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Archive for the ‘Book Reviews’ Category

Review / OUT BEELZEBUB!

Out Beelzebub!Out Beelzebub! by Johnathan Wilber

Johnathan Wilber’s Out Beelzebub! is an absurd and funny take on obsession, gay weddings, cults, postmodern parenting, entrepreneurship, and tiny dogs. As you can see, there’s a lot going on in this book, but it’s a joyride as Wilber successfully maintains the reader’s focus by keeping a tight grip on the plotline at any given moment.

The main character, Damien-Victor Kunh-Keesey, suffers from a kind of celebrity worship syndrome tinged with petty jealousy and explicitly homicidal tendencies. He lives in a hostile world and much of the hostility is of his own making, yet there is a naive openness and strange likeability to the character that generates sympathy and keeps the reader turning the pages.

Out Beelzebub! is recommended reading for anyone looking for witty prose and an entertaining storyline that moves from a bookstore riot to finding true love through incarceration to accessorized celebrity Chihuahuas.

Available on amazon.com for the Kindle by clicking here,

Review / ON WINGS OF AFFECTION

My review of George Snyder’s On Wings of Affection has been published online by Lambda Literary.  You can read it below, or on the Lambda Literary site by clicking here.

George Snyder’s On Wings of Affection (Lulu) is a likeable romp through a witty and serendipitous West Hollywood complete with a murder mystery, a full-scale disaster and, oh yeah, a lopsided lust triangle.

The lust triangle encompasses narrator Sam Finch (gay habitué of several WeHo gyms and Coffee Beans), poor little rich girl Agnes aka Pam Uccello, (whom Sam is secretly being paid to keep tabs on), and Didier Rossignol  (kept companion of the universally loathed ‘decorator to the stars’).  Sam learned at a young age about the rigors of life by hanging around rural Ohio truck stops before becoming acquainted with the privileged classes as a teacher at an upper-crust Manhattan girls’ school.  He now gets to pass judgment on the work of others from the comfort of convenient WeHo coffee venues as a script reader for movie producers whom he’s dated or worked for, “which is almost the same thing.”  The youngest and wisest member of the cast, Pam is a “little blonde pixie” and former student of Sam’s who is estranged from both parents and living with her fabulously wealthy grandmother.  Sam is semi-secretly accepting money and nice brunches from Pam’s mother to report on the girl’s activities.  Didier is fatuous, gorgeous, and bisexual—an especially potent blend of qualities for attracting attention in WeHo society.  He’s living with the aforementioned loathed decorator, but is the ex-lover of Pam’s father, an Italian count.  Didier and Pam have been disaffected since an incident involving Pam’s father’s yacht in St. Tropez, Didier and a popular actress, and the actress’ jealous Russian oligarch boyfriend and his “posse of well-armed comrades”.  Sam has a huge man-crush on Didier and a fascination with Pam’s lifestyle, Pam has a hate-crush on Didier and feigns disdain for Sam, and, well, Didier humps everybody in sight (except Sam) like a friendly, horny puppy.

Okay, so—spoiler alert—the loathed decorator is killed, prime suspect Didier goes on the lam, Sam becomes a suspect, there’s the aforementioned full-scale disaster, and then ultimately it’s a case of ‘all’s well that ends well’.  The plot is convoluted and strains credibility, but it is a lot of fun once the action starts.  Verisimilitude is clearly not the author’s goal, nor should it be the reader’s.

The writing style complements the farcical plot.  The style, reminiscent of H. H. Munro’s, drips sarcasm and a particularly non-heterosexual kind of insolent wit consistent with the personality of narrator Sam.  For example, brunch-goers at a WeHo bistro are “a host of bachelor designers and their overnight acquaintances” and a porn producer’s ranch house looks as if “the Manson family had taken over Liberace’s dressing room.”

Anyone looking for Pride and Prejudice should consider a different book. On Wings of Affection is, however, a recommended read for anyone wanting to spruce up the darkening days of autumn with the spirit of some summer-like exuberance.

Review / BLIND: A MEMOIR

Blind: A MemoirBlind: A Memoir by Belo Miguel Cipriani

Belo Cipriani’s account of the violence that led to his blindness, and of the strength and friendship that ultimately led to his recovery, is an inspiration to anyone facing unexpected adversity.

While a lesser talent could have resorted to overwrought prose, Cipriani writes in a crisp, straightforward style that engages the reader and draws us into his world. The episodic structure and anecdotal tone present snapshots in time that are sometimes painful, sometimes bittersweet, and sometimes, unexpectedly, laugh-out-loud funny. In the process of describing his journey of recovery, Cipriani presents the everyday experiences of life, like bus rides and nights out, from a perspective that most of us have simply never had to consider. That alone makes this book a “must read”.

Ultimately, Cipriani’s story is about the victory of hope and optimism over hatred and despair, and about the power of the human spirit.

Available in paperback or Kindle edition from amazon.com.