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Archive for 'Susan Lyons'
September 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
First, the exciting news. Men on Fire, the Aphrodisia firefighter anthology from November 2009 is September’s Red-Hot Read in Cosmopolitan magazine. How cool is that?
The novella they excerpted is Jodi Lynn Copeland’s “Playing With Fire.” Hurray, Jodi!! And hurray also that the book’s co-authors, Rachelle Chase and I, get a little free promo too, since our book cover is featured. That makes twice in Cosmo for me this year – my own Sex Drive (December 2010) was the May Red-Hot Read.
So, of course I bought the September Cosmo, and as I browsed through the articles, I found this tidbit. This man who’s 30 says he owes his seductive skills to buying “dopey romance novels” (excuse me???), ripping out the sex scenes, and memorizing them until he can recite the “tacky phrases” (double excuse me???) word for word. He says they’re like cheat sheets for getting a girl’s undies off.
On how many levels is this just plain wrong? If he thinks romance novels are dopey, then clearly he thinks romance is dopey (and who uses the word “dopey” anyhow?). Well, obviously, if his goal is getting a girl’s undies off, he doesn’t give a damn about romance, does he? This is a man I so don’t want to know!
But, seriously, would a woman fall for this? Some guy who doesn’t look at her, isn’t interested in her, doesn’t care about her, just reciting seductive phrases from a novel with his tongue firmly planted in his cheek, with the sole goal of having sex with her? I’d really like to think she’d laugh her head off and walk away from the shmuck.
On the other hand, for a man who really cares about women and wants tips on how to please them, reading romance novels is a great guide. There are insights into what women want and how they feel that are invaluable to the good guys. Hint: it’s about the romance, the genuineness, the connection, not the specific words! Yes, having a guy say something romantic can be a turn-on for a woman, but that “something romantic” has to ring true. It can’t be a sleaze-ball line delivered in a bar by a virtual stranger. She has to believe it’s personal, genuine, meaningful, and not just some “tacky phrase” he’s only saying to get her into bed.
I’ll keep writing romance novels, and when I picture men reading them, it’ll be the good guys I have in mind. As for the sleaze-balls, I hope they get exactly what they deserve.
Tags: Cosmo, Cosmopolitan, firefighters, Jodi Lynn Copeland, Men on Fire, Rachelle Chase, sleazy men, Susan Lyons Posted in General | 6 Comments »
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May 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
A couple of nights ago, I attended Stars on Ice, a gala figure skating exhibition. I totally love figure skating, especially the dance and pairs. To me, those couples and their performances are the essence of romance. What more could you possibly want?
A man who’s incredibly strong–strong enough to lift his lady over his head and carry her safely across the ice. A man who’s tender–tender enough to set her down with infinite gentleness. A man who’s agile, coordinated, gymnastic, and graceful, without ever losing his power and strength. A man who’s good looking, wears great clothes, and presents himself well. A man who can entertain and connect with the audience, who can feel and interpret music, who can convey passion, humor, whatever emotion the particular piece calls for. What more could any woman possibly want from a hero?
And then there’s the woman. Graceful, elegant, beautiful–and just as strong and coordinated as her partner. She can do everything he can (well, except lift him over her head!), make it look easy, and look gorgeous while she’s doing it. Very definitely a heroine to be admired.
As for the couple, they portray the magic, the special bond, that’s romance. The way they gaze into each other’s eyes, the way their bodies move together and apart, the way they can reach for each other’s hand without even looking, knowing it will always be there. To me, skaters like Jamie Salé and David Pelletier (Olympic gold medalists from 2002), Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir (Olympic gold medalists from 2010), and Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon (twice world silver medalists) give me the same warm glow in my heart as reading the happy ending of a wonderful romance novel.
They also symbolize everything that’s beautiful and admirable in a relationship. Because it’s not just their intimate connection and the romantic face they show to the world, it’s all the individual work and teamwork that goes on behind the scenes. They are incredible athletes with the discipline to commit to a lofty goal and follow a brutal training schedule. Together. Hand in hand, as partners.
Not surprisingly, a number of pairs and dances teams fall in love off the ice, too, and marry. I think it’s wonderfully symbolic that when Marie-France and Patrice married, the couple who had trained and skated side by side walked each other down the aisle. Side by side.
Sometimes the marriage proposals even happen on the ice. When Chinese skater Hongbo Zhao proposed to his long-time pairs partner, Zue Shen, it was on the ice at the end of the performance where they won the 2007 World Championship.
Aw, isn’t that romantic?
Tags: figure skaters, figure skating, romance, Susan Lyons Posted in General | 10 Comments »
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April 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
My book Sex Drive (from Aphrodisia) has been chosen by Cosmopolitan as their red-hot read for May! (By the way, that’s the issue labeled on the front, “The Sexy Issue – So much hot stuff!”) How cool – sorry, make that seriously hot – is that?
Why me? People have asked how I managed this. Sheer luck. I had absolutely nothing to do with it, except of course that I wrote the book. As I understand it, publishers send their sexy books to Cosmo and the magazine picks the ones they want to excerpt. My guess is, they liked mile-high sex! Well, who wouldn’t? My heroine and hero, Theresa and Damien, sure had fun joining that club.
So, surprise number 1 was hearing that my book had been chosen. What a total thrill! I was in Cabo San Lucas when I picked up the email from my publisher, and I promptly celebrated by going to the bar and ordering – what else, but … a cosmo. Yum!
Surprise number 2, which wasn’t such a big one because I’d already heard about other authors’ experiences, was how much Cosmo changed my writing. In the end, I can maybe sort of recognize my characters and scene. LOL. But that’s fair, because one of the most important things with any kind of writing is to know your audience. When I’m writing a book, I have 300+ pages to develop character, emotion, and story. Cosmo has a page and a half to provide a sexy excerpt for their target audience.
If you’re interested in how my 7 page scene differs from their 1.5 pages, you can check out the original of my scene on my website at http://www.susanlyons.ca/books/sex_drive_excerpt.php (along with another excerpt from earlier in the book).

For the most part, I understand why Cosmo edited the way they did. But here’s one thing I totally don’t get. In my book, the flight from Sydney, Australia to Vancouver, BC, stops in Honolulu – and hero Damien, a thriller writer who has a reading scheduled in Honolulu, persuades the no longer buttoned-up sociology prof Theresa Fallon to “lay over” with him. In the excerpt, Honolulu has become L.A. Uh, pardon me (and nothing against L.A.), but I think Honolulu’s a way more romantic, sexy venue. After all, Damien and Theresa do have sex on the beach – as in, Waikiki! So, what was the logic for switching Honolulu for L.A.? If you have any theories, I’d love to hear them.
Sex Drive is the first book in my sexy “planes, trains, automobiles, and a cruise ship” Wild Ride to Love series about three sisters who travel home to their baby sister’s wedding. Along the way, they find romances of their own—and learn that the journey to love truly is one wild ride! The second book, Love, Unexpectedly, is out this month from Kensington Brava under my pen name Susan Fox. There’s info on both books (and all my other titles), including book videos, behind-the-scenes notes, discussion guides, recipes, my monthly contest, and other good stuff on my website at http://www.susanlyons.ca. I hope you drop over for a visit.
Tags: Cosmo, erotic romance, mile-high club, red-hot read, Sex Drive, Susan Lyons Posted in General, The Writing Life | 4 Comments »
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March 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
In less than two weeks, I make my debut under a new pen name, Susan Fox, writing for Kensington Brava.
Oddly, my launch book, Love, Unexpectedly, is the second book in a series that I started as Susan Lyons with Aphrodisia, with the book Sex Drive in December 2009. So, I’m doing my best to get the word out. If you’ve enjoyed my Susan Lyons books, check me out under Susan Fox as well. (And no, I’m not the same Susan Fox who writes for Harlequin Romance, and no, I don’t know if she’s still writing.)
Let me tell you a little about Love, Unexpectedly. It’s the “trains” segment of my sexy “planes, trains, automobiles, and a cruise ship” Wild Ride to Love series. The heroine, Kat Fallon, is one of the four sisters introduced in Sex Drive (the “planes” book). When I wrote the first book, I got a pretty clear handle on all the sisters.
So, I knew that Kat (who’s a PR director at a luxury hotel in Montreal) really wanted love, marriage, and a family, yet had terrible luck with men. She fell quickly and passionately for “larger than life” guys (a NASCAR champ, a gold medal skier) and the relationships never worked out.
For Kat, I wanted to write a very special love story. Sometimes, we fail to see what’s right under our nose. Personally, I love romances when best friends turn into lovers (do you know the song “Tonight I Celebrate My Love For You” by Roberta Flack and Peabo Bryson? – love it!), so that’s what I gave Kat. But not the “When Harry Met Sally” kind, where they were like middle-aged squabbling spouses from the beginning – but a romance with excitement and passion as well as trust and true friendship.
There’s a twist, in that Kat’s neighbor and best friend, photographer Nav Bharani, has been in love with Kat for quite a while. She doesn’t see him that way, though – or at least, she tries not to. He’s the closest friend she’s ever had and, given her disastrous track record with lovers, she refuses to risk her friendship with Nav.
So, Nav needs a game plan to break out of the buddy trap and win her. And that’s where the trains come in!
I love those old movies like “North by Northwest” and “Silver Streak,” where strangers meet on a train and fall for each other. Trains can be pretty darned romantic! So, when Kat takes a cross-Canada train trip from Montreal to Vancouver for her baby sister’s wedding, the desperate Nav grabs the opportunity.
To spice things up, I gave him a dramatic strategy to open Kat’s eyes and make her see him differently. He has a make-over and transforms himself into an exciting “stranger,” a Bollywood movie producer, the kind of man she typically goes for. If she opts into playing “the stranger game” (pretending he really is the movie producer rather than her old friend), she can explore her secret passion for Nav without consequences. She can have the stranger on the train, and her best friend when she returns home.
Well, of course it’s not going to work out that way! For Kat and Nav, once they start their wild ride to love, there will be no turning back.
So, tell me, what do you think of “friends to lovers” romances – either in real life or in books or movies? And how about train travel? Do you see it as romantic, or slow and boring?
Tags: north by northwest, romance, susan fox, Susan Lyons, trains, when harry met sally Posted in General, writing | 10 Comments »
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February 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
I’m so sad to hear that one of my favorite writers has passed away. Dick Francis died on Valentine’s Day, at the age of 89. He was born in Wales, was a very successful jockey, then turned his hand to writing mysteries. More than 40 of them, and they almost always had something to do with the world of horse-racing.
I think I’ve read every single one of his books, and I’d happily read them again. And again. They’ll be on my keeper shelf forever. Yes, I love horses and I always enjoy a good mystery, but the real hook for me is his heroes.
Oh my God, do I love his heroes! They’re not always the biggest, most muscular, super handsome guys. What they are is strong in all the ways that count. They’re leaders, the kind of men who solve problems and save lives, who are intensely loyal and passionately devoted to doing the right thing. They have guts and integrity. And they never boast. They’re the quiet, unassuming kind that always comes through in a crunch. They’re also dead sexy and have a dry sense of humor.
Is it any wonder that every hero I write has a lot in common with the heroes in Dick Francis’s books? Of course, mine do tend to be super handsome because, after all, I write romance rather than mystery and we women do like our hot guys!
My January release, Sex on the Beach, has three sexy heroes. It’s a collection of three interrelated novellas all taking place in Belize, in the week before a destination wedding.

The first hero, Free Lafontaine, is an unusual sort of hero because he’s actually trying to stop his best friend from getting married – but he’s doing it for noble reasons: he believes the bride is a money-grubber and he’s honouring a promise to his friend. Of course, he’s going to realize he’s dead wrong – with a little help from wedding planner Sarah McCann!
The second hero, Ric Nunez, is the perfect man for Tamiko Sato, the fragile victim of sexual abuse. He’s gentle and sensual, and awakens the passionate woman inside her. Every woman deserves a lover like Ric!
And then there’s the third hero, James Moncrieff. When he was married to Giovanna, he was a stuffy professor who was definitely not the right match for the vibrant but immature Italian girl. Now, though, he’s about to show his ex that he’s a far different – far sexier! – man.
What I want to hear from you is, who are your favorite heroes? Writers who you’ve loved for years? What makes for a perfect romance hero?
By the way, I’m thrilled to announce that my December book, Sex Drive, is a Fresh Pick at Fresh Fiction today, and it will also be Cosmo “red hot read” for May!
Happy reading, and happy Olympics!
Tags: Dick Francis, heroes, romance, Sex on the Beach, Susan Lyons Posted in writing | 4 Comments »
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January 17th, 2010 | by Susan Lyons |
I do! As I write this, the rain is pouring down outside my window. OK, that’s Vancouver, BC, and that’s pretty much the story in winter. For me, I prefer this to snow (though snow is definitely prettier!) because when it’s raining the temperature is at least above freezing, and I hate being cold. Here’s a photo of Vancouver, BC in winter. Lovely, eh?
Often, I think that I’d rather do away with winter. Except, then I remember a kids’ book I once read. Did anyone else read the Pookie (the rabbit with wings) books, about all those cute woodland creatures? I loved those books! In one, Pookie Puts The World Right, he makes the mistake of wishing there’d be no winter. Well, of course that totally messes things up, upsetting the whole balance of nature. So, okay, I guess we kind of need winter. I try to remember that, as the rain pours down.
The thing is, I thrive on sunshine and warmth. I inherited that from both my parents, who had the habit of pulling me out of school in winter and driving down to Mexico.
Anyhow, it was this kind of thinking that, once upon a time (as they say in those wonderful kids’ books), led me to the idea for my January release from Berkley Heat, Sex On The Beach. (Yeah, the drink. And yeah, the other kind too – LOL.) 
It’s set in Belize. Seriously, wouldn’t you rather be in Belize right now?
That’s exactly what I thought. And what do people do in Belize? A lot of them get married. In winter, tropical places are prime for destination weddings, where the bride and groom invite their family and close friends for a tropical holiday plus a wedding celebration.
That’s the setting for my book. And no, the bride and groom aren’t one of the couples, though they have a subplot and lessons to learn and teach. The book features three different romances.
In “War of the Sexes,” wedding planner Sarah McCann learns that the groom’s best friend, Free Lafontaine, intends to save his pal from the mistake of marriage. It’s an all-out war between the sexes – a war that just might have two winners!
In “Sex With the Proper Stranger,” model Tamiko Sato comes to the wedding as arm-candy for the groom’s deep-in-the-closet uncle, so what’s she to do when resort manager Ric Nuñez proves far too tempting? Is Ric the man who can heal her wounded heart?
In “Sexy Exes,” Giovanna Moncrieff and her ex, James, mix as well as Italian olive oil and English tonic water, so it’s embarrassing – and exciting! – to discover the flame of passion still burns. Is true love possible the second time around?
I had a lovely time escaping to Belize while I wrote that book. I hope readers will enjoy the same kind of mid-winter escape.
So, what I’d like to know today is, how do you feel about winter? If you’re a skier or snowboarder, you probably love it. Personally, I’m a walk-on-the-beacher – in summer, in bare feet! What do you like or hate about winter? If you could be anywhere right now, where would it be?
And hey, while we’re at it, what are your favorite kids’ books? As well as Pookie, I’ll put in a plug for the Penelope books, written by one of my local writing friends, Sheri Radford. You can check them out here: http://www.sheriradford.com/ They don’t have rabbits with wings, but they have a spunky little girl heroine with lessons to learn, and some great artwork.
Tags: Belize, children's books, Penelope books, Pookie, Sex on the Beach, Sheri Radford, Susan Lyons, winter Posted in New Release, The Writing Life | 13 Comments »
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December 17th, 2009 | by Susan Lyons |
It’s been a while since we’ve had a sexy post here at the Aphro site. I figure, it’s the season to be jolly, and what’s more jolly than . . . sex in interesting places!
When I started my Wild Ride to Love series, the concept was that three sisters would travel home by planes, trains, and automobiles to their baby sister’s wedding – and along the way, each would have a sexy romance. Fun idea, isn’t it? A physical journey, and the sexy journey of falling in love.
So, I started writing the first book, Sex Drive, which is out this month. Repressed professor Theresa Fallon, the eldest sister, lives in Sidney, Australia, so of course she has to travel home by planes to Vancouver, BC. One flight from Sydney to Honolulu, then another from Honolulu to Vancouver. And of course I had to give her an ultra-sexy seatmate, in Damien Black, thriller writer and one of Australia’s 10 sexiest bachelors!
Well, there they were, eating and drinking and flirting, on that first very long flight and . . . well, it’s an Aphrodisia book so we know the in-flight entertainment is going to get down and dirty, right? On a plane. Have you ever done it on a plane? There’s not all that much room, or privacy, is there? And yet, somehow Theresa and Damien manage. Where there’s a will, there’s a way!
Still, I couldn’t imagine restricting their sex scenes to the confines of an airplane (I have an imagination, but it’s not that creative!), so I gave Damien a stop in Honolulu for a reading/signing at a bookstore, and he persuades Theresa to overnight there with him. And that opened up other interesting possibilities. Yes, the hotel room has a bed, but Waikiki Beach by moonlight just begs for a little skinny-dipping, don’t you think? What’s better foreplay than skinny-dipping?
[Want to view a book video of Sex Drive?]
I’ve written outdoor “maybe we’ll get caught” sex before, particularly in Champagne Rules. I’ve written firehall and firefighter training center sex in Hot in Here. Sex on the front deck of a sailboat; that’s in “Too Hot to Handle” in Men on Fire. Hmm, what are some of the other ways that inventive lovers can find to hook up?
Time for you to get into the act. What have you done, read, written, seen, imagined? What’s the most inventive place you can think of to have sex? Let’s share some spicy stuff and heat up this holiday season!
Tags: airplanes, Sex Drive, Susan Lyons, travel Posted in New Release, writing | 4 Comments »
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January 17th, 2009 | by Susan Lyons |
It was great reading all the responses to Bonnie’s post on January 6th (about what readers most like in blogs). Lots of people said they like hearing writing news and reading excerpts. So, that’s what I’m going to give you today.
My wonderful news is that my 2008 book, She’s on Top, is a Reviewers Choice Nominee for best erotic romance at Romantic Times BOOKreviews. I’m thrilled to bits!
Three other Aphrodisia titles are nominees as well: Sharon Page’s Black Silk, Lydia Parks’s Addicted, and Noelle Mack’s One Wicked Night. Congrats to them!
She’s on Top is the fourth book in my Awesome Foursome series, featuring four 20-something girlfriends who laugh, cry, bond, and each find their own very hot romances. Here’s a blurb:
What happens when a woman with body image issues contacts her first love, remembering a gawky boy but discovering he’s turned into a total hottie? Music is Rina’s passion and she’s never forgotten the sensual rhapsody she experienced with pianist Giancarlo. Ten years later, he’s a gorgeous music video producer whose masterful fingers still create an intimate melody of pleasure. Rina wants a full encore of passionate sex – so long as Giancarlo sticks to her rules: to only make love with the lights off. But he’s determined to bring her into the light, convince her to love her body the way he does, and give her a glorious, unforgettable climax.
It was so much fun writing this book, coming up with various sex scenes that took place in the dark – or with him blindfolded. When you can’t see, your other senses really come to life, don’t they?
Now, here’s an excerpt (it’s not as hot as some of what you’ll find in the book, but it is pretty explicit – so if you’re not into that kind of thing, don’t read on). This is from the first sex scene. They’re in his hotel room and she hasn’t yet confessed to her insecurities and instituted her “lights off” rule, but she’s determined the room will remain dark.
“Here, let me turn on the light so I can see your eyes,” Giancarlo said. His hand left her back and she knew he was reaching for the switch.
She didn’t mind him seeing her eyes, but there was a whole lot more that she had no intention of revealing. Quickly she captured his hand, threaded her fingers through his. “No. No light. And yes, I’m positive I want this. Now, where’s the bed?”
The drapes were drawn tightly and she couldn’t see a thing.
He chuckled. “How can I find it if you won’t let me turn the lights on? I want to see you. Every lovely inch of you.”
She winced. What he’d see was every extra pound. Thank God this hotel had thick, expensive window treatments.
But tonight she was supposed to be sexy, not pitifully insecure, so she tried for a sultry purr. “And I prefer the dark. It’s mysterious, exciting.”
“But –”
“But what?” She cut him off. “This, perhaps?” Unerringly she found the waist of his beltless pants and undid the button. The zipper. “Mmm, there’s something in here. I wonder what it is?” At last she could cup her hand over the hard-on that stretched his underwear. Her uncertainties fled, replaced by confidence and a surge of lust.
“It’s dark,” she said, “so I can’t really tell. I’ll have to figure it out by . . . feel.” She breathed the last word seductively.
Her hand slid under his underwear – some kind of silky-feeling jersey fabric – and then . . . Oh, yum. A hot, pulsing shaft filled her hand. Filled it.
And her hand, a pianist’s hand that could easily span an octave, wasn’t small. Her vaginal muscles clenched. God, he was going to feel good inside her.
He gasped, tensed for a moment, then began to breathe again. Fast.
“Oh my.” She licked her lips, letting him hear her do it. Then she ran her hand up and down his shaft, plunging deep inside his clothing to explore his balls, then slowly back up to the head of his penis. Her pussy was aching with need but she didn’t give in. She had to make Giancarlo forget any desire for light.
Can you identify with Rina and her insecurities? I sure can!
(By the way, there are longer excerpts from all my novels and novellas on my website, plus notes about how each book originated, review quotes, and other fun stuff – such as a monthly contest and e-newsletter: http://www.susanlyons.ca.)
Oh, before I forget, and on a completely different note, here’s another bit of fun news. Did you know there’s a new print magazine with short romances, New Love Stories Magazine? My Valentine’s story – and this one’s sweet, not spicy – is in the premiere Jan/Feb issue. If you’re interested in subscribing (or submitting, fellow writers), check it out at this website:
http://www.newlovestories.com.
So far, 2009 is a very good year for me! How about for you?
Tags: awards, erotic romance, RT, stories, Susan Lyons Posted in writing | 7 Comments »
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