My motto was created to tell you more about my books before you’ve actually read them.
Literary Fiction means that while I love a story for a story’s sake (and usually for the romance in it), I strive to tackle serious issues as well. In the interest of full disclosure however, I should tell you that with a touch of Erotica is perhaps an understatement.
My logo doesn’t have much to do with the Black Swan in Tchaikovsky’s ballet, although I have been known to use that as soundtrack for my Instagram posts lately.
In the Eastern-European tradition that shaped my childhood, the swan stands for independence and beauty but also for a state of isolation which deprives the individual of love and genuine companionship. I tried to breathe new life into that symbol, bringing self-reliance to the table along with some steamy romance and novel ways of looking at people’s misfortunes.
As my stories seek to prove, anyone can find love. The thing they can’t guarantee though is that love will stay. Oftentimes people’s flaws, traumas, or hidden desires stand in the way of their happiness.
What the swan promises to bring every character is a story like no other, that one person and love-affair to change them forever.
Papi

Roberta Metasol is a beautiful Mexican woman who comes to America in search of a better life.
Ready to use every seduction tool at a woman’s disposal, she finds herself caught in a web of family intrigues and tragedies while the aged, strong-minded patriarch of the family tries hard not to fall for her.
My next titles
Heart of Hearts

At the dawn of one of Europe’s most gruesome dictatorial regimes, Carolina Mare lives the life she has chosen for herself and spits in the face of prejudice.
My next book features a beautiful soprano with an obsession for fine jewelry and Jewish men.
Sugar Baby Love

Charlie D. Hardin has been raised by a good momma and a kind uncle, but his image of the woman who gets to wait for him at night is slightly different than that of his righteous family.
The protagonist of my third title struggles to establish his identity in the midst of a series of murders in his native 1950s Houston.
