CAPTIVE DESIRE cover is here!

Releases Monday Nov. 19th

We have a cover for the next sex planet, I mean, Planet of Desire book. And it is super sexy and I hope you love it as much as I do 🙂

This one’s all about Gahnin, Oten’s second in command another golden god Ssedez, and Assura, special operative in Nemona’s crew who’s recently spent a week alone in the fiery jungles of the alien planet Fyrian.

These two are combusting with so much sexual tension… I think there are orgasms in chapter 2… yeah, they couldn’t keep their hands off each other for very long. Haha! So strap in for another sexy ride, full of bad assery.

If you liked how Nemona was a tough heroine, just wait for Assura. She is the total shit. I love her. Oh, and Gahnin is a super sexy alien with a soft side (secret: he hasn’t had a lover since his mate died a century ago… not till Assura!)

You all are gonna love it. Details below. Releasing Nov. 19!!!

For your TBR!
Goodreads http://bit.ly/2qpbBw2

For reviewers!
NetGalley http://bit.ly/2CYBRVI

For Pre-Order:
Amazon https://amzn.to/2P5Jj8J
Kobo http://bit.ly/2PBKlbX
Google http://bit.ly/2RyantX
Barnes & Noble http://bit.ly/2yMAJSc
iTunes https://apple.co/2F0nNxr

About the book!
Gahnin, a Ssedez general, hasn’t had a woman since his first mate died a century ago. And since his kind can live for a thousand years, he’s still bound by traditional mourning. If he breaks mourning, he could lose his position in the Ssedez military. His friends and family. Everything.

That means no falling in love. No lust. No sex. For another century.

Then he’s ordered to guard Assura, a human woman and military special operative, on a planet whose atmosphere causes a sexual arousal so fierce, it drives people insane if it isn’t satisfied.

Even though he tries to keep Assura at arm’s length, he’s hooked. Forbidden desire called to life by a human, the same species who killed his first mate. Assura needs his body if she is going to live. But if he gives in to his passion, it could destroy him.

Each book in the Planet of Desire series is STANDALONE:
* Toxic Desire
* Captive Desire

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What comes after TOXIC DESIRE?

Can’t get enough of the sex planet, the gold aliens, the fangs, the Achilles peen, the rebellious women, the Ssedez, the Fellamana? Guess what? There are two more books coming with all of the above 🙂

So, whose in the next book?

Book Two’s working title is CAPTIVE DESIRE and is between Gahnin, Oten’s second in command, and Assura, the rebellion soldier who survived a week alone in the jungles of Fyrian and delirious from the sex fever is placed under Gahnin’s care. And guess what part of that entails…? You know, because we all know sex is healing on planet earth, but on a sex planet it’s a biological necessity 😉 Especially when there’s a super sexy alien on hand.

And these two… I’m working on their edits right now. They are steeped in tension. They’ve each been through the ringer on stuff life has dealt them, and it makes them perfect for each other, and even more perfect for the steamy business. They are practically combusting with sexual hotness. I’m surprised my computer hasn’t gone up in flames.

They’re enemies to start, but they’ll have to work together to get through the Fellamana sex games (I know you can’t wait to find out what those are—yes, it’s what you think it is!) and an attack from the Ten Systems, cuz what’s a rebellion without some battle action! And some serious toughness display from the Ssedez, the Fellamana, and of course, our favorite rebellious women in arms 🙂

Cardio exercises like cialis 40 mg treadmill, swimming, cycling, jumping rope, playing a sport, dancing and aerobics are pretty beneficial. An organic reason can be compounded by the added fear of not being able to perform in the sack – and that’s a viagra store in canada fact. It improves your overall sexual health by cialis where making you feel more loved than ever before. This means the client prescription order viagra without is the only one who has ever had their partner cheat on them knows the issues in acquiring previous the predicament and move forward with the relationship. Book Three, currently entitled DREAMING DESIRE, will, you guessed it, be starring Koviye and Jenie. Koviye is one of the free-loving Fellamana who live on planet Fyrian. He has no inhibitions about sex whatsoever. But Jenie, acting general to the rebellion while Nemona is away with Oten, has some hangups in the bedroom department that Koviye is more than willing to help her with…and is the perfect male to help her get her sex life back to sizzling with pleasurable things.

I can’t wait to share these with you. CAPTIVE DESIRE’s release date is November 12, 2018. DREAMING DESIRE will release February 18th, 2019— I’m writing that one now!

Happy reading all! And if you haven’t read book one yet, TOXIC DESIRE, here are the links where you can find it.

Goodreads | Amazon | iBooks | Kobo | Google | Barnes & Noble

And if you’re not on my mailing list, be the first to know about the Planet of Desire world updates here. 

Or if email’s not your thing, I also have a Facebook group, Robin Lovett’s Romance Lovers!

Toxic Desire is out today!

ToxicDesire-x750I’m so thrilled to share this book with you 🙂 I’m in love with the heroine for all her strength and dedication to finding the truth; the hero for all his sensual intensity and his inability to not be heroic; the “sex planet” for all the fun it creates, yes, but also its power to bring out their deepest desires and force the characters to face them.

I hope you enjoy it. I can’t wait to share the rest of the series with you.

Enjoy exploring the alien worlds and the sexy aliens in them!

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If you haven’t caught Chapter One, the link is here 🙂

 

Toxic Desire’s cover is here!

I’ve been working on this sci-fi erotic series, Planet of Desire, for about nine months now, and I am beyond thrilled to share it with you. The first installment releases March 19th, 2018. The cover came out beautifully and depicts so well the fraught intimacy that comes from the forced proximity of Oten and Nemona, crash landing on a sex planet in a fight for their lives against each other and the alien planet itself. Continue reading Toxic Desire’s cover is here!

11 Things the NY Times COULD Write About Romance

I sent an email to the NY Times Book Review. Following Robert Gottlieb’s wildly inaccurate and offensive article last week, “A Roundup of the Season’s Romance Novels” , Radhika Jones’s rebuttal “Who Gets To Write About Romance?” still completely missed the point yesterday. So I responded to her question: “What are the stories in the field of romance that you think are most significant?”
Here are mine! (I may have gotten a little carried away. The Times has so much room for improvement! *side-eye* Even still, I by no means had space to cover all of the offensive slights in either article. Please excuse the things I had to leave out.)
 

Dear New Times Book Review,

I appreciate that you have a desire to cover romance. It is a nice change. Though, it is long overdue and the lack of coverage on the genre is itself discouraging. To have the article misrepresent the genre, whether written by a romance enthusiast or a critic, is damaging to the awareness the romance industry is attempting to bring to the validity of its genre.
The following are possible topics which would show respect for the marginalized genre that is so often derided, mocked and overlooked in our culture and by the literary world at large.

 

1) Feminist Ideas in Romance Novels

That’s not an oxymoron. Those of us who know, love and respect the genre see it for what it is: feminist ideas written for forward thinking women.
Continue reading 11 Things the NY Times COULD Write About Romance

Romance In The Age Of Trigger Warnings: Do Readers Need To Be Warned?

(This article was originally published on Heroes & Heartbreakers.)

The presence of Trigger Warnings has been fast growing. We see them more and more. Sometimes clear, sometimes vague, but always—in my opinion—helpful.

I wish there were more of them.

But not everyone feels the way I do. Some complain they’re annoying, and they’re spoilers. It’s true. They do let the reader know what to expect. But for those of us who need trigger warnings, it sometimes makes it possible for us to read at all.

Many gravitate toward romance because it’s a safe space. We know the happily-ever-after will come. That love will triumph over evil. That no matter how bad it gets, it will all be okay. They provide a security no other genre can give us. In our real world, where HEA is not guaranteed in any part of our lives, romance novels are nothing short of priceless.  Continue reading Romance In The Age Of Trigger Warnings: Do Readers Need To Be Warned?

What’s So Funny?

I’m not a funny person, or at least I don’t intend to be. I take everything too seriously, and I fell for the “gullible’s not in the dictionary” joke three times when my husband and I started dating.

How the hell could I ever write humor in my novels?

Jokes happen at my expense, not because I’m making them. Every party I go to without fail, I say something I intend very seriously that instead makes everyone laugh. I’m left saying, “But it’s true!” and baffled as to why everyone is laughing.

 lol reactions laughing laugh old GIF Continue reading What’s So Funny?

The Merits of Happily-Ever-After

If you ask any romance reader what they love most about their genre, most will say it’s the happily ever after (or HEA, as it’s lovingly referred to). It’s the defining characteristic of what makes a romance a romance. It’s the number one requirement for romances novels entered in Romance Writer of America writing contests: “the resolution of the romance must be emotionally satisfying and optimistic.” Continue reading The Merits of Happily-Ever-After

A Case for Romance

What do you do when the genre you write is commonly referred to as trash? Not just by non-readers, but by the key audience demographic as well? The romance genre, dominated by a female readership whose novels most often involve sex, would have to be referred to as trash in a culture still affronted and embarrassed by any mention of feminine sexuality, right? Continue reading A Case for Romance

Little Thoughts On Writing Big Conflict

(First posted on RWChat.com.)  A novel isn’t a page turner without conflict. Conflict is what keeps us on the edge of seats worried about what will happen next. But managing conflict as a writer–planning it, producing it, keeping it–is an exercise in stamina. Beginning a novel with enough conflict to last until the end isn’t easy. Add in the struggle to keep the conflict ball in the air chapter after chapter,  it takes a lot of practice.

Conflict stems from two main sources:

  • External conflict--the plot, the events, the other people in the story– the things that come at the heroine from outside and keep her from reaching her goal.
  • Internal conflict–the internal struggle of the character, the flaws, the past wounds, the emotional barriers–those are the things that thwart the hero from within himself.

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Balancing external and internal conflict is like walking a tight rope. There has to be enough external conflict to keep the over arching plot moving without stalling. But there has to be enough internal struggle to keep the reader emotionally engaged in the stakes till the end.

We love our characters and the temptation to make things easier for them, to help them fall in love sooner, reach that happily ever-after faster, is possibly the worst enemy of our story. If it’s too easy for them, who wants to read that? There’s no reason to keep turning pages. But if we torture them and employ my favorite technique from James Scott Bell, “What’s the worst that can happen?”, then we come up with the kind of books we can never get enough of–even after the HEA.