"Summer Club" may remind you of novels of the olde days when orphan boys found they were really sons of millionaires, but those days are probably gone until updated by this book. Totally ignorant of the choices open to all of us, David grew up thinking he was a loser until he was thrust into the company of some knowledgeable young people who showed him what his body was good for and where his mind should be traveling. He traverses the barriers of bisexuality and even the "Creatures" in the mirrors are no longer to be avoided.
"Summer Club" may remind you of novels of the olde days when orphan boys found they were really sons of millionaires, but those days are probably gone until updated by this book. Totally ignorant of the choices open to all of us, David grew up thinking he was a loser until he was thrust into the company of some knowledgeable young people who showed him what his body was good for and where his mind should be traveling. He traverses the barriers of bisexuality and even the "Creatures" in the mirrors are no longer to be avoided.