Arcade
A Novel
-
- $10.99
-
- $10.99
Publisher Description
An unnamed man, in the wake of a breakup, begins frequenting a peepshow arcade where closeted men meet for anonymous sex. The arcade is a strange world, one where questions of power, race, and class collide with unhinged sexual desire, with fetishes, fantasies, and even occasionally love.
The protagonist explores this curious new place, where many of society's rules are thrown out and replaced with a very specific code of conduct. After being driven to the arcade by a break-up and subsequent obsession with a cop who left him due to his fear of coming out, he compulsively returns, neurotically cataloguing the sights and sounds of the arcade, its overwhelming sleaziness, its safety and dangers.
As his adventures both within the arcade and beyond continue to escalate, he must eventually confront whether his time at the arcade is just the passing phase that his small town Texas family insists it is, or perhaps, the gateway to a new way of life.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The debut novel by Smith is the incredibly detailed yet meandering story of an unnamed narrator who occasionally goes by Sam with the men he meets for sex and his indoctrination into the gay cruising culture of a triple-X arcade outside the small present-day Texas town where he lives. Sam harbors intense same-sex desires but is ignorant about and generally dismissive of gay culture as a whole. He becomes addicted to the instant gratification of anonymous sex at the arcade while also continuing to stalk a former lover who spurned him in favor of a more conventional relationship that Sam wasn't at the time willing to offer. While deeply and believably entrenched in the inner life of a closeted man whose circumstances don't allow for a more open relationship with his sexuality, the novel's persistent aimlessness distracts from its occasional beauty. A moving final chapter celebrates cruising places not as scenes of perversion but as sites free of judgment where men with identity struggles can truly be themselves. Though multiple scenes are repeated with little variation (phone calls discussing the exact same things, sex acts in booths, etc.), this is a sharply observed and sometimes witty novel.