G.L. Tomas's Blog
December 31, 2021
Wishing y’all a Happy New Year!
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December Wrap Up!
A New Year is almost upon us! Here’s what we were up to this month!
We did an author takeover with Keta Kendric’s reader group!
Guinevere shared her very first Guin’s Favorite Tropes posts!
We wished folks a Happy Holidays!
Lucky’s Charm and Melt For You had a one-day-only sale with Romance Bookworms(sign up for their mailing list to be reminded when we do another sale with them!)
Wishing everyone a Happy New Year!
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December 29, 2021
One Day Only: Snag Melt For You and Lucky’s Charm!
Hey Y’all! For today only, both Melt For You AND Lucky’s Charm are free to download via Amazon. In fact, there are over 600 romance books free for both Kindle users and people who prefer to get their books via Nook, B&N, Google Play and Kobo.
Act fast because it’s only today!
Who said you had to give the gift of giving only on Christmas?!?
Click the image above or this link here to download our recently released books!
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December 24, 2021
Happy Holidays from G.L. Tomas!
Wishing everyone a safe, happy holidays!
Top three Christmas movie suggestions?
1. Jingle Jangle
2. The Nightmare Before Christmas
3. Gremlins
Hope you’re ready for what we have in store for 2022!
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December 5, 2021
Guin’s favorite tropes: Age gap
My first favorite tropes post, I’m so excited!
Like promised, Melt For You is dropping early y’all! For those of you who joined us for our takeover last night, thank you! You made discussing the Kinky Matchmaker series so fun! We’re still trying to slush through the comments!
Anyway, Melt For You has a lot of tropes, but one of my favorite is Age Gap. I won’t lie, before I started reading romance heavy, age gap was always a little uncomfortable. I was in my 20s and all my experience with older men had been less than ideal. But when I read the first age gap romance that I enjoyed, I realized why people enjoy it.
The romance genre is about safety. You can read something you might not do yourself in the comfort of a book, no mixed feelings or heartbreak necessary. Typically when the woman is the younger one, it’s like a reset; if you had a bad experience, you can imagine what it could have been like. If the woman is the older partner, you can experience dating a younger man, even if that isn’t your thing. There’s a universal fantasy behind either situation.
Here are four age gap romances that Libertad or I have read and loved over the past few years:
Let Me Love You by Alexandria House:
I’m sure this’ll come up on MOST people’s favorite age gap romances(Big South is in his late 30s, the heroine is in her late 20s)but it was so fun! Both of them had kids and had been married before each other, so there was so many twists and turns, it’s hard not to rec(Alexandria House is a personal favorite of both of us btw).
If She Says So by Tasha L. Harrison:
So this work features an older woman and younger man. She’s in her 50s and he’s and his 30s and while it is a little messy that its her best friend’s son, everything works out(as romances do). The man is also submissive, so by default she’s a bit of a gentle Domme.
Her Big City Neighbor by Jackie Lau:
It’s not a huge age gap difference(only 9 years) but they definitely acted like they were in different places in their lives. By the end, she had him in ugly Christmas sweaters, and if you’d known how he was in the book, that was no small feat! A cute read if you like grumpy/sunshine!
This was a great one, because the age gap is as significant as the first suggestion. The man is in his 50s and the woman is close to her 30s, but there’s some light daddy kink in there! It’s also set in Nigeria with Nigerian characters, a major motivator!
Now that you have some new reads to pick up, remember, there’s still time to pre-order Melt For You before it drops this Tuesday!
In the meantime, enjoy this adorable commission that highlights some of the adorable ways our character’s 14-year age gap presents itself in the book(hint: she teaches him to use TikTok!)
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December 1, 2021
Join us for our Takeover December 4th 5PM EST!
It’s been quiet on our end, but for good reason!
We’re just about to wrap up with the final read-through of Melt For You and it may drop a little earlier than expected! We don’t want to promise a specific day, but we know for sure it’ll drop next week, a week before its Amazon launch!
We hope everyone got a chance to pre-order it! It’s currently searchable on Booksprout, but not many copies are available, so if you’re interested, now’s the time!
If anyone has time, feel free to join us on Saturday 5 PM EST! We are hopping over on Keta Kendric’s Readers Group for a takeover!
There will be prizes in the format of eBooks and audiobooks, so if you think you’d like to join in our reindeer games, hop on over to her group!
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September 29, 2021
September Wrap Up!
Goodbye September!
Here’s what we were up to this month:
We gave updates on our new releases dropping before the end of 2021!
We introduced blog themes to our websites!
The Love Bet and Meant For You were on sale! Sign up for our newsletter to get updates for discounted G.L. Tomas books!
We sat down with Shirra Lynn for her Author Chat podcast!
We talked about rebranding series‘
The Bookish Friends to Lovers Boxset dropped on Audible! It also went on sale on Chirp! Sign up to Chirp to learn when our other audiobooks go on sale!
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September 13, 2021
Join us September 14th on Author Chat w/ Shirr�� Lynn and G.L. Tomas
So way back in July, we sat down with an author friend Shirra Lynn. She is the author of Love and War as well as Quartet and invited us to sit down with her and discuss a topic that will have a bunch of different answers depending on who you ask.
How do you tell your audience your heroine is Black?
We’re still trying to figure that out! It was a fun conversation that not only allowed both of us to understand each other better (Shirra Lynn is African-American, whilst we are Black Cubans) but discusses the challenges of how we succeed and fail at hinting at the character’s Blackness.
We struggle more at some characters more than others, as being Black folk that exist in Latine/Latinx spaces, it is a challenge to showcase how Blackness is in those spaces when non-Latine/Latinx see Black and white Latine culture as the same.
Black American and white American cultures are vastly different, so we liken it to that. Whereas our Black American characters and characters with very specific ties to Africa we don’t have that issue.
It won’t be solved in an hour conversation, but we had fun having it and look forward to more people creating this dialogue inter-culturally!
Y’all should totally check it out on September 14th!
The post Join us September 14th on Author Chat w/ Shirr�� Lynn and G.L. Tomas appeared first on Welcome.
Join us September 14th on Author Chat w/ Shirrá Lynn and G.L. Tomas
So way back in July, we sat down with an author friend Shirra Lynn. She is the author of Love and War as well as Quartet and invited us to sit down with her and discuss a topic that will have a bunch of different answers depending on who you ask.
How do you tell your audience your heroine is Black?
We’re still trying to figure that out! It was a fun conversation that not only allowed both of us to understand each other better (Shirra Lynn is African-American, whilst we are Black Cubans) but discusses the challenges of how we succeed and fail at hinting at the character’s Blackness.
We struggle more at some characters more than others, as being Black folk that exist in Latine/Latinx spaces, it is a challenge to showcase how Blackness is in those spaces when non-Latine/Latinx see Black and white Latine culture as the same.
Black American and white American cultures are vastly different, so we liken it to that. Whereas our Black American characters and characters with very specific ties to Africa we don’t have that issue.
It won’t be solved in an hour conversation, but we had fun having it and look forward to more people creating this dialogue inter-culturally!
Y’all should totally check it out on September 14th!
The post Join us September 14th on Author Chat w/ Shirrá Lynn and G.L. Tomas appeared first on Welcome.
September 6, 2021
The Chisme: It’s all in the rebrand…
Onto our first The Chisme topic: Rebranding a book/series
Y’all have seen it; you’re looking up a book or series that you only know by the cover, but by the time you find it, you learn you’ve been looking at the book or series all along?
Maybe the title changed.
Maybe the blurb has been reworked.
But you know for damn sure you knew it by a completely different cover…
Do you ever wonder why authors unpublish works and rework them? While my sister and I are no experts, we have some personal insight on why authors do this.
Reason One:
The original branding was off to begin with.
One thing my sister and I know is that as you grow as an author, your eye for certain things improve. When we first started out, we were sh*t when it came to blurbs. Our cover game left a lot to be desired, and we choose covers based on whether we liked them, not necessarily if they met genre expectations.
Our very first romance novel was Same Page, an untitled series duet that featured its sequel Next Chapter (excuse us as we cringe a bit). Not equipped with any cover designers or Photoshop experience, we commissions many of our romance covers from fiverr.
Our first goal was attempting to put both faces of the characters (or at least how we saw them in our heads!) on the cover. We were apart of reader groups for years on Goodreads, and many of the common conversations surrounding covers were that people wanted to get an idea of how the couple looked like on the cover.
1st Attempt
Maybe not our personal best, but the first cover brought enough interest for readers of interracial romance to take a chance on it.
One thing we were always trying to do at the start of our romance journey was be different. With our first two romance series,’ we couldn’t have been more different in terms of being so stubborn, we were failing to meet reader expectations.
In Same Page, there was a faux pas on our part, that featured cheating as a plot point, something we weren’t aware at the time was often a no-no in romance. Some readers liked it, some could ignore it for the story, abd the remainder didn’t appreciate the cheating. If we had known about terms like taboo and attached them to Same Page, it may not have suffered from some of its initial pushback, as making sure readers understand its forbidden, or taboo, would have made them aware of what to expect.
To save the series, I convinced Libertad to expand on future characters and center it as much as possible around the bookstore, calling it the Bookish Friends to Lovers series. We faced some minor setbacks in 2016-2018 but were still able to rebrand it to feature a couple on the cover, as seen in the example below.
2nd Attempt
We spent years neglecting it based on ego and a lot of other things that made our writing suffer. I was able to convince Libertad to revive the series, especially after it received a Bookbub Featured Deal in 2020, another in 2021, as well as its audiobooks getting our very first Chirp deal due in a few days.
We knew they would require a rebrand to move forward, especially since we were able to get Next Chapter in audio in mid-2021.
We decided to experiment with just a sexy bare torso this time around, as the couple on the cover was something we asked for, but our naivete made it a challenge to know whether the cover would hit with audiences. Looking at the Amazon charts we’d love to place in, we decided that the final product was just enough to blend in as it’d stand out, as pictured below.
Final Attempt
We honestly feel like it’s just enough Timothy (nice body, sexy beard, etc.) for readers to get an idea but also make up their own face if they’d prefer to picture their dream guy.
Reason Two:
Failure to meet genre expectations.:
As you can see, our very first attempt at F*THS we also got through Fiverr. Not a horrible cover but also not an eye-catching one. Our first goal with the first cover was to ensure people could tell it was a bwwm/interracial romance. Our second attempt was to mimic covers we loved, but those designs were dated and may have worked when other authors went that route but made it more challenging to see there was a Black woman on the cover. It did sell a little better, but over time, we got bored with the design and couldn’t wait until we made the move to change it.
1st Attempt
2nd Attempt
Our final attempt came a little over 2020. We saw a premade that could be made into a set and knew that even though it only had a man’s body on the cover, his tattoos would convey Asher in a way trying to put both of them on the cover hasn’t been able to. Originally, the Friends That Have Sex series was only meant to be a duet of books, followed by a second duet depicting their ‘later in life” stories.
Final Attempt
After a long few years, we weren’t sure we were ever going to make time, or even want to continue on with the series, so when Libertad asked, could you make their future story more tropish(the first few books were arguably very niche and had strong romance elements but some don’t always read it as a romance) I thought long and hard but couldn’t come up with anything.
She was actually the one to suggest making it a “we’re planning a baby” trope as well as making it a second chance, as Asher and Teddy have been estranged since Friends That Break (originally titled How We Start) and reunite only when both of them have healed and had years away from each other.
Friends That Collide will be the final book and it’s kind of taken that long to figure out what could stand on its own (without having to read the first two books, as F*THS and Friends That Still… are much more New Adult, whereas Friends That Collide is a second chance romance) while also finishing up their story and staying true to the characters.
Reason Three:
Reader complaints
This one hurts the most, as it was something we couldn’t help. The first cover was designed by our go-to designer Najla Qamber @ Qamber Designs. It was to market and exactly what we needed for a Cowboy romance. When it came out it had been the first book we released with over 100 pre-orders in a short pre-order push so it was our most successful book when it came out in 2017. However, lots of readers complained that the woman on the cover had the skin color of a white woman on her legs with a Black woman’s face.
Exhibit A:
Original Stock Image
1st designed cover
If you notice the only thing that changes about her legs is the effect. Those are HER legs and her body. Nothing about her was changed outside of the effects the designer used to make the cover look “western.” But there were so many people who were just not happy that it LOOKED like her face was just plastered on. With this cover, the book did well but with all the angry emails we got about it we just decided to unpublish it. We were changing our brand anyways and weren’t sure this cover/book fit into our brand. It took us two years to reread the book and we mutually decided that all it needed was a new title, a new cover, and major edits.
Below is what we decided on:
Rebranded cover
What we’ve learned:
Truthfully, sole men on covers sell books. It isn’t the popular answer but we notice our sales are way different with a man on the book. That’s not to say we won’t feature couples. We have eight covers we haven’t revealed yet that most DEFINITELY have couples on them but we do have back-ups in the crappy case that those ones don’t perform as well as we hoped. All our unrevealed covers have interracial couples on them. Half of those are two POC characters so obviously, we want to show that representation. But please, we beg you…
Please be understanding when authors change their covers. Maybe you loved the first one. Maybe you felt like the first one fit the image of the characters more. Authors don’t change their covers based on a whim. It’s to reach out to the audience that hasn’t discovered them yet. Maybe you’ve been day one’s but there’s a truckload of readers that are dying to make someone their new favorite author but the first cover just didn’t speak to them. Perhaps the second one will…
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