Title: Your or No One
Author: Olivier Bosman
Series: Doggerland Trilogy #1
Genre: M/M Romance
Release Date: April 7, 2020
Publisher: Rocket Man Press
Cover Design: A Pradipta
Is the world ready for an openly gay king and his prince consort?
Joel is happy, confident and working class.
Eric is shy, insecure and a member of one of the oldest aristocratic families in Europe.
When they meet in university sparks fly.
They say opposites attract, but when Joel discovers that Eric is the crown prince and future king of Doggerland, he starts having doubts.
They want to get married. They think their greatest battle will be convincing the King and the Prime Minister to give their consent. But estranged relatives coming out of the woodwork, intrusive tabloid press, and the traditional, stifling lifestyle of the aristocracy conspire against them.
Are Joel and Eric secure enough in themselves and each other to overcome a world which is not as tolerant as they thought?
I got up early that morning. I entered the breakfast room five minutes after it opened. I wanted to beat Eric to it. I wanted to be the one to tell him to fuck off when he pulled up a chair at my table. I sat at my table at five past, sipping coffee and nibbling on a croissant. I was engrossed by that croissant. How did they make them so delicious? I was busy dissecting the different pastry layers when a voice suddenly spoke to me.
"Mother never taught you not to play with your food?"
It was Eric, towering over me. His rosy face looked freshly scrubbed, his hair tightly combed, his white silk shirt freshly ironed, his beige chinos pressed. Before I could do anything to prevent it, he pulled up a chair and sat down before me.
"Where is Petra?" I asked.
"She’s gone to her friend’s hen do. Probably won’t see her again till Christmas."
He lifted his arm and clicked his fingers at the waiter. "Coffee, please. Black. And... um... eggs. Scrambled." Then he shooed the waiter away with his hand.
How rude, I thought. This was a side of Eric I hadn’t seen before.
"How was your little drive yesterday?" I made no attempt at hiding the bitterness in my voice.
"It was good. We drove along the coast and had a long good chat."
"What about?"
"About you, as it happens."
"Me?"
He sat up and cleared his throat. "I... um... I want to ask you a question. I wanted to ask you last night in your room. But you were sleeping."
"What do you want to ask?"
He hesitated for a few beats. Then he blurted it out. "Would you like to marry me?"
Well! I don’t need to tell you that I was shocked. I gaped at him silently. Perplexed..
"This isn’t a proposal, you understand,” he added hurriedly. “I’m not asking you to marry me. Not yet. I can’t without the permission of my father and my government. But I’m asking you whether marrying me is something you would consider."
"Are you serious?"
"Yes. I had a long chat about it with Petra. She said she talked to you last night. She likes you. She said you’d make a good partner for me."
"But we only talked for about ten minutes."
"Well, she’s a good judge of character. She saw the same good qualities in you as I did."
"What good qualities?"
"Your confidence. Your self-assuredness."
"But I have no confidence."
"Of course you do. I mean, look at you. You’re poor, you’re Welsh, you’re not particularly good looking, and yet you’re sitting here in the smartest hotel in Brighton as if you had every right to do so."
"Wow! You really know how to sweep a boy off his feet!"
"No, you don’t understand. These are things that I like about you."
"That I’m not particularly good looking?"
"What I meant was..." He shook his head. "This conversation isn’t going at all the way I planned it. What I mean was that you’re grounded. You’re down to earth. You don’t care what people think of you. Otherwise you wouldn’t be wearing that."
"What?"
"That hoodie. This is the Pavillion Hotel, not a hip-hop bar in Brooklyn."
"Do you want me take it off?"
"No. You don’t understand. I like that about you. I like that you snubbed the nice clothes I bought for you and chose to wear your council estate gear instead. I like that you come down for breakfast without even bothering to comb your hair. I like your ordinariness. Your earthiness. You’re a working class kid with the balls and intelligence to break out of your environment and compete with us rich kids. And you outshine us. Not with your clothes, or your wit, or your family name, but by being yourself. That’s what I like about you. And that’s what I want standing beside me when I’m king. Petra thinks so too, and she’s an excellent judge of character."
I was flabbergasted. Never had I felt so insulted and complimented at the same time! I’d read Petra wrong.
"Well?" Eric asked.
"What?" I’d long forgotten what the original question was. I was still reeling from his speech. You outshine us. That was the nicest thing anyone had ever said to me.
"Would you consider marrying me?" he said. "Or rather, what I’m asking is whether you’d be willing to be my right hand man. We’d be the first gay royal couple in history. We’d do all those things that you talked about in the car. Be ambassadors to gay rights and so forth. But it won’t be easy. We’ll be hated by many. There’ll be insults, ridicule, maybe even death threats. And that’s only if our marriage is approved by King and parliament, which will be a whole battle in itself. But one I’m willing to fight if you are by my side. So what do you think? Will you consider it? Will you be the next Prince Consort of Doggerland? Will you be my husband?"
"Mother never taught you not to play with your food?"
It was Eric, towering over me. His rosy face looked freshly scrubbed, his hair tightly combed, his white silk shirt freshly ironed, his beige chinos pressed. Before I could do anything to prevent it, he pulled up a chair and sat down before me.
"Where is Petra?" I asked.
"She’s gone to her friend’s hen do. Probably won’t see her again till Christmas."
He lifted his arm and clicked his fingers at the waiter. "Coffee, please. Black. And... um... eggs. Scrambled." Then he shooed the waiter away with his hand.
How rude, I thought. This was a side of Eric I hadn’t seen before.
"How was your little drive yesterday?" I made no attempt at hiding the bitterness in my voice.
"It was good. We drove along the coast and had a long good chat."
"What about?"
"About you, as it happens."
"Me?"
He sat up and cleared his throat. "I... um... I want to ask you a question. I wanted to ask you last night in your room. But you were sleeping."
"What do you want to ask?"
He hesitated for a few beats. Then he blurted it out. "Would you like to marry me?"
Well! I don’t need to tell you that I was shocked. I gaped at him silently. Perplexed..
"This isn’t a proposal, you understand,” he added hurriedly. “I’m not asking you to marry me. Not yet. I can’t without the permission of my father and my government. But I’m asking you whether marrying me is something you would consider."
"Are you serious?"
"Yes. I had a long chat about it with Petra. She said she talked to you last night. She likes you. She said you’d make a good partner for me."
"But we only talked for about ten minutes."
"Well, she’s a good judge of character. She saw the same good qualities in you as I did."
"What good qualities?"
"Your confidence. Your self-assuredness."
"But I have no confidence."
"Of course you do. I mean, look at you. You’re poor, you’re Welsh, you’re not particularly good looking, and yet you’re sitting here in the smartest hotel in Brighton as if you had every right to do so."
"Wow! You really know how to sweep a boy off his feet!"
"No, you don’t understand. These are things that I like about you."
"That I’m not particularly good looking?"
"What I meant was..." He shook his head. "This conversation isn’t going at all the way I planned it. What I mean was that you’re grounded. You’re down to earth. You don’t care what people think of you. Otherwise you wouldn’t be wearing that."
"What?"
"That hoodie. This is the Pavillion Hotel, not a hip-hop bar in Brooklyn."
"Do you want me take it off?"
"No. You don’t understand. I like that about you. I like that you snubbed the nice clothes I bought for you and chose to wear your council estate gear instead. I like that you come down for breakfast without even bothering to comb your hair. I like your ordinariness. Your earthiness. You’re a working class kid with the balls and intelligence to break out of your environment and compete with us rich kids. And you outshine us. Not with your clothes, or your wit, or your family name, but by being yourself. That’s what I like about you. And that’s what I want standing beside me when I’m king. Petra thinks so too, and she’s an excellent judge of character."
I was flabbergasted. Never had I felt so insulted and complimented at the same time! I’d read Petra wrong.
"Well?" Eric asked.
"What?" I’d long forgotten what the original question was. I was still reeling from his speech. You outshine us. That was the nicest thing anyone had ever said to me.
"Would you consider marrying me?" he said. "Or rather, what I’m asking is whether you’d be willing to be my right hand man. We’d be the first gay royal couple in history. We’d do all those things that you talked about in the car. Be ambassadors to gay rights and so forth. But it won’t be easy. We’ll be hated by many. There’ll be insults, ridicule, maybe even death threats. And that’s only if our marriage is approved by King and parliament, which will be a whole battle in itself. But one I’m willing to fight if you are by my side. So what do you think? Will you consider it? Will you be the next Prince Consort of Doggerland? Will you be my husband?"
What is the biggest influence/interest that brought you to this genre?
As a writer I’m better known for my series of Victorian mysteries featuring a gay Quaker detective with a morphine addiction, but I had this great idea one morning, and I just couldn’t let it go. You see, every time there’s a royal wedding, my dreamy mind starts to wonder: what if I ever met a prince? It’s silly, romantic tosh, I know, but then I got to thinking.... no really, what if? What if there really was a gay crown prince who didn’t want to stay in the closet, but who wanted to marry a man? How would the world react?
Being a self published writer, I have the luxury to write what I want, without a publisher pressurizing me to stick to my genre. I want to have a go at many different genres; whether it’s romance, or mystery, or noir, or science fiction, or fantasy. But the one thing all my books have in common is that they all have gay protagonists. This is important to me. I want to have books that I can relate to.
When writing a book, what is your favorite part of the creative process(outline, plot, character names, editing, etc)?
The best part is the very beginning, before a single word is written, when you get to lie in bed all day and think up characters and plots and possibilities. Everything else is hard work.
When reading a book, what genre do you find most interesting/intriguing?
Just like I enjoy writing different genres, I also enjoy reading them. I don’t really care what genre the book is, as long as the characters are well drawn. It’s the characters that make a story come alive. I don’t like clichΓ© cardboard cut outs. I want real, gritty, three-dimensional characters, flaws and all.
If you could co-author with any author, past or present, who would you choose?
Puh! That’s a tough one. Maybe Margaret Atwood. I’ve only read one book of hers, The Blind Assassin, but I was so impressed by the way she strung three different story strands, in three different genres, together. It’s probably the best book I ever read.
Have you always wanted to write or did it come to you "later in life"?
I have always wanted to be a writer. I remember writing little mini booklets when I was about nine, and I was always thinking about plots and drawing characters when I was a teenager. But I was initially daunted by the prospect of writing a whole novel. It seemed like such a big task and I didn’t think I had the stamina. Five years ago, however, I just sat down and wrote and persevered. And now I have written and published seven novels! I’m quite proud of that.
As a writer I’m better known for my series of Victorian mysteries featuring a gay Quaker detective with a morphine addiction, but I had this great idea one morning, and I just couldn’t let it go. You see, every time there’s a royal wedding, my dreamy mind starts to wonder: what if I ever met a prince? It’s silly, romantic tosh, I know, but then I got to thinking.... no really, what if? What if there really was a gay crown prince who didn’t want to stay in the closet, but who wanted to marry a man? How would the world react?
Being a self published writer, I have the luxury to write what I want, without a publisher pressurizing me to stick to my genre. I want to have a go at many different genres; whether it’s romance, or mystery, or noir, or science fiction, or fantasy. But the one thing all my books have in common is that they all have gay protagonists. This is important to me. I want to have books that I can relate to.
When writing a book, what is your favorite part of the creative process(outline, plot, character names, editing, etc)?
The best part is the very beginning, before a single word is written, when you get to lie in bed all day and think up characters and plots and possibilities. Everything else is hard work.
When reading a book, what genre do you find most interesting/intriguing?
Just like I enjoy writing different genres, I also enjoy reading them. I don’t really care what genre the book is, as long as the characters are well drawn. It’s the characters that make a story come alive. I don’t like clichΓ© cardboard cut outs. I want real, gritty, three-dimensional characters, flaws and all.
If you could co-author with any author, past or present, who would you choose?
Puh! That’s a tough one. Maybe Margaret Atwood. I’ve only read one book of hers, The Blind Assassin, but I was so impressed by the way she strung three different story strands, in three different genres, together. It’s probably the best book I ever read.
Have you always wanted to write or did it come to you "later in life"?
I have always wanted to be a writer. I remember writing little mini booklets when I was about nine, and I was always thinking about plots and drawing characters when I was a teenager. But I was initially daunted by the prospect of writing a whole novel. It seemed like such a big task and I didn’t think I had the stamina. Five years ago, however, I just sat down and wrote and persevered. And now I have written and published seven novels! I’m quite proud of that.
Born to Dutch parents and raised in Colombia and England, I am a rootless wanderer with itchy feet. I've spent the last few years living and working in The Netherlands, Czech Republic, Sudan and Bulgaria, but I have every confidence that I will now finally be able to settle down among the olive groves of Andalucia.
I am an avid reader and film fan (in fact, my study is overflowing with my various dvd collections!)
I did an MA in creative writing for film and television at the University of Sheffield. After a failed attempt at making a career as a screenwriter, I turned to the theater and wrote and produced a play called ´Death Takes a Lover´ (which has since been turned into the first D.S.Billings Victorian Mystery). The play was performed on the London Fringe to great critical acclaim.
I am currently living in Spain where I make ends meet by teaching English.
No comments:
Post a Comment