Shaun Levin
Autor/a de Seven Sweet Things
Sobre l'autor
Shaun Levin is editor of the literary journal, Chroma.
Obres de Shaun Levin
Four Seasons in a Day 1 exemplars
Obres associades
Short, Vigorous Roots: A Contemporary Flash Fiction Collection of Migrant Voices (2022) — Col·laborador — 78 exemplars
Who’s Yer Daddy?: Gay Writers Celebrate Their Mentors and Forerunners (2012) — Col·laborador — 16 exemplars
Etiquetat
Coneixement comú
- Gènere
- male
Membres
Ressenyes
Potser també t'agrada
Autors associats
Estadístiques
- Obres
- 12
- També de
- 13
- Membres
- 34
- Popularitat
- #413,653
- Valoració
- 3.9
- Ressenyes
- 1
- ISBN
- 9
- Llengües
- 1
There is a small scene, about a stray dog, Shaun wanting to help him, Martin doing it, but then instead of taking the stray dog at home, or feeding him, Shaun turns his shoulder to the dog, as he will turn his shoulder to Martin, when he will look behind; I had the feeling that Martin had to go home, but wanted from Shaun to stop him, to give him a reason to finally break up with his girlfriend.
There is almost a routine in Martin and Shaun’s life, they are not nightly lovers, they meet in plain daylight, at lunch time; Shaun spends the morning baking sweet things for Martin, Martin arrives and Shaun feeds him with words, food and sex; Martin is recharged for the rest of the day and instead Shaun has unloaded all the love he accumulated from the last time he saw Martin. It’s like with the exchange of bodily fluids, they also exchange life force.
The story lasts one year in Shaun and Martin’s life, and in that span of time I completely changed my mind: at the end of the first story, I was cheering for Shaun, hoping that uncaring Martin could finally understand what wonderful man Shaun was, and that his girlfriend had nothing more to satisfy him; story after story, I saw little things of Shaun, his insecurities, his need to be the caretaker to prove that he is not alone, his refusal to share his inner soul replacing the void with food; food for Shaun represents love, the love he lacked, the love he desperately wants; at the end, I understood that maybe Shaun was not ready to love Martin, that he needed time, that one year was just enough to know each other. At the end of the book, Shaun is changed, and instead Martin is always the same, but maybe now Shaun is ready for another part of his life, no more only the lover, but also the partner.
Seven Sweet Things is a wonderful novel, really, high dose of sugar in the recipes, but an almost ethereal feeling in the story, light and heavy, heavy and light, perfectly balanced.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/1590212029/?tag=elimyrevandra-20… (més)