Skip to main content

I'm a dark romance author, and I don't hide my identity - here's why! :-)

Seeing the budget is out (Malaysia) and the election over (USA) let’s get back to important stuff: dark romance books 😊 You may have noticed that dark authors tend to hide their true identity from the public, whereas I’m right in your face about it. So, here’s the story about that.

I’ve been a creative for over twenty years. I sold my first feature to the New Straits Times back in 1996 and my first magazine article to Cleo a few months later. Between 1996 and 2016 I sold more than 3000 articles to publications in over 12 countries.  I also wrote and sold some short stories.

In 2013, I went back to school and took a Masters in Counselling. I already had a degree in psychology, so that was me going back to my roots.

In 2015, I was finishing my studies and writing Katz Tales, a sweet feel-good newspaper column under my own name, a tech column under a pen name, and dark romance as AJ Adams. I also had a legacy in erotica writing as Storm Chase.  

I kept my lives separate because that was how good marketing worked. So, one day I’m sitting in a workshop when this woman says, “Ooooh, I know about you. You write books. Under a different name!”

The smirk said it all. I knew exactly what the nasty cow was up to.

Of course, the others in the room were curious.

“You write books?”

“What do you write?”

The nasty cow was hoping I’d blush, stammer and be embarrassed. BIG MISTAKE! I’ve had my person and my work picked apart by strangers in public for decades, so I am incredibly hard-nosed.

So, I beamed at the cow and squealed, “Ohmigod, you’re a fan? AWESOME!” Then, at the others, “I write dark romance. That’s really violent stories about the cartel with seriously filthy dirty pornographic sex scenes.”

In straightlaced Malaysia, this was gobsmacking information.

And because I’m a bitch, I said to the cow, “Which of my books do you like best? The Cartel stories or the Storm Chase erotica?”

She backed off and never came near me again.

But it did make me think. Women are often shamed for writing romance, it’s an equality issue, and I didn’t want any future hassle. I might have hidden my writing or stopped (Ha! NEVER. But technically, it’s an option) but I decided an in-your-face attitude would fix it.

I put my pen name on my personal social media, linked all my profiles very clearly and for good measure cross-posted. Anywhere you look, you see the whole me.

Marketing today is quite different and we’re moving increasingly away from using separate pen names for every genre, so that’s working out okay. As for my various lives, there will be gossip but frankly, I don’t care. I am who I am and people can choose whether to like that or not.

So, that’s why I plaster my various names all over this timeline. Do let me know what you think.

Have a happy day! And please do ready my books. Start with Helpless by AJ Adams and then move on to the Zeta Cartel novels, starting with The Bonus <3

 

 

 

 

Comments

  1. Men are not embarrassed over horror and porn so why should women be over books of dark erotica especially when there is always a happy ending. I think women writing and reading these suffer needless angst over them. Women can be disapproved over so many things that taking all of them to account would make life hell.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Should I switch from first person to writing third person points of view? Plus a review of Dark Experiments (Forever and a Night, #2) by Lana Campbell

I write in first person point of view (I/me/my) is where the character tells you what’s going on directly. I was shit scared he’d throw me to the pack, so when he stood up and walked me round the side of the house, away from everyone else, my legs went all shaky. Chloe, from The Bonus In my novels, you get the story as told by my girl and her man. She gets a chapter and then he gets a chapter. (Except in Beast, where the story is told by Wynne). I love first person because it’s so immediate. Apart from the pure whammo of personality, you get to see what my girl and her man are thinking, their inner fears, and you can see them fight with themselves as they grow. Also, as my novels have a mystery as well as a love story plot, and my girl and her man go off and do a lot of things without the other knowing, it made sense to switch viewpoints from chapter to chapter. I love the way you can show an incident through two sets of eyes. Like when Chloe discovers Kyl...

After #Cockygate, do you need to trademark/copyright your book titles?

This post is written for young authors, or new authors living in non-kindle countries, who are worried about #cockygate leaving them open to lawsuits and being blocked by American sales platforms like Amazon.  Also, there are tips on creating a unique title. What is #CockyGate? Faleena Hopkins who sells novels on Amazon is making lots of claims, including that she alone has the right to use the word 'cocky' in a book title. She's been bullying authors, threatening to sue them, and telling Amazon that her rights have been infringed. For a short time, authors who had books with the word COCKY in the title on Amazon had their books taken down. Also, because Amazon uses a lot of automated tools, readers who'd used the word in totally unrelated book reviews also found their opinions censored. Although Faleena is sticking to her guns and making more and more wild claims, Amazon has put the banned books back up, and is restoring the reviews. She's also being challe...

Life In Malaysia: My Neighbourhood

I've been in Malaysia for more than 20 years so I don't really think about how different life is here compared to the West. However, when Stu, a good friend of ours, died a few weeks ago, I realised that visualising those differences can be quite difficult.  So over the next few weeks I'll write a few posts about daily life in Subang Jaya, Selangor.  It's partly so that our friend's family back in Europe have a better idea of what he was seeing every day, and partly for those of you who say to me, "You live WHERE? Wow, so what's that like?" So here goes! I live in Subang Jaya, a suburban area just outside Kuala Lumpur, the capital city of Malaysia. This is my street. My house is hidden under that massive tree. We are security obsessed.  You have to be vetted and approved at a guard house to get into our housing area. And if you live in a condo, you have an extra layer of security. This is the guard house at the cond...