Tag Archives: fantasy

Do LGBT readers expect explicit content?

It is clear to see when you do a simple search of any LGBT eBook category that the first few pages of book titles include a generous serving of the steamier side of life. Seriously, you only need to look at those covers to know what’s going on between them.

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Which then led to an interesting conversation with friends: do LGBT readers expect explicit content? Is that what they’re there for, or is it just a given within the genre and no one is at all surprised when it happens?

I have a few thoughts about this, given that my own books don’t contain explicit content (yet it has been requested, so there is obviously a market). I wonder, sometimes, if  actually the assumption is somewhat based on that old stereotyping – that the gay is all about the sex. Gay men certainly suffer from this perception more than lesbians, hence the oft-held belief that they can’t be in a long term relationship and will hump anything that also has a penis.

Are we still in the stages of infancy with the genre so books with gay characters are all about the gayness rather than plot? If so, this automatically leads into somewhat dodgy ground. It is difficult to demand greater visibility but without giving characters same depth and multi-facetedness. Romance is one thing, but other genres?

Let’s face it, sex sells. It doesn’t matter what kind of sex you’re into, it’s still enough of a taboo to  generate intrigue, and the anonymity of eBooks makes for fertile ground. After a perceived drought for LGBT readers it’s no great surprise that explicit content is in high demand.

So, is the LGBT eBook market just moving with the dynamics of supply and demand? Do the readers merely accept the content or are they actively seeking it out? If anyone has the answers then I would genuinely love to know. I’ve tried to make diverse characters who are more than just their sexuality, or their race, or their social background. But I suspect that I’d probably shift more sales if there was a bit more laborious breathing and references to bodily fluids in that first 10% taste you get for free.

Bonus points and apologies if you’ve spotted all the sex puns scattered throughout.

A break is as good as a rest!

As I begin to wrap up my vacation time, I’ll be sad to leave the holiday feeling behind. Yet I know that it has been as essential as it has been fun.

My notebook has new ideas in it, as well as some amendments to existing projects. Sometimes, physical distance can allow you to see things with new eyes. For example, the Lazarus Hunter series has been fairly well plotted to the end for quite some time now. The first three books are completed and book four is down on the list as one of my next writing projects (I’d love to do it sooner, but I have other commitments which are stopping me). Yet a missing piece of conflict that I needed has been elusive up until now.

With nothing to think about, this piece finally snuck up on me and smacked me between the eyes.

So I will be returning from my break with a renewed sense of enthusiasm. I love writing, but my life is like balancing three full time jobs sometimes. My creativity can stutter if I don’t take a break every now and again. When I do, it is worth every penny, both in literal money and also time.

I’ve not got any C K Martin books planned for the release for the rest of this year. I’ve not tracked the sales of A Taste To Die For while I’ve been on vacation, because I’ve not wanted the time to be about number watching, no matter how addictive it can be.

So I can go into the last third of the year feeling more relaxed about what I still need to do. I know one thing that people have wanted in the Teddie McKay books is a little bit more lovin’ for Teddie. As neither books in the series are romances, it didn’t feel right at any point to put a good sex scene in, not without it feeling entirely gratuitous. So I’m playing around with an idea for a short story to let the woman get a bit of action. It would need to be fun for everyone (including me) to make it work.

So, despite saying there’d be no more publications this year, part of me is already thinking never say never…

 

Finishing touches of A Taste To Die For

There is something quite exciting about knowing something is finished. Today, all the final touches of the next Teddie McKay Novel are in place, ready for August 27th release. I’m so excited!

I’m not sure (because the past month has been a bit of a blur between this and several other projects) whether I have mentioned the title yet. If not, I can reveal that it will be called A Taste To Die For. That is not, in case you were wondering, some bad lesbian joke based around Teddie’s sexuality.

Until the book actually goes on sale in 7 days, I know I will be a bit of a wreck. It is an excited kind of wreck, but still a bit wobbly regardless. There is something quite terrifying about sending a novel out there for people to read. Even though everything so far has been positive, that doesn’t mean I will ever get complacent about people’s reviews and opinions. All I can do is put the best book I can out there, and hope that people enjoy it.

Despite the fear, it is a hugely rewarding experience too. My life revolves around writing and that goes beyond C K Martin and her books. Yet the Teddie McKay series and the Lazarus Hunter series are some of my favourite things. Why?

Because I can write them as I want.

I don’t have a publishing house or editor telling me how to make them more saleable on a mass market scale. I don’t have to make the characters thinner, fatter, straighter, gayer, more of this gender, less of that, or anything else. The characters are the people I am interested in and the stories are the ones I want to tell.

For example, since Twilight, vampires have been a hard sell in traditional publishing. Yet Indie publishing shows that there is still a significant market for them. The only thing the Lazarus Hunter series has in common with the significantly more popular one is the vampire theme. Therefore, I don’t feel like I should hide it away just because someone else did something similar once. That’s insane.

With Teddie, I wanted the book equivalent of cheesey cop shows. I love to watch them on TV but there are so few gay characters and not in a leading role. Most of the lesbians I know are cops. Just saying. So I wanted her to be identifiable. But the main point is that she’s a detective. A flawed but capable detective. She doesn’t solve the crime with her gay magic powers. She solves it the same way as anyone else would. Which should be the point, really, shouldn’t it?

Anyway, that turned into a post slightly different from the one I had intended. Which was *squee*. It’s done. Now, we wait.

If you haven’t yet read the first book in the series and the sequel sounds interesting to you, then you can buy The Crochet Killer on Amazon.

(Cover reveal on Monday!!)

Kindle Promo: Blood Inheritance

Just a reminder folks that we’re moving into the last chance to grab Blood Inheritance while it is on promo.

For those of you who haven’t yet seen anything about this novel, it is the first in my supernatural urban fantasy series focusing on Elizabeth, the daughter of an authority of vampires and Monica, the unwilling head of a vampire family. The two women, who should by all accounts be sworn enemies, discover that actually they can trust each other more than some of the people who should be on their side.

Of course, there are fights, blood and sex, because you would expect nothing more from an urban fantasy novel. However, I’ve tried to stay away from implausible high heels and tight leather fighting outfits. I wanted likeable, relatable female protagonists, who don’t go to pieces over their love lives or lack thereof. Mostly, I wanted a book where women don’t automatically have to be bitches/unsupportive/crazy/fighting over the same man/woman etc etc just because there are two of them. Enough with that already.

The second book in the series is currently in the editing phase and is planned for publication in early 2016. The series is already going to be a long one and in terms of many of the plot points, we’re in for a slow burn. There is an undeniable chemistry between our two lead ladies, but where this will go and when remains to be seen (I know, of course, but you don’t get to). Even though I am currently heavily into the release of the second Teddie McKay book, life at author HQ is never just about a single project. I love these ladies and it is always fun writing about them.

So go grab it from Amazon while it’s on offer and let me know what you think. Amazon seems to have a tendency to lose customer ratings if it thinks you know me, so feel free to wear a fake moustache, look anonymous and leave a 5* review…

 

Subtext vs Queerbaiting: When does one spill over into the other?

This blogpost came out of a conversation with a friend about how badly diversity is handled by some media. Whether in TV, movies or books, there are shining examples and there are terrible examples. Although the conversation was about diversity in general, it was the the fine line between subtext and queerbaiting that seemed the most blurred.

Firstly, whilst subtext can mean all manner of implied content, for the purpose of this post I’m just using it in a sexual / sexuality way. After all, subtext as a technique is essential in all art mediums, otherwise there would be only explicitly stated events. And that would be no fun at all.
joey quote

Firstly, let’s get some definitions going. Not mine, but stolen from the internet as generally accepted understandings:

Subtext is content underneath the dialogue. Under dialogue, there can be conflict, anger, competition, pride, showing off, or other implicit ideas and emotions. Subtext is the unspoken thoughts and motives of characters—what they really think and believe.

For me, whenever I heard the term queerbaiting, it always seemed to be in anger or thrown around without much thought to what it actually means. So I turned to Wikipedia to found out (if it’s on Wikipedia then it must be true, right?)

Queerbaiting is what happens “when people in the media (usually television/movies) add homoerotic tension between two characters to attract more liberal and queer viewers with the indication of them not ever getting together for real in the show/book/movie”

Now, one of these things sounds significantly worse than the other. One seems normal writing technique, the other seems malicious and cruel. But in the context of sexuality specifically, I’m not sure the difference between the two is as great as it seems. Stick with me here. Because (and I’m going to pull from TV for a second, rather than books), since the late 90s, we see very little has changed. Subtext was the source of great joy in the early days, queerbaiting a source of great anger now. But compare two shows, one from now and the other from back then, and other than the bad hair there is probably very little difference.

It is expectations that have changed. And rightly so.

It used to be that queer audiences were glad for anything they could get. In a world of terrible TV stereotyping, or gays that were essentially called that but were portrayed in a nice, safe, asexual way, some tense subtext between two characters was something to enjoy. A long, soulful glance could launch a thousand fanfics. It still can.

But queer viewers (and generally liberal viewers of all sexualities) no longer expect to be grateful for having someone throw them a bone. Fully rounded queer characters have been portrayed on TV, and in a world where gay marriages are increasing becoming enshrined in law and general social acceptance, it seems almost ludicrous that obvious sexual tension between two characters of the same sex wouldn’t lead to more. Why? Because in the real world, it would.

In the real world, when there is a smouldering sexual tension between two parties, it eventually explodes into something more. Generally after a bottle of tequila. Either that or it becomes confessed to a best friend after a bottle of tequila. Two things remain truth: acknowledgement of said tension and tequila.

The reality is the majority of TV is still written and devised by straight white middle class men. Usually American. Subtext was fine before, so why is it not now? I suspect there is a general mentality of let’s throw this in for the gays, they’ll love it, and then general confusion when they don’t. A lack of understanding of why, in 2015, they might just feel cheated and annoyed. Homosexual self-worth has increased ten-fold and those who have come out the other side of social shame are pulling the teenagers who are struggling right up there with them. Being reliant on subtext feels like going back in the closet, like becoming second class citizens again.

As a writer, I still love me some subtext. I love the freedom it gives for people to create their own imagined ships, whilst understanding that it may not work with the overall intention of the narrative. I completely get that, I really do. Likewise, I love the slow burn of subtext between two characters regardless of sexuality. Castle and Beckett holding out against each other for as long as they did made the payoff even greater. I’d like to think that audiences are smart enough to spot when that’s the case.

The art is understanding the line and knowing when you are about to cross the threshold. When the move goes from fun to offensive. Back to TV – shows like Rizzoli and Isles have come very close to crossing that line, without spilling over into the fury that has been seen with Once Upon A Time. Two very different shows, handled in two very different ways. One is a light-hearted detective show that is only one step up from Diagnosis Murder in its case complexity, with two female leads who are outstanding in their respective fields. It does not frame itself in any other way.

Once, by contrast, sets itself up for confusion: a re-telling of fairy tales (already pretty dark if we’re honest), whilst remaining a family show. It would be hard to reconcile those things at the best of times, but with an almost exclusively white, strongly heterocentric character list who do despicable and brutal things, it fails at both. Creating a convoluted family tree does not equate to a re-telling. Murder does not equate to a family show. Having your characters say one thing but behave in a way that is classic subtext, is no longer ‘just fun’ within the parameters the show has set for itself.

The world has come a long way. I guess that is the key concept I have reached in all of this. That subtext is fine, but context is key. Like all art, at the grand finale, the audience expects a payoff. Books have it much easier, allowing the audience to be privy to the innermost thoughts of the character. TV and movies have to convey much more to compensate for that. It requires a great script, great directing and great acting ability. But people have a right to vote with their fingers: to close the book or to turn off the TV.

People have a right to not enjoy it when something they identify with is being used as a fun plaything for someone else. They have a right to say so. Eventually the world will change more. Eventually, I hope, this blog post will be laughably obsolete as people no longer have to fight for entertainment that is ethnically, socially, sexually diverse. Oh, and don’t forget gender. Wouldn’t it be nice for the virgin/whore trope to be gone forever?

Feel free to agree or disagree, but politeness only in the comments section please!

Writing and motivation: keeping the momentum going

I find the long weekend has been perfect for a little bit of extra introspection time.

I’ve spent the past few months building up to publishing Blood Inheritance, with the crazy planning and scheduling that goes with such a big endeavour. I say that because we should not belittle our achievements. I am terrible at taking time out to celebrate when I hit my goals. I’ve been talking about getting this book out there for the best part of two years, so I’m allowed to high five myself for being brave and letting one of my babies fly the nest.

The downside in achieving something that has taken up so much of your time and attention for months is that after the excitement fades, then there is a moment when you realise the enormity of the void it has left behind. Instead of breathing a sigh of relief that you have now got so many hours of your life back each week, you sense the loss. There is only one thing to do.

You have to keep going.

There will always be another book brewing on the horizon. There will always be an idea to be captured and the seed of the idea planted so it can grow. Writing tasks will never disappear completely, but neither will the joy of those first moments of creation. So when the sigh of relief wears off and I begin to think about that sudden free time, it’s always good to know that I have several projects I can dip into.

It is good to take a break. It is good to allow yourself to recharge. It is not good to allow that to turn into sloppiness and complacency. So how do you avoid it? It’s quite simple really.

fieldnotes1. Keep a notebook. Capture your ideas somewhere safe so you don’t have to keep them in your head. Then they’ll always be there waiting for you when you need them.

2. Plan your next project before you finish your current one. In those quiet times, those moments when you find yourself twiddling your thumbs, think about what you want your next project to be and outline what next actions you’ll be taking on it. That removes the panic of having to come up with something spur of the moment.

3. Be realistic with your scheduling. Each project will be different, but each one will also take a lot of hard work. Be kind to yourself and allow yourself adequate time when planning your project. Don’t be too generous though. You want to have enough tension there to motivate you to do something, rather than having the psychological freedom to continually defer it until next week. Be sensible, but also give yourself a deadline. Even self-imposed ones carry a punch when you keep a reminder of them where you can see them.

So that’s what I’ll be doing. The first draft of the next Teddie McKay novel is nearly complete and I’m going to be working through that for the next few months. My goal is to publish it in September, so that is the deadline keeping me on track. Whilst Blood Inheritance may be published, everyone knows that is not the point at which marketing and reader engagement stops. Of course, I’ve already got the next book I’m editing decided and set up to make it easy to start.

So the void of time was relatively short; I’m back to writing again.

Blood Inheritance – Finally Published!

This is a very exciting day for me – Blood Inheritance is finally published! Pretend you can hear me squee.

Blood Inheritance C K Martin

The first ever book I published, Rebirth, was more a way to prove to myself that I could do it. The Crochet Killer was fun to write and I enjoy the characters, but it wasn’t like publishing this book. This book has been like sending my baby out into the big wide world. It’s exciting, but it’s also terrifying. I want it to do well, but I also want to hug it close to my chest and never let it go.

This post should probably be some savvy piece of marketing, but instead I’m going to just talk honestly. I have invested in these characters far more than any others I have ever created. Elizabeth, to a degree, will struggle with something that I have spent the past decade and a half trying to deal with. It might only be in that one way I can relate, but it is fairly significant.

Urban fantasy is always about hot chicks in leather kicking ass. Kicking ass and then becoming soft as a kitten because some broad shouldered hunk renders them senseless for some reason. That’s not something I can relate to. And my friends, many of whom kick ass on a daily basis (albeit of a non-supernatural nature), don’t behave that way either. They are strong and independent.

Besides, if there is to be romance – and I’m not saying that there will be – then I’m more of a fan of the slow burn. There is something delicious in the smouldering stages of a relationship, in that confusing attraction that defies what you have always believed in. And it can change you, but it shouldn’t define you. That is the difference I wanted to see in the urban fantasy books that I read and when I couldn’t find it, I decided to write it for myself.

So, please, head over to amazon and download yourself a free sample. Obviously, I’d prefer it if you just bought the book straight away, but I’m prepared to let you have a little taste for free.

Because if there is any other theme going on in Blood Inheritance, it’s that the first taste is what gets you hooked.

Introducing Garth

As part of my series of character introductions for Blood Inheritance, it would be remiss of me to ignore Garth. He’s not one of the main characters, but he does hold a very special place in my heart: he was the first character who made their appearance in my head.

I began writing the book that would become Blood Inheritance at the start of a 48 hour train journey. I had just left Adelaide, Australia, and was heading over to Perth. It was going to be a long journey and I had purchased a new notebook knowing that if nothing else, I would have plenty of time to write. Even though it is no longer the opening scene in the book, the chapter when we first meet Garth is largely unchanged from that first handwritten account.

For much of my writing, I don’t focus on physical appearance unless it is fundamental to the plot. Other than a few key features, I love it when I read books where I can picture the characters myself, so that’s the way I tend to write. Sometimes, I don’t even have an image of my own characters clearly defined in my head when I’m putting them onto paper. Personal feelings and journeys are more important to me than giving someone’s cup size. But everything about Garth was there in my head; his clothing, his hair, the way he moved his body. It was so detailed, I ended up putting more into his description than probably anyone else.

He was so vivid to me straight away, that man-boy with the weight of the world on his shoulders. And although he falls into the category of supporting character, his own story arc is one of my favourites planned across the entire seven books.

So there needs to be a thank you to the man-boy on that train journey with me, who walked past and reminded me of an old friend from home, causing the two images to collide and spark that first ever scene from the book that was originally titled The Hunter. Without Garth, the entire book would have been entirely different.

You can pre-order Blood Inheritance now (or if you’re reading this at some time in the future, download a copy straight away!)

Character Introduction: Monica Carletto

As a way of introducing Blood Inheritance I thought it would be fun to do a few character background pieces. There shouldn’t be any spoilers in here though, so you should be safe if you haven’t yet read the book.

Monica Carletto really deserves to be more than a secondary character. Without her, there would be no book, no tension, no story. Her role in the entire Lazarus Hunter series is central; her journey is inextricably bound with Elizabeth’s.

Throughout Blood Inheritance, she has plenty of scenes told from her point of view. I went with a third person multiple perspective for the series because I wanted characters who were rich enough to have a viewpoint that serves their own story, rather than just providing a counterpoint to the main character. Besides which, in the era of TV, I think people have become more comfortable with reading multiple points of view, as long as it doesn’t switch mid chapter.

In the ten years or so it has taken for me to shape this story into what I wanted it to be (then build up the necessary courage to share it with the world), Monica has changed very little. Her story arc was relatively clear to me from the start, perhaps even more so than Elizabeth’s. I wanted a woman who was strong-willed and capable, both in their professional and personal lives. With gender inequality still rife in even the most civilised nations, I wanted a woman who wouldn’t be out of place in the boardroom. But I also wanted her to be a ball-buster without being a bitch, and certainly without feeling like she needed to compromise on her femininity.

I’d love to give you more, but everything else would probably ruin a couple of surprises in the book!

Blood Inheritance

Character Introduction: Elizabeth Hastings

As a way of introducing Blood Inheritance I thought it would be fun to do a few character background pieces. There shouldn’t be any spoilers in here though, so you should be safe if you haven’t yet read the book.

Elizabeth Hastings is technically the main character of The Lazarus Hunter series. I say technically because I’ve always felt Monica Carletto has been a main character in her own right. There will be more about her in later post.

I love Elizabeth as a main character. She is smart, funny and capable. More importantly, she has a whole history to live up to and still always insists on doing things her way. I always admire (in both fiction and real life) people who can take the cards life deals them, no matter how bad the hand, and use it to work in their favour. The ones who get back up, no matter how hard they’ve been knocked down. For me, Elizabeth is the very embodiment of that quality. She’s not Buffy, but I wanted someone who at least didn’t undo all the amazing things that Joss Whedon did for female empowerment when he put the fate of the world in the hands of a girl.

Non-spoilery character background:

She’s British (and as she’s the main character, that is why the spelling in the book is British English, rather than using Americanised spelling). Her age is never actually mentioned in Blood Inheritance, although an interesting age conversation actually happens in book four (yes, I am that far along in writing the series).

She has some interesting scars, but none where you can see them.

She once ran a marathon in 3:02:59, but practices sprints more these days. After all, no one has ever had to outrun a vampire for 26.2 miles…

Blood Inheritance is available on kindle now.

Blood Inheritance