From the author of Bob the Book -- a funny, fast-paced, touching tale of love, laughter, family of choice and fabulousness!
Wouldn’t it be great if a porn character stepped out of the TV, into your life? Well, be careful what you wish for, because that’s how Calvin and Peachy end up looking after Joey. And teaching him everything he needs to know to be be a gay man in New York City. The big test? A fabulous party on Fire Island. But first, they have to get invited. This will involve a rogues’ gallery of gay Manhattanites, including portly, perspiring publicist Bunce van den Troell; theatrical investor Sir Desmond Norma; priapic publisher Stuart Bergman; and lubricant king Fred Pflester. Tender, witty and utterly deranged, Looking After Joey will make you wish that you, too, had a porn character at your kitchen table asking, “So, when can I have sex?”
"Read Looking After Joey with the expectation of laughing throughout, but there’s more to it than that. The social commentary is razor sharp, and the ultimate destination is surprisingly moving." - 'Nathan Burgoine, Out in Print
David Pratt is the author of
the Lambda Award-winning novel Bob the Book (Chelsea Station Editions) and a
new novel, Looking After Joey, from Wilde City Press. His short stories have
been collected in My Movie, also from Chelsea Station. He has published in
several periodicals and anthologies. He has presented work for the theater in
New York at HERE, Dixon Place, the Cornelia Street Cafe, the Flea Theater and
the NY International Fringe Festival.
And now, a special sneak peak at the story behind the story from author David Pratt...
First of all, I’d like to thank Tammy very much for having
me as a guest today. M/M romance bloggers have offered my new novel, Looking After Joey, a home all over the Internet, and I am very
grateful!
Nate Klarfeld of the radio program Stonewall Live! recently interviewed
me about Joey. He asked me if
Joey—the porn character who pops out of the TV into the life of a New York City
accountant—is my own fantasy. I said yes, he is. But not as a lover. (Already got
one, and a very nice one, too!) But as a son.
I have had paternal fantasies all my life. In the beginning
I did not know that’s what they were. In junior high I had a friend a bit behind
in his development, stepping into the shower little and pink but with a toughness and a
sweetness, too. A few years later, in high school, he shot up in a matter of weeks.
I remember this in the boys’ locker room: suddenly he was making some joke that
involved pulling his underpants up so his now-mature package showed in distinct
outline. He was laughing, and I thought, I
am so proud of you. Funny to be proud of someone for something nature would
do anyway. I just thought how long he put up with being little and pink and called
Shorty; now here was a joyous young man, showing off—with, I promise, no conscious
intent of seducing me—his suddenly grown-up cock and balls. A moment so knowing
yet so innocent. I did not know that what I felt was paternal. I just knew I
couldn’t say it. In fact, I pretended I didn’t get the joke and was irritated.
Best defense.
{"David reads from Looking After Joey at NYC"s Bureau of General Services Queer Division."}
Around the same time I had a friend from another city. He
was accomplished at sports and beginning to be experienced with girls. I was
the artist and intellectual, though, analyzing movies we saw, scripting our own
movies for us to shoot with my Super-8 camera. (See “Another Country” from my
story collection, My Movie.) I knew
he had fun with me, but I thought he had so much more than I had, I could not
possibly be of real value in his universe. He was “safe,” because his religious
beliefs kept him from having sex before marriage, but he had the right kind of
desire, so a split was inevitable. He didn’t want to hear about certain
“feelings” I had—though I kept myself from feeling them for him. He began to
take his faith more seriously. He was afraid I’d go to hell. I took the
Huckleberry Finn route: “All right then,
I’ll go to hell!” Not in defense of any Jim, but in defense of what I still
wouldn’t openly declare myself to be. I guess I knew it was coming, though, and
I guess I knew this boyhood friend, whom I had sort of fathered in intellectual
and artistic matters, was going. I have only seen him three times since. The
last at my mother’s funeral.
In college there were several men I naively thought I might
father. My impulse was mixed eroticism of course. I did not yet understand that
my own love and desire could not make someone…”soft” that way. There were,
especially then, two orientations, and never the twain did meet. Now we have
guys who call themselves “mostly straight.” I wonder how much as changed for
lonely boys looking, well, not just to father but be fathered. My RA freshman
year was just the sweetest man imaginable. But I couldn’t talk to him about…you
know. No. Maybe the same thing applied to that RA that applied to another
college friend who told me, years later, “You could have told me. But I totally
understand why you didn’t.”
I never became a real father. Of all the reasons I could
give, the one that accounts best most for my not having a child, is that
writers are selfish. Dickens liked to write spang in the middle of the parlor,
with Heavens-knows-how-many kids swirling around him. Most of us can not do
that. We resent intrusion because we are managing to steal a few precious
moments because we also have jobs because we are not Dickens. We are making children
on the page. My characters are my kids, and they are teaching me about life. I
have learned a lot writing about Looking
After Joey on this blog tour. A lot about the book and a lot about myself.
I wish the outer self would cooperate with the inner. The inner has all sorts
of lovely ideas about family, love and loyalty. The outer is still squirrely
and angry and would prefer not to be “outer” at all. I still have so much more
to write. I could spend ten or twelve hours a day doing it, if the body would
cooperate. I have so many ideas, so many ways of looking at the world left.
“It’s not dark yet,” as Bob Dylan sings, “but it’s getting there.”
Again, thanks to Tammy. Be sure to enter for the ebook
giveaway, and if you don’t win, consider picking Joey up from your favorite
evil corporate Web site or, if you are lucky enough to have one nearby, gay
bookstore. Those stores have some generous and persistent dads, holding the
fort in Boston, London, Milwaukee, Toronto, Atlanta, New Orleans, Ann Arbor,
Vienna, Paris, New York and many other places. It’s a bit quixotic being a dad
to a bunch of books—a bunch of gay books. (See my first novel, Bob the Book.) But then, no kind of love
ever quite makes complete sense, does it?
A huge thank you to David for stopping by and sharing this story about Looking After Joey with us today, please be sure to enter the giveaway at the end of this post. And for more books by Pratt..
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Thanks for all of the amazing interviews, reviews, and giveaways you do!
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