Books by Andrew Ashling

A Dish Served Cold by Andrew Ashling    Just don't Mess with Us: Family Matters by Andrew Ashling         

Welcome

This site is the home of books by Andrew Ashling.
All my novels contain male on male action, often very explicit. You could call them gay, slash, yaoi, m/m-romance, though none of those terms define them accurately. If you're still reading beyond this point, this means you consider yourself to be a responsible individual. That's good enough for me.
You can find my books in Kindle format on Amazon, and in epub, pdf and mobi format on this website.
There are some sample chapters of the Dark Tales of Randamor the Recluse-series and other books.
If you'd like me to send you an email when I publish a new book, you can subscribe to my mailing list.
In case you're interested where else I hang out on the Internet, you'll find it in this post on my blog.

Book IV of Dark Tales of Randamor the Recluse Is Finished

I finished Book IV in the "Dark Tales of Randamor the Recluse"-series a few weeks ago.

This new installment, "Gambit" is the first part of a new trilogy, called "The Invisible Hands."

I know: it gets confusing. Maybe a little overview will help.

Book I: The Invisible Chains - Part 1: Bonds of Hate
Book II: The Invisible Chains - Part 2: Bonds of Fear
Book III: The Invisible Chains - Part 3: Bonds of Blood

Book IV: The Invisible Hands - Part 1: Gambit

Two more books are to follow, and I already started Book V.
The second trilogy — just like the first — is one big story. One dance move in three steps.



I have to admit I have some mixed feelings about this second trilogy.


I kept the first paragraph a bit vague to avoid spoilers for those who haven't read the first trilogy.

Most of the main characters return. After all the hardships of the first trilogy with it's raw emotions, this is a far more subtle game. The sharp edges are gone, but the pieces still don't fit. Not quite. Neither is it certain that they ever will. While I find it very interesting to write about the more nuanced give and take that is going on, I can't help but wonder whether the reader will like it as much as I do.

The political arc is painted on a much broader canvas. That means the story is far more complicated than that of the first trilogy. Also, there are a lot of new characters. And I do mean a lot. Maybe you'll be happy to learn that quite a few of them are couples.
There are also new cultures, new languages, new customs...
The great neighbor to the south of Ximerion starts to move, prodded on, provoked even, by the high king, and as a result disturbing the balance of power of the whole region. Kingdoms and independent city states get involved in a struggle for survival, with everybody looking out for their best interest and reconsidering allegiances and alliances. Meanwhile, Anaxantis tries to weld his dominions into a coherent, prosperous state, at the same time trying to keep them out of the main conflict.

The first trilogy was, in comparison, far more straightforward. There were several threads, but they were basically intertwined from the beginning and going in the same direction. In the second trilogy — and this is what might make things more confusing — several threads come at the reader from far flung starting points, to merge only in the third book. Again I wonder how that will be received.

What I can promise is that there will be the same mix of emotions. Tragedies, conspiracies, good, as well as bad and mediocre people, caught between impossible choices, loyalty, friendship, love, betrayal and adventure...

Life, to put it in one word.

Rainbow Awards

My novel A Dish Served Cold got an honorable mention (6th place) in the category Best LGBT Coming of Age / Young Adult of the Rainbow Awards, organized by Elisa Rolle.

I am hardly a well-known name, even in the M/M-romance genre, so I was pleasantly surprised my book got noticed at all.

I must admit I find the classification a bit strange. In A Dish Served Cold the main characters themselves fall under that category (for most of the story), but the novel is not aimed at young adults. Yes, there is a coming-out-theme and young, budding love, but it is only the background against which far more darker events take place.

However, I’m certainly far from complaining.

Thanks, Elisa and all who voted for Dish.

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