Redesigning Max By Pat Henshaw Tour
Author Name: Pat Henshaw
Book Name: Redesigning Max
Series: Foothills Pride
Book: Two
Can be read as a standalone
Release Date: July 29, 2015
Blurb:
Renowned interior designer Fredi Zimmer is surprised when outdoorsman Max Greene, owner of Greene’s Hunting and Fishing, hires him to remodel his rustic cabin in the Sierra Nevada foothills. Fredi is an out and proud Metro male whose contact with the outdoors is from his car to the doorway of the million-dollar homes’ he remodels, and Max is just too hunky gorgeous for words.
When Max starts coming on to Fredi, the designer can’t imagine why. But he’s game to put a little spice into Max’s life, even if it’s just in the colors and fixtures he’ll use to turn Max’s dilapidated rustic cabin into a showplace. Who can blame a guy for adding a little sensual pleasure as he retools Max’s life visually?
Max, for his part, is grateful when Fredi takes him in hand, both metaphorically and literally. Coming out, he finds is the most exciting and wonderful time of his life, despite the conservative former friends who want to stop his slide into hell.
Pages or Words: 73 pages
Categories: Contemporary, Gay Fiction, Romance
Excerpt:
By the time we got to the Rock Bottom Cafe, I felt like I’d bottomed out. I was hungry, tired, and feeling the first twinges of a headache.
Max hadn’t exaggerated about how much I’d hate the Rock Bottom’s decor. It was the worst of rural cafe: hellacious plastic flowers, grotesque plastic-covered booths, peeling gangrene-painted beadboard walls, pockmarked linoleum floor, and faded food-stained menus. It made the cabin look almost palatial, except it didn’t smell as bad.
As Max slid into one side of a booth and I into the other, he said, “Food’s great here. Okay?”
I glared at him, but I had to admit the odors coming from the kitchen wove seductively around us.
After we’d ordered and had gotten glasses of iced tea, which I liberally dosed with artificial sweetener, Max leaned back in his side of the booth and blew out a little breath.
“So guess here’s what you need to know about me.” He was looking at the tabletop. “I was an only kid when my folks died. Raised by my aunt and uncle with their four boys. I was the youngest and nobody cared what I thought, so I don’t talk much.”
Oh dear. I wasn’t sure which of those statements I should answer, if any. My heart bled for the beautiful man in front of me who would give me a raging hard-on if I let my libido take control.
His words and lack of self-pity made me want to create a unique space where he’d feel completely at home and that would soothe him when he needed it. I probably wouldn’t end up his BFF or someone he could unbend with, but I could create a warm cocoon to shelter and coddle the man or let him entertain his friends comfortably.
The image of the young Max feeling like an outsider when he was thrust on his uncaring aunt and uncle to raise was banished by the waitress who put lunch in front of us.
“Oh. My. God!” I nearly drooled into the chili and homemade bread as I tasted them. “This is incredible.”
“What’d I tell you?” Max gloated. “Said you shouldn’t be put off by the decor. Some of us are more than our decor.”
I spooned up a couple of bites, then looked at Max. “You really do think I’m a snob, don’t you?”
Why was it so easy to get him to blush? I hadn’t a clue, but his quick, mercurial red cheeks had me intrigued.
“No, no, I don’t think you’re a snob,” he protested. “I mean, you’re just so….” He waved a couple of fingers at me, but kept his elbows on the table as if protecting his bowl of chili.
“I’m so what?”
Max shrugged. “I don’t know. Beautiful. And fancy,” he added, ducking his head over his bowl.
Ah, I understood now. Max was intimidated by my suit.
“Look, you came to get me in the coffee shop. I was dressed to take a rich lady through her house later this afternoon. I can work in jeans and a T-shirt”—did Max think I wore suits every day?—“or anything I want. Pajamas even. You just caught me on a suit day.” Which, I didn’t add, was too often for even my overblown sense of style.
Now Max was staring at me.
“Yeah, right. You wear jeans,” he scoffed, but looked interested, intrigued.
I shrugged. “Okay, not when I’m with a client. At home I’m way more casual.” I might have sounded a tad defensive.
“Yeah, right,” Max muttered with a grin.
I left it lying there. It wasn’t worth fighting about. But it bothered me that he saw such a divide between us. I was just a man, wasn’t I? Just like him, right? What was he going on about? Sheesh.
Interview:
Today I’m very lucky to be interviewing Pat Henshaw, author of Redesigning Max.
Hi, Pat, thank you for agreeing to this interview. Tell us a little about yourself, your background, and your current book.
Hi! I’m originally from Nebraska and have lived all over the U. S., landing here in Northern California. Now retired, I’ve held a number of jobs including theatrical costuming for the Alley Theatre in Houston, public relations for radio and television at WETA in D. C., and teaching English composition at a junior college in California.
Redesigning Max, the second of the Foothills Pride novellas, revolves around the unlikely pair of interior designer and architect Fredi Zimmer and the CEO of an outdoors equipment store and wildlife guide Max Greene. When he hires Fredi to redesign and update his Sierra Mountain mountain cabin, Max finds his life and heart undergoing a makeover too.
Not everyone in the small Stone Acres, California, community is as excited about Max and Fredi getting together as the guys are. Because Max’s been in the closet so long, he not only has to convince his friends that he’s gay but he also has to convince Fredi, who keeps getting mixed signals from him.
- Tell us something about your character’s friends.
Jimmy Patterson and Felicity Long (from What’s in a Name?) are Fredi’s best friends from childhood. After working many years in the San Francisco Bay Area in coffee shops, Jimmy and Felicity came to Stone Acres and opened their own shop at the local mall. In What’s in a Name?, they branch out and open a second shop in Old Town Stone Acres. They are both bright, pleasant people who are adept at keeping each other sane when times get tough.
Max Greene has very few friends because he grew up in the shadow of his religious zealot uncle and three Neanderthal cousins. He’s known and liked by nearly everyone in the community, but not close to anyone in particular except a few fishing and camping buddies.
- What are your character’s favorite places to eat?
Fredi’s a lot of things fashionable, but he’s not a foodie. Anything that’s tasty, smells good, and well made is fine with him. He’s partial to the down-home cooking of Bud Culpepper who owns the Rock Bottom Café and the off-beat, unique gourmet meals of Adam de Leon at the Sierra Chalet. When he’s in full designer mode, Fredi likes to eat at the French Laundry and House of Prime Rib or other fashionable eateries.
- What activity does your character absolutely hate?
Unlike Max, Fredi abhors roughing it. He won’t take a rafting trip down the American River, won’t hunt for deer nor especially for any kind of bird, and certainly won’t fish, not even touch a worm. His idea of camping and being an outdoorsman includes four walls, indoor plumbing, and a bed with a mattress at least four inches thick. No bugs, including but not exclusive to gnats, ants, spiders, ticks, flies, and moths. He’ll look at a butterfly and loves to watch birds—from a deck with high-powered binoculars.
- What other author’s book do you think your character would be good in?
I’d love to have Fredi meet Oscar Hernandez in Mathew Ortiz’s Love and Salvage: Eli’s Three Wishes. I think they’d get along just great and would become fast friends. Oscar would also get along with Jimmy and Felicity, so they’d be a fun foursome.
- What’s your favorite decade and why?
I’m perfectly happy living in this decade. I’d like to believe that the future will bring us a better life, but history doesn’t seem to support that idea. So, give me a decade that’s closer to equality than any we’ve ever seen, and I’m happy with it.
Sales Links:
http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/store/product_info.php?products_id=6690
About the author:
Pat Henshaw, author of the Foothills Pride series, was born in Nebraska but promptly left the cold and snow after college, living at various times in Texas, Colorado, Northern Virginia, and Northern California. Pat has visited Mexico, Canada, Europe, Nicaragua, Thailand, and Egypt, and regularly travels to Rome, Italy, and Eugene, Oregon, to see family.
Now retired, Pat has taught English composition at the junior college level; written book reviews for newspapers, magazines, and websites; helped students find information as a librarian; and promoted PBS television programs.
Pat has raised two incredible daughters who daily amaze everyone with their power and compassion. Pat’s supported by a husband who keeps her grounded in reality when she threatens to drift away writing fiction.
Where to find the author:
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pat.henshaw.10
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6998437.Patois
Book website: http://whatsinanamenovella.blogspot.com
Website: http://patbooked.blogspot.com
E-mail: whatsinanamenovella@comcast.net
Tumblr: http://phenshaw.tumblr.com/
Twitter: @phenshaw
Goodreads Link: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/25824113-redesigning-max?ac=1
Publisher: Dreamspinner Press
Cover Artist: AngstyG
Tour Dates & Stops:
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