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Diplomacy
by Zahra Owens

List Price: $11.99
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Paperback
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press

Jack Christensen has everything he ever wanted. He's a rising star in US Diplomacy, the youngest man to have been appointed as an Ambassador of the United States. A career diplomat who's just been sent to a politically interesting Embassy in Europe, he has the perfect wife, speaks five languages and has all the right credentials, yet there's something missing and he doesn't quite know what. Then Lucas Carlton walks into an Embassy reception and introduces himself and his American fiancée. From the first handshake, the young Englishman makes an impression on Jack that leaves him confused and uncharacteristically insecure. Lucas' position as the British liaison to the American Embassy means they are forced to work together closely and they have a hard time denying the attraction between them, despite their current relationships. When their women decide to go on a weekend trip together, Jack and Lucas start a passionate relationship, which continues long after their partners return. Diplomatic circles are notoriously conservative though, and they each know that the right woman by their side makes a very significant contribution to their success. Will they be able to make the right choices in their professional and personal lives? Or will they need to sacrifice one for the other? Full Chapter excerpt available at www.dreamspinnerpress.com


Customer Reviews:
 
Intriguing and well written!
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
Plot and storyline were excellent. All the characters were so well written and developed - everything was so believable. I was still thinking about it days after i'd read it. A must read for anyone who loves romance/erotica with a great story and plot to it.

Love with a twist
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 
Gay love shouldn't be complicated but being married does throw a twist into the relationship. Aptly titled--''Diplomacy''--the author dealt with it tactfully but certainly not wimpishly. The younger-older relationship is portrayed with vigor, sensuality and enduring strength. Of course there is the sex (let's not be coy about it!) so it can be enjoyed on different levels depending on one's moods. Go ahead, celebrate it all!

read it
Customer Rating: 4 out of 5 
It has been an great pleasure to read this book. I like the charters and the story

(I'm sorry I read it...............
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 

............No, I'm not.)----(Learn about the author's "take" on this review title at the three stars {***}, below).

((Here is my approach to obtaining/reading/reviewing Gay romance tales in book form (you could see it as seeking the holy grail of that genre, or as looking for the "Addictive Read"). Selection of read materials is based mainly on purchase of new stories by favorite authors or on comments/reviews by you in these on-line "Book" pages. Re the latter, sometimes I feel correctly steered by you (the "Keepers" filling my shelves), other times mislead---occasionally badly (the "Throwaways"). Rarely, I come across the "Addictive"---- those I can reread at least monthly (see below starred *** area for a list......and for some "near-Addictive" as well). For some reads, I'll share comments with you, as follows below. Thanks for sticking with me so far.))

{{WARNING!! This Book May Be ADDICTIVE To Your Health!!}}

For me, a gay romance set in the diplomatic corps was very much a new experience---one of enjoyment, one of learning. Thank you, Zahra Owens, for inviting us along into this new world you created for us---one to which you've given a timely spin, in several instances relating it to current day events. And kudos to Dreamspinner Press for giving us one of the most truly elegant and memorable book covers I can recall running across. Thanks also, guys, for providing a lesser number of typographical errors than have many similar publishing houses out there.

Now (and in no particular order) some other "pluses" that stand out and for which I'm thankful to Zahra Owens:

- Setting up a marvelous structuring of the book. It is noteworthy that her "transitionings" from one point to the next in the life and the relationship of her two main characters are beautifully and interestingly written. This makes following where she is taking us so easily done......creating great anticipation along the way.

- Giving us Jack's and Lucas's initial and very real seeming physical encounter (in a mens room, interestingly), as one so intense that it almost jumps off the page. Oh, and for creating a beautifully......beautifully done love making scene in a shower (it certainly made this reader want to get wet).

- Providing a big, mirthful hoot to our enjoyment by imaginatively adding some new pages to the reading world's "How-to" book on Sushi dining.

- Creating great romantic sex scenes---highlighted by a lovingly done and sweetly detailed man-on-man, first anal love making scene (Wow!!) which is written from the point of view of a character who has known only heterosexual intercourse. Owens is also especially good at giving us a multitude of "touchy-feely" moments, and creating in our minds a picture of lyrical love making. This means including the "little things" that you'd expect to occur in the foreplay phase of making love: the touches, the kisses, the disrobing and tossing around of garments, the little whispers of endearment---they're all wonderfully there. Then she goes on to compellingly build up to the very deepest physical aspects of "making love."

- Allowing us to discover that she's created a bit of magic for her couple by giving them their own little "Verbal Connection" {***}, simple phrases involving apologizing, which will carry them through their entire relationship. No, all you readers out there, I won't go on to give this away---find out yourselves. Suffice it to say, it's a sweet and simple device which prompts me to ask: how many authors think to give their couples a special "VC"? Thank you, Zahra, for being that type of person.

- Devising a life threatening crisis into which she immediately pulls us, while at the same time inventively "back-forthing" us between the lead male in trouble and his anxiously aware and waiting lover. It would be near perfect, as written, to serve as a film script.

- Wonderfully pulling off, later in the book, a "reintroduction to our couple" in their new surroundings. It's very beautifully, smartly and "up-to-dately" handled. Bravo! (Although, for suspense purposes, I do wish she'd used a different job title in Liz's description of the person Lucas was going to be meeting/escorting).

- Last, but far from.......well, you know: coming up with some notably refreshing usage of the romance language (e.g., "........feel his breath ghosting across his face."). And there are others.

In closing this review, I'll admit planning to include some grousing about a few minor grammatical problems---most of which I now see are likely due to differences between U.S. and our author's European upbringing, education and language usage. Now I find doing so not to be necessary. Far, far more important than dwelling on those things is celebrating the real Joy this woman's story brings to us.......for Joy, indeed, is here and really deserves to be spelled with that capital "J." Even more, though, there is the feeling of HOPE she gives to us.......hope in the perserverance of our happiness.

PS--***Other "Addictive" reads: "Caught Running" (Madeleine Urban and Abigail Roux) (Caught Running) // "Freshman Pledge: The Magic of Love" (Larry Coles) (Freshman Pledge: The Magic of Love) // "Bareback" (Chris Owen) (Bareback). Some "near-Addictives: "Brokeback Mountain" (Annie Proulx) // "The Dreyfus Affair" (Peter Lefcourt) (The Dreyfus Affair: A Love Story) // "The Carnivorous Lamb" (Agustin Gomez-Arcos) (The Carnivorous Lamb (Little Sister's Classics)) // "Afterlife" (Paul Monette) // "Cowboy Up" (short stories edited by Rob Knight)

****

(I'm sorry I read it...............
Customer Rating: 5 out of 5 

............No, I'm not). (Learn about the author's "take" on this review title at the three stars {***}, below).

((Here is my approach to obtaining/reading/reviewing Gay romance tales in book form (you could see it as seeking the holy grail of that genre, or as looking for the "Addictive Read"). Selection of read materials is based mainly on purchase of new stories by favorite authors or on comments/reviews by you in these on-line "Book" pages. Re the latter, sometimes I feel correctly steered by you (the "Keepers" filling my shelves), other times mislead---occasionally badly (the "Throwaways"). Rarely, I come across the "Addictive"---- those I can reread at least monthly (see below starred *** area for a list......and for some "near-Addictive" as well). For some reads, I'll share comments with you, as follows below. Thanks for sticking with me so far.))

{{WARNING!! This Book May Be ADDICTIVE To Your Health!!}}

For me, a gay romance set in the diplomatic corps was very much a new experience---one of enjoyment, one of learning. Thank you, Zahra Owens, for inviting us along into this new world you created for us---one to which you've given a timely spin, in several instances relating it to current day events. And kudos to Dreamspinner Press for giving us one of the most truly elegant and memorable book covers I can recall running across. Thanks also, guys, for providing a lesser number of typographical errors than have many similar publishing houses out there.

Now (and in no particular order) some other "standout pluses" for which I'm thankful to Zahra Owens:

- Setting up a marvelous structuring of the book. In this regard it should be noted that her "transitionings" from one point to the next in the life and the relationship of her two main characters are beautifully---but even more importantly---interestingly done. This makes following where she is taking us so easily done......creating great anticipation along the way.

- Giving us Jack's and Lucas's initial, very real and physical (mens room) encounter, one so intense that it almost jumps off the page. Oh, and for creating a beautifully......beautifully done love making scene in a shower (it certainly made this reader want to get wet).

- Providing a big hoot to our enjoyment by imaginatively adding some new pages to the reading world's "How-to" book on Sushi dining.

- Besides all the great sex---highlighted by a lovingly done and sweetly detailed man-on-man, first anal love making scene (Wow!!), written from the point of view of one having known only heterosexual intercourse---(Owens is especially good at) giving us a multitude of "touchy-feely" moments, and creating in our minds a picture of "romantic" love making. This means not leaving out the "little things" that you'd expect to occur in the foreplay phase of making love: the touches, the kisses, the disrobing and tossing around of garments, the little whispers of endearment---they're all wonderfully there. Then she goes on to compellingly build up to the very deepest physical aspects of "making love."

- Allowing us to discover that she's created a bit of magic for her couple by giving them their own little "Verbal Connection" {***}, simple phrases involving apologizing, which will carry them through their entire relationship. No, readers, I won't go on to give this all away---find out yourselves. Suffice it to say, it's a sweet and simple device which prompts me to ask: how many authors think to give their couples a special "VC"? Thank you, Zahra, for being that type of person.

- Devising a life threatening crisis into which she immediately pulls us, while at the same time inventively "back-forthing" us between the lead male in trouble and his anxiously aware and waiting lover. It would be near perfect, as written, to serve as a film script.

- Wonderfully pulling off, later in the book, a "reintroduction to our couple" in their new surroundings. It's very beautifully, smartly and "up-to-dately" handled. Bravo! (Although, for suspense purposes, I do wish she'd used a different job title in Liz's description of the person Lucas was going to be meeting/escorting).

- Last, but far from.......well, you know: coming up with some notably refreshing usage of the romance language (e.g., "........feel his breath ghosting across his face."). And there are others.

In closing this review, I'll admit planning to include some grousing about a few minor grammatical problems---most of which I now see are likely due to differences between U.S. and European upbringing, education and language usage. Now I find that not to be so necessary. Far, far more important than dwelling on those things is celebrating the real Joy this woman's story brings to us.......for it is here and really deserves to be spelled with that capital "J." Even more, though, there is HOPE.......hope in the perserverance of our happiness.

PS--***Other "Addictive" reads: "Caught Running" (Madeleine Urban and Abigail Roux) (Caught Running) // "Freshman Pledge: The Magic of Love" (Larry Coles) (Freshman Pledge: The Magic of Love) // "Bareback" (Chris Owen) (Bareback). Some "near-Addictives: "Brokeback Mountain" (Annie Proulx) // "The Dreyfus Affair" (Peter Lefcourt) (The Dreyfus Affair: A Love Story) // "The Carnivorous Lamb" (Agustin Gomez-Arcos) (The Carnivorous Lamb (Little Sister's Classics)) // "Afterlife" (Paul Monette) // "Cowboy Up" (short stories edited by Rob Knight)

****





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