It’s no secret that I love books and always have. From my earliest memories of listening to someone read to me, then transitioning to being old enough to pick up a book myself to while away the time. When I was younger, my family moved around every couple of years or more as my father’s job was to evaluate school systems. While not a hardship, it’s not conducive to the young who find it hard to leave friends and special places behind again and again. As I got older and the moving proved more stressful, I turned to books for companionship. Books, never far from me from birth (a given with parents as educators), became my constant companions. They became my escape from reality, an acceptable form of “invisible friend,” my Harvey. I was lucky in that one of my uncles, a great uncle really, worked at Charles Scribner’s & Sons. Uncle Wade sent us boxes of books of all types and genres, most of which were too old for me (Frank Yerby, really?) and that created its own special allure, to be old enough to read all those books! A new goal and easily fed addiction formed early in life – I was seven by then.

Have I said that books fascinate me? It was always just a matter of minutes before I lost myself in an author’s special universe. Their characters jumped to life on their pages waving swords or crawling through tunnels, the places they created became worlds whose paths I wished to tread and on whose seas I wished to voyage. Don’t you remember picking up a book and starting to read, and thinking please, please, never let it end? That was me, out in the woods or under a blanket in bed, book in hand, eyes shut tight and wishing with all my might for a magic wand and horses with wings.

With some books, just one book is sufficient to satisfy your need for the world the author created. You read it and are happy to have visited there. They were great hosts, told you a marvelous story and fed you a meal that left you full if not completely replenished. When it came time to take your leave, you wished those characters well and felt that while you have enjoyed the visit, other destinations were calling and you must be off. My Friend Flicka was one. Treasure Island was another. So was Old Yeller, Dahlgren, and National Velvet and hoards of nameless books of my youth. But then there are those books whose characters became friends or heros, the worlds they lived in were places I yearned to go, each and every element necessary and magical to me at the time. Those stories had multiple books called a series! From the mundane to the mystical, I gobbled up series with all the ardor and fervor of a zealot.

For me a series meant never having to leave your favorite characters behind or the universe they inhabited. After you finished one story, you could look forward to a new adventure, a new challenge or a new journey taken with the same beloved people/beings you met in the first book. Sometimes the characters stayed the same, they lived in their old house, had the same friends and stayed the same age. I am thinking Nancy Drew here with Beth, George, and Ned. And sometimes the characters grew up like those in C.S. Lewis’ The Chronicles of Narnia. But whatever the shape the narrative took, I knew that I would be visiting a familiar place but with unknown consequences. Oh the anticipation, the agony, the time I spent daydreaming about what was to come next for my heros (of all genders and species).

Whether it was L. Frank Baum’s Wizard of Oz books or Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, book series have been my affordable addiction. Not possible to own a herd of horses in a suburban backyard? Let’s substitute dragons for horses and scarf up Anne McCaffrey’s Dragonriders of Pern. My parents inform me that we are southbound, going to visit the relatives again this summer. My first reaction? OK, second reaction? Hide all of Marion Zimmer Bradley’s Darkover books in my suitcase to pull out at the cousins first suggestion to Dippity Do my hair and head out to the Dairy Queen. Series after series, genre after genre, my addiction grew and my bookshelves groaned.

Has my addiction to series dwindled as I have aged? Not on your life! Don’t look at me like that! I know you have been there along with me. Haven’t you ever reached the end of a book that has kept you mesmerized from word one and wanted to scream out ‘Noooooooo, I don’t want it to end”? Or had the characters in the latest book you were reading seem so real that the last sentence of the epilogue left you feeling bereft? Or maybe the world that came alive in between the pages was so vivid that you could smell the alien air and feel the magic in the landscape? It still happens to me at 2 or 3 am in the morning (just like always) when I come to the end of a gripping saga I started earlier that day and never put down. I scramble to get back to the pages in front and then in the back to see what else the author has written. If stymied, and who wouldn’t be at that time of the morning, I turn on the computer (ok this part is new) and check for updates at their publishers or websites, never mind the dogs glaring at me because I have disturbed their sleep. And when my search turns up that the book is a part of a series? Well, let’s just say I give the ol’ Rebel Yell a run for its money and make my Celtic ancestors proud!

Some of my favorite series? Hard to separate them out as I have so many in different genre’s. Mystery authors make it easy for me. Love you Martha Grimes and Inspector Jury, same to you, P.D. James and Inspector Adam Dalgliesh, and on right to up Sarah Paretsky and her female private eye, V.I. Warshawski and Stieg Larsson and The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. Once a mystery author creates a character, a series is sure to follow. Authors of the supernatural and fantasy are much the same. Look at Laurell K. Hamilton and Anita Blake. Hit List is the 20th Anita Blake novel. Or Terry Pratchett and his Disc World series that is comprised of 33 novels. That could be a little daunting if not for the treasure that is Disc World.

Sooooo, where was I? Oh yes, my love for book series. Today with the advent of eReaders and ePublishing, the novel and book series has never been more popular. Especially with my m/m fiction, I have so many favorite series that I hardly know where to start. Perhaps I will begom with a series where I began my m/m journey. That would be Carol Lynne’s Cattle Valley series, still going strong today at book number 27. I love Josh Lanyon’s Adrien English series and Kate Steele’s Bond of the Maleri books. Can’t go wrong there. I would wave Jet Mykles Heaven Sent series at you, can’t miss those! Or JL Langley’s With or Without series with her wolf shifters that are so hot and memorable. So many that I need to start a list. And just look at the books I have reviewed lately. Some of my must read series are among them: Cut and Run from Madeleine Urban and Abigail Roux (now just written by Roux), Infected by Andrea Speed (I groan just thinking about Roan – snicker), the Lost Gods series by Megan Derr, the Cambridge Fellows books by Charlie Cochrane, Katey Hawthorne’s Superpowered Love series and so many more. I feel like one of those people at an awards show with a never ending list. I could go on and on and on while a guy in the wings gives me the signal to shut up.

So here I am all these years later and nothing has changed. OK, yes some things have changed. Sheesh! You think you would let a girl get by with some things…but my love of books and a series of books? Never. A great series still fills me with excitement and the expectation of wonderful surprises just on the horizon. I look forward to each new twist and turn the author can think up and that I never saw coming. I can’t wait for the paths unexplored and the roads not yet taken by characters I love on worlds new and known. And that is why a series makes my heart sing.

Small list of my favorite m/m series in no particular order and yes I know I left a lot out. Please send us your favorites:

  • Promise Rock series by Amy Lane (contemporary)
  • Lost Gods series by Megan Derr (fantasy)
  • Conquest series by S. J. Frost (rockers)
  • Heaven Sent by Jet Mykles (rockers)
  • Adrien English Mystery series by Josh Lanyon (contemporary)
  • Cut and Run by Urban and Roux, now just Abigall Roux (contemporary)
  • Infected series by Andrea Speed (science fiction)
  • Sanctuary series by RJ Scott (action/adventure)
  • Faith, Love, and Devotion series by Tere Michaels (contemporary)
  • St. Nachos series by Z.A. Maxfield (contemporary)
  • Cattle Valley by Carol Lynne (western contemporary)
  • With or Without series by JL Langley (shifters)
  • Sci Regency series by JL Langley (science fiction)
  • Cambridge Fellows series by Charlie Cochrane (historical)
  • A Matter of Time series by Mary Calmes (contemporary)
  • Warder series by Mary Calmes (paranormal)
  • Home series by TC Chase (western contemporary)
  • Superpowered Love series by Katey Hawthorne (contemporary)

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