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The Ease of Access

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The Love Is Gone In this tell-all, our bored, apathetic and greedy narrator embarks on a mission to demolish his world by revealing the ins and outs of his former job Hollywood's Most Wanted Prostitute. Does he feel superior? Does he feel remorse? Does he feel anything?

252 pages, Paperback

First published December 16, 2013

99 people want to read

About the author

Jeff Musillo

11 books14 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Amber.
126 reviews
March 15, 2014
Ok, so we know from the description that this book is about a male prostitute but it’s so much more than that (I mean that bit is glorious but then you add the layers and its blow your mind enjoyable). Which I imagine a male prostitute is supposed to be.
This is about greed, and fame, and egos the size of Texas. The writing is so good. The people in the book, all these different people from all different walks of life. Who they are, what they like. It’s like reading a science experiment.

I just can’t get over it. I’ve never read anything like it. It's incredibly unique.

If you are looking for your next great read, look no further. Check this book out.

To see my full review head over to Ginger-Read Reviews and check it out.

http://ginger-read.blogspot.com/2014/...
Profile Image for Towerbabel.
50 reviews9 followers
January 20, 2015
A new kind of sex tale in four intriguing episodes

The Ease of Access is a story of one male prostitute’s life on the job. He looks back on his adventures, without shame but without excitement either, revealing the secret lives of his clients in a tell-all, having left the business behind, even though he has become “most desired whore in Hollywood.”

The book starts off by describing what led to his becoming a prostitute. He was introduced to adult things sooner than most kids, taking drugs for the first time when he was 12. His sexual life began more innocently, learning the arts of pleasure with high school girl Melissa. But as he becomes more sexually advanced, he becomes a sort of service, sleeping with Melissa’s entire crew of friends before high school is out. This introduction gives the reader a fascinating glimpse into an unusual life. Its anecdotes are told unsentimentally, without melodrama, but vivid and realistic so that by the time the more commoditized sexual exploits arrive, we feel like we know the protagonist quite intimately...

Read the full review at Towerbabel here: http://www.towerbabel.com/library/102...
Profile Image for Bibliophile Book Reviews.
28 reviews54 followers
May 26, 2014
The author does an excellent job of keeping to the narrator’s “voice”. He establishes the character without ever giving us any physical description or even so much as a name – all of our interaction as the reader is from an emotionally detached perspective. While no formal names are ever introduced for any of the subjects, the author does an amazing job of enticing the reader into guessing who his Hollywood subjects really are and if in fact they are fictitious. The verbiage is eloquent – beautiful even, poetic by all rights. It is apparent that Mr. Musillo is a poet and master of the English language. My only suggestion or critique would be that the narration have more peaks and valleys, anticipation, climax. It reads more as a memoir than a work of fiction – which may be what the author intended.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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