Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Beds and Blue Jeans a sexy non romance

I am presently working on a couple of stories, which I hope to publish in the near future.
But for the moment, I’d like to say a word about my latest story “Beds and Blue Jeans.”  It’s not a romance with a happy ever after ending.  I wanted to write something that was  more realistic, than the usual romances.  I wanted to explore a story, where people face real life problems and make mistakes and don’t always find it easy  to put the mistakes right.   Sam is a selfish, average young man, who uses his looks and sex appeal to get plenty of action.  Like a lot of men. He tries to be a good father, and he tries to live with the difficult young woman that he ended up in a relationship with.  He’s very far from perfect.  But I wanted to write about someone ordinary and average, who had real faults, not very minor ones.
I realise that many people won’t like a story like this, but I wanted to write it and publish it, and I hope that some people will find it interesting.

. http://www.amazon.com/Beds-Blue-Jeans-everyday-mayhem-ebook/dp/B01370SMFO/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1443024514&sr=1-1&keywords=beds+and+blue+jeans


Monday, 31 August 2015

BEDS AND BLUE JEANS.a love story

This is my first try at a realistic story, about a young man trying to sort out his life. Sam is young, attractive and talented, but he is also thoughtless and selfish. He loves his musical career, but he wants to do more than make a bare living at it. He loves his girlfriend, but he’s tempted by other women. He is at a stage of trying to make decisions which will affect his future. It is available on Amazon.. by Nadine Sutton.

Tuesday, 25 August 2015

Beds and Blue Jeans By Nadine Sutton. A taste!

Pattie’s face, which had been tired but smiling, suddenly froze. She sat up rapidly. Her moods changed so fast. “Oh I see. I guess you’re out fucking some woman. Where are you meeting her? Tell me when you're going to meet her, I'd hate to disturb you by calling your cell phone.” “No, hell, no, honey, I ain’t. Don’t be so stupid. Honey? Sam tried to put his arms round her, but she pushed him away and walked out of the room. She slammed the door hard. Oh God, he thought. He had made the date with Sherry, but that might be best to cancel.

Saturday, 1 August 2015

BEDS AND BLUE JEANS a new novella by Nadine Sutton

Sam is a young singer, who loves country and rock music and his dream is to be successful in the music world. He’s never really wanted to do anything else. He’s a handsome young man and he gets plenty of attention from female fans. He likes the ladies, but he’s beginning to want something a bit deeper than a sex session. He has a woman in his life, and a kid but he’s not very happy. He meets other women, who seem to offer a real close love affair, but he’s unsure what to do, or where to turn.  He’s often selfish, and mixed up, but at heart, he wants love. http://www.amazon.com/Beds-Blue-Jeans-everyday-mayhem-ebook/dp/B01370SMFO/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1438496954&sr=8-2&keywords=nadine+sutton

Dennis Wheatley 1897-1977

I've just been re-reading a book by the forgotten author Dennis Wheatley. He was born in South London, to a middle class family in 1897 and was sent to a good school (Dulwich college). He was expelled, allegedly for forming a secret society. He then ended up in the Merchant Navy. He served as an officer in the First World War. His family wine business occupied him after he left the army in 1919. By the 1930s, it was doing badly and he decided to sell up and become an author. He wrote his first novel in 1932, but it didn’t get published for some time. He wrote historical and contemporary thrillers with a strong military bent. He had war and “secret ops” and propaganda experience which helped him with his plots. He also had some interest in the occult, and wrote several Black Magic based thrillers though he always warned his readers against getting involved in such things. He was an extremely conservative thinker and felt that Britain was “going to the dogs” and that socialist reforms would make people lazy and weak. In his writing, he usually champions the conservative cause, backing the English Tories against the Whigs and the British government against the French revolutionaries or Napoleon. He published his first novel “Three Inquisitive People” in 1933. His heroes are usually aristocratic and independent minded and often ruthless in how they achieve their ends. He is not greatly sympathetic to left wingers but he is usually fair to them. While there are times when he comes across as dated, and bigoted, generally speaking, he was a good story teller. His books are well researched and while he is not an elegant word smith, he knows how to keep the readers’ attention and to be a page turner. His Gregory Sallust series is about a former army officer who is involved in spying during World War Two. Gregory marries a beautiful German aristocrat who is anti-Hitler, and the books are said to have been a partial inspiration for the James Bond novels. His women characters are usually less active than the males, but are often involved in spying as well, and they are not above using their and their sex appeal to contribute to the causes they serve. However, he is sympathetic to women. As a man of his time, he does not like women to be quite as promiscuous as men, and doesn’t expect them to be as active physically but there is definitely a role for them. He does not criticise female characters for being sexually active. One of his best novels, Desperate Measures, covers the end of Napoleon’s reign, and Waterloo. Roger Brook, his British agent, uses his identity as Colonel De Breuc to foil the Bonapartist cause, and tries to get married to Georgina, his beautiful mistress. Dennis Wheatley was married twice, and died in 1977.

Saturday, 18 April 2015

Suite Francais Film

This is  a likable film set in the aftermath of the Fall of France, when the Germans occupied the country. The chief character is a young woman called Lucille who lives with her mother in law, and is lonely because her husband is now a prisoner of war in Germany.  She doesn’t get on with her mother in law, who is a well to do and cold hearted widow.  Lucille feels bullied by her and hates the way that her mother in law is harsh towards their tenants.

 When a German regiment come into the town, Lucille notes that the older women freeze them out, but the young women lonely without their menfolk who are away at war, find it hard to ignore them. Before long, some of the younger women take German soldiers as lovers. Lucille is lonely too but her mother in laws strict watchfulness controls her life. When a German officer is billeted at their house, her mother in law refuses to talk to him, but Lucille who loves music, gradually develops a friendship with him. But in the end, she realises that she cannot ignore the fact that he is German and the occupier of her country.

Suite Francaise is about wartime love and sexual passion and captures very well the loneliness of soldiers away from their homes and loved ones, and the loneliness of the young women whose men have disappeared into Germany or been killed.  And the furtiveness and passion that this gives to their love affairs with the Germans.
I particularly liked it because I like to read of illicit or non-traditional love. Of course married and settled love has many satisfactions but there is a special thrill to love that is not accepted…

Friday, 3 April 2015

Royal Paramours by Dulcie Ashdown

I’ve been reading this book lately, and I can remember reading it many years ago. It covers the illicit relationships of Britain’s Royals from the medieval era to the time of Edward VIII. However it misses the later revelations of infidelity from the 1980s onwards. I’ve greatly enjoyed the stories of Edward VII’s many mistresses, the love affairs of the Stuart Kings and the intense friendships of the Stuart Queens, Anne and Mary. Both of them seem to have had close relationships with women as well as with their husbands. Dulcie Ashdown said, very truly that “normal” conventional respectable married love, is not as interesting as illicit love. We love to read about the loves which should not happen, or about the deceptions and secrets of love outside of marriage, which can result in scandal. We like to see the problems in a love relationship, rather than the boring years of settled married life, which is why love stories usually end at the altar.