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Book Title: Leaving Winter for a Desert Sky
Author and Publisher: Skylar Lyralen Kaye
Cover Artist: 100 Covers
Release Date: January 2, 2025
Third person/Past tense/Single POV
Genres: Literary Queer Fiction
Tropes: Recovery, family dysfunction, queer friendships
Themes: Mother/daughter, homecoming, recovery
Length: 68 000 words/234 pages
Heat Rating: 3 flames
It is a standalone book and does not end on a cliffhanger.
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A reluctant prodigal queer daughter returns to her dysfunctional alcoholic family and struggles to climb out of her familiar role of savior.
Blurb
Erin has spent the last six years abroad, teaching English in Spain, France, Japan. Now, sheβs back home in Maine for Christmas, for the first time in years. Her abusive father, Thomas, made it clear that Erin, a lesbian, was not welcome in the house, but her mother, Janet, recently ended the marriage, then invited Erin to come home for the holiday. βJust us three girls,β says Janet, including Erinβs younger sister, sixth grader Bethβthough Thomas tends to show up at night drunk and sit in his car in front of the house. Erin bickers with Janet even as she helps her mother get on her feetβsetting her up a bank account, making her a resume to apply for jobsβbut when it becomes clear her father is trying to reconcile, Erinβwho isnβt ready to forgiveβleaves for Mexico. She takes a bus to Arizona, where her drinking and her guilt over abandoning Beth get the better of her. She stops in Tucson to attend some Alcoholics Anonymous meetings. With the help of her no-nonsense sponsor, Maggie, Erin attempts to make sense of her life up to this point, beginning with the tumult of her parentsβ marriage. As Janet plans to come down to Tucson to visit her, Erin must consider the possibility that she didnβt have one abusive parent, but two. Kaye captures Erinβs complex emotional journey with elegant, salt-of-the-earth economy. βThey have a saying about people who keep running away,β Janet tells Erin at one point. βThings catch up with you sooner or later.β While many aspects of Erinβs situation and her reactions to itβsubstance abuse, sabotaged love, solo travel, motorcyclesβmay strike the reader as slightly predictable, Kaye fashions her in such a way that she feels like an individual rather than a cliche. Itβs a breezy read despite the dark subject matter, and the reader quickly gets swept up in Erinβs redemptive saga.
KIRKUS REVIEWS
Our verdict: Get it!
A raw, emotional novel of recovery and familial reckoning.
A reluctant prodigal daughter returns to her dysfunctional family in Kayeβs debut literary novel.
Itβs a breezy read despite the dark subject matter, and the reader quickly gets swept up in Erinβs redemptive saga.
MELIZA BANALES, Lambda Award Finalist
Skylar Lyralen Kayeβs βLeaving Winter for a Desert Skyβ is a striking and rebellious coming of age story. With every pit stop, AA meeting, and second chance Kayeβs raw portrayal of Erinβa complex survivor turned adventurerβ offers a snapshot of a young Queer finding her way through trauma and leaving room for hope, even in the most unexpected places.
TINA DβELIA, Award-winning poet and Solo Performer
Riveting and timely! In Leaving Winter for a Desert Sky Erin, a young world traveler returns home, where ghosts, family, and unexpected arrivals challenge her in ways to which any reader can relate. Erin travels through loversβ beds, desert skies, and looming memories in this novel of relationship cliffhangers.
Excerpt
Erin stood in the school hallway, shaken out of the six years of her life in Spain, France, and Japan by her motherβs voice. She could feel the moment like a snapshot, a stilled image before everything shifted away from her toward an end she couldnβt see. Until now, Erin had told herself it was easy to endure her motherβs hostility on her yearly visits, easy to stay with friends and sneak to see her sister, and easy, always, to leap again onto the wide sweep of road sheβd taken to get away from home. In the beginning of December, the secretary at the language institute in Madrid where Erin taught English had come into an empty classroom and handed her a message. She stood dumbfounded at first, blonde eyelashes shading her pale blue eyes, almost too shocked to recognize her motherβs name. She had looked at the secretaryβs dark skin, into her darker eyes, before turning to the classroom window. Fumes from the cars blew up from the street; the gray Madrid sky shifted so a brief glimpse of light slipped through as if by mistake. She opened the note. It said to call whenever she could. Now.
The secretary waited. Erin extended her lower lip and exhaled, blowing up the bangs that hung over her forehead. She spoke in her native American. βShit,β she said. βWhat does she want?β She stuffed the note in the pocket of her Oxford shirt and spun so fast her long red gold braid flew over her shoulder with a soft thud.Halfway out the door she stopped and turned around. The white blue of her attention washed over the secretary, bathed her and held her up as Erin smiled an apology, her face changing from bone-hard to a gentle mirth, as if she and the
shared a secret, as if they were the only people in the world. The secretary had smiled back. People usually did.
Erin walked around with the message in the pockets of different shirts for almost a week. Sheβd didnβt want to zoom on her iPad; her mother didnβt know she had one. Sheβd dumped her last burnerβtoo many women calling after one-night standsβso she could truthfully email her mother and say she didnβt have a phone and didnβt plan to get one. After all, she didnβt plan. She usually just procrastinated for a week or two between burners. Sheβd avoided her motherβs calls as she did those of the stalker women. The sound of her motherβs voice sent stitches of cold threading through her stomach. She didnβt want to call back.

About the Author
Skylar Lyralen Kaye, fae/they is a queer social justice and award-winning writer as well as a lifelong activist. They have a BA in English from the University of Arizona and an MFA in Theater from Sarah Lawrence College. They were nominated for a Pushcart Prize in Fiction in 1997 and were a finalist for the 2005 Massachusetts Cultural Council of the Arts Awards in Playwriting. They have published in literary journals such as Calyx, Persona, Phoebe, Girlfriends, Happy Magazine and the anthology Out of the Ordinary, Children of LGT Parents as well as winning the Boston Amazon Poetry slam finals and performing on the slam team. Their foray into filmmaking brought awards that include the 2021 NE Film Star Award as well as 12 film festival awards for the web series Assigned Female at Birth. In theater, they won 2018 Best in Fringe at the San Francisco Fringe for the one person show My Preferred Pronoun Is We, in 2017 the Moth Story Slam and 2018 the Boston Story Slam. Some other awards include: the 2015 Meryl Streep Writers Lab for Screenwriters and the 2002 Stanley and Eleanor Lipkin Prize in Playwriting. Kayeβs memoir, Bachelorx, will be released in 2026 For a complete list of awards and credits please visit https://lyralenkaye.com/
Author Links
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