3.5
The Men from the Boys
ByPublisher Description
This stunning slice of gay life at the turn of the millennium introduces thirtysomething Jeff O'Brien. After six years, his lover, Lloyd, has just announced that the passion between them has died. Terrified of ending up alone, Jeff turns his eye toward other men. But the anonymous, impersonal encounters leave him feeling sordid and used. In search of love during this "last summer in which I am to be young," he finds romance with a beautiful houseboy named Eduardo. At twenty-two, Eduardo is the same age Jeff was when he began a relationship with the older David Javitz, a leading activist now gravely ill with AIDS. But David became more than a lover to Jeff, who wasn't yet out of the closet. He was his mentor and cherished friend.
Narrated by Jeff, who's caught between the baby boomers and generation X, the novel shuttles between summers in Provincetown and winters in Boston.
is about the illusive nature of love and desire—"the magic that happens across a dance floor," leaving you "forever young."
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Meet readers like you in the Fable For You feed, designed to build bookish communitiesThe Men from the Boys Reviews
3.5
“Jeff was not the most likable main character. He's a little whiny and self-centered, but we all are at times. It's a nice portrait of aging from youthful beauty into middle age. The book seemed to drag in places, and it was hard to keep the converging narratives straight. I found I had to keep flipping back to see where we were. I understand the switching back and forth, but the storylines didn't seem divergent enough to warrant it.”
About William J. Mann
<p><strong>William J. Mann</strong> is the <em>New York Times</em> bestselling author of <em>The Contender: The Story of Marlon Brando</em>; <em>Kate: The Woman Who Was Hepburn</em>; <em>How to Be a Movie Star: Elizabeth Taylor in Hollywood</em>; <em>Hello, Gorgeous: Becoming Barbra Streisand</em>; <em>Wisecracker: The Life and Times of William Haines; </em>and<em> Tinseltown: Murder, Morphine and Madness at the Dawn of Hollywood,</em> winner of the Edgar Allen Poe Award. He divides his time between Connecticut and Cape Cod.</p>
Other books by William J. Mann
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