More Honestly, Delamere and Promos

Good morning! Nearly the end of June already, it’s hard to believe, but there it is. I have three things for you today. Firstly…

Honestly

The serialisation continues, and there are now four short chapters up on the list. Check the page from the menu, and you will see a drop-down list of the chapter links. (You may need to refresh the page to see all four.) Each chapter has a link to the next, and there are another seven chapters still to be posted, which I will do in time.

Delamere Nine

So, what’s happening in the Jack Merrit world? Well, without giving too much away, Jack, Baxter and Simeon are currently in Suffolk investigating a case in the countryside. We’re getting rural for this one, which is a challenge for me, who has read mostly about Victorian city life. I’m doing my research, though, and delving into the world of the dairy farmer and village pub. Luckily, where I was brought up was still pretty 19th century in terms of farming, remoteness, villages and pubs, so I can draw on some of that.

I am up to 32,000 words already, the mystery is growing but now the investigation has started. Simeon is coming of age, kind of, there’s a these of father’s and sons which is giving Jack some pause for thought, and Baxter is, of course, being inappropriate as often as possible.

Promos

I will soon have another collection of promos to share with you. These are free-to-view collections of books on specific topics and from indie authors selling on Amazon and elsewhere. As from next month, though, I will add them not only to the newsletter, but also to their own page on the site here, so you never lose out.

Newsletter

You can subscribe to the newsletter from the top of this page, or from the newsletter page itself, where the privacy policy is also set out. I’ll be back on Wednesday with a proper update about Delamere Nine (still untitled), and any other news I have for you. Have a great weekend!

Two Works in Progress

Two? Surely not… Well, yes and no…

Delamere Nine

This book is underway and, so far, is running smoothly. It’s one of those that I am making up as I go along (don’t we always do that when writing a novel?), but I know where it is going. I know what the climax should be like, I know who is involved, and what the emotional through line is to be, what the ‘theme’ is, and how the mystery starts. What I don’t yet know is what the mystery is (I have a vague idea) or how it will be solved. That’s the joy, you see, the joy of the job. I discover as Jack and Baxter discover, and from what they discover, comes the next chapter, and so on. If I reach a point where I start to lose the thread, I go back, unstitch, and start again. Or I make repairs as I go. This way, I avoid plot holes.

I am aiming for half a chapter a day, and I am already up to the end of Act One, at 25,000 words. There has been a tragedy, there is a mystery, and someone in the cast is trying hard to grow up, while two others have to share a bed…

More on this story as it develops.

Honestly – a Novella

The other project on the go is updating and uploading ‘Honestly’, a novella I wrote following on from the success of ‘Remotely.’ That was a gay/straight body-swap coming-of-age comedy. ‘Honestly’ is also coming of age and is set in a small fishing village ‘up north’ where a young lad and his mother have moved from ‘down south.’ All is not well, however, and Miss P has been sent on a mission to put things right because the problem in the village has been caused by that dreaded thing, writer’s block.

Well, you can download the whole novella here for $0.99, or you can start to read it online, chapter by chapter. Today, I have chapter two available, and am working on preparing chapter three so you don’t have to wait too long to continue the story.

https://jacksonmarsh.com/honestly-chapter-two

If you’re interested in the straight/gay body-swap, you can find ‘Remotely’ at this link. That’s Amazon.com, but it’s available in all my usual Amazon stores. Here’s the blurb:

Britain’s newest and most pointless TV talent competition is coming to Middlestone-On-Sea. ‘So You Think We’re Remotely Interested?’ has taken Friday night viewers by storm as it streams live variety shows from remote, provincial theatres across Britain. The theatre with the most audience votes wins regeneration and revival, and lord knows, Middlestone-on-Sea needs both.

The dying seaside backwater rests its hopes on the performance of two ex-best friends, gay Gary and straight Stag.

The visiting celebrity judge, the mysterious and timeless Miss P, knows that for all to be well, they must mend their broken friendship. But there is no success without trial. She magically swaps Gary and Stag into each other’s bodies. Secrets are learned, comedy ensues, and yet the community remains divided.

Rifts must be healed, differences accepted, and bodies swapped back before the season grand finale in four days’ time otherwise Middlestone will lose everything.

Honestly

I am starting a new project and sharing one of my novellas. This will appear chapter by chapter over time. (When I can’t think of anything else to write as a blog post.)

I’ve set up a menu page you can click to and find new chapters as and when, and when I work out how to do the drop-down menu, I will add the chapter list to the main menu… Anyway… Honestly is a comedy coming of age novella I wrote after writing the gay/straight bodyswap comedy ‘Remotely’, which stars an enigmatic character called Miss P.

Here’s the blurb and first chapter, which you can also find on the Honestly menu page here.



Chapter One

“There’s always been something missing from this village, and it ain’t the stink of fish.”
Mrs Marigold Lumpsucker, a resident of Carping Bay.


It is a little-known fact that Miss P was the first woman in history to find a cure for writer’s block. The event took place in London, backstage at The Globe Theatre in 1594.

While scouring the fields and lanes of Shoreditch in search of some delicious and potent tobacco leaves, she sensed that something nearby was not as it should be. It didn’t take her long to track down the problem, and she found young Will within minutes. He sat at a small table in the yard, staring at the barn, a quill in one hand and a blank page in the other. She could tell from the air that the man was struggling. If it sounds strange to say that she could sense someone’s difficulty in the air, that’s because she was strange. Unusual, at least.

As Miss P approached, she could see that Will had nothing on his page apart from a title and a few lines. As she read them and pondered, she spied a rolled tobacco leaf on Shakespeare’s table and politely asked if she might try it.

Shakespeare waved his hand as if he were seeing off a fly. He meant that she should help herself, which she did. The yard had the tang of dung about it, and there were flies about. A swarm of them fought over some recent droppings. The sight reminded Miss P of the Siege of Pyongyang, an event she had recently arranged. For the good of everyone, you understand.

She rolled the leaves into a cigar shape and lit it, enjoying the rich taste and the way the smoke tickled her nose. She turned her attention back to the title page of Will’s new work.

‘When is opening night?’ she asked, pointing a slender finger towards the paper.

‘Seven days hence this must be done by, Lady. Else no income shall my company have. ‘’Tween times I must take up arms against the slings and arrows of Richard III, two Shrews and a Titus Andronicus matinee for the elderly.’

‘I see.’ Miss P did see. She saw all kinds of things that no-one else could. That’s why she did what she did. ‘A tragedy?’

‘I do agree, my block is so. And such a sad tragedy it be that I fear this play be nought but a farce. No words hath my quill. No new syllables sprout from my imagination like buds to the dawn. No passion flows in this dead bird’s coat.’ He waggled the feather, slumped his head onto the table and banged it twice.

‘May I…?’ Miss P took the quill from him.

Shakespeare turned his head and opened one eye suspiciously on the elegant, hard-to-age and impossible-to-place lady. She brushed the feather down her cheek while studying his words. He snapped his eye shut when she caught him looking.

‘I don’t think the world is quite ready for this. That is your problem.’

He raised his head to her. ‘My problem, handsome stranger, is that I find scene one a mountain as impenetrable as Olympus. There is nothing here.’ He beat his fist against his head.

Miss P drew in another drag of the burning leaves. As she let the smoke out, she angled it towards the playwright. A thin wisp snaked away from the cloud and spiralled before Will’s face. He crossed his eyes to focus and gasped. It was a dark green colour with flecks of sparkling silver. As he opened his mouth to ask what this lady had done to his tobacco, he inhaled the smoke and coughed.

‘May I suggest we address the title?’ said Miss P. ‘Once that’s found, you will see that the story unlocks itself.’

Shakespeare looked at the title. ‘But this, smoke-angel, be the tale my heart aches to tell. There be riches in this story. Worth in all its mighty forms, honour as worthy as Prince Hal at Agincourt. This tale must be told.’ He was adamant on the subject.

‘Indeed, it will, Mr Shakespeare,’ Miss P assured him. ‘But in time. The story you ache to write now will be possible in years to come. And yes, your story will throw light through the world like dawn breaking through yonder window. But, alas, the good people of Shoreditch, to say nothing of Her Majesty, are not yet ready for a tragic love story about,’ she checked the page, ‘Romeo and Julius.’

Shakespeare groaned and sat back in his chair.

‘Sad but true,’ Miss P continued. ‘But this is not the time or place to break this kind of ground.’

‘It is meant a comedy.’ Will snatched the paper from her. ‘It be not what it seems. Two old friends, both alike in dignity, are at war with each other. Magic intervenes, and they wake up realising they are no longer in their own bodies but in those of each other…’

‘And to get back, they must learn how it is to be each other. One man is destined to be a father, and the other to love only men. Yes, a most engaging plot, and yes, there is a remote chance that story will be told. But not now.’ She was also quite adamant on the subject.

A few more strands of smoke drifted from her near-spent leaves and found their way into Will’s nostrils.

‘And you suggest?’

‘Romeo and Juliet, perhaps? A love story. No, the love story.’

‘Oh, Madam. You are thrusting greatness upon me.’ Shakespeare rubbed his beard. He glanced from Miss P to the page.

‘Some are born to it, Mr Shakespeare,’ she said. ‘While others…’

She offered the quill, he took it, and for a moment they held it together. His body trembled. His eyes flashed wide, and his lips moved. She released the quill, and it flew to the page where Shakespeare scratched inspired words.

‘Two households, both alike in dignity, in fair London, where we lay our scene…’ he spoke as he wrote, the story falling into his mind like gold from a cut purse.

Miss P smiled. The yard smelt so much cleaner now. The air was crisp and had a delicious tang of cigar about it. She was ready to leave, but there was still one thing unsettled. She reached into the bag that hung from her elbow and took out a small glass figurine. She put it on the page, right where Will was scribbling. He drew back.

‘What’s this?’

‘I picked it up on some recent travel. You should keep it. It’s just an elephant made from jade. It will make sure you never forget your words again.’

‘Well, gracious kind, and my heart accepts the warmthness of your gift, Madam.’

‘Maybe, in return, I could…?’ Miss P plucked a quill from Shakespeare’s tankard.

‘It is old and worn, but thine with thanks,’ he said, and dipped a superior nib into his ink.

‘By the way,’ Miss P added as she turned to leave. ‘I bought it in Verona.’ She paused for emphasis and stuck the feather in her hat. ‘Fair Verona?’

‘Of course!’ Will was back to his writing. ‘Nobody dies for love in London.’ He started the scene again.

That was the last time Miss P saw him. It was the last time she needed to.

She had been curing writer’s block ever since.


Look out for Chapter Two
Or download the novella here for $0.99

Honestly Index

Number Nine

Yes. I know, I just can’t stop… So, instead of stopping, I have started on the Delamere Files book nine, so far untitled. I am 20,000 words into the first draft, I have an opening inciting incident, I have had a tragedy, and now, I have an assignment for Jack, Baxter and Simeon. We haven’t had much from Simeon since he appeared in ‘A Case of Make Believe.’ We got to know his younger brother, Ronny, a bit more in ‘Holywell Street,’ so I thought we might drag Sim into this story and find out more about him. Exactly what his role will be as he sets off into the wilds of Suffolk with Jack and Bax remains to be seen. We know he’s been on the streets (in more ways than one) and he said he didn’t mind, but I wonder… Will he meet someone in the countryside? Will he grow up a little (he’s now nearly 17), or will he become part of the mystery…?

I have an idea for the climax of this story, but no idea how I am going to reach it. So far, we have a missing lad and a body in a wheat field with no tracks to or from it, strange lights in the sky at night, and… Well, who knows what chapter seven will bring.

This one is currently set to be a real adventure, for me, I mean. No doubt Jack and Co. will have some adventures along the way, and perhaps Baxter will fall for a farmer’s lad and have a fumble in a barn. Time will tell.

Meanwhile, today’s promo for you to click on and explore is this one:

MM Murder/Mystery/Detective/Crime Promo General Fiction / LGBT and Romance / LGBT

This one is right up my street. A mix of male romance and mystery. I have Deviant Desire in this one and Guardians of the Poor.

Book Release and a New Badge

First of all, folks, ‘Holywell Street’ is finally published.

I say ‘finally,’ but I notice that Acts of Faith only came out in March! Holywell Street was one of those that ‘wrote itself’, although, of course, it didn’t. It represents about 400 hours of work over three months, but it’s there, and it’s here:

Holywell Street – Kindle, Paperback and KU

As usual, that’s the Amazon.com link, but you can change the .com to your country if buying the paperback. A New Badge, what’s that all about?

30 Best MM Romance Book Blogs and Websites in 2025

This is one of those things that I never know whether I should take with a pinch of scepticism. Is it good publicity for me, or the start of a barrage of spam? Well, I did one of these before with my Symi Dream blog, and it went well, so I am going for it now. It’s not costing me anything but a little time, and who knows, it may gather me some more readers.

This FeedSpot listing promises to give you “The best MM Romance Book blogs from thousands of blogs on the web and ranked by relevancy, authority, social media followers & freshness.” MM Romance Book Blogs has given me my own page, but if I want to add to my profile, I have to sign up and pay, so I shan’t be doing that. I’ll just share with you this badge, leave you the link, and move on, but feel free to share this post and news around if you feel so inclined.

MM Murder/Mystery/Detective/Crime Promo

And today’s promo push is for MM Murder/Mystery/Detective/Crime Promo. Click over to check out a full set of titles from new and established authors, with all books being on the theme of MM pairings involved in crime and mystery. Guardians of the Poor is in there.

Delamere Book Nine

Yes, I have started on an idea for book nine… I won’t tell you what that is yet, because bit is very much early days, but it will, no doubt, be another twisted tale of strange clues, missing people, and mystery with some emotional elements thrown in. I am thinking something along the lines of fathers and sons, but I am not yet too sure. Meanwhile, let me direct you back to the start of the series, just in case you’ve not caught up with the tale of two Merrits, one Baxter and London in the 1890s.

The Delamere Files

The News From the Desk

The news from the desk today is that I have just received the full cover for ‘Holywell Street’, and the files are with the guys who do the formatting for me. I used to do it myself using Adobe InDesign, but a) I am not a designer, and b) it was a nightmare, and now, c) Other Worlds Ink do a fantastic job for a reasonable fee, which includes as many later edits as necessary. For example, while I was setting out the audiobook version of ‘1892’, I noticed two typos had snuck through. So, I emailed the guys, and they made the changes within minutes. If you need to have your internal files set out (MS, front and back matter, etc.), then you need to check OWI’s author services.

Holywell Street should be available to you in the next few days. You’ll know when it’s there either by a message from Amazon, or here on my blog, or on my Facebook pages. Meanwhile, I have started on book number nine in the series, and I have an idea for the start and the end, the crime and the climax, but, as usual, not much else. So, I shall do what I do best and what I enjoy doing the most, and sit down to tell myself a story. How that story will unfold is yet to be seen… yet to be written.

In the meantime, I have also been working on publicity (because I don’t have anyone to do it for me), and so, I have set myself up in some more shared promos for July and must share the news of those that are running in June. These were also in my newsletter, and the usual plead applies: please click on them and take a gander. It doesn’t cost anything, but it gets me points that allow me to take part in more and bigger promos. The old income’s taken a bit of a hit this month, so the more publicity we can generate for old Jack Merrit and Co., the better. Thanks.

Here are a couple of promos specifically for MM Romance and Pride month.

Pride Romance 2025

General Fiction / LGBT and Romance / LGBT

As June is generally Pride Month around the world, we’re kicking off with a Pride Romance promo that features over 150 titles. There are loads of cute cover models, werewolves, fantasies, topless hunks, and the four Mentor books by yours truly are also listed.

Queer Romance Is Resistance – June 2025

Romance / LGBT

Back in the 80s and 90s, when I went on Pride marches, they were demonstrations. These days, it’s more of a celebration, but we still need to fight for equality and acceptance. Hence, June is also Resistance month. In this promo there are 70+ titles including work from our old friends Elle Keaton and KC Carmine, and Jackson Marsh (me) with The Mentor of Lonemarsh House.

A Tragic Event and Inspiration

Holywell Street

‘Holywell Street’ was inspired by a true and tragic event. If you search out a copy of the Illustrated Police News for Saturday, April 1st, 1893, you will find, on page two, a short article titled, ‘Killed by Laughing Gas.’ The man’s name was Thomas Samuel Minett, and his practice was on Sloane Street (number 97). Part of the report reads, About five o’clock a gentleman called, and receiving no answer to her knock, [the secretary] entered the deceased’s room, and found him half sitting in his chair with his mouth covered with the gas machine.

Those are the opening lines of the author’s notes that come at the end of ‘Hollywell Street’, which I have just got back from proofreading. All that’s left now is for me to have my final read and then arrange for the files to be properly set out and formatted for publication – oh, and to get the full cover back from Andjela. So, not long now.

The part of the article above in italics is what really set my mind to thinking about the mystery – in this case, why did the dentist kill himself? The discovery appears in chapter three of the book, and the mystery starts from there. The story, however, opens a little time in the future because it’s one of those that starts with a scene and then goes back a few days to start again, finally reaching the same scene (from a different point of view) some way into the story. There’s a name for that kind of storytelling, at least, there is in film. I think it’s something like double double-narrative flashback, or similar. I like it, but only use it now and then. I used it in ‘Artful Deception’ the sixth book in the Clearwater series. That starts with an incident at the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square and then jumps back in time to a country estate.

Here, in Holywell Street, the story starts in a bookshop on the street:

Chapter One

The proprietor of number eight, Holywell Street knew exactly what to expect the moment a customer approached his bay window. Stockton Wheeler had been in business long enough to recognise a vagabond or ne’er-do-well on the hunt for some kind of trouble or other. The statuesque, white-haired publisher knew well the twitching mouth of the hopeful sharper, the shifty eyes of the would-be petty thief, and the slanted nose of the youthful palmer. Raggedy boys loitering at the window were invariably criminal, but it was not beyond the bounds of possibility that such a till-taker might take the form of a young woman. However, that had happened on only one occasion in his career.

Promos & Newsletter

While all that is going on, and while I am fixing the final files, look out for my monthly newsletter which is due out tomorrow. I have a few promos to share with you, and they will be linked in the newsletter, and will pop up here during the month and also on my Facebook page and Bluesky page.

Here’s one:

Queer Romance is resistance (Over 70 MM Romance titles)

I’ll leave you with the full cover for Holywell Street, which, in real life, doesn’t move. More news about the release coming soon.

Audible 1892. Visual Holywell Street.

My update this week concerns two things: The Clearwater Tales Vol 1, ‘1892’, and the Delamere Files book eight, Holywell Street.

1892

This short collection of short stories, as told by five Clearwater characters, is now available as an audiobook. As I have explained before, I had to go with the virtual voice option. Although I have been in touch with a talented VO artist who is willing to profit share my Clearwater series, I can’t take him up on the offer because of where I live. At the moment, you can only upload your own recordings to Amazon if you live in certain countries, and Greece is not yet one of them. So, I have used the best of what Amazon have on offer.

Sadly, I can’t change the accents of characters when they speak, and not all the subtle nuances are there, but it’s the best I can do right now. Here’s the link.

Click the pic

Holywell Street Cover

The exciting news here is that I have the cover for Holywell Street, and you will be the first to see it. The MS is with the proofreader, Andjela has the back cover text and will be making the full cover soon, and all being well, we’re looking at publication around the middle of the month, if not before.

So, to be the first to see the cover, click the title that I’ve put after the blurb. And the blurb is this:

Act for all of us.

Respected dentist Harold Eskell writes a list of cryptic references for Jack Merrit to find and then takes his own life.

Now leading the Delamere Agency, Jack is determined to uncover the truth behind Eskell’s final act. Enlisting the help of Baxter and his loyal team, he embarks on an investigation that uncovers shattered lives, unexplained suicides, illicit photography, underground erotica, and blackmail.

It’s all leading him somewhere, but where?

All things are unrelated yet connected, and the only way to do the right thing is for Jack to risk his liberty and fight crime with crime.

Click the pic