Pansy Park Series

by Annie Moon

The Pansy Park LGBTQ+ book series takes place in a fictitious urban neighborhood in Santa Ana, California. The stories center on six people who call each other their chosen family. They are in various stages of life, the youngest being Cicero, a cute Latino twink and the oldest being Giovanna, known better as Gio, the matriarch of the group but who still gets turned on by bad karaoke and kinky sex. One by one they’ve gravitated to the Pansy Park apartments, a safe haven where the landlord attests, “the broken come to find their truth and a home.”

The stories include a variety of tropes and lifestyles, including BDSM, age-gap, enemies to lovers, second chance at love, hurt/comfort and first time gay. Each book can be read as a standalone and contains a guaranteed happily ever after!

Late in Love

Pansy Park, Book One

In Late in Love, the first book of this new series, the reader will meet Giovanna Rossi, one of the “broken” people who moved from the east coast to Pansy Park for a fresh start. She is the new proprietor of a bookstore with a rich history within the gay community dating back to the 1980’s, which she’d restored but was now on the verge of losing. Isidore Martin, a once famous author returns to her old neighborhood after twenty-five years looking to retrieve the inner magic that produced an award winning bestseller and nothing since. Can two stubborn women who loathe each other at first sight see beyond past betrayals and heartbreaks and find a way forward together with their dreams intact?

Late in Love can be read as a standalone and contains a guaranteed HEA.

 

Daddy in Love

Pansy Park, Book Two

Tony Caruso retired from the military after twenty years as a Lieutenant Colonel commanding Green Beret special forces. He’s not looking for love. He’d loved once and lost it and never wants to experience the heartbreak again. He’s happy with his life, surrounded by friends he considers family. He doesn’t need anyone else, especially a man who is afraid to come out of the closet—he’d put up with enough prejudice in the military. That is, until he’s forced into seclusion with Nico Boros, the councilman who saved Pansy Park from corruption—the man he might be willing to break his own rules.

Can Tony save Nico from the killers in pursuit? Even if he does, he has a hard limit on how long he’s willing to stay in a secret relationship. Can Nico find the courage to accept his sexuality and make a future with Tony before his time is up?