Archive for April, 2010


Almost Like Being in Love by Steve Kluger

April 14th, 2010 by Kassa / 1,396 views

Title: Almost Like Being in Love
Author: Steve Kluger
Publisher: Harper Collins
Length: Novel / 370 pages
Buy the bookAmazon

Blurb:

A high school jock and nerd fall in love senior year, only to part after an amazing summer of discovery to attend their respective colleges. They keep in touch at first, but then slowly drift apart.

Flash forward twenty years.

Travis and Craig both have great lives, careers, and loves. But something is missing …. Travis is the first to figure it out. He’s still in love with Craig, and come what may, he’s going after the boy who captured his heart, even if it means forsaking his job, making a fool of himself, and entering the great unknown. Told in narrative, letters, checklists, and more, this is the must-read novel for anyone who’s wondered what ever happened to that first great love.

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Posted in 5 stars, Fiction, Gay, Reviews | 12 Comments »

Tangled Web by Lee Rowan

April 13th, 2010 by Kassa / 673 views

Title: Tangled Web
Author: Lee Rowan
Publisher: Running Press
Length: Novel / 260 pages
Buy the book: Paperback, Ebook

Blurb:

Regency London…

Brendan Townsend is a young man who is very loyal to his friends. So when Tony—his best friend, occasional lover, and a complete screw-up—comes to him in trouble, Brendan is determined to help. Tony is being blackmailed by the owner of a “molly house”, the private club that Tony—and other like-minded gentlemen—frequent in order to indulge their entertainment needs.

Brendan is disappointed in his friend, but goes to seek the help of his older brother’s military commander. Philip Carlisle is a gentleman to Society, and also a man Brendan’s brother trusted completely and told his younger brother to seek out if he ever was in trouble. Philip is a 40-year-old widower, and finds himself charmed, for the first time, by an attractive young man. Brendan is likewise besotted with hero-worship, especially when Philip turns the tables on the blackmailer and saves the day for many of Society’s closeted sons.

What follows is a tale of desire, regrets, cross-country pursuit, hidden identities, lovers torn asunder then reunited, clever cover stories, and the requisite pistols at dawn.

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Posted in 4 stars, Erotica, Fiction, Gay, Historical, Reviews | 2 Comments »

Second Nature by Jae

April 9th, 2010 by Oddmonster / 1,758 views

Title: Second Nature
Author: Jae
Publisher: L-Book ePublisher
Buy the Book: Publisher

Blurb:

Novelist Jorie Price doesn’t believe in the existence of shape-shifting creatures or true love. She leads a solitary life, and the paranormal romances she writes are pure fiction for her.

Griffin Westmore knows better — at least about one of these two things. She doesn’t believe in love either, but she’s one of the not-so-fictional shape-shifters. She’s also a Saru — an elite soldier, investigator, and if need be an assassin with the mission to protect the shape-shifters’ secret existence at any cost.

When Jorie gets too close to the truth in her latest shape-shifter romance, Griffin is sent to investigate — and if necessary to destroy the manuscript before it’s published and to kill the writer.

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Posted in 3.5 stars, Erotica, Lesbian, Reviews, Romance | 1 Comment »

Celebrating GLBT Literature – Part Two

April 9th, 2010 by Kassa / 1,271 views

We’ll be continuing our series of celebrating the GLBT genre on Friday posts until all of the wonderful submissions we’ve gotten are shared. Some weeks we’ll offer more than one answer.  This series has sparked a lot of interest and some great discussion already. Last week reader Tam offered insight into m/m romance and this week we have an author to share their thoughts in the dual role of reader and writer in this genre.

What do you love about GLBT literature?

Well, I AM GLBT.  Ahaha, and yeah, I’m pretty much all the letters in that acronym.  It’s a long explanation.  At any rate, it’s my family, my home.  It’s the same thing I love about reading a story set in a town I’ve lived in—the little cues of familiarity, the feeling of being more connected with the story because you know what they’re talking about.  I love when there’s a book that really connects to that experience, that minimizes the exotic, eroticized freak show aspect in favor of not only depth of character but depth of experience.  Being gay isn’t all pride parades and dodging haters with baseball bats (although where I’m from, there’s plenty of that too), so I’m always extra happy when there’s an author who takes the time to really get inside the nuances of what it’s like.  I tend to gush about them when it happens.

What would you like to see more of?

Unfortunately, somehow “GLBT literature” is seemingly becoming synonymous with (primarily m/m) “romance,” and I feel like there’s a lot more that could be written about the experience of being GLBT without involving romance as the central plot device, as much as I enjoy the romance novels.  So I would like to see more books—even within the romance genre, but particularly in more varied genres—exploring more parts of being gay than just, you know, sex.  Authors who identify as GLBT themselves tend to do this more than authors who don’t (obviously, since they understand the experience more intimately by having lived it), but I have faith that straight authors can be nuanced in their exploration of the GLBT identity as well.

Between the Lines - Transgender Comic

Also, I would really love to see more focus on Transgender characters.  That is the part of my identity that I feel most strongly about, and the T’s often get thrown under the bus in relation to the gay rights movement.  It makes me so incredibly happy when there are Transgender characters in a book, especially when they’re the main character.  I know it gets confusing for people who are into m/m for the “two guys together is hot” thing, trying to figure out if it counts as a “real guy” or not (which… please don’t say that aloud to anyone transgender. Please), but there is already plenty of cisgendered m/m out there for those folks.

IN ADDITION, I would love to see more characters of color.  I hear white authors talk about how they don’t know enough about what it’s like to be a person of color to write these characters, but I remind them: Many of them are straight women writing gay men.  And while they do have the whole “part of the anatomy I like to have sex with” thing in common, they don’t know what it’s like to be a gay man any more than they know what it’s like to be a person of color.  A little research will help out just fine.  Also, I’d like for some of the characters of color to be in relationships with other characters of color, not always the white/of-color interracial pairing.  I could go into a long explanation of why, but then I’d have to charge you for the sociology courses I’ve taken. ;)   The short version is this: There is a sad pattern of racism within the gay community that views a white partner as “the most desirable” partner, and I’d like to see some of our fiction start setting that right.

And other additions: People who aren’t gorgeous, people who aren’t necessarily young, people who are in the working class or poor (without being reduced to a fetish), people who have physical, mental, and emotional disabilities…

So I guess basically, “More diversity.”  I’d like fiction that explores the full experience of being GLBT and fitting into more than one category, and that does it with respect and attention to detail.

M. Jules Aedin @
http://www.twitter.com/mjaedin – on Twitter
http://mjules.net –  website
http://mjaedin.livejournal.com -  professional blog


We got back several responses and some we’re still waiting on. However we didn’t have email addresses for everyone so if you’d like to participate – which we’d love to be able to share different opinions from all kinds of readers, including authors who are readers too – please feel free to write up your own answers and contact us at threedollarbillreviews@gmail.com.

Posted in Ramblings | 9 Comments »

Not Quite the Same by Sheila Morris

April 8th, 2010 by Emily / 1,703 views

Title: Not Quite the Same
Author: Sheila Morris
Publisher: Red Letter Press
Length:: Novel / 179 pages
Buy the bookAmazon

Blurb:

GCLS Literary Awards winner Sheila Morris continues her engaging stories as she leaves her Texas home breaking free from the ties of her childhood. Her travels take her from Seattle to South Carolina, and from youthful longings to grownup passions. Along the way, she unearths and understands herself, but rarely the women she loves.

From no-holds-barred workplace discrimination against women in the 60s to the deliberate deception of corporate America against lesbians in the 21st century, she survives and tells the stories that need to be told. She speaks honestly, but with humor that spices the narrative.

Finally, she hears the voices of her past calling her home again in her memories. They remind us all that we never really leave home or the people we love.

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Posted in 3.5 stars, Lesbian, Memoirs, Non-Fiction, Reviews | No Comments »

Give and Take by Anne Brooke

April 8th, 2010 by Kassa / 964 views

Title: Give and Take
Author: Anne Brooke
Publisher: Amber Quill Press
Length: Short / 7k words
Buy the bookPublisher

Blurb:

David has spent two years grieving for the loss of his partner to cancer. When he decides to move on, he visits a gay bar for the sole purpose of hooking up with someone—in spite of his concerns that as he’s in his mid-forties, he might be too old. There he meets Jeff, a young barman, and after dancing and making out with other men, he realizes that Jeff is in fact the one he wants to take home most of all.

During his explosive evening with Jeff, David discovers a side of himself that he never knew existed. But, when the morning comes, can he persuade Jeff that their relationship may develop into more than a simple one-night stand?

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Posted in 3.5 stars, Erotica, Fiction, Gay, Reviews | 5 Comments »

Wonder Bread and Ecstasy: The Life and Death of Joey Stefano by Charles Isherwood

April 7th, 2010 by Oddmonster / 1,745 views

Title: Wonder Bread and Ecstasy: The Life and Death of Joey Stefano
Author: Charles Isherwood
Publisher: Alyson Books
Buy this Book: Publisher

Blurb:

At the top of the gay porn industry, Joey Stefano’s death in 1994 from a drug overdose, at the age of 26, revealed the truth behind the burnished image. Stefano had struggled with substance abuse since his teens, and the fame and financial rewards of his career couldn’t keep at bay the demons that caused his ultimate self-destruction.

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Posted in 3 stars, Biography, Gay, Non-Fiction, Reviews | 1 Comment »

Queeroes by Steven Bereznai

April 6th, 2010 by Kassa / 923 views

Title: Queeroes
Author: Steven Bereznai
Publisher: Lethe Press
Length: Novel/ 250 pages
Buy the bookAmazon

Blurb:

When strange powers emerge in a group of gay teens in the town of Nuffim, their lives are forever changed. Troy is a closeted jock who starts to sense other people’s emotions. His geeky brother, Gibbie, develops super strength. Flamboyant Chad unleashes his inner animal, while his gal pal Mandy turns invisible.

”I can totally use my power to psych out my competition,” says Troy. ”My night vision will make cruising guys super easy,” exclaims Chad. ”I am so going to eavesdrop on people’s conversations,” exclaims Mandy. ”Uh, I was thinking we’d make the world a better place,” offers Gibbie. They get the chance when their schoolmates Devon and Liza use their own unique abilities to remake the student body in a darker image.

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Posted in 3.5 stars, Fiction, Gay, Reviews, Young Adult | 7 Comments »

Mr. Benson by John Preston

April 4th, 2010 by Kassa / 1,134 views

Title: Mr. Benson
Author: John Preston
Publisher: Cleis Press
Length: Novel / 200 pages
Buy the bookAmazon , Publisher

Blurb:

A classic of modern gay S/M fiction, Mr. Benson is the compelling story of a young man’s quest for the perfect master. In a West Village leather bar, he finds wealthy, sophisticated, exacting Aristotle Benson, who leads him down the path of erotic enlightenment, teaching him to accept cruelty as love, anguish as affection, and ultimately, Mr. Benson as his master.

If John Preston, the masterly, handsome author of more than 30 books, was himself a gay icon, his character Mr. Benson defined the culture of gay sex for an entire generation. When Mr. Benson first appeared in the pre-AIDS early 1980s, its unabashed celebration of male sexuality made it a cult favorite among gay men, many of whom wore T-shirts declaring that they were “looking for Mr. Benson.” The novel’s fresh voice and insights into identity, desire, power, and love influenced a generation of writers and editors, including Anne Rice, Samuel Delany, Michael Lowenthal, Laura Antoniou, and Joan Nestle.

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Posted in 4.5 stars, Erotica, Fiction, Gay, Reviews | 4 Comments »

The Hit List by Anne Brooke

April 4th, 2010 by Kassa / 866 views

Title: The Hit List
Author: Anne Brooke
Publisher: Amber Quill Press
Length: Novel / 390 pages
Buy the book
Publisher

Blurb:
Jamie Chadwick is straight. Determinedly straight. Or so he keeps telling himself. His small conference business is doing okay and, even though he looks after his ailing father, he loves living in the countryside and life is good. Sort of. But the arrival of old college friend, David Fenchurch, who’s just come out on the distinctly camp side of camp, together with Lucy Reid, his father’s sexy new physiotherapist, sets Jamie on a path he’d never dreamed of taking.

On top of all that, the unexpected return of long-lost family friend, Robert Trevelyan, himself openly gay, means that Jamie can no longer ignore the past he’s kept hidden for six years. When Robert and David get together, Jamie’s feelings begin to surface in surprising ways.

Who, amongst the crowd of people set to blow his life apart, will make it onto his fantasy hit list? And in the midst of Jamie’s own emotional battlefield, how can he keep things together at all?

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Posted in 3.5 stars, Erotica, Fiction, Gay, Reviews | 4 Comments »