Rick R. Reed’s provocative and completely enticing new novel, Tricks proves that even when this talented author writes about male go-go dancers and gay strip clubs, nothing is at it seems. Sinister forces swirl around the lives of his main characters, Arliss, a former hustler and current stripper and Sean, a first-time patron of the club Tricks, who is nursing a broken heart.
The book opens with a pulsing dance beat and well-hung Arliss doing his best strut.
What should be a typical, horny encounter with a crazy old coot of a patron at the bar clutching a twenty-dollar bill, soon turns into a menacing, chilling threat.
Oh, how Reed of Reed!
Arliss recovers from this bizarre experience to later run into Sean, whom he’d also noticed during his dance routine. The two men connect, Sean overcoming his initial prejudices about Arliss.
After an intoxicating night of dinner, bed and, well, dessert, Arliss thinks he may have found his someone, only to have this notion challenged by an unexpected early-morning appearance of Sean’s recently ex boyfriend, Jerome.
Sean’s reaction is not what Arliss – or anyone, male or female -- would want from his new lover. For Arliss, it unchains a host of memories from his unhappy, ugly past.
As usual, Reed has a scientist’s eye for the painful details that ground each and every character as he paints unflinching, resonant detail with his giddy, literal palette.
He has his finger on the pulse of exactly what is going on with gay men in the world today, especially the US. His honesty is both refreshing as it is timely.
With meth amphetamine use at an all-time high among gay men in America, Reed gives this particular addiction to his mesmerizing secondary character, the dancer, Antonio.
He also wisely addresses the issue of bareback sex, which among many gay men is more prevalent in the real world than writers and readers of gay fiction care to admit – or perhaps even realize.
His characters address the issues of sex, disease, drugs – legal and otherwise, love, fashion, communication, jealousy, ego, vulnerability, and, what constitutes the notion of tricks.
Sean and Arliss’ relationship deepens and threatens to unravel with the arrival of a third man. All of this is revealed with Reed’s searing, yet compassionate gaze.
My heart was with Arliss from the opening page and I badly wanted a happy ending for him. When his past bubbled to the surface in his new relationship with Sean, I kept thinking, please don’t hurt him, please don’t let anything bad happen to him.
I think this is Reed’s greatest gift as a writer. We watch him lift rocks, turning them over, making his characters squirm as he examines their gritty truth, exposing them to the light. Ultimately, his rocks are never returned the same way he found them and that is his trick. We can thank him for thrills and spills, high emotion and constant surprise. This is a wonderful book that makes you cry, scream and laugh along with his characters.
This is an author also makes you think.
For once, he has a happy ending, but it is laced with Reed’s typical steely edge.
It wouldn’t be a Rick R. Reed novel without a few…tricks.