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  Die Liebe zweier Brüder (2019)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-02-2025, 07:54 PM - Replies (1)

   



Adam wächst als ältester Sohn mit vier Pflegegeschwistern bei dem angesehenen Landarzt Dan Hanssen und seiner Frau auf. Als sein Ziehvater an einem düsteren, schneereichen Novemberabend ganz unerwartet den vierjährigen Eli mit nach Hause bringt, kümmert er sich sofort aufopferungsvoll um das Kind. Die beiden werden unzertrennlich, doch als die Jahre vergehen und sein Bruder zum Teenager heranreift, erwachen in Adam ganz neue Gefühle. Plötzlich wird es von Tag zu Tag schwerer für ihn, Eli nur wie eines seiner Geschwister zu lieben. Seine verwirrenden Gefühle und zweifelhaften Sehnsüchte quälen ihn immer mehr, ebenso wie die Frage, woher diese rätselhafte Anziehung zwischen ihnen rührt. Spürt sein Bruder sie vielleicht ebenso? Und was hat Dan vor all den Jahren dazu bewogen, den Jungen ohne ein Wort der Erklärung in ihre Familie zu bringen? 


Adam grows up as the eldest son with four foster siblings in the home of the respected country doctor Dan Hanssen and his wife. When his foster father unexpectedly brings home four-year-old Eli on a gloomy, snowy November evening, he immediately devotes himself to caring for the child. The two become inseparable, but as the years pass and his brother matures into a teenager, entirely new feelings awaken in Adam. Suddenly, it becomes harder for him to love Eli as just one of his siblings. His confusing feelings and dubious longings torment him more and more, as does the question of the origin of this mysterious attraction between them. Does his brother perhaps feel it too? And what prompted Dan, all those years ago, to bring the boy into their family without a word of explanation? 


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  Marrying Tom (2002)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-02-2025, 07:46 PM - Replies (1)

   


This was an adventure.

I found the PDF by chance on Anna's Archive, but the images that made it up were insanely large, and it kept crashing AbbyFR. When I did finally persuade the program to spit out an EPUB, it turned out to be by far the worst OCR job I'd ever seen. Fortunately, the PDF allowed me to highlight text, and so I ended up copy/pasting the entire book into Sigil.

The upside is that this is probably the least error-strewn ebook I've ever edited and posted, so maybe that's a method I ought to use all he time!

Happily I enjoyed the book very much. The story is narrated by Danny from the longer perspective of early middle age, and the author succeeds in giving us a rounded portrait of this inteligent and sensitive thirteen-year-old.  He is less successful withTom, however, although that might be because he tries to make the narrator speak from the viewpoint of his younger self with the addition of insights acquired with age and maturity. The young Danny wouldn't have thought about analysing Tom's motivation or thought processes, so there's nothing about those.

There are a couple of massive - and sometimes intrusive - subplots: Danny is a potential champion diver, and Tom has unwisely got involved with a ruthless crowd of gansters, and most of the time he's trying to tap-dance around them. Danny, being in love with Tom, refuses to stay out of these matters with predictable consequences.

No spoilers from me, but it's a well-paced novel with a skilfully-worked climax, and I recommend it to you

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  Peg Boy (2013)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-02-2025, 07:43 PM - Replies (1)

   


Many unorthodox ways of life were allowed during the early days of the California Gold Rush. The demands of the times and a great influx of races forced tolerance. San Francisco became notorious for its lawlessness, its gambling casinos, and its bordellos and madams. The Barbary Coast became a part of California’s history and San Francisco’s heritage. The Barbary Coast was an area near the waterfront that law enforcers found almost impossible to control. Those who operated establishments there, refused to abide by the gradually encroaching law and order being established by the other parts of town. For along the Barbary Coast any vice could be bought.

There also, a little-known vice guarded with great secrecy were the male houses of prostitution. Some of the more clandestine operations offered young boys. Most of these boys had few means of survival other than their wits and bodies. Known as peg-houses, the places provided boys as young as seven and as old as seventeen to those who were able to meet the extraordinary prices. These houses were often operated by unscrupulous and ruthless men who provided the boys with drugs, thereby chaining them by their addictions. These could become hopeless addicts unable to function as anything but subservient slaves to their masters. An international slave trade supplied these houses with boys who were enticed or kidnapped from all over the world. Peg-houses were common in the Orient. The custom was brought to the West by seamen who had grown fond of such pleasures.

Boys were trained to service customers by having their anuses enlarged by wooden peg of gradually increasingly size. They would be offered for selection while sitting on stools that displayed the properly sized peg protruding from the bottom to indicate the size penis that each boy had been trained to accommodate. This is the story of Santiago Cali, one such boy. 


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  The Rider on the Bridge (2022)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-02-2025, 07:40 PM - Replies (1)

   


I sat in the catering hall as my thirteen hour work day dragged on with inactivity. A co-worker from another department entered and I locked eyes with him in my peripheral vision as I buried my mind into the sophomore effort of author Scott Pearce. I was asked “How is it?”, to which I replied “enchanting”, finding no greater word to encapsulate the author’s writing. “What’s it about?” followed suit, and as I tried to summarise the novel in the way one would sell a high-concept film I. characterised it as “Midnight Cowboy meets The Virgin Suicides”.

Always a fan of the Western, Scott Pearce follows his debut postmodern western novel Faded Yellow by the Winter with another postmodern western, which is as unsurprising as it is fulfilling. Echoing the work of James Leo Herilhy’s Midnight Cowboy, Pearce’s novel follows a protagonist named Kitten, so named by a girl he met long ago, who flees a life beyond the end of a train line in pursuit of the Australian dream. Arriving in the inner city suburb of St Kilda, Kitten finds himself in a seemingly illustrious Manor which serves as the refuge for a group of larrikin misfits. Yet what begins as a coming-of-age story about summer nights spent at the pier sharing affordable fish and chips, smoking cannabis and bumping uglies turns jaded by the winter as the dilapidated manor turns reminiscent of the condemned apartment where Ratso Rizzo housed Joe Buck in Midnight Cowboy. Recreational drug use turns into a psychedelic journey through a house of horrors, and the freedom Kitten has found has come at the cost of what little stability he once endured in the unhappy life he has run from. The reader is given little knowledge about Kitten’s origin; like the protagonist of a spaghetti western, his identity is a mystery. And amidst what little we know of him, it is clear to the reader that he is alone in the world and trying to find a way not to be. Something we can all sympathise with. The less we know about him, the more we can identify with him, and Pearce articulately uses this to connect him to the reader on an emotional level. Suffice to say it definitely worked.
Deftly woven into the story is the work of Jeffrey Eugenides on The Virgin Suicides, a text I was privileged enough to study under Pearce in Year 11 literature class. Like the illustrious Lisbon sisters, our characters are never completely understood, enshrined in a mystery yet empowered by Pearce’s captivating ability to gently offer just enough characterisation to keep audiences pining for more. As our young characters enjoy the forages of youth, discovering sexuality and adventure, they steadily begin to learn the harsh realities of an unforgiving world where drug dealing and sex work serve as means for survival. Like Eugenides, Pearce entrances the reader in the mysteries of his characters and what they’ll do next without ever fully revealing it, respecting the reader enough to never give everything away. He keeps the tale unspecific, vague and mysterious. Though a reasonably short novel, Pearce keeps his audiences on a prolonged chase to see if his characters will ever reach the promised land of Byron Bay, and there are definitely times where the chase feels like it can be rather dragged out. But The Rider on the Bridge is not like Trip Fontaine’s pursuit of Lux Lisbon where the catch fails to live up to the chase. Pearce rewards his readers with an emotionally climactic conclusion to the journey which I couldn’t dare spoil for anyone. The chase is kept interesting by Pearce’s articulate skill for world building which makes it easy for even the mind of an ADHD-influenced reader such as myself to visualise everything in detailed form, and the catch is one which requites audiences for sticking around throughout it all. I put The Rider on the Bridge down after finishing it, stunned by the conclusion and shaken like the first time I had first finished reading The Virgin Suicides or when I had first viewed S. Craig Zahgler’s Brawl in Cell Block 99.

The Rider on the Bridge is a powerful journey. Whilst I enjoyed Faded Yellow by The Winter, there was always a feeling that I could tell what ending it was due to arrive at. Pearce went so far against this in his second novel that there was never a moment where I could tell what was going to happen next. His entrancing mystery and delicate world building ensured I remained interested the entire time. But what he didn’t go against was his inherent skill for transforming the Western genre into a relatable piece of contemporary Australian storytelling, one where he makes the familiar suburbs of Melbourne seemingly mythological in the manner of which they host both the wild summer nights and Requiem for a Dream-esq nightmares of the Manor family. His novel is an amalgamation of themes and genres which even finds ways to feel like a frightening drug trip at times.
Pearce previously displayed eloquence, intellect and maturity as a writer on his debut novel. His sophomore effort shows that he has done nothing but continue to grow and improve as a writer in the time between. And amongst the many questions I was left pondering when I put the novel down, the primary one on my mind was “What will his third novel be?” And as I wait to find out, I could say Pearce has left me on a chase of my own for the time being where the catch will inevitably be another great piece

.

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  A Novel (Sep 2025)
Posted by: Frenuyum - 12-02-2025, 07:37 PM - Replies (1)

   


Hailed as “an American epic” (NPR), this captivating story weaves the intimate lives of two midwestern families across generations, from World War II to the late twentieth century.

“I love this book with my entire heart.”—Ann Napolitano, New York Times bestselling author of Hello Beautiful

One town. Two families. A secret that changes everything.
In Bonhomie, Ohio, a stolen moment of passion, sparked in the exuberant aftermath of the Allied victory in Europe, binds Cal Jenkins, a man wounded not in war but by his inability to serve in it, to Margaret Salt, a woman trying to obscure her past. Cal’s wife, Becky, has a spiritual gift: She is a seer who can conjure the dead, helping families connect with those they’ve lost. Margaret’s husband, Felix, is serving on a Navy cargo ship, out of harm’s way—until a telegram suggests that the unthinkable might have happened.
Later, as the country reconstructs in the postwar boom, a secret grows in Bonhomie—but nothing stays buried forever in a small town. Against the backdrop of some of the most transformative decades in modern America, the consequences of that long-ago encounter ripple through the next generation of both families, compelling them to reexamine who they thought they were and what the future might hold.
Sweeping yet intimate, rich with piercing observation and the warmth that comes from profound understanding of the human spirit, Buckeye captures the universal longing for love and for goodness. 

Quote: A sweeping story that starts in the 1920’s through to the 1970’s, in a town in the mid-west of Bonhomie, Ohio. A story of 2 couples whose lives become entangled.

We meet Cal who is symmetrically misaligned with his legs. Because of this, he is rejected from signing up for the war. Betsy, his wife, is a spiritual healer. She conducts seances to reach the dead to provide closure for her clients. But Cal doesn’t believe what she does is real and hence, a distance grows between them.
Then there is Margaret, who we meet, as a young baby orphaned by her birth mother. Felix, her spouse, is gay but he’s attempted to keep that life separate from theirs until he returns from the war and realizes how difficult the duality has become.

Two boys from each family develop a kindred spirit and become close friends. They become the glue that cements these families together.
Secrets and regrets the cornerstones to each of these characters.

Homosexuality; infidelity; identity; abandonment; grief; ultimately, forgiveness.
And time. A luxury we think we all have. Sometimes it seems to stretch out eternally; and at other times, its end is abrupt.

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