Title: Hungry for Love
Author: Rick R. Reed
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: May 11, 2020
Heat Level: 2 - Fade to Black Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 63300
Genre: Contemporary, LGBTQIA+, romance, author, dating sites, dishonesty, duplicity, best friends
Add to Goodreads
Synopsis
Nate Tippie and Brandon Wilde are gay,
single, and hoping to meet that special man, even though fate has not yet
delivered him to their doorstep.
Nate’s sister, Hannah, and her kooky
BFF, Marilyn, are poised to help fate with that task by creating a profile on
the gay dating site, OpenHeartOpenMind. They are only exploring, but when a
face and body are needed for the created persona, they use Nate as the model.
When Brandon comes across the false
profile, he falls for the guy he sees online. Keeping up the charade, Hannah
begins corresponding with him, posing as Nate.
However, real complications begin when
Brandon wants to meet Nate, who doesn’t know he’s being used in the online
dating ruse. Hannah and Marilyn concoct another story and send Nate out to let
the guy down gently. But when Nate and Brandon meet, they feel an instant and
powerful pull toward each other. Cupid seems to have shot his bow, but how do
Nate and Brandon climb out from under a mountain of deceit without letting go of
their chance at love?
Excerpt
Hungry for Love
Rick R. Reed © 2020
All Rights Reserved
Brandon Wylde faced the form on his iMac
screen with something akin to terror. Or maybe the emotion causing his mind to
go blank and his heart to beat more swiftly could more rightly be called
performance anxiety.
What was causing this fear of failure
and quickened breath was the registration page for a gay dating website called
OpenHeartOpenMind. Brandon had been all over the Internet, searching for a site
that would put him in touch with other gay men looking for romance and the
promise of something lasting and not for hookups. Now, there was no shortage of
the former—the hookup sites were rampant, and as much as Brandon felt that “to
each his own” was a motto worth living by, these sites were not his own. A
close-up picture of an asshole (in the literal sense) or a hard dick might be
titillating to some, but to Brandon it was simply a bore. How could one tell if
one wanted to even “hook up” when seeing only a faceless body part? The idea
gave Brandon the creeps. Did we have sex with genitals alone? No, we had sex
with entire human beings, for Christ’s sake. No matter how big and thick the
dick was or how open and inviting the asshole (literal, again), Brandon
couldn’t imagine a meeting of any sort with simply a body part.
His “pickiness,” as his man-whore friend
Christian always said, was what kept Brandon alone and yearning at age
twenty-nine. “Just go online. You can have a hot guy delivered to your door
within an hour, like a pizza, a delicious, mouthwatering pepperoni pizza. Hold
the cheese!”
Christian was no stranger to the
embraces of many men, culled from sites like Manhunt, Adam4Adam, or Craigslist
(or as Margaret Cho referred to it—the Penny Saver of dick) and, more lately,
Grindr and Scruff. Christian swore by these electronic connections and, as far
as Brandon could tell from their happy-hour conversations, took advantage of
their charms on an almost daily basis.
Brandon shook his head and wondered if
what Christian was shopping for online was more a fix than a human connection.
Brandon knew what he himself was, what
he had, and the condition was incurable.
He was a romantic. As much as his
hormones told him that all he really required in this world was a warm place to
bury his dick, his more developed senses begged to differ.
Brandon wanted someone with whom he felt
a special connection, someone with whom there was that magical spark he read
about in the gay romance novels he devoured with increasing frequency, to fill
the void missing in his life. Brandon wanted chocolates and flowers. He wanted
love poetry. He wanted surprise weekend getaways to remote mountain cabins or
quaint bed-and-breakfasts. He wanted someone to curl up next to on the couch,
falling asleep together to some old black-and-white movie.
He wanted someone with whom he could
share not only his body, but his life.
Christian told him, “You’re never going
to find the man of your dreams, unless you bring some of those wet dreams
you’re still having at your advanced age to life! Just get laid! No man’s going
to buy the merchandise without a free sample.”
Really, Christian? Really? And why are
you still alone, then? Brandon knew Christian spent almost all of his free time
online. Hell, Brandon could even count on Christian to be on his phone, on Grindr
or Scruff, when they were out to dinner or one of the clubs. Brandon would
twiddle his thumbs with Christian nearby, oblivious and texting furiously,
always on the prowl for his next hookup, who usually lurked somewhere nearby.
Why was the man never satisfied?
Brandon had a secret, one which he had
never shared with anyone, especially Christian.
He was almost a virgin. He had only two
pathetic sexual experiences on his résumé. First, there was an embarrassing,
guilt-ridden “affair” back in high school that had lasted for all of two weeks
(although Brandon wished for more). And the one time, back in college, when he
had met his second paramour in the basement men’s room of King Library on the
Miami University (Ohio) campus. The guy wanted Brandon simply to kneel down
between the stalls so he could blow him, but Brandon was far too fearful to
engage in such an act and even then, he wanted more—like to see his
cocksucker’s face. Besides, Brandon wasn’t even sure why the guy kept putting
his hand under the stall, not knowing then it was a signal for him to kneel on
the floor. So Brandon, romantic at heart that he was, simply grasped the
signaling hand and held it.
This prompted his tearoom trick to flee
the bathroom—and Brandon followed him outside.
Somehow, in the stairwell outside the
men’s room, Brandon convinced his bathroom suitor to take him home, to an
off-campus apartment where the two young men quickly and furtively got one
another off, worried about the imminent arrival of the guy’s straight roommate.
That experience, sordid and unsatisfying
as it was, left in Brandon a desire to chase windmills, if that’s what his
idealism could be called. Brandon was not going to settle. If he couldn’t have
the whole enchilada (the enchilada being a relationship that was satisfying not
only on a physical level, but also on an emotional one), he wanted none of it.
Unfortunately for Brandon, he had come
of age during a time when Internet and even smartphone connections made hooking
up fast and efficient. Brandon conceded those connections might possess those
benefits, but they were not for him.
He was interested in both of a man’s
heads, thank you very much. And he would not settle for less.
He believed a man who thought the same
was out there. Somewhere.
Which is what brought him, right now, to
the registration site for OpenHeartOpenMind. When he had finally landed upon
the dating website, he was thrilled to find their mission statement on the home
page, one that dovetailed with his own inclinations.
It read:
We here at OpenHeartOpenMind believe in
old-fashioned romance. If you’re looking for impersonal, easy sex and lots of
it, there are plenty of other sites that cater to your interests. Go for them.
OpenHeartOpenMind is for the man who
wants to date, who knows that sometimes delayed gratification can make the
rewards all the sweeter.
OpenHeartOpenMind is for gay men who
think the road to love is paved not just with physical attraction (although
we’d be lying if we said that doesn’t play a big part!), but with mutual
respect, shared interests, and the common goal of wanting more than just
merging genitals, but merging hearts and minds as well.
Good luck on your dating journey!
Below the mission statement were icons
that urged the potential user to sign up and the current user to sign in.
Purchase
NineStar Press | Amazon | Smashwords | Barnes & Noble | Kobo
Meet the Author
Real Men. True Love.Rick R. Reed is an award-winning and bestselling author of more than fifty works of published fiction. He is a Lambda Literary Award finalist. Entertainment Weekly has described his work as “heartrending and sensitive.” Lambda Literary has called him: “A writer that doesn’t disappoint…” Find him at www.rickrreedreality.blogspot.com. Rick lives in Palm Springs, CA, with his husband, Bruce, and their fierce Chihuahua/Shiba Inu mix, Kodi.
No comments:
Post a Comment