The first thing you should know about
Jeremy Edwards is that his jokes are a lot better than mine. The Pleasure Dial is a laugh-out-loud
sexy; tickle-me-till-I-pass-out funny, brain-gasm-inducing work of sheer
genius, and one of the most scrumptiously entertaining novels—erotic or
otherwise—I’ve had the pleasure to read in quite some time; an unforgettable, couldn’t-put-it-down,
never-wanted-it-to-end reading experience, the sort of which have become
increasingly all too rare nowadays.
The Pleasure Dial transports
us to the thriving entertainment world of 1930s America, dominated by radio and
the movies, recently reborn, if not always reinvigorated, with sound. The story
is a lovingly irreverent homage to that golden age of radio comedy (Jack Benny,
Abbott and Costello) and the great screwball romps of the day, without the
pesky Hayes Code censorship—think Carole Lombard and William Powell in My Man Godfrey or Rosalind Russell and
Cary Grant in The Front Page with the
same razor-sharp double-entendre-rich repartee and considerably fewer clothes. The
veritably Shakespearian ins and out of the plot are summarized by chief
protagonist, radio gag-writer Artie Plask, thusly:
“Here’s what I have on my list so far:
(1) A radio show in which the star, an irascible and conceited Hollywood legend
is doing comedy when he thinks he’s doing drama—and he mustn’t find out. (2) A
second radio show, whose star, though a dream of an employer in and of herself,
is viewed with suspicion by star #1 because she is an intrafamily rival. (3) A
fledgling mannequin manufacturing company that we’ve promised will show a
profit shortly, and with whom my personal appearance is so closely identified
in the suspicious mind of radio star #1 that I am forced to wear a disguise in
his presence—because he mustn’t find out that the mannequin executive who stood
up to him is really one of his own writers.”
If you think this sounds like something
with the potential to be hilarious, you’d be right. The jokes fly fast and low,
sneaking in under the blood-brain barrier before we even get them, and when we
finally do, we have to mark our place and take a few minutes to roar till the
belly is quite literally aching with pleasure! The “juicy parts” aren’t bad either, especially
considering that Edwards’ special brand of funny is on the sex like white on
rice. Reluctantly, I have to limit
myself to only three short examples:
He lowered his ass to the edge of the
bed, his hard-on wrestling his thigh for top billing. Your jokes made me laugh today,” she
continued. This was his kind of foreplay. “Which
one did you like best?” “The one about ignoring.” She tittered
at the memory. There’s a customer waiting and I don’t want to ignore him. I don’t
want to, but I’d like to. Yes, that would work
well in Heffy’s voice. “Thank you. That’s a subtle one.” “I love that word, don’t you? Subtle. It
sounds like a softly licking tongue.” Artie knew a song cue when he heard one.
He pulled the sheet away from her body and focused his attention on the
sex-damp blond fur he’d thereby revealed.
Or this:
Elyse blinked back tears as she backed
the car out. “Yesterday my life was perfect; a house full of
laughter-conjuring, clitoris-pleasing heroes. Apart from the nuisance of having
to keep my clothes on whenever Daddy was around, the place was paradise on
earth.”
And this:
The face of Elyse Hefferman being
tongued to orgasm by the head-giving head writer had to be the most compelling
thing that had ever appeared on this stage, thought Artie. Elyse, one could
tell, approached every climax with the control and self-assurance with which a
painter approached a blank canvas. The artistic mastery expressed in her face
was overlaid with sensory pleasure, burgeoning arousal, and erotic anticipation—hers
was the fiery-eyed face of a genius watching her creation come to life exactly
as she had envisioned it.
Can’t you see a young, ditzy Carole
Lombard as Elyse? For Artie’s fast-talking, even faster-thinking, comedy-writing
girlfriend, Mariel Fenton, my imagination cast Rosalind Russell. And then there’s
the beautiful, Garbo-esque Lila Lowell, every-man's-fantasy sexpot of the silver screen, who really
does want to be alone—in her modest, book-lined bungalow, playing checkers with
her lesbian lover. Edwards gives us, if not a cast of thousands, a vast troupe
of memorable, wise-cracking supporting characters who can trace their
laugh-lines back to Vaudeville and the Catskills; Jack Benny, Fibber McGee and Molly, the Marx
Brothers, The Great Gildersleeve,
Abbott and Costello, and the list could go on and on.
Jeremy Edwards is that rare writer who
is at once a consummate professional and a gifted entertainer. His well-polished
prose are unfailingly engaging; his style sometimes cerebral, yet always affably
accessible. Charming, sexy and smart, wry and rollicking, intoxicating and, oh yes, funny as hell; The
Pleasure Dial is enthusiastically recommended.
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