Erastes

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Erastes started to write homoerotic historical fiction because he couldn't find any other than the very few that were on the market, such as Gaywyck by Vincent Virga and the novels of Mary Renault.


On the Web

Novels

  • Standish - Standish A homoerotic Regency romance. Published on 15th November 2006

REVIEWS FOR STANDISH

Available at:

Amazon USA

Amazon Canada

Amazon UK

Amazon Japan

Amazon Germany

Barnes & Noble

  • Transgressions A homoerotic saga set in the turbulent years of the English Civil War OUT SPRING 2009
  • Junction X England 1962: A closeted and married stockbroker falls disastrously in love for the first time, with the boy next door.

Novellas

  • Chiaroscuro A novella based in 19th Century Florence about an artist who becomes obsessed with his sitter - Published in Night Movesby Aspen Mountain Press

Hard & Fast - to be published by Linden Bay Romance on 1st June 2008 (Gay Regency)

Frost Fair - to be published by Linden Bay Romance in November 2009 (Gay Regency)

Short Stories

  • Drug Colours to be published in Lethe Press' "Best Gay Short Stories"
  • Show Don't Tell - published in March 2008's MEN Magazine.
  • Right Hand Man - to be published in “Superqueeroes” by Haworth Press
  • Ribinks - published in The Drabbler Magazine
  • Ribinks - to be published by The Drabbler
  • His Story Teller - runner up in Torquere Press' "Do it yourself" competition
  • Sin of the Tongue published in the Blasphemy anthology by Torquere Press
  • Lifeline published in the Chance Encounters anthology by Torquere Press

Memberships

Erastes is the Director of the Erotic Authors Association and a member of the Historical Novel Society He's the moderator of Speak Its Name - the only resource on the web dedicated to gay historical fiction

Other Information

Erastes/Eromenos

In the pederastic tradition of Classical Athens, the eromenos (Greek ἐρόμενος, pl. "eromenoi") was an adolescent boy who was in a love relationship with an adult man, known as the erastes (ἐραστής). The relationship was typically of a pedagogical nature and while it was also typically affectionate and passionate it was not necessarily sexual.