In Rick R Reed's Legally Wed, love comes along when you least expect it. That’s what Duncan Taylor’s sister, Scout,
tells him. Scout has everything Duncan wants—a happy life
with a wonderful husband. Now that Seattle has made gay
marriage legal, Duncan knows he can have the same thing. But when he proposes to his
boyfriend Tucker, he doesn’t get the answer he hoped for. Tucker’s refusal is
another misstep in a long line of failed romances. Despairing, Duncan thinks of all the
loving unions in his life—and how every one of them is straight. Maybe he could
be happy, if not sexually compatible, with a woman. When zany, gay-man-loving
Marilyn Samples waltzes into his life, he thinks he may have found his answer.
Determined to settle,
Inspiration for the book actually began on
the first day same-sex couples were able to obtain marriage licenses. It was a
special day for Rick personally—and yes, he would say that this moment was the
inspiration for the book.
Bruce, Rick's now-husband and he were one of the first couples in line
down at City Hall in the wee small hours of the morning to get their marriage
license on the first day they could. There was such joy at City Hall that
morning, both from couples getting their licenses and the employees and
supporters who had come out to witness this historic moment. Rick wanted to write
about not just love, but marriage. Here’s the opening - you can see
what he's talking about:
Legally Wed
Dreamspinner Press (January, 2014)
ISBN: 978-1-62798-203-0 (ebook)
978-1-62798-204-7 (paperback)
EXCERPT:
Same-sex marriage
had just become legal in Washington State and Duncan
Taylor didn’t plan on wasting any time. He had been dating Tucker McBride for
more than three years and, ever since the possibility of marriage had become
more than just a pipe dream, it was all Duncan could think of.
He had thought of it as he gazed out the windows of his houseboat on Lake
Union, on days both sunny and gray (since it was late autumn, there were a lot
more of the latter); he had thought of it as he stood before his classroom of
fourth graders at Cascade Elementary School. He had thought of it when he woke
up in the morning and before he fell asleep at night.
For Duncan , marriage was
the peak, the happy ending, the icing on the cake, the culmination of one’s
hearts desire, a commitment of a lifetime, the joining of two souls. For Duncan , it was landing
among the stars.
And for Duncan,
who would turn 38 on his next birthday, it was also something he had never
dared dream would be possible for him.
And now, too
excited to sleep, he was thinking about it—hard—once again. It was just past
midnight on December 6, 2012 and the local TV news had pre-empted its regular
programming to take viewers live to Seattle City Hall, where couples were
forming a serpentine line to be among the first in the state to be issued their
marriage licenses—couples who had also for far too long believed this right
would be one they would never be afforded. Many clung close together to ward
off the chill, but Duncan knew their
reasons for canoodling went far deeper than that.
The mood, in
spite of the darkness pressing in all around, was festive. There was a group
serenading the couples in line, singing “Going to the Chapel.” Champagne corks
popped in the background. Laughter.
Duncan couldn’t
keep the smile off his face as he watched all the male-male and female-female
couples in the line, their mood of jubilation, of love, of triumph traveling
through to him even here on his houseboat two or three miles north of downtown.
Duncan wiped tears from his eyes as he saw not only the couples but also all
the supporters, city workers, and volunteers who had crowded together outside
City Hall to wish the new couples well, to share in the happiness of the
historic moment.
And then Duncan couldn’t help
it, he fell into all-out blubbers as the first couple to get their license
emerged from City Hall. 85-year-old Pete-e Peterson and her partner and
soon-to-be-wife, Jane Abbott Lighty, were all smiles when a reporter asked them
how they felt.
“We waited a long
time. We’ve been together 35 years, never thinking we’d get a legal marriage.
Now I feel so joyous I can hardly stand it,” Pete-e said.
It was such a
special moment and it was all Duncan could do not to
pick up the phone and call Tucker and casually say something like, “Hey honey,
you want to get married?”
Rick R. Reed
Biography
Rick R.
Reed is all about exploring the romantic entanglements of gay men in
contemporary, realistic settings. While his stories often contain elements of
suspense, mystery and the paranormal, his focus ultimately returns to the power
of love. He is the author of dozens of published novels, novellas, and short
stories. He is a three-time EPIC eBook Award winner (for Caregiver, Orientation and The
Blue Moon Cafe). Lambda Literary Review has called him, "a
writer that doesn't disappoint." Rick lives in Seattle with his husband and a very
spoiled Boston terrier. He is forever "at work on another novel."
Visit Rick's website at http://www.rickrreed.com or follow his blog at http://rickrreedreality.blogspot.com/. You can also like Rick on Facebook at www.facebook.com/rickrreedbooks or on Twitter at www.twitter.com/rickrreed. Rick always enjoys hearing from readers and answers all e-mails personally. Send him a message at jimmyfels@gmail.com
Visit Rick's website at http://www.rickrreed.com or follow his blog at http://rickrreedreality.blogspot.com/. You can also like Rick on Facebook at www.facebook.com/rickrreedbooks or on Twitter at www.twitter.com/rickrreed. Rick always enjoys hearing from readers and answers all e-mails personally. Send him a message at jimmyfels@gmail.com
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3 comments:
This one is very close to home, I can tell. Good job, Rick - thanks
I agree with Victor - the atmosphere of celebration leaps off the page. Congratulations on another fine story. Frankly, I'd go farther than "a writer that doesn't disappoint," but that's just my opinion...
Very nice, Rick. So much is conveyed about the protagongist in this short excerpt. Nice writing and a wonderful, feel-good subject.
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