Granted, there’s a lot of latitude within this stricture,
and, for the most part, this group of authors rises to the challenge with more
than sullen resignation. Along the way readers are treated to just about
everything from the seedy to the posh: satin-sheeted rendezvous in high-end
penthouse love nests to hardboiled rough play on moth-eaten mattresses in fetid
hourly-rate hookup holes. Rustic inns, far, far from the madding crowd,
flaunting their quaint historically-themed charms, to lonesome roadside dumps in
deserts where nothing human ought to be, boutique auberges trading in
discretion, and gaudy urban palaces, oozing bright flashing-neon excess. Yet,
there’s something about hotel rooms themselves that seems to breed cynicism and
ennui in otherwise perfectly well-adjusted human beings; the most ordinary and
indifferent of spaces—describe one and you’ve likely described thousands just
like it—stubbornly defies poetry. In the end, it has to be the characters
that make these stories memorable, their desires, hopes, dreams, conflicts,
that which gives the narrative true depth and color. No setting--no matter how exotic or colorful--can save an uninteresting character.
This being said, there are some truly
outstanding stories here: Valerie Alexander’s scintillating genderqueer fantasy Zero
Gravity, and Arden Ellis’ gritty and gorgeously written f/f Grey Bar
Motel in which a pair of bank robbers hide out in a desert dump as they
consider their next move—a superb study in character dynamic and psychology: T.C. Mill’s effectively atmospheric f/f My
Body is a Haunted House, describing the encounter between two women with
nothing in common but a man they once knew, after the man’s funeral, and Reiver
Scott’s heart-wrenching The Witching Place in which a selfish Dom is
forced to see himself through the eyes of the woman he thought was his perfect
sub.
Also of note: J.S. Emuakpor’s At the Crossroads conjures
orgiastic and terrifying images in an ostensibly abandoned hotel somewhere in
the California desert—a liminal space where vengeful gods may lurk: Parker
Marlo’s lyrically noirish Easter 1992: Zac Blue’s Rolling the Die in which
anticipated retribution comes in the most pleasantly unexpected of ways: Rhidian
Brenig Jones’ m/m/m Tricks of the Trade where a pair of male escorts
service a wealthy client, the only opportunity one of the rent boys has to fulfill
his hopeless love-born fantasy of being with his professional colleague: Sara
Dobie Bauer’s Breathing Underwater, movie stars encounter in a hotel
pool, and In the Long Nights of Our
Never Enough—great title!—by Christian Fennell, a lyrical description of a
beautiful woman’s first outing as a high-class escort.
Recommended.
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