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Guest Post | Holly Day - World Naked Gardening Day: Perfect Rows

May 10, 2022 in Guest Post

I can’t believe it’s Tuesday already! ! Today is the second to last day of our World Naked Gardening Day guest posts. If you didn’t have a chance to learn about A.L. Lester’s story yesterday or K.L. Noone’s story on Sunday, make sure to check them out.

Today I’m excited to have my long-time friend Holly Day (aka Ofelia Gränd) here to tell us about her contribution to our World Naked Gardening Day group project.

We’re extremely happy to have you, Holly!


Hello everyone! Thank you, Amy, for letting me drop by today. A few days ago, Perfect Rows was published. It's my contribution to the celebrations of World Naked Gardening Day. Last year, A.L. Lester had the idea that we should celebrate World Naked Gardening Day by writing a story each, and it sounded like a fun thing to do, so Nell Iris, K.L. Noone, my lovely hostess Amy Spector, me, and Ally Lester, of course, did.

Perfect Rows is about Grayson who has inherited his grandmother's cottage-style house with a lovely kitchen garden, Victorian-inspired. The only problem is that when Grayson's great grandfather purchased the property, he built two houses on it, one on each end of the kitchen garden. Grayson's grandmother lived in one of the houses, and her sister lived in the other. It was all fine until the two women left this earth, and Grayson had to share the garden with Camden.

The biggest conflict Grayson and Camden have is about what purpose the garden should have. Grayson wants to grow vegetables, and he has a permaculture approach to it all - which basically is to mimic nature with crop diversity and natural productivity. Camden, on the other hand, wants flowers growing in perfect rows.

I love to garden, I'm not very good at it, but I enjoy it. When I grew up, my grandmother had a rather big kitchen garden. She lived in the city, so we're not talking loads of acres, but she hardly had any lawn. Instead, she grew flowers and vegetables everywhere. My mum often muttered about how unorganised it all was - it wasn't.

My husband and I lived with my grandmother when she'd grown old and no longer could take care of the garden. She was mourning her loss of ability, and we did our best to keep it as she wanted it to be, and it was NOT unorganised. What annoyed my mother was that if there suddenly grew a tomato plant among the beans, my grandmother allowed it to grow there. To my mum, this was a plant growing in the wrong place. To my grandmother, it was a bonus plant. She saved all flowers peeking up between the lettuce plants, and if there was dill by the zucchinis, then there was dill by the zucchinis.

I'm like my grandmother. Grayson is like my grandmother. Camden is like my mother LOL



Perfect Rows

Blurb: Everything would've been perfect if Grayson Dawe hadn't been forced to share his garden with Camden Hensley. Grayson has everything he needs in life - a job, friends, a house he loves, and a garden. He wants to grow enough vegetables to cover his needs over the summer, and he has a plan for how to achieve it.

 Camden Hensley loves his garden. He loves beautiful flowers in perfect rows, sweet scents and buzzing bees, but his neighbor, Grayson, messes everything up. He mixes vegetables with flowers in the growing beds and is incapable of placing plants in straight lines. And when Cam pulls out the plants growing in the wrong place, Grayson snarls at him.

 Grayson doesn't want to fight with Camden, but he's completely unreasonable. Cam only wants Grayson to stop creating chaos and to grow flowers instead of vegetables. Neither of them is willing to back down, and days in the garden usually end in shouting matches, at least until Grayson realizes he can shut Cam up by kissing him. But will they ever be able to agree about what plants should grow where?

Contemporary Gay Romance: 16,427 words


Buy links: JMS Books • Amazon • books2read.com/PerfectRows


Excerpt: His great grandfather had bought the land, built the houses, and then given it all to his two daughters. They’d raised their families there, sharing space and resources. When his great-aunt had died, his uncle had sold her house, and they’d struck some weird deal with his grandmother so they still shared the garden. It had been much easier if they’d divided the property, then Grayson wouldn’t have to share a garden with Camden fucking Hensley. Annoying little shit.

Grayson had moved in last spring after Granny had passed away, and they’d gotten off on the wrong foot right from the start. He had plans for the garden, Cam had plans for the garden, but they weren’t the same plans.

Camden wanted flowers, wanted the garden to look pretty and to have everything in perfect rows. Grayson wanted food and didn’t give a shit about how it looked.

He strolled along the garden bed, smiling at a small tomato plant sticking up in the middle of the radishes. There was another one right in the middle of the pak choi he’d planted. He assumed they came from the compost. He composted everything he possibly could, and last year he’d had volunteer potatoes that had to have come from the compost. They’d grown right in the middle of the strawberries and had driven Camden mad.

He loved getting bonus potatoes, but the biggest joy was watching Cam glare at the plant every time he walked past it.

Grayson would have to do his best to protect the stray tomatoes, it was free food, and nature didn’t grow in strict lines.

Cam would pull them out if he got the chance.

Grayson glared at Camden’s house again. A light shone in the kitchen, and his stomach rumbled as he pictured Cam cooking in there.

He needed food, and he needed a shower. Abandoning the tomato plants, he headed for the door. He stopped by the raised bed closest to his house and plucked some lettuce and carefully pulled a couple of turnips from the soil. He wasn’t a big fan of turnips, but since he was challenging himself not to buy any vegetables, he needed early and fast-growing kinds, and turnips, sadly, fit the bill. Roasted turnips weren’t bad, and he’d thawed some chicken to go with them.

Peeling, rinsing, and chopping, he soon had the food in the oven and rushed into the bathroom for a quick shower. The day melted away with the suds running down his body, and he groaned as he rolled his head to loosen his tense neck muscles. He’d been painting ceilings all day and looking up for hours on end caused strain.

Turning off the water, he stepped out of the shower stall and grabbed a towel. He dried his face and looked into the misty mirror, unable to see anything. Reaching over to the window, he pushed it open. The cool air wrapping around him made him shiver and right as he was about to step away from the window, he spotted movement in the garden. Camden.

His fair hair shone in the dark as he squatted and— Grayson cursed as he pulled something from the garden bed. Oh, hell no!

The bathroom door banged against the wall as he pushed it open. He ran down the stairs, crossed the kitchen, and yanked the door open. His bare feet hit the gravel path between the raised beds, but he couldn’t let the pain of the small stones digging into his feet stop him.

“What the hell do you think you’re doing?” The towel caught in one of the rosebushes. Grayson yanked, but when it didn’t come loose, he dropped it. “Leave those tomatoes be!”

Camden stood, his eyes wide and his mouth open as he looked Grayson up and down. “Grayson.” His voice wasn’t more than a whisper, and Grayson noted he looked a little disheveled—Cam never looked disheveled. He was a suit and tie kind of person. His hair always cut at a perfect length and his hands always clean. Long slim fingers with neatly cut nails. Grayson spent more time secretly watching those hands than any sane person should.

“Don’t kill the volunteer plants.”

Camden frowned. “The what?”

“The self-sown plants, don’t touch them.”

Camden stared at him. “Aren’t you… erm… cold?”

Heat climbed Grayson’s face, but he hoped it was too dark for Cam to notice. “Don’t kill the plants.”

“It was in the wrong place.”

“There is no wrong place. If it’s there, it’s because nature wants it there, so leave it be.”

“Nature wants—”

“Put it back.”

Camden’s back stiffened. “I will not put it back.” He twisted his fingers and snapped the plant.

Grayson growled, curling his hands into fists and taking deep breaths. “It could’ve given us plenty of tomatoes.”

“It was in the wrong place.”

“There is no wrong place!”


About Holly Day

According to Holly Day, no day should go by uncelebrated and all of them deserve a story. If she’ll have the time to write them remains to be seen. She lives in rural Sweden with a husband, four children, more pets than most, and wouldn’t last a day without coffee.

Holly gets up at the crack of dawn most days of the week to write gay romance stories. She believes in equality in fiction and in real life. Diversity matters. Representation matters. Visibility matters. We can change the world one story at the time.

Connect with Holly on social media:

Website • Facebook • Twitter • Pinterest • BookBub • Goodreads • Newsletter


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

And make sure to check back in tomorrow when Nell Iris stops by to tell us all about Strike a Pose, 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.

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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.

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