How to upset your dog in one easy lesson

Listen to different types of wolf howls, again and again, all in the name of research, and only notice after about half an hour that the faithful old Lab is no longer curled up safely snoozing in his basket but is instead stalking around, eyes practically popping out of his head. Oops. Lots of cuddles and a venison ear later, he seems to have forgiven me. I never had these problems when researching the best types of Regency furniture for Our Heroes to have sex on.

Speaking of whom, Carnevalehas received another lovely review, this time from Becky Condit at Mrs Condit and Friends Read Books, who has awarded it 5 Sweet Peas. I’m truly delighted that people are enjoying Perry and Jack’s adventures.

A 5 star review for ‘Carnevale’

Some days are better than others, as a minor character in one of my favourite Blake’s 7 episodes was fond of saying. Today I woke up to a lovely surprise – a really wonderful review of Carnevale from Susan MacNicol on The Romance Reviews website.

“Beautifully written in the period, this is an ornate tapestry weaving story of men falling in love, of realizing their humanity and their frailties and their strengths. This is a definite recommended read and I can’t wait to read the next in Jack and Perry’s story.”

Luckily, the next part of their story, A Gilded Cage, is already available! There is one more book to come in this series, to give Perry and Jack their ultimate happy ever after, but I’m taking a little break from the formalities of eighteenth century Venice to explore a somewhat dysfunctional shifter pack in modern day Colorado.

Carnevale is available from Siren-BookStrand here. A Gilded Cage is available here.

Release day for A Gilded Cage

I’m not sure where the summer is going, but somehow the release day for A Gilded Cage is already here!

Set once more in 1790s Venice, with its licentious Carnevale and gorgeous clothes and masks, the book is a sequel to Carnevale (though either book may be read as a stand-alone). A Gilded Cage is available from Siren-BookStrand here, with a 10% discount until 28th August.

The coffee house to which Perry takes Gilbert is based on Caffe Florian, partly because it was in the right place at the right time, partly because I longed to use a place frequented by such men as Casanova and Byron, but mainly because I couldn’t resist tormenting Gilbert by having ladies present in a coffee shop. The horror! 

Publication date for ‘A Gilded Cage’

A Gilded Cage, the sequel to Carnevale, is due to be released by Siren on August 21st. I don’t want to say any more about its contents yet, as to do so would give away what happens in the first book, released on July 30th.

Instead I will mention that I am currently in the midst of a completely different style of book. It’s a contemporary paranormal, involving gay cowboy shifters. And that’s a sentence I never expected to write. I’m not quite sure where the inspiration for this one came from; I was contemplating taking a break from 1790s Venice and writing something a little less formal, and my brain was suddenly taken over by an argumentative shifter and his reluctant mate, who would not rest until I’d written their story.

So if werewolves suddenly turn up in Venice, or a cantankerous shifter starts wearing silk knee breeches and speaking in full sentences, you’ll know I’ve got myself a little confused.

 

A new book, and gondoliers.

While research into eighteenth century Venice was fun for its own sake, I’m delighted that Siren BookStrand have accepted the novella for which it was undertaken. Titled Carnevale, it’s due to be published on July 30th, and follows the fortunes of Peregrine (Perry) Sinclair, an English gentleman visiting Venice as part of his Grand Tour.

I’m in the midst of the sequel to Carnevale at the moment. Continued reading around the subject of Venice led me to John Addington Symonds’ memoirs. They’re interesting in their own right, but I was particularly struck by his love affair with Angelo Fusato, a gondolier. Symonds was fascinated by Angelo from the moment he first laid eyes on him:

The image of the marvellous being I had seen for those few minutes on the Lido burned itself into my brain and kept me waking all the next night. I did not even know his name; but I knew where his master lived. In the morning I rose from my bed unrefreshed, haunted by the vision which seemed to grow in definiteness and to coruscate with phosphorescent fire. A trifle which occurred that day made me feel that my fate could not be resisted, and also allowed me to suspect that the man himself was not unapproachable. Another night of storm and longing followed. I kept wrestling with the anguish of unutterable things, in the deep darkness of the valley of vain desire — soothing my smarting sense of the impossible with idle pictures of what it would be to share the life of this superb being in some lawful and simple fashion.

In these waking dreams I was at one time a woman whom he loved, at another a companion in his trade — always somebody and something utterly different from myself; and as each distracting fancy faded in the void of fact and desert of reality, I writhed in the clutches of chimaera, thirsted before the tempting phantasmagoria of Maya. My good sense rebelled, and told me that I was morally a fool and legally a criminal. But the love of the impossible rises victorious after each fall given it by sober sense.

I would love to know what trifle occurred that made Symonds think Angelo might not be unapproachable! The following day, Symonds learned Angelo’s name and arranged to meet him. Symonds expressed his surprise at Angelos’ willingness to do so, for he was not then aware that gondoliers were accustomed to selling their sexual services. And they retired to Symonds’ bed together:

I am not dreaming. He was surely here
And sat beside me on this hard low bed;
For we had wine before us, and I said —
"Take gold: 'twill furnish forth some better cheer".
He was all clothed in white; a gondolier;
White trousers, white straw hat upon his head,
A cream-white shirt loose-buttoned, a silk thread
Slung with a charm about his throat so clear.
Yes, he was here. Our four hands, laughing, made
Brief havoc of his belt, shirt, trousers, shoes:
 Till, mother-naked, white as lilies, laid
There on the counterpane, he bade me use
Even as I willed his body. But Love forbade —
 Love cried, "Less than Love's best thou shalt refuse!"

I have wanted for some time to write the love story of two of the secondary characters in Carnevale, a Venetian nobleman and his gondolier. Having read this, and also about the shenanigans of Lord Byron’s “muscular young gondolier”, I think that wish is fast becoming a necessity.