Chasing the Sun Blog Tour: Stop #4–Literary Nymphs

It’s hard to believe that I’m fours stops into my Chasing the Sun blog tour, but I am. Time sure does fly when you’re having fun, and today, I’m having fun over at Literary Nymphs. And why wouldn’t I? Not only do I get to talk about my latest release, but I get to hang out with the fine folks who run Literary Nymphs and their readers. It’s a win-win!

Today, I talk about why I chose the artwork that graces the cover of Chasing the Sun. It was more than just its stunning beauty. If you want the 411 on why I chose yet another of Michael Breyette’s fantastic art, then click here and you’ll be instantly teleported over to Literary Nymphs.

The giveaway is still going strong, so don’t forget to leave a comment. If you leave a comment at any of my other stops, you’ll increase your chances of winning a free e-copy of Chasing the Sun. That could be a total of 12 entries. How awesome is that?

I hope to see you all there! 🙂

Chasing the Sun Blog Tour: Stop #3–Mrs. Condit Reads Books

I’m over at Mrs. Condit Reads Books today for the third stop on my Chasing the Sun blog tour. It was my first time over at the hallowed halls of those precious sweet peas we love to get, and I had a great time!

What did I discuss over there? Well, I talked about the challenges of being a father. As anyone who is a parent knows, taking care of our kiddoes is a tough job, but just as moms face their own unique set of parenting difficulties, I think dads have some issues that primarily affect them. If you’d like to read what I had to say, then click here and you’ll be zipped away to Mrs. Condit’s blog. There’s also a four sweet pea review of Chasing the Sun that I was pleased to receive. How awesome is that?

The giveaway is still going strong! Don’t forget to leave a comment and you’ll be entered for a chance to win a free e-copy of Chasing the Sun. If you want more chances to win, then leave a comment at my other stops and you’ll increase the likelihood of your name being drawn as the winner. 🙂

Chasing the Sun Blog Tour: Stop #2–The Novel Approach

Today, it’s blog stop #2 for the Chasing the Sun blog tour, and I’m over at the Novel Approach. It’s one of my favorite places to visit. Mostly because of the awesome Lisa and her fantastic reviewers and partly because of the free-flowing alcohol. It’s always a party at TNA.

So what am I talking about today over at the Novel Approach? Well, I’m explaining why I titled the book Chasing the Sun. If you want to learn the rationale behind the title, then click here and you’ll be zipped on over to a place filled with booze and men. Who could ask for anything more?

Also, the beautiful Jackie from TNA reviewed Chasing the Sun. If you’d like to read it, click here to be taken to the review.

Don’t forget about the giveaway. If you leave a comment, then you are entered to win a free e-copy of Chasing the Sun. If you leave a comment at all my blog stops, you increase your chances of winning. Pretty cool, huh?

Chasing the Sun Blog Tour: Stop #1–It’s Raining Men

The Chasing the Sun blog tour is finally here! Yay! I typically like starting blog tours on release day, but since Chasing the Sun came out the same day GRL began, I just couldn’t swing it. I was too busy having fun with all the readers and authors. Who had time for anything else?!?!

But GRL is over now. Boo!

But the good news is that the blog tour can now officially begin! WHOOHOO!

I kick off my tour over at It’s Raining Men. It was my first time over where men fall from the skies. Believe me, I was surprised too. That’s where we should all be living, right?

So, what did I talk about over at It’s Raining Men? Well, I talk about the top 3 reasons I believe younger men are attracted to older men. If you’re interested in reading what I have to say, then click here and a powerful wind will lift you up and deposit you on the land of raining men.

As always, there’s a giveaway as part of my tour. If you leave a comment to the post, you are entered to win a free e-copy of Chasing the Sun. If you leave comments at all my blog stops, then that just increases your odds of winning. Who does’t like free stuff? I know I do!

Chasing the Sun: Chapter 1 Preview

Chasing the Sun, the second book of the Provincetown Series, releases tomorrow October 16. To celebrate the release, which also happens to coincide with the beginning of Gay Romance Lit (or GRL) in Atlanta, I’m sharing the entire first chapter of the novella with my readers.

Chasing the Sun

Chasing the Sun

Pretty awesome cover, right? And in case you haven’t read the blurb, here it is to give you a little background to the chapter I’ll be sharing.

Blurb:

As a physician and prominent citizen of Victoria, Texas, Dr. Gil Kelly took a hard fall when his vengeful wife revealed his infidelity with other men. Closing ranks around her, the town’s elite ostracized him, and his relationship with his children was nearly destroyed.

After spending his life focused on living for others, he has no idea how to live for himself. He wants to find love but now settles for anonymous sex that only further clouds his world with shame and guilt. Gil believes finding true love is an unobtainable dream, what his father used to call “chasing the sun.”

Then he runs into Tom Martinez, his son’s childhood best friend, who returned to town a grown man and offers everything Gil needs. But Gil hesitates to fall into Tom’s arms, because after his high-profile divorce, the potential scandal of loving a younger man could separate him from his children permanently.

Spin off of When Love Takes Over (1st Provincetown Series book)

I hope you enjoy this extensive preview. It seemed like the only way to commemorate such a momentous occasion as a new release and GRL converging on the same day. And, without further ado, here is Chapter One:

Excerpt:

Gil Kelly couldn’t believe what he was doing. Was he insane? Someone he knew could just waltz in here. How was he going to explain himself? What was this going to look like? Well, he’d look like a crazy old fool, that was for sure, and after everything he’d put his family through, he should know a lot better.

Was that going to stop him, though? No. The allure proved too much. It had been too many months since he felt the comfort of another’s body. Though he should flee this place, and the potential ridicule, the hardness elongating within his khaki trousers trumped his concerns for self-preservation.

A far stronger need held him fast in its sweaty embrace.

His already tarnished reputation in this small town was going to become a greasy stain if things went badly.

“To hell with it,” Gil muttered as he sat down at the corner table of the Starbucks just as he told his would-be visitor he would.

So far, no one he knew in this town of sixty thousand—which for someone of his position and status made Victoria, Texas, a surprisingly small town—had ventured into the coffee house. Only three other customers currently took up space inside. A young college-aged couple sat on the other side of the room, sipping their drinks, completely oblivious to anyone else. They were so in lust with each other, giggling like schoolchildren and rubbing their legs against one another, Gil doubted they would flinch at a pistol shot.

Closer to him and along the left wall, a man roughly about his early thirties—the same age as Gil’s two children, he noted glumly—gazed intently at his computer screen. He was too engrossed in whatever project he furiously worked on to pay any mind to a white-haired man in his very early fifties.

Gil might as well be invisible, which suited him just fine.

It was just past one in the afternoon, and he scheduled the rendezvous for one thirty. Gil chose the time to avoid the lunch crowds at noon and the hurried parents scurrying toward their three o’clock children pickups at school.

Gil glanced at his watch, hoping the gesture would somehow rush time along. He was disappointed to find only a minute had passed, and he cursed himself for getting there so early.

Why had he done that again?

He had entertained the idea of arriving late or sitting in his car to see who sat down at the agreed-upon table. After all, he knew nothing about this person except that his screen name was “Visiting” and, from the picture the man sent, he had probably the most gorgeous ass Gil had ever seen. Based on the supple flesh in the picture, Visiting Guy was some years younger than him, which was hot. But did the body attached to the ass belong to someone resembling Steve Buscemi or Steve McQueen? He might be hard up, but he wasn’t Steve Buscemi hard up. At least not for a few weeks yet.

That was why he had to get there early.

If he waited outside or arrived late, someone else might beat one of them to the table. Then Visiting Guy might just up and leave, destroying an entire morning’s worth of online flirting. He definitely didn’t want that, especially when he didn’t know when he might have another free day from the hospital.

It hadn’t been easy to get Visiting Guy to agree to a public meeting. He wanted Gil to come over to his place or for Gil to invite him over so they could fuck.

There was no way in hell Gil was agreeing to that. The guy might be a psycho—or worse, someone he knew, maybe even a previous patient. Just because he was visiting didn’t mean he’d never lived in Victoria. If they met in public and the guy turned out to be an acquaintance, Gil planned on telling a big, fat lie to save himself.

Visiting Guy didn’t know what he looked like, since he never sent him a photo of his face. He sent a cock shot instead, so there was no way for him to be identified that way. The acquaintance might not buy the lie, but it was plausible enough to save him some embarrassment, unless someone who knew about his past happened to see them together.

Then, all bets were off.

Besides, he’d read enough articles about the dangers of meeting strangers in private locales to prevent him from being that reckless, no matter how horned up he was.

When he discovered the gay dating site called Cyber, he initially thought the idea absurd. What had happened to getting to know someone over a few drinks? Then he realized he’d never done that before either, at least not with another man.

And what did he do then? Well, being the good academic he was, he started doing research.

He learned that dating for gay men was different than when he dated and pretended to be straight all those years ago. When he dated his wife, he quickly realized it for what it was—a cat-and-mouse game. She flirted. He advanced. When he made a move, she pulled back. If he followed her lead and didn’t pursue, she flirted, which started the cycle all over again.

It was basically one big tease.

That wasn’t how men pursued other men. Sure, teasing abounded. Why else did most gay men wear such revealing clothing or send naughty pictures of themselves over dating sites like Cyber? To tease and attract someone, just like women tempted men with a peek of their bosoms barely contained by plunging necklines or skirts so short they hardly covered up the goods.

The big difference between pursuing women and gay men, though, was follow-through. Gay men didn’t continue the game. Once both players accepted the rules, the good times rolled. For gay men, dating was about sex, sometimes anonymous, which apparently cranked up the hot factor by ten.

He found the idea intriguing at first, but the horror stories online made Gil not want to chance a private meeting, ever.

He’d read articles about guys being robbed or even attacked by gay bashers, who lay in wait for some unsuspecting man with more boner than common sense to head over to some stranger’s house.

Over the past five years, he’d made enough of a spectacle of himself to not want to add a gay bashing to his long list of scandals.

This town had feasted upon him enough as it was.

Gil accepted the mistakes he made that destroyed his family. He would continue to repay that debt for the rest of his life, if he had to. But he didn’t owe anyone else another damn drop of his blood, even though the social elite constantly circled him like the sharks they were.

He would no longer be the chum in their blood-infested waters.

“Dr. Kelly?”

The man’s voice startled Gil out of his thoughts. When he looked up, fear crawled down his spine like a spider taking a leisurely stroll along the length of his back.

“Tommy?” he asked, embarrassed that he sounded like a teen caught doing something naughty by his parents. To recover, he inhaled deeply. “It’s been, what? A year? How are you?”

“Okay, I guess,” the younger man said, pulling out the chair across the table and sitting down. “But please, call me Tom. It hasn’t been Tommy since I graduated high school, which was many years ago.”

Gil smiled and nodded.

Tommy Martinez had been his son’s best friend since elementary school. Back then, Tommy and Zach were inseparable, and Tommy proved to be much sweeter than the hellion Zach always pretended to be. Where Zach was defiant to authority, Tommy showed only respect to adults. He never complained when he and Zach were told not to get dirty, to take their baths, or to eat their vegetables. He simply nodded, smiled, and did what was asked.

As they entered puberty, Zach’s wild streak worsened. His son never seemed happy. It was as if Zach constantly searched for something beyond his grasp. Tommy, on the other hand, appeared more grounded. By the time they were teens, Tommy possessed self-confidence envied by most adults. He understood his life was of his making, and he was bound and determined to make his way in the world. When Tommy didn’t return to Victoria after college, Gil hadn’t been surprised.

Over the past few years, Tommy had returned to town a few times, and Gil hadn’t been surprised that the respectful boy, who had always smiled underneath a full head of messy jet-black hair as a child, had matured into a striking man.

His hair, still as black as the night, had finally been tamed. Cut short along the sides, it descended into sideburns that dipped just below his ears. The top was a little longer than the sides, just enough to get a good handful of in more intimate situations, and his caramel-colored eyes that were three shades lighter than his tanned flesh made Gil feel drunk.

“You okay, Dr. Kelly?”

“Yes,” he answered quickly. “How come?” He couldn’t stop staring into Tommy’s eyes. What a lecherous fool he’d become! That was why Gil did his best to avoid him whenever Tommy returned to visit family. Gil had known him as a child, yet all he could ever envision was licking a trail across the stubble that hugged Tommy’s jaw line.

The man Tommy became appealed too much to Gil.

“You just seem preoccupied. If I’m intruding, just say the word, and I’ll go.”

Gil didn’t have the heart to dismiss him like he did last year. His reactions to Tommy weren’t Tommy’s fault. “Not at all. I’d love to catch up.”

“Are you sure? You seem like you might be waiting for someone, so I don’t want to be a bother.”

“Please, Tommy. Stay.” But as the words left his mouth, panic descended upon him. What if the man he was supposed to meet showed up while he was talking to Tommy? What would Tommy think? And would Tommy tell Zach about it?

Just what he needed. Another reason for his son to hate him.

“Okay, I’ll stay. But only if you call me Tom, not Tommy.”

Gil nodded in agreement, forcing his rising fears about being discovered into the pit of his stomach. What could he do about it now anyway? He asked Tommy to stay, and Gil owed him the courtesy of his undivided attention.

After all, Tommy made it a point to try to see Gil whenever he came to town.

Visiting Guy would just have to wait, or even better, just leave if he saw the table already occupied by two customers.

They chitchatted for a few minutes. Gil learned that the younger man’s parents had passed away, and he’d returned to take over the family business, a Mexican restaurant called Tequila Sunrise. Although Gil hadn’t patronized the establishment in some time, the eatery was a local favorite.

Their conversation, about how Gil’s daughter Sami was getting along, went nicely until Gil accidentally called him Tommy again. “I’m sorry, Tom. I’m just so accustomed to calling you Tommy. Please, forgive me.”

“It’s okay. I get that a lot in Victoria. Everyone only sees the boy I was before I left. Not the man I now am.”

Gil understood about not being seen for who he was now. The town certainly never let him forget what he’d done, and his son refused to speak with him. Holding a grudge bigger than the Grand Canyon was wide about how he treated Zach as a child. Even though he’d changed, neither the town nor his son could see past the man they once knew.

Would his past define him forever? He hoped not, but there didn’t seem to be anything he could do about that.

“Well, I see him,” he told Tom. “In fact, I’ve always seen the man inside you. Even when you were a kid.”

“How so?”

“You were so different from Zach. More focused. Less angry. I know Zach was trying to prove himself in the world and to me. I certainly wasn’t the easiest father for my son, and I regret that. But you never seemed as if you had anything to prove. To anyone.”

“Guess I didn’t feel the need to fight who I was. I simply accepted it,” Tom said. “It wasn’t that easy for Zach.”

“How so?” Tom’s statement slightly wounded him. Gil always wanted his son to feel accepted. Lord knew, his father never made him feel that way. He was always too much of a dreamer for his working-class father. The man accused Gil of putting on airs, of trying to be more than what he was born to be.

His father called it chasing the sun.

He tried to be better for his son. To make him see his life held endless possibilities if only he’d choose something worthwhile and pursue it. But Gil realized too late that he’d ridden Zach just as hard, which paved miles of distance between them.

“It’s not my place to say,” Tom finally replied after a long silence.

“I can respect that, but do you mind if I ask you a different question?”

“As long as I don’t have to break Zach’s confidence. We may not be as close as we once were, but I still consider him one of my best friends.”

Gil nodded. “You were there with Zach as he grew up. Hell, you practically lived in our house! With whatever you know about Zach, did I do something or treat him in a way that made him feel as if I expected anything more than for him to be happy?”

Tom thought about the question. As he pondered it, he lightly tapped his fingers on the table. Dark hair dusted his forearms. From there, smoother skin disappeared beneath the tight red Polo he wore.

Was Tom’s chest smooth or sprinkled with dark hair like his forearms? The image caused his cock to stiffen, so he immediately banished it from his dirty old mind.

What the hell was he doing? Lusting after his son’s childhood best friend? He used to put him to bed in his Superman pajamas, for Christ’s sake! He even took pictures of him and Zach and the girls they escorted to homecoming and prom. So why couldn’t he stop thinking of kissing Tommy’s soft lips? Or running his tongue across his naked body?

“I seem to have lost you again.”

Gil focused on Tom’s alluring eyes, which had widened in concern. Tom pushed his chair back from the table as he continued, “I must be intruding.”

“You’re not. I was just thinking about how I might’ve screwed things up with Zach.” Even though it was a lie, it was only a partial lie. “I guess I just lack the ability to see myself objectively to arrive at a definitive answer. This is something I’ve thought about for a while now, and though I have some ideas, I really don’t feel as if I understand it all, so any insight you have would be welcome.”

“Only if you’re sure,” Tom said as he once again scooted his chair closer to the table. “I don’t want to speak out of turn.”

Gil smiled. “As respectful as ever, I see.”

Tom’s soft lips parted, revealing a sparkling set of white teeth. “To a fault. Or so I’ve been told.”

“Well, I don’t know who’s been telling you that, but it’s never been a fault in my book.”

“Let’s just say it was a problem in my last relationship.” His cheery brown eyes grew murky for a second before he managed to blink the sadness away. “But we were talking about your relationship with Zach, not my tale of heartache and woe.”

Tom obviously did want to talk about the relationship and the pain associated with it. Although the sting he saw in Tom’s eyes seemed in no way to weaken his self-confidence, Gil observed enough hurt to know that it had at least rocked Tom’s rather stable foundation.

When they were done discussing Zach, he planned to see what advice he might be able to offer Tom. After all, if there was one thing Gil knew, it was fucked-up personal relationships.

“So, then, what do you see that I can’t?” Gil asked.

“Well,” Tom began, looking more like the child Gil remembered as he ran his right hand through his dark locks. The gesture turned Gil on more than it should have. “The troubles you had with Mrs. Kelly hurt him a great deal.”

And there it was. Gil had always hoped he’d done a better job of shielding his children from their parents’ marital distress, especially before the marriage suffered its meltdown. Apparently, he failed. “In what way?” he finally asked.

“You know how close Zach was to his mom.”

“Close is an understatement. Donna’s life revolved around Zach. It seemed almost unhealthy. Poor Sami never got anything close to the affection she heaped upon Zach. I tried my best to give Sami more attention, to somehow make up for what she didn’t receive from her mother, and I tried to provide some balance to Donna’s overindulgence of Zach. Did he resent me for that?”

“That wasn’t it.”

“What then?”

Tom sighed. He looked worse than miserable for having to speak whatever truth he knew. He chewed on his lower lip and looked away.

“You won’t offend me, son,” Gil reassured him. “In fact, you’ll probably be helping my relationship with Zach. We haven’t been on good terms for far too many years.”

“I know. We talk every few months or so.”

“Really?” When was the last time he talked to Zach? If he had to guess, it was at least three years ago. That was way too long.

“In fact, we chatted a few weeks ago,” Tom said.

Tom obviously preferred this topic of conversation to the previous one. His former apprehension vanished, and the light in Tom’s eyes returned. For that reason alone, Gil decided to allow the subject change. For now.

“I told him I was moving back this week, and he couldn’t believe it. He demanded to know why I would ever return to Hick-toria.”

Gil smiled. He hadn’t heard Zach’s less-than-endearing nickname for Victoria since before Zach departed for college in Dallas. When he moved out, he promised never to see the town again.

“What did he say when you told him you were taking over the restaurant?”

“Well, he knew that it wasn’t my only reason for returning.”

“Did the past relationship you mentioned play a contributing factor?”

Tom’s mouth hooked to the right in a half-grin. “Spot on, Dr. Kelly.”

“Well now, if I have to call you Tom, you need to call me Gil.”

Tom looked shocked, as if Gil were asking Tom to shoot him point blank. “I could never,” he said. “You’ve always been Dr. Kelly.”

“And you’ve always been Tommy.”

Tom pursed his lips in defeat, the same way he used to as a child whenever Zach beat him at a board game. “You win,” he replied with extreme hesitation before finally uttering his first name, “Gil.”

“See, it wasn’t that bad now, was it?”

“Yes, it was.”

“Okay, then you can call me by my birth name.”

“What is it? Gilbert?”

He shook his head. “Worse than that. It’s Gilchrist.”

“Gilchrist?” Tom asked with a wrinkle to his nose. “That’s awful!”

“Tell me about it! My father was a good ol’ Irishman and wanted his son to be a proud Irishman as well.” He rolled his eyes. “He got me instead.”

“Well, I like who you’ve decided to be,” Tom announced. “We should always define ourselves and never be defined by what others see or expect.”

Was there some hidden meaning in Tom’s comment? Why did it seem as if Tom was trying to send Gil a message he was supposed to understand? In fact, the majority of this conversation left him perplexed. As a boy, Tommy Martinez answered questions posed to him. Tom Martinez proved more evasive. He hadn’t revealed what he knew about Zach’s beef with Gil, at least so that it made clear sense. He also remained vague about his past romantic relationship and how it contributed to his return to Victoria.

Just what was Tom hiding? And why?

A Little Fall Fun with Jacob Z. Flores on Gay Sex Cast

I was so honored when Dean asked me to be a guest on his show called Gay Sex Cast, which is a podcast/Internet radio show that interviews gay fiction authors as well as gay porn models. Naturally, I said yes, and why not? I LOVE talking about gay sex. And gay porn models? Well, yum!

But then, the nerves set in. What was I going to say? How much of an ass was I going to make of myself? And why did I agree to do this?

I’m not used to synchronous interviews. I’m used to blog tours, where I have a chance to think about questions before answering them. How was I going to do this? Luckily, Dean helped be feel better about the interview, so I pulled on my big boy undies and dove right in.

We chatted about parties, romance/erotica, Provincetown, and my Provincetown Series. I have to admit: I had a lot of fun. Hopefully, you all think so too. Dean was a gracious host, and his two co-hosts, Benny Morecock from CockyBoy Studios and Jamie Sanders, a Helix exclusive model, were great guys to get to know.

If you are interested in hearing the interview, click here. Let me know what you guys think.

For those who don’t know, Gay Sex Cast in a podcast/Internet radio show that interviews gay fiction authors as well as gay porn models.

Character Interview with Tom Martinez of Chasing the Sun

Today, I conclude my interview of the two main characters from my upcoming release, Chasing the Sun, which is the second book of The Provincetown Series. If you missed my interview with Gil Kelly, click here.

Chasing the Sun

Today, I’ll be interviewing Tom Martinez, who is a thirty-year old restauranteur, who is returning to his home town of Victoria, Texas.

Tom Martinez

Tom Martinez

Tom, thank you for stopping by. I know you’re an extremely busy man these days.

Tom: That’s putting it mildly. But when I got your call, I was intrigued. So I just had to come. Besides, any publicity is good publicity. Especially since I’m trying to grow my parents’ restaurant into what I’ve always seen it to be.

What’s the name of the restaurant?

Tom: Tequila Sunrise. Not very original I know. But it’s been a pretty popular Mexican food restaurant here in Victoria for years. Lots of locals know about it so I can’t change it’s name now. Even though I’d love to.

So if your parents’ restaurant has been so popular over the years, why do you want to change things up so badly? I assume it’s been doing pretty good business. It’s been open for how long?

Its doors opened in 1994 so almost twenty years now. And I can’t deny that it’s done a steady business, but the customers who typically frequent the restaurant are aging. I’ve got to find a way to appeal to a younger demographic. It’s not because I have anything against the older generation. I think they’re great. Believe me! But in order for the restaurant to survive, I need to attract a new generation of customer. Otherwise, my parents’ legacy won’t last, and that’s something I’m intent on achieving.

You seem like an extremely motivated man. Have you always been that way?

Tom: (laughing) All of my life. I don’t know if I’ve ever acted like a child. Even when I was one. I’m not saying I had an awful childhood or anything. My parents were awesome. I really lucked out there. And I had tons of friends so I wasn’t some lonely kid eating lunch by himself all the time. To be honest, I’ve been blessed. But I’ve always known who I was and what I wanted out of life. I guess having that clear sense of direction for as long as I can remember has helped motivate me. It’s kept me focused.

And what is it that you want out of life? What has been your motivation for all these years?

Tom: Well, this is gonna sound really sappy, but I swear it’s true. I’ve only ever wanted to be true to myself.

What do you mean by that? Were you ever not true to yourself?

Tom: I’ve always been true to myself. You see, I’ve known from a very young age that I was gay. I heard the way kids at school called each other “queer” or “fag,” so I knew liking boys was not something others readily accepted. Not even some people in my extended family. It’s hard realizing you’re gay when friends, family, and the media tells you it’s wrong. But I never believed any of that crap. I was who I was. No one was going to change my thinking on that or make me doubt myself. I was simply me, and that wasn’t wrong.

Wow! That’s quite an adult approach for a child. I won’t lie but I’m a bit floored. There are some grown men who don’t possess that level of confidence or self-esteem. And you’ve had both since you were a kid!

Tom: I know, and I find it quite sad that most people don’t love themselves enough to believe the same things about themselves. We get so caught up with being just like everyone else. And that’s just a recipe for disaster. We can’t live for what our neighbors think is right or wrong. As long as we’re not hurting someone else, it’s really nobody else’s business.

Truer words have never been spoken.

Tom: Sorry. I tend to get on my soapbox. Sometimes you’ve just got to shut me up.

Don’t apologize. This is something you obviously feel strongly about. But I did want to ask: who was the first person you came out to as a child?

Tom: My best friend Zach.

And how did Zach take it?

Tom: Quite well actually. He was a bit stunned, but it wasn’t the fact that I was gay that freaked him out. It was that I was so okay with it. Zach’s always had these personal demons he’d been battling. His family life wasn’t great, and he had a hard time getting along with his father. So I think it threw him to learn that I was okay with who I was. Even though it might cause me problems. Zach wasn’t that way at all. He believed he had to be what everyone else wanted him to be. I tried to help him, but I couldn’t change Zach. I could only be there for him when he needed me. That was really all I could do.

Are the two of you still friends?

Tom: Yes. We’re not as close as we used to be. He’s moved to Dallas and a lot has been going on in his life recently. So he just hasn’t had the time to reach out to anyone. But I’ll be here for him when he needs it, and I’ll always will.

I have to say: you sound too good to be true. Not only are you a fine-looking man, but your confident without being cocky. You’re motivated in life. You have a good head on your shoulders and a kind heart. You are quite possibly what others might describe as the “perfect” man.

Tom: Ha! I’m far from perfect.

How so?

Tom: Well, for starters. I’m pushy and opinionated. That’s been problematic in some past relationships. Although most guys think they want a man to stand up for himself, they really don’t. Most men prefer to get their way and have the final say. I’m not saying I have to have things my way all the time, but is compromise such a bad thing? For some of my ex-boyfriends, it has been. It was either their way or the highway. Which is why I’m single.

Are you really? I find that hard to believe.

Tom: It’s true. I’m single, but I’m hoping not to be for much longer.

Now, you’ve piqued my interest. Who has caught your eye? Tell us about him.

Tom: (shaking his head) Sorry. That’s not gonna happen.

Why not?

Tom: Because I don’t know if it will ever happen.

That sounds rather ominous and self-defeating. Especially for such a confident man as yourself.

Tom: I may be confident, but I’m also a realist. It keeps me grounded and my head out of the clouds.

What’s wrong with flying through the sky in search of a dream that others might call impossible?

Tom: Just ask Icarus. He wanted to fly, so he made wings out of wax. Unfortunately, he flew too close to the sun. Impossible dreams are sometimes just that. Impossible.

Well, Tom, I truly believe that nothing is impossible. With your drive and motivation, you’ll find some way to soar into the sky and kiss the sun. Thank you again for stopping by and chatting with me.

Character Interview with Gil Kelly of Chasing the Sun

On October 16th, the second book of The Provincetown Series Chasing the Sun releases from Dreamspinner Press. I can’t tell you how excited I am! Writing this series has been a labor of pure, unadulterated love, and I’ve been pleased by the reception the first book of the series When Love Takes Over has received. I’m glad to know that the characters and Provincetown have resonated as much with the readers as they have for me.

Even though Chasing the Sun is part of The Provincetown Series, however, it is a spin-off of When Love Takes Over. This means that for this book (and this book only) we leave Provincetown and the kooky characters we’ve come to love like Nino, Gary, Penny Poison, Quinn, and Tara and head back to Zach Kelly’s hometown of Victoria, Texas.

Why are we leaving Provincetown in a series titled The Provincetown Series?

Good question!

We’re leaving P-town because I just had to tell the story of Zach’s father. Those of you who’ve read When Love Takes Over already know that Zach and his dad have a complicated history. Chasing the Sun fills in the gaps readers might have had regarding their relationship, and we get to see the man Gil Kelly really is and not just what his son perceives him to be.

So to celebrate the upcoming release of Chasing the Sun, I’m going to be sitting down with the main characters from the novella spin off.

But before we get started, here’s the book’s blurb to give you a bit of a background:

As a physician and prominent citizen of Victoria, Texas, Dr. Gil Kelly took a hard fall when his vengeful wife revealed his infidelity with other men. Closing ranks around her, the town’s elite ostracized him, and his relationship with his children was nearly destroyed.

After spending his life focused on living for others, he has no idea how to live for himself. He wants to find love but now settles for anonymous sex that only further clouds his world with shame and guilt. Gil believes finding true love is an unobtainable dream, what his father used to call “chasing the sun.”

Then he runs into Tom Martinez, his son’s childhood best friend, who returned to town a grown man and offers everything Gil needs. But Gil hesitates to fall into Tom’s arms, because after his high-profile divorce, the potential scandal of loving a younger man could separate him from his children permanently.

Spin off of When Love Takes Over (1st Provincetown Series book)

ChasingtheSunORIGSo first up on my interview couch is none other than Gil Kelly, a fifty-something physician from Victoria, Texas.

Gil Kelly

Gil Kelly

Gil, I want to thank you so much for taking time out of your busy call schedule at the hospital to sit down and answer a few questions.

Gil: Not a problem at all. I was actually quite flattered that you were interested in interviewing me for your Internet show. What is it you call it again?

It’s “From Gay to Z.” And though I wish it were a show, it’s not. It’s a blog. But how fabulous would it be if I got my own show? I see myself on Bravo. Or ABC. I would love to be related to Sofia Vergara’s character on Modern Family.

Gil: (laughing) Who wouldn’t? She’s a beautiful woman. I’d love to be on that show too, but with my luck, I’d get cast as Ed O’Neill’s older brother.

Oh, please, you’re not old enough for such a typecast, and you know it.

Gil: (grinning) I know no such thing! Do you not see my silver hair? I’m old, and that’s okay. I embrace my age. There’s no reason not to.

Well, it’s my personal opinion that older and distinguished men are quite attractive. And the silver hair, well, excuse me for growling at you, but I find it extremely sexy. I think a lot of my readers will too. And we should all embrace our age. We are only as old as we feel.

Gil: Well, sometimes when I wake up, I feel every year that I’ve lived in my bones.

Let me ask you a question about that: do you think you are sometimes so bone weary because of your age or because of the great emotional stress you’ve been under the past five years?

Gil: Wow. You don’t pull punches do you?

I’m sorry. I don’t mean to be rude, but I am curious. You’ve undergone a rather messy, high-profile divorce. That had to be hard on you.

Gil: (sighing) It’s been awful. Donna, that’s my ex-wife by the way, has made it her mission to make my life a living hell since our divorce. People who I thought were my friends went over to her camp. I’ve become a social pariah. And in a town of only 60,000 that makes for some pretty lonely days and nights. But I guess that’s the price I paid for pretending to be someone I wasn’t.

You mean pretending to be straight.

Gil: Yes. Back when I was growing up, being gay just wasn’t an option. You were expected to find a gal, get married, and produce as many children as possible. At least that’s what my parents wanted. Especially my dad. He was pretty hard on me. Not wanting me to hope for things I couldn’t have. Definitely more of a pragmatist while I was always more of a dreamer. He didn’t support my decision to go to college or medical school. He thought I was trying to be more than I was destined to be.

What were you destined to be?

Gil: Well, according to my dad, a working class man just like him. He didn’t believe in higher education. He put faith in his strong back. A man was a man if he got dirty and worked hard. He didn’t understand that I didn’t want that for myself. That I had a passion for medicine. He said that my dreams were like “chasing the sun.” I was after the impossible and I would never catch it.

But you did. You became a doctor even though your dad didn’t support you.

Gil: I did. And by chasing my dreams, I alienated myself from him. He said he didn’t know me anymore now that I had an education. He claimed I was somebody new. Someone he didn’t recognize.

That’s sad.

Gil: (nodding) It is. But now that I’m older and a bit wiser, I think he was worried that I’d think less of him. As if I’d see him as a worthless worker bee like so many others had seen him as. I only wished I had realized that before he passed away.

So you always had a difficult relationship with your father. Were things better between you and your children?

Gil: You would think it would be, wouldn’t you? But no. Things weren’t better for me and my kids. My daughter Sami and I were close, but that was more because her mother basically neglected her in favor of our son Zach. I tried my best to make up for that with Sami, but I never felt as if I was enough. As for Zach, well, I think Kelly males are destined to forever be at odds. No matter how I tried to reach out to Zach as a child, he resented me. Nothing I did ever seemed to be right. And truthfully, I can’t say that I blame him. I was hard on him. I wanted him to be whatever he wanted, but I think my desire to have him chase whatever sun he wanted ended up with him resenting me for pushing so hard.

What about after the divorce? Did things get worse?

Gil: Boy, did they ever! After Donna got her revenge by exposing my secret, my children were destroyed. Our relationships, which were already tenuous, dissolved almost completely. I haven’t spoken to Zach in years, and Sami, well, she tries, but I can tell her heart isn’t into it. I don’t think she will ever be able to forgive me.

And Zach? Do you think he will forgive you?

Gil: Never. Not even in a million years.

I’ve got to be honest, Gil. Your life sounds like a mess. And not even a hot mess, which can be fun. You’ve lost your family and your friends. And you intimated that you basically live as a hermit. Is that correct?

Gil: Sad but true.

Do you plan on being alone forever? Is there no light at the end of your tunnel? No sun for you to try to catch?

Gil: To be quite honest, I think the sun has set for me, Jacob. At least in terms of a normal life. Maybe one day I’ll see the light again, but I think I’ve consigned myself to the darkness. It’s not like I’m lonely all the time. Thanks to the wonders of technology, there are hookup apps and websites for men like me who are unable to sustain relationships. I might not ever find love again, but when I need it, I can at least be consoled by a stranger’s touch. While it lasts at least.

I’m sorry you’re having such a tough time. I truly am. But somehow, I don’t think you’ll live in the dark forever. The sun may sometimes set, but it always rises again. Somehow. Some way. I guarantee it.

Well, Gil, that’s all the time we have today. Thank you again for stopping by and sharing a bit of yourself with me and my readers.

Let’s Start Chasing the Sun

Now, that the When Love Takes Over blog tour is officially over, I figured it would be a perfect time to talk about the next book in The Provincetown Series, Chasing the Sun.

Chasing the Sun is a novella spin-off of When Love Takes Over.

What does that mean?

Well, in the case of Chasing the Sun, it means two things. The first is that this book will take us out of Provincetown and deposit us back in Zach Kelly’s home town of Victoria, Texas. So while the book is still in the same “world” as the first book, we have spun off from the original location of the series.

It also means that we leave behind most of the characters from When Love Takes Over and focus on a different cast for the novella.

Don’t fret though; our favorite MC’s from WLTO just might make an appearance or two in Chasing the Sun.

Just who will be the MC’s for Chasing the Sun?

Good question. Zach’s dad, Gil Kelly, will be one of the main characters. Zach’s best friend Tom Martinez will be the other.

If you’re wondering what will be going on in the book, well, here’s the official Dreamspinner blurb:

As a physician and prominent citizen of Victoria, Texas, Dr. Gil Kelly took a hard fall when his vengeful wife revealed his infidelity with other men. Closing ranks around her, the town’s elite ostracized him, and his relationship with his children was nearly destroyed.

After spending his life focused on living for others, he has no idea how to live for himself. He wants to find love but now settles for anonymous sex that only further clouds his world with shame and guilt. Gil believes finding true love is an unobtainable dream, what his father used to call “chasing the sun.”

Then he runs into Tom Martinez, his son’s childhood best friend, who returned to town a grown man and offers everything Gil needs. But Gil hesitates to fall into Tom’s arms, because after his high-profile divorce, the potential scandal of loving a younger man could separate him from his children permanently.

Spin off of When Love Takes Over (1st Provincetown Series book)

I hope you thought the blurb was as intriguing as I did. The folks over at DSP did a fabulous job. As always!

What else can be shared about Chasing the Sun?

Well, the novella will be releasing in October/November. Since I’ve already completed the second round of edits, I think it will most likely be released in October. However, don’t quote me on that. That’s just a guess on my part.

I will be offering up more information about Chasing the Sun as weeks progress. But there is one final thing I wanted to reveal here that I have yet to reveal anywhere else–the cover!

Chasing the Sun

It’s just amazing, isn’t it? The cover was created by Michael Breyette who also did the cover for When Love Takes Over. In fact, as I’ve mentioned before, Breyette’s work will grace the covers of all books in the series. I couldn’t be happier!

Well, that’s all I have to share with you for today. I hope you enjoyed this little sneak peek at the next book in the series. Keep your eyes peeled for more in the upcoming weeks!