"Politically incorrect, hard-hitting sleazy hard-boiled detective"
Contemporary Hard-Boiled Detective / Windy & cold,
fictional location. I never read any Mickey Spillane, but I imagine this is
what they're like. I DID watch Mike Hammer on TV, though,
and the same voice-over was right here in this book! If
this is an example of "sexy" from a manšs point of view,
OK. Sleazy, but I'll buy it. If this, however, is what they
think is a romance, then they really ARE from Mars! We will
assume politely that it is not. That said, if you are looking for a politically-incorrect,
hard-hitting sleazy story with a short, punchy, pithy
writing style, you got it, baby -- in spades! (Cue music:
gritty saxophone wailing out the "Harlem Nocturne" theme
song . . . Cut to opening scene) 47-year old Jay Hughes (yes, yes, same name as the
author . . . no, I am not commenting) has won the lottery
for $30 mil and gets picked up a dame. A young one of 23.
Amy. She loves him, he can't figure out why. And then
there's the baggage. When ex-wife Ruby calls up to say
their daughter Susan is missing, he remembers Susan is
older than Amy! But Susan is a stripper/whore, so who
cares? Well, crap -- he does, so he investigates at the
strip joint she worked at. He meets Raven, a gorgeous black
gal (whose real name is Robin) with mega-tits (well, duh!
there are no flat-chested girls in male fantasies -- get
over it!) who has some info on the daughter. He spends lots
of time with strippers, throwing money around as if it were
Post-It(c) notes. As if it mattered. As if he cared. He finds the girl, buys her back after watching her do a
porn film (!?) and then the ex-wife is kidnapped. He
marries Amy, she gets pregnant. (See? aren't those the
requirements of a romance novel?) Lots of porn sex,
stripper sex. Sexual tension? nothing like we women would
define! Sexy, well yes, since the story is drenched in the
sex trade world of internet porn, strip joints, porn kings,
and prostitution. But donšt be too put off -- I could see
this on HBO! It is a good story! The characters are appropriately one-dimensional, so we
don't get to know them. Enigmatic they all are, except the
hero, who is clueless. Amy always sees to know more than
she lets on, and you get the feeling that she might be in
on some plot to fleece Jay out of his $30 mil from the very
beginning. Is it a con? Can't quite tell. Ever. Suddenly
Amy is buddy-buddy with Raven the stripper, who gave her
husband a blowjob. Hmm. Complex. No one is what they seem. If you saw the movie "The Spanish
Prisoner ", Amy is exactly that girl with the dark hair
that fleeces Steve Martin! No emotion, but something's
going on! And such a guileless demeanor! Who knew? On the whole, I loved this story because it was such a
different tone, such a different voice than the usual
Hallmark acceptability most romances are written with. (No
disrespect -- it's obviously the tone the publishers want!
And it's not a bad tone, not distracting. I suppose that's
the point.) This is that fabulous B-movie tone where women
get to have cleavage, aren't sluts for having even sleazy
sex or even running around naked in front of your dad --
shot in grainy black-and-white. Very original, extremely
fun! Any sexual tension was the sort brought on by the visual of
bump-and-grind naked strippers flashing plastic tits. This
story is not in the least bit sensual. A crass hornyness,
perhaps, but no deep, sensual longings for the touch of his
lips, grazing softly across . . . oh, sorry. There's none
of that.
(Walk off into the foggy, streetlight-lit night. Cue sax.
Cut.) First Kiss - pg 5
First Sex - pg 5
1st I-Love-you - pg 6, devoid of all real emotion (as all
are)
Partners - H/H are the main ones
Sex Acts - oral sex, a porn movie being made, strip club
activity
Body parts - Tits. Ass. Long legs. More tits. Great ones.
Passion - None. Nada. Zippity-Do-Da
Angst - Real Men donšt HAVE "angst", baby.
Mystery - Lots. Tons. Twists and turns. Holy Toledo!
Adventure - I guess it's an adventure . . .
Readability - Great re-creation of a lost style, drenched
in the raw sex of strip joints. Red Pencil Recommendations
I hate mysteries because I hate being lost! Around Chapter
12, I felt as clueless as he professes to be. A little re-
cap of what Jay knew or didn't know would have been nice. Watch Out For Falling Dialogue
All of it fabulous Pulp Fiction! Tightly written period
piece. And you can get your man to read THIS "romance" all
the way through!!
Reviewed by Dana Dietrick
Courtesy Sensual Romance
Posted December 28, 2001
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