

loveyoudivine

myspace

Facebook

erotic musings

sapphicplanet.com/

amazon.com

Dalia’s latest story – Weathering the Storm – will be out on the 26th February!

Jean Roberta Interview

Saturday, February 6th, 2010
Author Jean Roberta

Author Jean Roberta

 Jean Roberta came to lyd as part of the To Love and To Cherish project. So I didn’t know much about her when we started the interview… she’s a fascinating person…

 

 

 

 

 

Bryn: Hi Jean, I see from your column at http://www.erotica-readers.com that you write philisophical essays as well as erotica. Which did you embark on first, and is there common ground between the two?

Jean: I’ve had a very varied writing career! I’ve always loved writing rants, um, opinion pieces. I did this long before I worked up the nerve to write stories with explicit sex scenes in them. No one knows this, but I’ve had at least as much non-fiction published (mostly in local publications that are eventually used to line bird cages) as fiction.

In the early 1970s, when electric typewriters were the cutting edge of office technology and I had only taken a few university classes, I got a job as a kind of apprentice journalist with a local public relations company. It was a fascinating introduction to the media world.

I wrote a book review column for a monthly publication, The Credit Union Way (journal of all the credit unions in the Canadian province where I live). I reviewed several groundbreaking books of feminist theory when they were new and widely discussed. (This was the dawn of Second Wave feminism.)

Years later, in the mid-1980s, I was an unofficial regular reviewer for Briarpatch, a leftist magazine that sent me books and tickets for live performances. For two years, I had at least one review in every issue. I was thrilled when my name was mentioned in an article in the national edition of The Toronto Globe & Mail (”Canada’s national newspaper”) in a series of articles about small, grassroots publications throughout Canada. According to the G&M, there were 2 good reasons to read Briarpatch: my writing and that of another regular contributor, a male political theorist who wrote lead articles.  

I wrote “mainstream” (for lack of a clearer word) short stories and poems for years while I also wrote articles and reviews for magazines & newsletters and the occasional skit. In 1985, I wrote and performed in “The Caucus Meeting,” a political spoof with dialogue in rhymed couplets for The Funny Pages, a cabaret-style evening of local theatre. (This is probably no excuse, but I was influenced at a young age by Gilbert & Sullivan operettas.)

In 1988, a paperback collection of my lesbian stories was published between slick, hot-pink covers by a one-woman publisher in Montreal as Secrets of the Invisible World. Alas, the publisher went out of business soon after, so my book went out of print. Several lesbian friends who said they liked my stories also complained that I was a “tease” – i.e. they wanted more sexual description.

Erotica in general was gaining in popularity and becoming combined with other genres. I wrote a few explicitly sexual stories which were accepted for anthologies which never materialized (as far as I knew). In the late ’90s, I joined the on-line Erotic Readers and Writers Association, read their calls-for-submissions and began submitting stories to editors and publishers who produced actual books and magazines. :D

So, to draw this epic to a close, I’ve actually been writing non-fiction much longer than I’ve been writing erotica. They’re very complementary. A flaming opinion and a hot sex scene can both relieve frustration, depending what kind it is.   :)

 Bryn: Wow! that’s quite some writing history. How ‘out’ are you about writing erotica?

Jean: I’m actually very “out.” I now have a business card, featuring the photo of me that accompanies my column at ERWA (www.erotica-readers.com), which includes the words “erotica,” “fiction,” “reviews,” articles,” “workshops” in that order (top to bottom).

I’m very lucky to have a tenured teaching position at a local university with a history of liberalism, so my published erotic fiction counts as “publications” when I report my accomplishments every year on a Faculty Review form, or apply for funding to attend a conference or a reading in some city that I can only reach by plane.

Here is where fiction and non-fiction fit together nicely. In 2000, some anonymous person complained to the secretaries in the English Department about the stuff I was running off on the office printer. I’m sure there were rumors about what I actually did in my office when the door was closed.

So I composed a 40-minute talk on the history of erotica (a sprint through the material) and got myself added to the schedule for the “OMADs” (Orlene Murad Academic Discussions, named for a departed colleague), a series of discussions by department members that are open to the public but usually attended only by fellow department-members.

I gave my talk, quaking in my shoes, in 2001. My parents were there, even though my father hated “porn.” (Later, he said he liked my talk. I don’t think he understood it.)  I used the overhead projector to show my audience an illustration (cartoon-like naked heroine), done in 1915 by American artist Clara Tice, for an English-language edition of Mademoiselle de Maupin, a classic French erotic novel. The talk was very well received – not a single person was offended, and several scholars in the crowd (my role models!) said they learned new things.

I developed my talk into an article which was published in several places, and spun it out into a talk on the history of censorship. I gave the censorship talk (without illustrations but with a free book list and historical outline) in February 2009 at a local chain bookstore as part of the “Coffeehouse Controversies” series, a joint project of Chapters Books and the local university. My talk was videotaped and shown numerous times on Community Channel TV.

I’m scheduled to give the same talk at a public library later in February 2010 as part of Freedom to Read Week.

At all these events, I’ve been honest about writing the kind of material which has been banned in various times and places. Once I put it in a social and historical context, no one threatens to put me in the stocks! (The publisher of Fanny Hill, or Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure was threatened with this in 1749, but that is another story.)

It seems that my youthful reputation as a slut has been eclipsed by my current image as an intellectual. Life is good. :)  

Bryn: That’s excellent! I feel very strongly that being a slut and being an intellectual should not be deemed as incompatible anyway! Who do you like to read?

 Jean: OMG, that’s a hard question to answer because I have many favorite authors, both living and dead. :)

One of my favorite (relatively) non-erotic authors at the moment is the historical novelist Emma Donoghue (originally from Ireland but now living in Canada). As one of her reviewers said, “She inhabits the past.” Reading one of her novels or stories set in a past century, you feel as if you’re there.

I tend to like writers who have broken new ground. So I like Frankenstein by Mary Shelley (first published 1818) and Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice (first published 1978), which set off the current craze for vampires as complex, almost-human characters, not just Evil personified.

I like the erotic fantasies of Pat (now Patrick) Califia, who helped found the real-life BDSM community of San Francisco as well as the current popularity of erotic fiction in general.

I like the erotica of M. Christian because he boldly goes where few other writers venture – into a whole variety of genres and sexual orientations, and always (to my knowledge) with respect for communities he doesn’t personally belong to. 

I like reading (and sometimes teaching) lesser-known books by authors who are better-known for something else.

Examples: 1) Sylvie and Bruno by Lewis Caroll, 19th-century author of Alice in Wonderland and Through the Looking-Glass.

2) The Third Life of Grange Copeland by contemporary U.S. author Alice Walker, who is probably best known for The Color Purple (made into a movie and then a stage musical).

I also admire a whole slew of other erotic writers, but I don’t want to start compiling a list because I’m afraid I would forget to include someone important.

 Bryn: A very interesting list. I did some anthology stuff with M Christian some years ago. A very engaging person. One final question then… where can people find you online?

Jean: I have a site that needs updating (I need help with that – I am so not a techie), but it still has a lot of information about me and my writing: www.JeanRoberta.com

My opinion pieces can be found every month in “Sex Is All Metaphors” here: www.erotica-readers.com (in the Smutters Lounge gallery).

 I am a staff reviewer here: www.eroticarevealed.com - look for my new review on the first of each month. My reviews can also be found here:  www.kissedbyvenus.ca

www.goodreads.com

www.velvetmafia.com

www.cleansheets.com 

& various other sites.

 I blog on Livejournal here:  http://lizardlez.livejournal.com. Or just type in “Jean Roberta” and see what comes up!

Jaime Samms interview

Friday, January 29th, 2010

Jaime came to lyd as part of the Immortal Fire project. She contributed two very lovely stories – Windblown, and Black Roses to the collection. Since then she’s also released the erotic, seasonal story Muse’s Vacation.

Bryn: Jaime, you write m/m, pretty much exclusively. What made you decide to focus on this?

Jaime: When I first started writing, I naively set out to write a novel. (never did finish it). It had various familial relationships in it, a Prince, his cousin and best friend, and his sister, and their various love interests. In the beginning, the Prince’s love interest was a spy, who at first was mysterious enough to avoid being very gender specific. As the story progressed, it was revealed to me that he was a guy, and really, that relationship, rocky though it was, always rang the most true to me of the others on the story.

that was pre-Internet…

When I found Live journal, and the plethora of m/m slash and fan fiction, I found my home and my calling. It didn’t take long, less than a year, for me to branch away from fan fiction to writing about my own characters and their stories. They all, or mostly, seemed to be male. I suspect I have a strong affinity for the male mindset in some ways. I do find men easier to write than women, and I enjoy exploring relationships that explore power dynamics when those dynamics start out from equal, man to man, or, occasionally, woman to woman, and change because of influences other than gender.

Bryn: I find m/m relationships a lot more comfortable for power aggressive exchange. I know ‘Muse’s Vacation’ explores dominance and submission. Is that a theme we’re likely to see more of then?

Jaime: I would venture to say, yes, there will be more of that. While my men don’t tend to be very aggressive, in general, they do take on decidedly dominant or submissive roles lately. I tend to write blind, a pantser, some people call it. This lets stories and characters evolve very organically, and right now, the evolution of my writing seems to be leaning toward D/s relationships. I follow these trends in my writing, rather than lead them, taking things where the spirit moves me to go. that all sounds very esoteric and all, but really, it just means the characters write themselves and I listen. Right now, this dynamic intrigues me, and I’m willing to keep exploring it.

Bryn: Have you ever been really surprised by the direction a story has gone in?

Jaime: Usually, the surprise comes when I’m stuck, I get worked up and frustrated, and the surprise is how simple the solution turns out to be. I will say, though, that in the first novel I wrote, which I recently went back to re haul there was a great surprise in that one of the characters, who I blithely killed off near the end, turned out to be the love interest of the main character. I only figured this out after I decided he had to die, though. Now I’m troubled as to what to do. I could substitute in a red shirt for the death, and leave happy alone. Or I could reflect that in real life, sometimes, perfect couples are torn apart too soon. They are guards, and there is a war. Stands to reason…

In another story, the mc had sex with the wrong man. Out of spite. Not spite for his boyfriend, but spite for the man he fucked. Not pretty, but then broken characters rarely are. Fixing him is proving to be a challenge.

Come to think on it, a nice surprise would be fantastic… lol!

Bryn: I like dark and realistic, and the uncertainty as to what sort of an ending is likely. Do you have a clear sense of what your characters look like before you start?

Jaime: You’ll like the project I’m working on next for LYD, then. Dark, gritty, set in an alternate universe from our own, a very broken character, and uncertain love are all features of this next story. If the sun shines at the end, it will be through a crack in the overcast, I think. But it will shine. I require it to shine down on them, however uncertain it is to last.

Goodness. No. In some cases, I never get a really clear picture of what they look like. In one story on my website, Long Road Home (http://www.jaime-samms.net/), the characters don’t even have names. I don’t know what their names are, don’t really know what they look like. I just know they are meant to be together, however long it took them to get there.

Bryn: Ooh, this I very much like the sound of! Anywhere else online people can follow you?

Jaime: My Live Journal: http://dontkickmycane.livejournal.com/ has promo for fellow authors, book reviews, and sometimes, a personal rant or two. I also blog: http://jaimesamms.blogspot.com/?zx=767433e8e8796b26 though intermittently…

I’m a reviewer for Dark Diva Reviews, where we review romance nad erotica, and I tend to focus on gay romance, and at Kuriousity, where I review Yoai light novels.

http://ddrreviews.blogspot.com/

http://www.kuri-ousity.com/about/

I do love to spout my opinion about the books I read, which I read a lot of. I can’t get enough of the written word.

Bryn: Me too! I’m a total blog junky. Thanks for chatting Jaime.

 

 

 

 

Let Me Introduce Myself

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

Hi. I’m a relatively new Loveyoudevine author. I write, at the moment, for the Hisandhiskisses line, and I have to say what a joy it’s been to work with the other authors, the editors and staff here at Loveyoudevine.

A little about me? I am, at heart, a writer and a stay at home mom of two. I home school a couple of delightful young kids who, let me tell you, are no picnic to keep up with! it’s a tough job, but a rewarding one.

I also write about men loving men. And fighting and working and having adventures together, but I would say, at the heart of my stories, there is always a romance, and always, hope for Happily Ever After.

I also review for Dark Diva Reviews in spare time. Because I have so darn much of it!

Mostly, what I want out of life are happy kids and to share my stories with people, and maybe, bring a bit of love and entertainment into the lives of my readers.

Jaime

Find out more about me

at my website: www.jaime-samms.net

my Live Journal: http://dontkickmycane.livejournal.com/

and my Blog: http://jaimesamms.blogspot.com/?zx=61489a52e7d53160

“Breathless” now available in paperback from Amazon

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Hey, everyone!

“Breathless”, the novella version of “Safe Word” is now available from Amazon.com!  Follow the link below and get your copy today!

http://www.amazon.com/Breathless-Alex-Morgan/dp/160054391X/ref=tmm_pap_title_0

Alex Morgan