It’s something that many people are going through in the present climate and I fear there will be more to come. He’s had to rent a horrid little house and he’s having to learn to manage on a budget. Tris: Fixed is about a guy whose life has been broken through no fault of his own and he finds himself back where he started. Kiran: Tell me a little about what inspired your latest novella, Fixed. My fourth book, due out before Christmas (hint), is an historical MM and, whilst there is a love story in there, it’s far from traditional. I started to get distressed by the way gay men were being portrayed in some of the fiction that’s about if you read some of them, you could simply change one of the characters to a woman and the story, the sex, the emotions could remain exactly the same. It’s true that my first three novellas are romances, but they are not by any means gooey and fluffy. Tris: It wasn’t so much a decision to write romance as a decision to write about gay characters. Traditionally the romance genre is dominated by female writers. Kiran: You are steadily gaining a name for yourself writing gay (M/M) fiction – gay romance to be precise. It was a bit of a struggle tying him to the chair – but I got there in the end… FIXED by Tristram La Roche is released today!įor the first of my interviews with erotica/romance writers I decided to try out my interrogation skills on Tristram La Roche, a fellow author with Etopia Press.
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