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Between Dances

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Set in a male-burlesque theater, this debut novel captures a bygone era of a seedy Times Square, following the mercenary life of a young dancer who falls in love for the first time.

With the same grim beauty as John Rechy's "City of Night" and Jean Genet's "The Thief's Journal," this novel traces the arabesques of acrid smoke and loneliness wound around the dim world of hustlers and johns, of porn theaters and crumbling hotel rooms.

"Between Dances," an early work by Erasmo Guerra, received a Lambda Literary Award in 2000 and is being reissued in a second edition.

222 pages, Kindle Edition

First published June 1, 2000

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About the author

Erasmo Guerra

10 books33 followers
ERASMO GUERRA is a Lambda Literary Award winner. His nonfiction stories have appeared in The New York Times, Texas Monthly, The Texas Observer and aired on NPR.

He is a member of the Macondo Writers' Workshop, headed by Sandra Cisneros. Born and raised on the Texas-Mexico border, he now lives in New York City and drinks too much coffee.

Find me on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ErasmoGuerra...
Watch book excerpts and interviews on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/user/erasmogue...
Listen to book excerpts on SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/erasmoguerra

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for Bill.
414 reviews104 followers
April 18, 2012
This is the story of Marco and his friends/lovers Chris and Jaime, all three erotic dancers and call-boys in NYC at some recent time, I'd suggest the late '90s. Though some of the plot concerns their 'jobs', the novel is really about Marco and his life "between dances" shown by his interaction with Chris, Jaime and a few johns.

There are sexual encounters in the novel, but not explicit, and actually episodes telling us more about Marco. I like this approach. One gets bored with descriptive sex scene after sex scene common to so much m/m fiction. If it were a movie, I'd rate it PG depending on how much d&a are shown.

The author seems an experienced craftsman. The prose has a literary bent, reminding me somewhat of Counterpoint: Dylan's Story. My main problem was some dialogue in Spanish which I did not want to look up for disturbing the flow of the prose. Sometimes the meaning was clear, most often not.

The novel is compared to Genet's The Thief's Journal and Rechy's The City of Night. I think this comparison comes from the novel being about a seedier sides of Gay life, but I see a big difference. Genet's autobiographical work and Rechy's novels tend toward protagonists who are stuck in their lives and one expects then to go on behaving in the future as they have in the past. Marco makes me want to try to save him from his physically and psychologically destructive life. And, I think there is a good chance he could be changed and so saved. He's likable though I don't think I'd have sex with him.

I liked the book a lot and would like to see more novels come from the author's pen. He has published short story collections, but no other novels that I can find.

The only real negative I found were a number of typos in the text, most minor. In one place it seemed a paragraph was out of place and I lost the flow of what was going on for a bit.

Recommended!
Profile Image for AthleticStilletto.
12 reviews3 followers
November 19, 2012
Only a writer with a magic wand could show us what goes on between dances. Erasmo Guerra can lift words out of his heart and hide them in ours without artifice. He can make exactly the right words appear in exactly the right places. He can play just the right music for us to dance to. He doesn't have to tell us how he did it, but it can only be that he sentenced himself to hard labor to become the great writer that he is.

This book is beyond wonderful.
Profile Image for Bea.
239 reviews12 followers
August 23, 2016
Holy shit. Damn good book. Not the type of story you read every day. I regret not having read this book sooner (like in high school). Love the characters and loved loved loved the ending. This book doesn't sugar coat shit and sometimes that's needed. It shows that relationships are hard and that it's not always the fairy tale you were shown/promised growing up.
Profile Image for Edgar Sandoval.
32 reviews3 followers
September 25, 2018
I read this before I met Erasmo. I was impressed with him as a writer first & then with him as a genuine person. Must read! 📚
Profile Image for Alana Voth.
Author 7 books27 followers
December 25, 2014
Between Dances, Erasmo Guerra's debut novel and Lambda Literary Award winner, is the story of "Marco," a young gay man from Mexico attempting find love in a hyper-sexualized world of strip clubs and hustling, and when I say love, I mean self love, the most difficult love to come by in the world.

Like many strippers/hustlers, Marco struggles to leave sex work behind and find a "real job." The money, of course, is hard to sacrifice. So is the attention. Like so many sex workers, Marco finds validation in feeling desired even while he resents the men who use him, and this applies to both tricks and lovers. Here's a young man who wants to make emotional connections despite the odds.

Guerra writes with a lot of care for his narrator and lays down so many great lines and images like, "He just hadn't expected his heart to empty out and burn down like a church on fire."

Between Dances chronicles a journey through an "underbelly" of society as told by a narrator with a warm and tender heart. There's no big happy ending here; instead it feels honest. And there's hope.

XO.
Profile Image for Libretto.
12 reviews5 followers
November 18, 2012
["]Between Dances["] there is truly great writing. Oh, the rhythm of the thing!
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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