• Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Contact Me
  • About
Menu

Amy Spector

  • Home
  • Books
  • Blog
  • Contact Me
  • About

Not part of the Amy Spector Reading Group?

Join and received a free book!

You’ll also get information on upcoming releases, free reads, contests and ARC giveaways, and special bonus material available only to group members. All delivered directly to your inbox.

You can join today by clicking HERE!


Read Around the Rainbow

Visit the rest of the Read Around the Rainbow bloggers!

Previous • Random • Next



Latest Blog Posts

Featured
Apr 15, 2025
JMS Books Daily .99¢ Deal • The Death of Digby Catch
Apr 15, 2025
Apr 15, 2025
Mar 28, 2025
Read Around the Rainbow • Hello, Spring! #RAtR
Mar 28, 2025
Mar 28, 2025
Jan 25, 2025
Release Day - Love Is Free
Jan 25, 2025
Jan 25, 2025

“It is likely I will die next to a pile of things I was meaning to read.”
— Lemony Snicket
“If you go home with somebody, and they don’t have books, don’t fuck ‘em!”
— John Waters

Amy is an Amazon Associate, and may earn from qualifying items purchased though her links.


RSS Block
Select a Blog Page to create an RSS feed link. Learn more
RSS

Guest Post | A.L. Lester - World Naked Gardening Day: Warning! Deep Water

May 09, 2022 in Guest Post

Happy Monday, and welcome to day two of our World Naked Gardening Day guest posts. I hope everyone stop by to learn about K.L. Noone’s story contribution yesterday. If not, make sure to take a peek.

Today we have A.L. Lester visiting. The World Naked Gardening Day collaboration was her brainchild, and she’s here to tell us about her story, Warning! Deep Water. I actually started this one last night!

We’re extremely happy to have you, Ally!


Hello Amy’s readers! Thank you so much to Amy for letting me pop in today to tell you a bit more about my part of our collaborative World Naked Gardening Day project. Amy, Nell Iris, K. L. Noone, Holly Day and I have all written gay romance novellas based around World Naked Gardening Day, which happens on the first Saturday in May. This year it’s the 7th, which is when our stories happen to be released! You can read about all of them here.

Warning! Deep Water is a 16,300 gay romance set in the UK 1947, just after the worst winter in living memory and eighteen months after the end of the second world war.

Writing in the 1940s is a bit of a departure for me. I am usually a historicals person, although I’ve also begun a quiet sideline in contemporary short stories since covid hit us—concentrating on a full-length historical novel suddenly got very hard. I have a book set in the 1780s that might have babies at some point; and a couple set in the late 1960s and early 1970s. But most of my full-length books are set in the very early 1920s, just after the end of the First World War.

I like writing in that period partly because I’ve done a load of research and can slide in to it fairly easily. The idiom and the events come relatively easily to my pen. I’m about to begin book seven now and I know it won’t require all the initial research I had to do at the beginning; that’s also partly about knowing where to look for things, and I have that bit sorted now.

I think the thing that drew me to the era initially though—apart from it being a hundred years since the Great War when I began writing Lost in Time and me having this mad idea to contrast a man of 35 in 1916 with a man of a similar age in 2016—was that it seemed like a period of flux to me. This was partly because I needed my time-traveller to slot in to the past fairly easily. But it was also because I really like writing in that painful, hurting place where everything is a knife-edge and people have had to make or are about to have to make hard choices.

Retrospectively, I think that’s what drew me to the late 1940s as well. I didn’t want to set it in the 20’s but I couldn’t manage to make it a contemporary. I think perhaps because my setting was based very heavily on the place I grew up and that was fifty years ago now!

So as is my habit, I went backwards. In 1947, mainland Europe was a mess. England less so, but still—it was pretty bad. There were food shortages and bomb damage, people were mourning loved ones and there were soldiers with injuries, visible and invisible, who needed to box up the last six years and slide back in to civilian life and pretend they hadn’t seen and done terrible things. A very definite collective trauma.

It makes it a very interesting place to write in.

Both George and Peter mention having nightmares and I’m pretty sure Peter has a cracking case of PTSD. But because it’s a collective trauma, and probably because of the kind of people they are and the era, they don’t really talk about it. To them, some things are best left unsaid. Also…I only had sixteen thousand words to work it out in and if I was going to go that route I’d have needed at least another twenty thousand!

Anyway…collective trauma and time-travel aside, here’s some more about Warning! Deep Water. I hope you have as much fun reading it as we all have writing our stories.


Warning! Deep Water

Blurb: It’s 1947. George is going through the motions, sowing seeds and tending plants and harvesting crops. The nursery went on without him perfectly well during the war and he spends a lot of time during the working day hiding from people and working on his own. In the evening he prowls round the place looking for odd jobs to do.

It’s been a long, cold winter and Peter doesn’t think he’ll ever get properly warm or clean again. Finding a place with heated greenhouses and plenty of nooks and crannies to kip in while he’s recovering from nasty flu was an enormous stroke of luck. He’s been here a few days now. The weather is beginning to warm up and he’s just realised there’s a huge reservoir of water in one of the greenhouses they use to water the plants. He’s become obsessed with getting in and having an all-over wash.

What will George do when he finds a scraggy ex-soldier bathing in his reservoir? What will Peter do? Is it time for them to both stop running from the past and settle down?

A Naked Gardening Day short story of 16,300 words.     


 Buy Links: JMS Books • Amazon US • Everywhere Else

• Add to Goodreads


Excerpt: “You didn’t say you liked music,” Peter said, as they were sitting across the table from each other over a cup of tea, once he’d finally pulled himself away from the instrument and reverentially closed the keyboard.

“Well,” said Peter. “It didn’t come up, did it?” He paused. “Mother used to play a bit,” he said, eventually. “Not like that, though. Hymns, mostly. She was big on chapel.”

There was clearly a story there.

“It’s nice to hear it played,” George went on. “Instruments should be used, not just sat there as part of the furniture. And…,” he paused again and blushed, “And you play very well.”

“Well,” said Peter shuffling with embarrassment. “I learned as a nipper and just carried on with it. Dad wanted me to go and study somewhere, but I wanted to get out and earn. It would have taken the joy out of it if I’d had to pass exams and such.”

George nodded. “I can see that. And you’re good with your hands.” He blushed again and became very absorbed with mashing the tiny amount of butter left from the ration into his baked potato.

Peter coughed. “Well yes,” he said. He couldn’t help smiling a little at George, although he didn’t let him see. He forged on. He really didn’t want him to be uncomfortable. “I think mathematics and music sort of go together, you know? And I was always good with numbers as well…it’s a good trait in a joiner.”

George nodded, clearly feeling they were on less dangerous territory. “Yes,” he said. “There’s all sorts of things you can use maths for; but music is pretty rarefied, isn’t it?”

Peter nodded. “This way I get to keep the music and earn a living. There’s always work for a carpenter, like you said the other day.”

He gradually became less self-conscious about playing when George and Mrs Leland were in the house over the next few weeks. It made him feel like another piece of what made him a person was coming back to life.

****

What it didn’t do was make him any less confused about what was happening between him and George. Half the time he thought George was completely uninterested. But then something would happen that would make him reconsider. The comment about being good with his hands was a case in point. It was a perfectly commonplace thing to say and George shouldn’t have been embarrassed. But he had been. Which meant he’d thought of it in a context that might cause embarrassment.

Peter spent several very enjoyable hours spread over several evenings working through different variations of what the other man might have been thinking.

George was nobody’s Bogart. But he was decent-looking. Nice face, especially when he smiled. A bit soft round the middle, but otherwise hard muscled from the physical work he did day in, day out. Clever…did his own accounts. Liked music. Made Peter laugh with his dry commentary on things in the paper or local gossip and the social pickles the girls reported on in the break room.

Peter liked him a lot. And fancied him. After the third night of considering at length how he could demonstrate how good with his hands he actually was, he gave up pretending. He fancied George a lot.


About A.L. Lester

Writer of queer, paranormal, historical, romantic suspense, mostly. Lives in the South West of England with Mr AL, two children, a terrifying cat, some poultry. Likes gardening but doesn't really have time or energy. Not musical. Doesn't much like telly. Non-binary. Chronically disabled. Has tedious fits.

Facebook Group : Twitter • Newsletter (free story) • Website • Link-tree for everywhere else


Thank you, Ally for stopping by today and sharing your new release! ❤️

And make sure to check back in tomorrow when Holly Day stops by to tell us all about Perfect Rows, her contribution to our World Naked Gardening story project.

You can also learn about all the books that are part of this project in one place by clicking on the image below.

Tags: A.L. Lester
Comment

Guest Post • K.L. Noone - World Naked Gardening Day: The Hermit of Aldershill Manor

May 08, 2022 in Guest Post

Hello and happy Sunday! Today I thought I’d try something different! In fact, we’re going to try this something different for the next four days.

As you know, yesterday was release day for my story celebrating World Naked Gardening Day, and for the next four days, the other authors who took part in this little collaboration will be stopping by to tell us all about their stories. I haven’t read any of the other stories yet, and I can’t wait to learn more about them.

Today I’m excited to introduce K.L. Noone, whose story title has me written all over it! Kristin is not only my first guest from the project, but she also holds the title of my very first guest here. Ever!

We’re extremely happy to have you, Kristin!


Hi there! Thank you to Amy for letting me drop in to tell you about my contribution to our collaborative World Naked Gardening Day project – for which Amy, myself, A.L. Lester, Holly Day, and Nell Iris have all written gay romance novellas based around World Naked Gardening Day, which happens on the first Saturday in May. This year it’s the 7th, which is when all our stories will be released!

My story for our project is called The Hermit of Aldershill Manor, a 17,000-word m/m romance between Lionel, a gardener on a historic estate, and Charlie, the newly arrived historian, here to help with the archives. There’s a bit of an age gap, and an unexpected summer storm, and shelter in an old hermitage. And an instant spark, among rain and flowers and green growing things.

I love historic manor houses and gardens, and I knew that was going to be central for mine—bringing together history and beauty, the stories and scents of herb-lore and blooming flowers, and a perfect setting for love to take root. For this one, I also really wanted to write a story that was essentially love at first sight—or at least attraction—because I always feel like that’s such a fun challenge, that moment of instant and sizzling but believable recognition. In Hermit, that’s grounded in the way Charlie and Lionel immediately see each other, in a way maybe nobody else really has before, for either of them. They’re lonely in different ways—Charlie’s figuring out a new life and a new country and a future without the ex-boyfriend he'd thought he might marry, and he’s learning who he is now, and what he wants. Lionel, on the other hand, is terrible at conversations, more comfortable with plants than humans, and very used to living and being alone, though he’s good at his job and deep down he does like people, as long as no one expects him to talk to them. He wants someone to share his gardens and quiet wordless reading time and cozy herb-rich baked goods with, even though he won’t admit it. And it turns out they’re very good for each other. (And very good together naked. Because we had to get that theme in there!)

Also, there’s tea, and getting caught in a thunderstorm, and warming each other up. And some garden-related puns, because I couldn’t resist. They just sprouted up on their own, honestly. They wouldn’t leaf me alone. (Sorry, sorry…)

 Here’s a bit more about Hermit! I hope you enjoy it, and I hope you enjoy all our Naked Gardening stories—I’m so excited to share this project with you all!


The Hermit of Aldershill Manor

Blurb: Charlie Ash is ready to start a new job and a new life at Aldershill Manor. As a historian, he’s thrilled to dive into the estate’s archives. Plus, he can move on from the end of his last relationship, when the man he’d thought he’d marry broke his heart. He’ll find solace in exploring the manor’s famous gardens…until he’s caught in the rain, and found by a gardener.

 Lionel Briar enjoys making people happy, as long as he doesn’t have to talk to them. He does not enjoy tourists, small talk, or social obligations. But he does like plants and history and his job, taking care of Aldershill’s gardens, helping beauty grow. He likes gently tending the world.

So when Lionel discovers the estate’s adorable new historian getting drenched by a summer thunderstorm in his gardens, he offers Charlie shelter…a rescue that just might bloom into love.


 Buy Links: JMS Book • Amazon • more to come


Excerpt: Just around the bend, and up the small rise; the old hermitage beckoned: an eighteenth-century fantasia of ornamental tower-curved stone and climbing roses and tumbling ivy, tucked into a garden corner by the stream. The honeysuckle and irises by the door, drenched in rain, perfumed the afternoon. Old stones welcomed wet feet, going up the shallow steps.

 Lionel opened the door, tugged Charlie in—the young man was looking at the tower with wide-eyed delight, as if expecting dragons and princesses—and only then realized that he’d done more touching of another person, in the last five minutes, than he’d done in the last three years.

 His hands catching a slim arm when Charlie’d slipped, earlier. His hands brushing ungloved fingers, handing over a jacket. His hands resting on Charlie’s shoulders, nudging thinness inside.

 It’d felt right. It still felt right. He didn’t know why.

 Charlie hadn’t protested being nudged, either. Though he was now gingerly peeling off Lionel’s coat, wincing, apologizing. “I’ll just stand over here, I’m dripping everywhere…” His hair, darkened by rain, had flattened into treasure-box colors: old gold and shimmering amethyst.

 “You’re not a problem. You need to get warm.” Lionel yanked off his own boots, winced as the tangle of his hair got into his face, shoved it back. “I’ll find you some clothes.”

 “I’ll be right here.” Charlie waved a hand at him. “Which is already better than being out there, thanks.”

 Lionel did not know how to answer, and so escaped, heart beating faster than it should’ve done. He felt Charlie’s presence at his back as he went.

 The hermitage had been converted to a residence sometime in the nineteen-thirties, and then updated in the seventies, and then again much more recently, with the influx of visitors and finances to the estate. It was an odd shape, only four rooms, the one main tower and the three smaller towers joined on at the back, all of them short and snug. But the walls were white-plastered and the wood floorboards were pleasant, and books lined most of the main room, and the central fireplace would heat the whole space, once he got that going.

 Lionel had always liked the hermitage. They fit each other, awkward but hopeful, part of the garden grounds.

 He tried to hurry, crossing the main room, opening the third door. He tried not to drip on his sofa or his books or the braided rugs, not too much, at least.

 The wardrobe and his bed took up ninety-five percent of the space in the bedroom tower, and that wasn’t an exaggeration: he barely had room to walk around. He liked his bed, though. The wood had been hand-carved by a local artisan, crafted from a fallen oak on the estate; it belonged here, and had a purpose. Right now it gazed at him in silent four-poster astonishment, as Lionel flung open the wardrobe and dove into denim and flannel and knit.

 Too large, everything would be too large—sweatpants, perhaps—heavy socks—

 His hair, wet, got into his eyes. He swore. Found a hair tie, and contained it.

 He ran back out. Charlie had obediently remained in place by the coat-rack, dripping onto the mat, which was designed for that. His lips were more pale, and he was shaking, though he was trying to hide it.

 He was still beautiful. Those cheekbones, that chin, the way his eyes were framed by the knowledge of laughter. Lionel swallowed roughly. Thrust clothing his way.

 Charlie took the offering, but paused. “Should I…go and change in your bathroom? I mean, unless you want me to sort of do that right here, and not get anything else wet.”

Lionel’s cheeks got warmer. He felt it, wondered if it was visible, tried to recall how to speak to humans instead of rosemary and yarrow. “You. Either door. Bedroom. Or bath. You can.”

“Thank you again,” Charlie said, and went off to the second door, which led to the hermitage’s small but serviceable bath. He was careful, Lionel noticed, to leave muddy shoes back on the mat, and to drip as little as possible along the way. Precise, and considerate.

Precise, considerate, beautiful, and in Lionel’s house. Lionel exhaled, and wanted to collapse back against the aged stone tower wall and let it hold him up. He didn’t, because he was still gently damp. But he wanted to.

A person. A man, obviously an adult but also obviously younger than Lionel himself, probably by a good ten years. Someone he’d only just met.

And now here. In his home. How’d that happened? What had possessed him to offer? For that matter, why had Charlie said yes?

He scrubbed a hand across his face. He also needed to shave. And evidently he’d had a leaf in his hair the whole time, which he only discovered upon dislodging it.

He took a deep breath, let it out. What mattered most was the next step. Charlie was here now, and Charlie needed to get warm. Which meant a fire, and tea. Perhaps biscuits. Or bread.

He could do those things. Concrete, clear-cut, things. Warmth and comfort. Yes.

He found the kettle. He tried not to shiver, because although he wasn’t too wet, he hadn’t managed to change clothes yet.

Which a mysterious young man was doing. In his house. Which he was not thinking about. Obviously.

 He built up the fire, in the old-fashioned fireplace. He made it large and glowing.

 He turned from poking a log, and found Charlie behind him, having just come in.

 Their eyes met. Lionel forgot how to breathe, momentarily, because that was what happened when one discovered a petite American garden sylph standing in one’s living room, dressed in too-long sweatpants and a thick knit jumper. He managed, “Sorry.”

 Charlie’s eyebrows went up, spring-blond drifts of surprise. “For what? I hung the wet stuff in your tub, by the way. If you’ve got a dryer—”

 “In the kitchen. Don’t worry about it. Sit down.” He dove for tea, a shield. “Tea? Chamomile. From the gardens here.”

 Thunder boomed, and rain burst against the windowpane, a sharp rattling clamor. Charlie laughed, and curled up in the chair closest to the fire, giving in. “I guess I’m not going anywhere.”

 “No. Yes. I mean. Not in that.”

 “Well, thanks for the sanctuary.” Charlie accepted tea, wrapping slim fingers around warmth. He took a sip and made a small pleased sound, and Lionel couldn’t take that and therefore gulped half his own to drown out any thoughts. It was very hot.

 “So,” Charlie went on, grinning at him, pushing one too-large knitted sleeve up, “what’s your name? And what do you do? When you’re not rescuing academics in distress, that is.”

 Lionel stopped to gaze at him. Academic? A scholar? Not an enchanted flower-sprite or dryad? With that bewitching gift for conversation, familiarity, putting the world at ease?

 He was holding the mug halfway up, in front of his face. Neither here nor there. He lowered it hastily. Felt his cheeks flush. “Lionel. Is my name. Lionel Briar. I’m a gardener.”


Thank you, Kristin for stopping by today and sharing your new release! ❤️

If you would like to learn more about K.L. Noone’s books, you can check out her website HERE.

And make sure to check back in tomorrow when A.L. Lester stops by to tell us all about Warning! Deep Water, her contribution to our World Naked Gardening story project.

You can also learn about all the books that are part of this project in one place by clicking on the image below.

Tags: K.L. Noone
Comment
Newer / Older
Back to Top

Copyright 2025 Amy Spector
All Rights Reserved.