The Blitz book club: Shuck

The New York City of Daniel Allen Cox’s Shuck was lost on 9/11 and replaced by a police state apocalypse where only the elite survive. As filmmaker Bruce LaBruce says on the back cover of the book, “Daniel Allen Cox writes truthfully and elegantly about a New York that I knew very well and that I miss very much. Set in the late 1990s, his novel Shuck describes with great clarity and verve the last grasp of a gritty Manhattan just before the war with the Eskimos, a bygone era that existed before wealth and privilege strangled the sweet life out of street life.”

The story is told through the diary entries of Jaeven, a cocky, insecure, hung Manhattan hustler and pornstar du jour whose eccentric and anarchist lifestyle includes living in the stock room of a shoe store, popping meth zits and whoring himself out while collecting magazine rejections for his short-story submissions. His writing may not be enticing the literary world, but it’s ignited the creative flame of a painter and client who uses his stories as inspiration for his work. Jaeven is taken in by the brooding artist, but when he starts to fall in love with him, he’s doomed to discover that for a Y2K rent boy, love isn’t surviving the millennium.

Keep Reading

Mya Foxx with an up arrow behind her; PM with a down arrow behind her

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 6, Episode 3 power ranking: Big Sister

Social strategy comes into play in a big way—but does it pay off?
Icesis Couture and Pythia behind podiums

‘Canada’s Drag Race’ Season 6, Episode 3 recap: Pick your drag poison

Season 6’s top 11 queens get to choose their own adventure: Snatch Game or design challenge?
The cover of Casanova 20; Davey Davis

Davey Davis’s new novel tenderly contends with the COVID-19 pandemic

“Casanova 20” follows the chasms—and—connections between generations of queer people
Two young men, one with dark hair and one with light hair, smile at each other. The men are shirtless and in dark bedding.

‘Heated Rivalry’ is the steamy hockey romance we deserve

The queer Canadian hockey drama packs heart and heat, setting it apart from other MLM adaptations