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State of The Trout: Updates for fans of The Boss

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Hey everybody! I have some like, news and updates and junk about my erotic romance series, The Boss, and I figured I would get them all out there at one time and then hopefully not forget to announce junk and things.

Okay, so, first thing’s first: The Boss and The Girlfriend will be available for purchase as paperbacks in November. Previously, these were available through The Book Patch, but the shipping for anywhere outside the US was insanity. I’ve been told that by going through CreateSpace, I can lessen the shipping cost to non-American readers, so that’s what I’m going to be doing. Thanks everyone, for being so patient while I work out the kinks in this self-pub venture!

Update the second: New covers. When I started the series, I had this idea that it would be awesome for each cover to be a pattern, since Sophie is a fashion journalist. The metal grating on The Boss cover represents New York, the ornate pattern on The Girlfriend symbolized Neil’s wealth, and The Bride was going to have a beaded veil look to it. But then I started thinking about what The Baby was going to look like, and realized that a cover to go with that title would likely mislead a reader who wasn’t looking for hardcore, face-slapping, collar-wearing, orgasm torture BDSM. So before The Bride comes out, I want to revamp the covers and make them a little saucier, so that they do what it says on the tin. The paperbacks and digital editions are both getting new covers. Keep an eye out for the new covers in November.

#3 I hinted on Facebook and Twitter that something might be in the works for a holiday treat for readers. The Hook-Up is an all-new short story, set in the middle of The Bride. It’s a preview/missing scene, about (spoiler, highlight to read)[ a hot, Sophie-sanctioned M/M encounter between Neil and Emir while Neil is away on business. ]Now, some of you might be going, “What? It isn’t about Neil and Sophie?!” Well, it’s written in Neil’s POV, where I assure you, nearly everything is about Sophie. This will be a free Smashwords exclusive in December (you can download many formats from them and even read a .html version online) and hopefully it will tide you over and wet your… um, whistle, for The Bride, which comes out in March. For those of you who don’t want any spoilers, The Hook-Up will be included as bonus material in The Bride.

And finally, the big news…

I’ve been having a really difficult time writing The Bride. I just couldn’t figure out what I was doing wrong with it, but something wasn’t clicking. It just didn’t feel right to me. And then, while folding laundry one day, I realized what I was doing wrong.

I had too much story to fit in the final two books.

The series was originally outlined as a four book series, The Boss, The Girlfriend, The Bride, and The Baby. But somehow, when I made my outline, I tried to cram too damn much into The Bride. I needed another book to bridge the gap. After some quick shuffling and brainstorming, the new series line-up is: The Boss, The Girlfriend, The Bride, The Exand The Baby. Adding another book has given me a chance to explore in more depth a story line I’m really excited about, and The Bride is right back on track. It’s funny how that happens sometimes, but wow, am I happy not to be in a blind panic anymore!

Okay. I don’t think I’ve forgotten anything. Direct questions/comments/concerns to… well, the comments section. I guess that was implied in the “questions/comments/concerns” part.

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Here for the first time because someone recommended my Fifty Shades of Grey recaps? Welcome! Consider checking out my own take on the Billionaire BDSM genre, The Boss. Find it on AmazonB&NSmashwords, iBooks, and Radish!

54 Comments

  1. AH! If I’d only waited…instead I posted about The Boss, etc., in the previous post. Just too quick I guess.

    October 27, 2013
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  2. Kelsey
    Kelsey

    WHoooo more books AND a way to get the books in Canada for reasonable prices. I’m sure I’ve said this before, but I LOVE YOU.

    October 27, 2013
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  3. shirley fremd
    shirley fremd

    Wow. Just wow!

    October 27, 2013
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  4. Oh wow! Even more of these wonderful characters! I can’t wait! I love Sophie and Neil! And I was so hoping for more with Emir. That is just so cool! Thank you!

    October 27, 2013
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  5. So happy to hear that writing is going well and that we will be getting MORE of these great characters….but I have to admit you’ve struck a little pang in my heart. The Ex? The Ex…what??? Sophie and Neil can’t break up….can they?!?!?

    And March just seems so far away! Thanks for the whistle wetter in December!

    Happy Writing!

    October 27, 2013
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    • I thought/hoped that may be Neil’s ex-wife interfering. As far as I recall, Sophie has had no significant relationships before Neil, for it to be her ex.

      Though now that I think about it, it would make more sense that it would be about Sophie and Neil splitting up. Bugger.

      October 28, 2013
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    • Remember, the titles don’t necessarily refer to the main characters in the way you think. 😉

      October 28, 2013
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      • Louise
        Louise

        I had already thought about the fact that I kind of hope ‘The Baby’ doesn’t refer to Sophie having a baby. I get that she is young and entitled to change her mind, but I think these books are too good to fall into the whole, ‘women who don’t want babies will change their mind eventually/when they meet the right guy/ when they’ve got the ring on their finger/when the biological clock starts to tick’ thing. I say that as someone who has always wanted kids myself and is freaking out that it now may not happen, but who has lots of female friends who don’t want babies and who get the rage when people say that sort of thing to them, or when female characters on film or tv or in books inevitably realise that they did have the maternal urge all along, really and that actually they really do want an ickle wickle baby. Like I say, women can and do change their minds, and there is no particular reason why Sophie shouldn’t, but these books have been so great at avoiding or cutting across tired cliches about all sorts of things that I’m kinda hoping the series goes in a different direction than that.

        October 29, 2013
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      • Plus Sophie has endometriosis, so I don’t think she can get pregnant?

        November 5, 2013
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  6. Sometimes just doing mundane things is all it takes to have an epiphany.

    October 27, 2013
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  7. kim
    kim

    SO excited to hear there will be more books! I was thrilled to hear about The Bride; now I have two more to look forward to. Cannot wait for the Neil/ Emir story….gah.

    October 27, 2013
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  8. Alison
    Alison

    Which actor would you pick to play Emir? I always enjoy your picks.

    October 28, 2013
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      • Anonymous
        Anonymous

        Oh boy… And Neil is a Tony Head lookalike, right? Are you done writing the Hook-Up yet??

        October 28, 2013
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      • That’s disturbingly close to how I pictured him…

        October 28, 2013
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      • Louise
        Louise

        Oooh, that’s exactly how I’d pictured him but without the big hair. He’s a gorgeous guy, but that big hair’s doing nothing for me…

        October 29, 2013
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    • Another suggestion for Neil that I’ve received is Mads Mikkelsen. I’m not opposed to that depiction, either, LOL.

      October 28, 2013
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      • Damnit, this is why every comment needs to have a reply button under it. It’s supposed to be in reply to Anonymous.

        October 28, 2013
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      • Irina
        Irina

        I honestly cannot see Mikkelsen as Neil in any way. I do agree Anthony Head is a wonderful embodiment (I should admit, however, that when things get dirty my brain suddenly turns to Simon Pegg :$. Yeah, I’ve got some issues).

        October 28, 2013
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      • The person who I imagine as Neil Elwood is probably not a popular one, but I can’t help but imagine the ITV newscaster Mark Austin as Neil.

        Still haven’t settled on who plays Sophie. Naveen Andrews for Emir, but that’s mainly a lack of knowledge of Asian/Indian actors in Hollywood.

        December 3, 2013
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  9. I’m so excited! Can’t wait for the new books in the series. You’re amazing, Jenn, as a damn fine writer and as a person who sees beyond the stereotypes, heteronormativity and sexism that is so omnipresent that most people don’t even notice it. Thank you for writing these amazing books. I’m thrilled to hear there’ll be one more than expected.

    October 28, 2013
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  10. radi4music
    radi4music

    Yeehaw! I CAN’T WAIT for the next THREE books in the series 😀 😀 😀 So you know, you have at least one dedicated buyer for the entire series, Ms.Trout. Heh, I’ve also gone on Amazon and pretty much bought every single book you’ve ever written, regardless of genre, and have been enjoying them all very much. How I LOVE finding me some new authors (well, authors who are new to me.

    October 28, 2013
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    • Hey, I appreciate that! I get so excited when I find a new to me author and they have a backlist. Because as much as I like debut authors, sometimes I finish a book and go, “There… aren’t any more books? ARE YOU EFFING KIDDING ME?!” I started reading Stephanie Bond when she only had like, five books out and it was TORTURE.

      October 28, 2013
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  11. Sophie
    Sophie

    Is there any chance you could put a spoiler tag around the description of The Hook-Up? I haven’t read the The Girlfriend yet and I just got spoiled. I’d hate for it to happen to someone else.

    October 28, 2013
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    • I might a highlightable text thing. Hope that works, and sorry for the spoiler!

      October 28, 2013
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  12. Yay, more Sophie and Neil! More books! Woohoo!

    October 28, 2013
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  13. Rachel
    Rachel

    I have to say, I’m excited to see some of this from Neil’s POV. I’m happy that there will be more books to read with these characters. I’m re-re-reading both books now and I can’t wait for the others. These are the first sexy books I’ve ever read and I’m glad it was with these.

    October 28, 2013
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  14. Anonymous
    Anonymous

    Oh I am so excited!

    OK, I’ve been wanting to write this somewhere ever since I read The Girlfriend so I will just hide it here. You know how one of the things you mention in the 50 Shades recaps (the reason I discovered you BTW) is when EL does the Britishisms? Like mucking up sayings( like the car pedal one)?

    Well….. I really enjoyed The Girlfriend apart from a few little things. But those few little things annoyed me quite a bit seeing as you’d spoken about EL doing a similar sort of thing.

    The doctor in London. That doctor is British and is in London. They would have given Neil and Sophie their mobile number not their cell number. Sophie saying cell number, fine, she is American after all. Neil saying cell phone, okish seeing s he could have picked it up with all the time he spends in the USA. But a British person, in the UK, saying cell phone? Not a chance.

    There were a few other occasions of British characters speaking American but that’s the one I can remember off the top of my head. Oh no wait, when Neil’s family were there and they talk about somebody going on vacation. Nope, they would have gone on holiday.

    There was also the kettle thing. When Sophie wants to make herself a cup of tea. I spent about 5 minutes reading the passage trying to figure out what was going on. She takes the kettle off it’s hook from by the stove and then clicks the burner on. And then, the first sentence of the next paragraph was something like “the kitchen was ultra modern. )
    Here’s the thing, I know you guys in America tend to have kettles which go on the hob. Us lot in Britain don’t unless we’re trying to be quirky cool hipsters or don’t have electricity. In Britain, a normal kettle is an electric one. And it is a basic requirement for any kitchen in the UK. Heck, even cheap crappy B&Bs and motorway hotels are expected to have kettles in the rooms.
    Yes, Sophie is American, but she was in London in a British guy’s house. There would not have been an old-fashioned kettle hanging up near the hob. There would have been a normal kettle.
    So, I was confused as hell and then for that to be followed up with something about how the kitchen was ultra modern. I was like this: http://tinyurl.com/q6yjbar

    OK, really these aren’t a big deal. But you know when you’re reading a really good book but you come across a few insignificant things that just niggle at you and turn an excellent book into one that’s just good? That happened, I can’t help it. And it’s exaggerated because I only brought The Boss and The Girlfriend because I love the 50 Shades recaps and in the very first recap you pick up on the British author getting Americanisms wrong but you’ve done the same sort of thing.

    Sorry.

    October 28, 2013
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    • I’m never sure if I’m actually supposed to respond to comments like this, because of the whole murky gray area about responding to reviews/criticism, but since you posted it here and addressed me directly, I figured you probably wouldn’t be offended if I responded. Or maybe you’d be more offended if I didn’t respond, LOL. 😀

      SPOILERS FOR PEOPLE READING THE COMMENTS

      The two English characters who say “vacation” are Emma and Neil. Neil refers to his “vacation home” in Italy, and Emma says her mom is going on vacation. Both of them live and work in New York part time, and have most recently been living in NYC. I believe Emma also uses the term “vacation” in The Boss, unless I cut that scene. Or… possibly I moved a part of this scene from The Boss into The Girlfriend. But either way, Emma uses Americanisms every now and then throughout, due to having lived there with her father.

      It doesn’t say the kettle is on a hook, it says it’s sitting at the back of the stove. Sophie wouldn’t think to look for an electric kettle, and she probably wouldn’t know how to use one. I don’t think a struggle with an electric kettle would be all that engaging or appropriate in the context of the scene, so call it artistic license, LOL.

      I think I know which scene you’re talking about with “cell phone.” It’s like, right before they leave the hospital after Neil’s first chemo session, right? It probably got left in there and didn’t change when I shuffled the dialogue around during my last edit. I had Emma in the scene at one point, and the scene just wasn’t working with her. My earliest draft has Emma saying she should give Sophie Dr. Grant’s cell number, and I think I just slotted that dialogue onto Dr. Grant and it didn’t get caught. Some stuff slips under the radar. If I have to make changes to the version out there, I’ll fix it, so thanks for the heads up.

      Obviously, none of this will repair the first initial impression you had. But keep in mind, it’s a lot easier to see minor issues with other people’s finished work than it is with something you’ve worked on yourself. It’s part of the risk I run making full-time mock of another writer’s book. 😀

      October 28, 2013
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      • Anonymous
        Anonymous

        I can understand about the Americanisms with Emma.

        Whole thing about the kettle, couldn’t remember the scene correctly and I can’t find my kindle so sorry about the hook thing. But my whole point was, there would not have been a kettle sitting on the hob/stove because those types of kettle just aren’t common here. We just do not have them (well, they could possibly be buried in a cupboard somewhere for use when there’s a powercut). A kettle is electric here so my point was, if she’s in a British kitchen she would have to use an electric kettle because that would be the only type available to her. And why on earth would she struggle with it? Just fill it with water and flick the switch.

        As to the rest, I will response but it’s half 11 here and I need sleep. But thank you so much for responding and for not being mad at me.(I have an anxiety disorder amongst other things. I’d convinced myself people would get angry if I wrote this hence why I hid it down in these comments. )

        October 28, 2013
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      • I am absolutely gobsmacked at this unexpected insight into American kitchen life. So how do you guys boil water? Just, like, heat it in a pan on the hob? That must seriously take hours.

        This is now explaining an anecdote from an old friend, who’s boyfriend was raised in the US. When they first got together and the boyfriend had stayed the night, my friend asks “Oh please can you make us a coffee, darling?” in the morning. “Sure, where’s your coffee maker?” says boyfriend. “Oh I don’t have one, just use the kettle,” says my friend.

        About ten minutes later, my friend has drifted back off to sleep but is woken by an appalling smell from the kitchen. He wanders in to find that boyfriend has found the kettle, and has filled it with water and 4 heaped tablespoons of instant coffee, and switched it on…

        October 29, 2013
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      • The-Great-Dragon
        The-Great-Dragon

        @Karen, we actually have kettles, but they’re the old fashioned ones where you fill them with water and set them on the stove to heat. Because kettles/tea just isn’t terribly common here (in the same way it is in England) our coffee makers are the electric ones.

        (I don’t know what “on the hob” means tbh.)

        For anything else when it comes to boiling water, we use pans. (or a microwave.)

        October 29, 2013
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      • Okay, for those horrified Brits out there: yes, we boil water on the stove. It takes about ten minutes. Or, we boil individual cups in the microwave. That takes about a minute. No matter how simplistic or seemingly easy it might be to use an electric kettle, I can assure you that I would not be able to do it. My biggest tea drinking friend practically had a panic attack when I explained that apparently no one in the UK boils water on their stove, LOL.

        The new text of The Girlfriend will read:

        “I located a teacup, filled the kettle that sat on the back of the industrial stove— I’d already had a run-in with the electric kettle, and the kitchen staff had hidden it away somewhere—, and lit the burner.”

        It will be uploaded soon, so if you have your device set to automatically download updates, it will be all set, LOL.

        October 29, 2013
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      • Louise
        Louise

        Ok, another random Brit sticking their head above the parapet on this one. The kettle thing bothered me too. The only people I know back home who have the kind of kettle you can boil on the stove are hipsters, and Neil is definitely not a hipster. I am an expat in Beijing where all my friends and all the guys I date here are Americans, and I too was utterly gobsmacked to find out you guys don’t have proper kettles. I get you don’t drink tea, but who can be arsed to boil water for cooking from cold on the hob? It takes so much longer. Bizarre. Also, what’s difficult about an electric kettle? You fill it, press the button and it turns itself off when you’re done. Literally nothing can go wrong.

        Anyway, I have to say some of the other Americanisms jarred with me too, especially given the criticisms of EL James’ Britishisms in the recaps (yes, I get that one should pass up no opportunity to snipe at the woman or her heinous outpourings of crap but you are better than her Jenny, so much better!) Sometimes the British characters use American vocab or grammar but, while it does jar with the voices I have for them in my head (if that makes sense) it is understandable that Neil and Emma might as they spend a lot of time in the States and since I became an expat I too have started to use American words and grammar a lot of the time.

        But, for what it’s worth two things that really stood out for me were referring to Royal Marsden as opposed to the Royal Marsden (anything Royal always has ‘the’ in front of it-again it was Sophie saying it so makes sense that she might get it wrong, I guess it’s just because I grew up close to the other branch and have had so many friends and family treated in there that I am sensitive about the place) and also that there was a sign in the hospital saying ‘No Cellular Phones.’ Both because no person or sign in Britain would ever say ‘cellular phone’ and also because British hospitals (I’ve worked in several) no longer prohibit the use of mobiles.

        These are all petty gripes and I wouldn’t have mentioned them if someone else hadn’t, but while you’re all on the topic I might as well throw it in there.

        Whatever, I love the books and can’t wait for the preview and ‘The Bride!”

        October 29, 2013
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      • Yeah, in Michigan we drop “the” where it’s needed and add it where it’s not needed. I never hear of anyone going to THE Mayo Clinic, but they’re always going to THE Walmart or THE Family Fare. Another one we like to do is put ‘s where it’s not needed. We don’t go to J.C. Penny, we go to J.C. Penny’s. And yet, everyone around where I live calls Macy’s, “Macy.”

        I’m STAGGERED that you guys can use cell phones in hospitals, though.

        October 29, 2013
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        • I’ve very curious about the use of cell phones in hospitals across America now. I live in Minnesota and the last few hospitals I’ve worked at don’t ban cell phones anymore. In fact, the hospital I currently work at offers free Wi-Fi for people to use on their cells (an other electronics). (I know that Wi-Fi is different than cell service, but the availability of it certainly doesn’t discourage cell phone use.) Almost every patient I get from from the ER is on their cell phone, as is almost every employee work with, for that matter. I think everyone would go crazy if they couldn’t check their phones for eight hours. 🙂
          I have no idea what changed, but I always wondered if it was when cell phones went from analog to digital. I could be pulling that out of my ass, though.

          February 25, 2014
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      • Pookie
        Pookie

        An American poking my nose into the mix just to throw in a fun fact: you’d be hard pressed to find an Asian-American household sans electric kettle, we either have the type most ppl are referencing here (pour in water, flip switch) or the kind the constantly holds water at just under a boil and is ready to dispense anytime (after you unlock it that is!). I only realized how rare electric kettles are in other american households when I went to college and mine became a marvel to my floormates.

        Also, seriously cannot wait for the next installment! I’ve reread the boss and the girlfriend at this point and need MOAR! Im tight on funds right now but I do plan to buy your other books because you are a fabulous writer and all around awesome egg!

        October 29, 2013
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      • Lontar
        Lontar

        This is amazing. I am a New Zealander and I thought we were quite American in some ways, but the idea of a kettle that you put on the stove is bizarrely old fashioned here. I hope this doesn’t sound rude, tone on the internet and everything, we still love you, Americans. Keep doing your stove kettle thing. And it makes total sense if coffee machines are that common. I don’t know how I missed that when I read the book! I think I filed it under “Old house in England – England is old – This is just like Pride and Prejudice – Low technology level”.

        October 30, 2013
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      • OMG! Just because we Americans don’t have electric kettles, does not mean we don’t know how to put water in the coffee maker to get hot water! You just leave out the coffee, which is what I do, since I hate that stuff. It’s not as fast as the microwave, but getting a whole pot of hot water is pretty easy that way. I’m pretty sure the science works the same as in a British kettle. So no, I do not boil water on the stove (or hob or whatever the hell you people call it), unless I’m making pasta! Or do you guys use your kettles for that too? LOL Seriously, I’m rolling my eyes over here about the comments to this person’s review.

        October 30, 2013
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    • Louise
      Louise

      Hmmm…come to think of it people in Britain often put the s on the end when it shouldn’t be there to, so that for example Asda (what Walmart is called here) becomes Asda’s or Tesco becomes Tesco’s. Drives me nuts. There was no Mr. Asda or Mr Tesco. Yes. I’m a pedant.

      Mobiles used to be banned in hospitals here until they worked out that they do not, in fact, interfere with the equipment.

      I still don’t get the horror/fear of electric kettles. They switch off the moment they hit boiling point, so they are so much safer than an old-fashioned one that can boil over or blast steam in your face, or spit at you, or burn you because they are made of metal and the outside gets really hot. Those old-skool ones are really dangerous!

      October 29, 2013
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    • Louise
      Louise

      That’s interesting, because it was my first roommate in Beijing (see how I’ve become American, I now say roommate to refer to people with whom I have never in fact shared a room) who first alerted me to the fact that most Americans don’t have electric kettles, but she said that she always had one at home. She’s ABC. I guess that explains it. Here in China most people don’t have kettles because, due to the tap water being undrinkable everyone has one of those dispensers that is like a water cooler except it here they don’t cool the water, they either dispense it room temperature or hot, because the Chinese believe cold water is dangerous and will make you sick or make your period last forever and make you infertile. They are so horrified if you drink cold water! When I first arrived I suggested giving cold water to the kids in the kindergarten I worked in because it was soooo hot, and was met with a gasp followed by, ‘You can’t give cold water to CHILDREN!!!” But those dispensers freak me out because the water in the container is room temp, but you press the lever for hot and it just comes out nearly boiling, straight away. HOW DOES THAT WORK??? Or am I just being dumb?

      October 29, 2013
      |Reply
  15. Hey Jenny, I really loved The Boss. I was wondering, are you going to post any more of the stories on your blog or are they all by payment only now? I don’t mind having to pay for them, of course, because they’re fantastic. I just couldn’t remember what you said you were doing.

    October 28, 2013
    |Reply
    • After November, the free version of The Boss will be back up on the blog. Future installments of the series will be pay ebooks (I was going to do by donation only, but it was just too hard to juggle distribution and payment with that model). The short story I mentioned will be free from Smashwords when it comes out. 😀

      October 29, 2013
      |Reply
  16. A Ninny Mouse
    A Ninny Mouse

    Where is this mysterious place we can buy the books from? I can’t figure it out.

    October 29, 2013
    |Reply
    • The Boss is an Amazon exclusive right now, and The Girlfriend is available at Amazon, B&N, Kobo, Smashwords, etc. except for Kobo in the UK (though you can get an epub file from Smashwords.com). They’re only available in ebook right now, but paperbacks are coming in November.

      October 29, 2013
      |Reply
  17. Zee
    Zee

    I’m pretty excited for this, I’ve only just finished reading the boss and started on the girlfriend (don’t read into that the wrong way, I’ve just changed jobs and my old one was like, 60 hours a week at night, I didn’t get the chance to do anything. My new job is better hours, so I’ve had the chance to actually pick up a frisking book) so more Sophie and Neil is entirely acceptable.

    October 30, 2013
    |Reply
  18. Lisa
    Lisa

    I went horse riding on the weekend, my horse was called Spanky and my husband’s horse was calle The Boss. I giggled all day.

    November 1, 2013
    |Reply
  19. Remi
    Remi

    Is it bad that I really want to read this series, but I’m waiting, patiently, for spoilers from the last book so I can be certain they don’t actually have a baby before I read anything, because I’m sick of having things ruined for me with the baby-bomb?

    November 4, 2013
    |Reply
  20. Vicki
    Vicki

    Firstly I need to say how much I LOVE these books. They’re my new obsession (and I have a history of falling in love with characters). I love the writing and wit in the books and I could not out them down. I even found myself thinking about them at work!

    So my theory is that The Ex is Elizabeth who we haven’t met yet and the baby is Emma’s child who Sophie may be a surrogate for? Neil May not be bake to have kids after chemo, Sophie doesn’t want them and Emma is struggling to conceive.

    Either way I cannot wait to read them!

    November 9, 2013
    |Reply
  21. Renae Au
    Renae Au

    Will The Ex be added to Goodreads, so the series can be updated? Thanks!

    March 21, 2014
    |Reply

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