Hot Valley
Product Details | Similar Products | Customer Reviews![]() | Author: James Lear List Price: £8.99 Our Price: £6.99 You Save: £2.00 (22%) Availability: Usually dispatched within 7 to 11 days ![]() |
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![]() | Product Details: Paperback 200 pages Release Date: 02 May 2007 Publisher: Cleis Press ISBN: 1573442798 Rating: ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sales Rank: 106258 | ![]() | Look for similar books by subject:
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| ![]() | Customer Reviews:![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sex and the Civil War. Does what it shows on the cover. (20 September 2007)Do judge this book by its cover - and its title. Jack, the younger son of a rich southern family, celebrates his coming of age by getting laid by half the guys in his nearest town. He then turns his attention to Aaron, the serious, upright black servant on his father's eatate, who turns out not to be immune to Jack's seduction techniques, though singularly unimpressed by his charms. As the civil war breaks out both men enlist and the book recounte their separate stories. For both, the civil war turns out to have been limitlessly inventive hot sex with most of the confederate army and several obliging civilians on the side. Oh, and the occasional battle too. True love between the two men also finds its course. But this book is a lustily, graphically glorious excuse to put its two heroes through their sexual paces and no one does hot gay sex with such obvious relish as Lear. The best raunchy read I have had in a while. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Hot Valley is just hot... (26 August 2007)For some reason, I got the impression that 'Hot Valley' was going to be more serious than James Lear's earlier work. I was wrong -- up to a point. Readers whose experience begins with his previous novel, 'The Back Passage', might be surprised at a difference in tone here; but if you've read 'The Low Road' or 'The Palace of Varieties', you'll discover a familiar Lear theme; the selfish, wanton young man, indulging in wild and indiscriminate gay sex until he's finally redeemed by the pricking of conscience and the cleansing salve of love. Jack Edgerton is the scion of a rich Vermont family, sowing his wild oats - and believe me, they're wild - in the years just before the American Civil War. One of my favourite episodes has the nineteen-year-old Jack, determined to lose his virginity, going in search of the roughest of rough trade on the wrong side of the tracks. And so beginning a wonderful career of debauchery. Later, he meets his match, in all senses, in Aaron Johnson, the son of a southern plantation owner and a slave woman. Aaron is everything Jack is not; studious, hard-working, thoughtful and restrained. (Though not for the whole book, you'll be glad to hear.) Inexorably, both men get drawn into the war, and Jack's long journey to salvation begins. I know a bit about this period, and it all felt very authentic to me. Lear has a great broad-brush technique; he doesn't bombard the reader with historical information - something which must have been a temptation here. But the picture he creates is vivid. Yes, the preponderance of willing homosexual partners is wonderfully coincidental, but then it's a gay fantasy; one might say a historical fairy story. And indeed, some amazing coincidences are needed to make the story work, but somehow it doesn't matter too much. Most of Lear's readers will buy this book for its sexual passages, and they won't be disappointed. This is real, raw sex; full of pain and pleasure, tastes, sounds, smells and bodily fluids. It's raunchy, rough and utterly without restraint. But there is a serious aspect. After all, the themes are war and racism and prejudice, and Lear doesn't dodge them. Given the nature of his writing, there's something endearingly naïve about the simple moral message the story conveys. But the frankly sentimental and deeply satisfying ending is rescued from mawkishness, in typical Lear style, by the introduction of a wild orgy. His prose is simple and flowing; easy, clear sentences which are a pleasure to read. Readers will know how likely they are to be affected by the sex scenes; my advice would be not to read 'Hot Valley' on the Metropolitan line, or indeed, any other form of mass transport. And if, like me, you're assailed by sudden tears at times of emotion, that's another reason not to read it in public. But do read it. This is Lear at his outrageous, raunchy best. ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() More Emmanuel than Rhett Butler, I'm afraid... (05 June 2007)I was so enamoured of Mr Lear's last novel "The Back Passage" that I looked forward to this book rather a lot. I was rather dissapointed. Whilst it won't dissapoint readers who like a hot scene to excite them on every other page, that's where the book failed for me. In The Back Passage, the hero goes from sexual encounter to sexual encounter in his quest to find out clues for a murder in an Agatha Christie style romp and although the sex is possibly gratuitous its cleverly done and never feels like it. There's also much wit and humour. But Hot Valley - set in the American Civil war - it just felt to me that sex scene after sex scene after sex scene... were linked tenuously with the hero's travels. It felt like the background of the war is added as an afterthought. It also feels hugely anachronistic as surely 1860 America wasn't so accepting of gay sex. Every single man that the protagonist meets, from his co-workers, his father's employers, drinking companions, fellow soldiers - everyone! Wants to (and does) have sex with him in many various ways. As much as I enjoy (heaven knows!) an erotic book, there is a case for Too Much - and I found myself hoping that the next man that Jack met simply wanted to have a chat. Or a cuppa tea. Or anything! I found myself skipping the sex to find the next piece of plot. I'm sorry, James, that I didn't like it. I wanted to, but I was hoping for a good historical romp but didn't find it in Hot Valley. | ![]() |

















