By Annabeth Leong (Guest Blogger)
Thanks so much to
Lisabet for kindly hosting me again on Beyond Romance. The last time
I was here, I was promoting a dark tale of stranger sex. And now for
something completely different...
***
I came to romance
as an act of rebellion. About three years ago, I forced myself to buy
several category romance books from a physical bookstore. My heart
has never pounded so hard, not even the first time I went collared to
a fetish event. I then continued my personal dare by making myself
read them in public, proudly, covers visible.
By that point,
I'd been reading and enjoying romance for years online. Even as a
punked-out literary teenager, I sneakily read romances in the
bookstore where I worked, but you wouldn't have caught me dead with
one on my bookshelf.
As an adult, I
came to romance through the back door of erotica. Reading and writing
erotica opened my eyes to sexual experiences portrayed in a wide
variety of modes — romantic, ecstatic, dark, hopeful. Erotic
romance introduced me to the idea of the HEA or HFN, the exact sort
of genre convention that I'd always thought precluded tackling
serious subjects. Except that, as I experimented with reading in the
genre, I found plenty of books that I liked, and eventually edged
into reading and loving the romance books I couldn't let myself enjoy
when I was younger. Plenty of them tackled heavy subjects — it's
just that they worked around to a solution by the time the ending
came around.
It's hard to
describe how I feel when I pull out a romance in public now. For me,
it's a way to play with my own comfort, to let myself inhabit an
image of femininity that I've always had trouble with. I'd have an
easier time sitting on a crowded train with Best
Bondage Erotica 2013 prominently
displayed than I would sitting there with a paperback with the
traditional beefcake cover. To my mind, the erotica collection says
I'm worldly, sexy, edgy. The beefcake says I'm romantic, vulnerable,
and naive.
It's very hard
for me to be vulnerable, and what opens a person up more than
admitting to the desire for committed love?
My latest
release, Not His Territory,
is the most unabashed romance I've written. There's explicit sex, but
for me the part of the writing process that made me feel really
exposed was the belief in love, the idea that the hero and heroine
can really get away with trying to heal each other. It was hard to
write a story where the decision to run off together could be a happy
ending, not a stupid decision.
I can't seem to
resist heavy subjects, and they're not absent from this story. At the
beginning, the heroine is being stalked by her ex-husband. The hero
works for an organization that doesn't care about people, and that
never improves.
I've experienced
some hard times in life, and they make me want to toughen up with
cynicism. I've seen people who believe in happy endings and get hurt
over and over. But I wouldn't be an honest writer if I claimed I only
get bad outcomes. In my life, as a reader, and as a writer, there's a
place for happy endings even if they scare the hell out of me.
If you look
through my list of published work, you'll find some dark stuff. I'm
glad to get the chance to share my darker work with readers — happy
endings can be a sort of tyranny if they're forced. On the other
hand, a darker ending isn't automatically the smarter one.
Writing Not
His Territory challenged me, and
gave me a chance to stretch my writing in a new direction. Love can
feel like two against the world, ready to stand together and fight
and overcome. Sometimes, that feeling is right, and I'm glad there's
a genre devoted to exploring that.
By the way, I'm giving away a copy of Not His Territory to one lucky person who comments. Don't forget to include your email address in the text of your comment!
By the way, I'm giving away a copy of Not His Territory to one lucky person who comments. Don't forget to include your email address in the text of your comment!
***
Blurb
After a
devastating encounter with an illegally shifted werewolf, a wounded
Raul Silva slumps on Chandra Williams’s doorstep, begging for
refuge. As an investigator for the legalistic Werewolf Council,
Raul’s been sent to look into instability in the local pack.
Chandra’s presence makes him want to succeed at his mission for
personal — not professional — reasons.
The Werewolf
Council disapproves. Chandra is strictly off-limits for Raul
according to both the traditions and laws of the werewolves. But
after a life devoted to upholding principles, Raul’s instincts and
desires are boiling to the surface. Can Raul resist Chandra, or will
he break with everything he stands for to pursue a woman who is not
his territory?
***
Excerpt
"Can I take
off his marking? I'm glad it kept you safe, but I'm not his
territory. It's not his house. I pay for it."
Raul's eyes took
on a strange weight. Chandra shivered, too aware of his body. "I
wish it were that simple."
"Why isn't
it? I can buy spray paint and cover up his mark."
"A territory
dispute must be resolved on the full moon in the ancient way."
"The ancient
way?"
"A
challenge. A battle for control. It's done in fully shifted form."
"Well, I'm
not a werewolf. What am I supposed to do?"
"We're set
up to be self-policing. Your ex shouldn't be behaving the way he is.
Marriages to humans are somewhat frowned upon and are supposed to be
done with full knowledge and consent on the part of the human. This
obviously wasn't how he did it with you, since you know nothing of
our customs. A human has good reason to be wary of marrying one of
us, though. Werewolf law often resorts to the ancient way for final
arbitration. A human is at a disadvantage in any dispute with one of
us. It's much easier when we keep to ourselves." Both of Raul's
hands gripped the tablecloth now. Chandra wondered what part of this
upset him so much.
"So you're
saying he shouldn't have married me."
"Not if he
planned to treat you this way." Raul's voice came out as a
snarl.
"I mean,
because it breaks werewolf law."
"It's not
that a werewolf can't be with a human," Raul said. His emphasis
on the words "be with" sent a chill down her inner thighs.
"It just needs to be done properly." Now Chandra grabbed
her own handful of tablecloth. She needed to figure out how to get
free of her ex, not become distracted wondering what Raul would
consider the "proper" way to be with a human.
"Okay,
well." Chandra's voice shook. She forced herself to look at a
spot on the wall beyond Raul. If she looked directly at the man,
she'd be off on another fantasy before she knew what hit her. "Since
that's water under the bridge at this point, isn't there any way to
dispute his claim on my house?"
Raul's hand
brushed hers. Chandra jumped. "Another werewolf could dispute on
your behalf. I could do that for you. If you wanted. I owe you my
life as it is."
Chandra waited
for him to move his hand away. He did not. She went on speaking
anyway, despite the bolts of arousal shooting through her lower
belly. "And what then? Am I—I mean, my house—is my house
your
territory if you win?" Her arms trembled. The idea of being his
territory sounded medieval to her brain, but her body loved it.
Enough that she involuntarily crossed her legs and squeezed them
together, further igniting the heat between her thighs.
"In theory,"
Raul said slowly. "I suppose so. In practice, only if you want
it to be." He smiled. "I'm a werewolf, not a caveman."
Available from:
***
Bio
Annabeth Leong
has written romance and erotica of many flavors -- dark, kinky,
vanilla, straight, lesbian, bi, and menage. In addition to Not His
Territory, Breathless Press published her werewolf story, “The
Arcadian Cure,” in its Ravaged anthology. For a complete list of
her published work, visit her blog. She particularly enjoys playing
off myth, legend, fairy tales, and fantastic history. She believes
passionately in freedom of speech, rights for people of all sexual
orientations, and freedom of religion. She lives in Providence, Rhode
Island, blogs at annabethleong.blogspot.com, and tweets
@AnnabethLeong
8 comments:
Greetings, Annabeth, and welcome back to Beyond Romance!
As another author who writes both darker erotica and romance, this is fascinating take on the contrast between them. I've never thought about the courage required to write a HEA - it always seemed to me to be the easy way out. However, you've got me thinking that I might be wrong.
Good luck with the book!
Thanks so much for having me! I'm always glad to have the chance to write a variety of endings. :)
Could someone educate me as to HEÂ and HFN mean?
Please enter me for the book, it sounds delicious.
M. Herzog ridgetb AT yahoo DOT com
Hi there! HEA means "Happily Ever After" and HFN means "Happy For Now."
Thanks for reading!
Psssst, did you pick a winner for the ebook? I'm so anxious.
Hi, M.,
I'll remind Annabeth about the giveaway.
How could I refuse someone anxious to read the book? I'll send you an e-mail forthwith, ridgetb. :)
Awesome! I'm doing the happy dance! Yaaahhhhooooooo!
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