Where the Boys Are
A Novel
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- $8.99
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- $8.99
Publisher Description
Jeff O’Brien and his friends return in this sequel to The Men from the Boys, William J. Mann’s critically acclaimed debut novel about gay love and friendship.
Where the Boys Are opens in Manhattan on New Year’s Eve, 1999. With the world on the cusp of the new millennium, Jeff O’Brien and his ex-lover Lloyd Griffith are grieving the loss of their friend and mentor David Javitz to AIDS. Desperate to forget, Jeff has become a fixture on the dance floor, surrounding himself with ever-younger boy toys like Henry Weiner. Henry, who was an insurance-company geek until Jeff transformed him into a hottie with washboard abs, is secretly in love with Jeff, who’s got a thing for the mysterious and exotic Anthony Sabe. Lloyd, once the love of Jeff’s life, has left his job to run a B&B with widow Eva Horner.
Alternately narrated by Jeff, Lloyd, and Henry, Where the Boys Are is a high-octane trek through the gay party-circuit scene from Provincetown to San Francisco, Montreal to Palm Springs. With equal parts humor and pathos, it addresses universal issues of commitment, family, friendship, and the never-ending search for love that everyone can relate to, whether gay or straight, male or female.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Mann continues to chart the lives, lusts and losses of Jeff O'Brien and Lloyd Griffith, who first appeared in his 1997 novel, The Men from the Boys. This lively sequel finds them estranged after six years together, yet considering a reconciliation. The death from AIDS of their mutual best friend and mentor David Javitz sent them scurrying in different directions: Jeff to discover a blissful bachelorhood of drugs, circuit parties and dance floor groping in Boston, and Lloyd to adopt a peaceful, celibate Provincetown lifestyle, exploring his spiritual side and running a guesthouse with friend Eva. Can these two men find common ground again? Lurking in the background are several friends who stand in their way: Jeff's current squeeze, the independently wealthy Anthony; Henry, Jeff's smitten best friend; and the widowed, emotionally unstable Eva. Each reveals his or her own secrets while selfishly pecking away at Jeff and Lloyd's happiness. This is especially true of Henry, who is indebted to Jeff for helping to transform him from nerdy nobody to muscular hottie. The chatty story is related from different characters' perspectives, the better to reveal their occasionally earnest but generally shallow motives. Mann doesn't skimp on cattiness, camp and clever barbs, yet he addresses serious subjects safe sex, gay families, moral responsibility as well. But at more than 400 tight-packed pages, the onslaught of rapid-fire, sitcom-style repartee and melodrama may have some circuit boys leaving this dance early.