Eight Acts By A. L. Lester
Genre: Romance, Historical, GLBTQ, MM
Released: March 20, 2021
Publisher: JMS Books LLC
Length: 20,225 words / 69 pages
It’s the summer of 1967 and the Sexual Offences Act has just decriminalized consensual gay sex in private between two men over twenty-one. Percy Wright and his friend Les Baker have both taken temporary jobs teaching English as a foreign language in London during their long summer break from teaching at a rural boarding school near Oxford.
Thirty-three year old Percy is keen to soak up some theatre, music and general culture, whilst the younger Les is also keen to experience the varied gay social scene. When Les picks up a man called Phil at the box office of the Albert Hall when he goes to buy tickets to a Promenade Concert, Percy inadvertently gets thrown together with Adrian Framlingham, Phil’s friend.
Adrian is all the things Percy likes in a man…funny, kind and steady. When Les gets hurt, Percy turns to Adrian for support, but as the end of the summer looms it seems as if their affair will come to a natural end.
What will happen when Percy goes back to his everyday life as a house-master? Will he and Adrian stay in touch? Does he even want a long-distance relationship when arranging to meet someone for sex is still illegal, even if the act itself is not?
A 20k novella that’s set five years before Taking Stock. Stand alone.
Content Warning: secondary character suffers off-screen assault/implied rape
Reviewed by ButtonsMom2003
A compelling story.
This was a great story. It’s a short-ish novella but it really packed a punch. The writing flowed well for me and it really conveyed the anguish and fear that these gay men lived with. I enjoy reading books by UK authors that are set in the UK because I always end up learning new words (usually slang). This story had a few terms that weren’t found in the dictionary attached to my ereader but it was still pretty easy to tell the meaning when read in context with the story.
I was a bit too young during the time period of this story to have known what was going on in the world, let alone what it was like to be gay. Even when I got older, I still didn’t realize all of the things the gay community endured. I’ve been reading MM romance for several years now and this genre has really helped to educate me and make me a more compassionate person. That is why we need books like this, ones that portray how it was like in a realistic manner – the good and the bad.
While this novella contains a certain amount of anguish, and an off page horrifying act, it has an HEA and shows that love between same-sex couples was able to survive in an environment that was still not accepting of gay people. I’m still thinking about this story and it’s been a few days since I’ve read it. It’s going to stick with me for a while.
♥♥♥♥♥
O Factor: Spicy
♥ Amazon US ♥ Amazon CA ♥ Amazon UK ♥ Barnes & Noble ♥ Kobo US ♥ Google Play ♥ iBooks ♥
“Shall we go for a walk in Hyde Park this evening?” Les said with forced casualness, shoving toast into the toaster in a bleary fashion.
“Tonight?” Percy said. It was a Thursday.
“One of the blokes I was talking to at the William at the weekend mentioned it. Said it’s an interesting place of an evening.”
He put the emphasis on interesting.
“Les…,” Percy was reluctant. “I’m not sure it’s my kind of thing.”
“What, getting your rocks off isn’t your kind of thing?” Les said, slightly snippily. “Don’t pretend you haven’t been having it off with Adrian for the last fortnight.”
Percy didn’t have anything to say back to that.
“We’re back to school in two weeks,” Les said, almost wearily. “And I want to have as much fun as possible before I get shut up in that damned boarding house with sixty adolescent terrors for another year.”
Percy watched him, steadily.
“This is…so different,” Les continued. “I don’t want to miss anything.”
“Didn’t you have a social set at university?” Percy asked. Not that he had himself, really.
“In York!?” Les said with an derisive huffing noise. “Not these kind of friends. I just want…something, Perce.”
Percy could understand that. “I know, he said. “I know you do. But…is Hyde Park after dark really what you’re looking for?”
Les sat at the small table and focused on buttering his toast fiercely. “I won’t know if I don’t go, will I?” he said. “It’s okay, Perce. You don’t have to come. I know it’s not really your scene.”
Les was so much younger, sometimes, Percy thought.
“What about Phil?” he asked.
“Nice bloke,” Les said, dismissively. “I don’t want a wife, though, Percy. I want some fun.”
Percy sighed. “Well, what time are you thinking of going?” he asked. “I’m meeting Adrian. He’s managed to get tickets for Hello Dolly at Drury Lane.” This would be the fourth time they had deliberately arranged to meet. After their first outing to the Prince William in Hampstead nearly a fortnight ago, they’d met in the week at a pub close to Adrian’s offices after work and gone on and had a meal. And on Sunday they’d begun the day by walking along the Embankment, had some chips in a pub they’d come upon and then spent the afternoon in Regent’s Park. It had been a really lovely day out. He’d felt guilty leaving Les on his own, but Les seemed happy enough going up to the Prince William by himself, once he’d been introduced around the weekend before.
“No idea what time,” said Les, interrupting his memories. I was going to come home and have some tea and then go on out. So you can still come along if you change your mind.”
Percy shook his head. “I won’t change my mind. I’ve got to be out of the door at about six, so I was going to come home, bolt a bit of toast and change, and then go on out. We’re having supper somewhere afterwards, I think.”
Les made grunting assent.
Percy was worried about him. The huge platter of different places and experiences that had opened to them over the last month were so different from anything either of them had experienced before. Percy was much more cautious than Les. He didn’t seem to have the same need to grab everything with both hands and try it all out. He was a decade older, he supposed. Whether than meant it had drained out of his system without him noticing whilst he was busy trying to hide it all, or whether it just meant he was a bit more sensible than he would have been a decade ago, he didn’t know.
What he did know what that in his opinion, Les was going to get in to trouble. And Percy wasn’t prepared to be dragged in to trouble with him.
“You will be careful, won’t you?” he said, diffidently. “Just…be careful, Les.”
Les looked over at him. “I’ll be careful. And you…you have a good time, yeah? If I don’t see you before you go out. He seems like a really nice bloke.”
Percy smiled. “He is. He’s a really nice bloke.”
Writer of queer, paranormal, historical, romantic suspense. Lives in the South West of England with Mr AL, two children, a badly behaved dachshund, a terrifying cat and some hens. Likes gardening but doesn’t really have time or energy. Not musical. Doesn’t much like telly. Non-binary. Chronically disabled. Has tedious fits.
Amazon | Blog | Bookbub | Contact | Facebook Author Page | Facebook Group Page | Goodreads | Instagram | Twitter | Website | YouTube
Previous:
Release Blitz, Excerpt and Giveaway: The Heart Heist by Elle Keaton
Next:
Audio Tour, Excerpt and Giveaway: Love Always, Wild by A.M. Johnson, Performed by Kirt Graves and Tim Paige
You may also like
-
07 Jun
Cover Reveal: False Assumptions by Jerica MacMillan
Contemporary RomanceIf you love snarky heroines and chemistry that ignites on the page, grab this fun, enemies to lovers story now!
-
30 Aug
Release Blitz, Review, Excerpt and Giveaway: American Dream by C F White
Giveaway5 STARS!!! Can acting out the American dream with his dad’s best friend change an unyielding fantasy into reality?
-
11 Apr
Audiobook Review: You Are Cordially Invited by Jay Hogan, Performed by Gary Furlong
GLBTQ Romance5 Fantastic Stars!!! There’s a wedding in the air at Auckland Med, but Reuben wonders if they’ll survive the stress long enough to say, ‘I do’.
-
5.0
30 Jun
Review Tour and Excerpt: Just Like That by Cole McCade
GLBTQ RomanceIn Just Like That, critically acclaimed author Cole McCade introduces us to Albin Academy: a private boys’ school where some of the world’s richest families send their problem children to learn discipline and maturity, out of the public eye.