A History of Barbed Wire

by Jeff Mann | Gay & Lesbian |
ISBN: 0977158233 Global Overview for this book
Registered by wingGoryDetailswing of Nashua, New Hampshire USA on 3/13/2008
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3 journalers for this copy...
Journal Entry 1 by wingGoryDetailswing from Nashua, New Hampshire USA on Thursday, March 13, 2008
I've enjoyed Jeff Mann's essays (Edge), poems (Bones Washed with Wine, On the Tongue, and a wonderfully erotic Appalachian-vampire story ("Devoured" from Masters of Midnight), so when I saw this collection (with a forward by Patrick Califia) I had to order a copy. [That was over a year ago, and it's only just arrived!]

Judging by the cover it could be pretty raw; I can only hope! {grin}

Later: Yep, a bit rough in places - but Mann does like it that way, so that's no surprise. While all of the stories center on the same set of fetishes, the variations in tone and settings are impressive (though I find that it helps avoid a sense of sameness if you don't read more than one or two of the stories at a time).

The first story, "Snowed in with Sam", is the tale of the narrator's in-depth fantasy of kidnapping a country singer (I had a lot of fun trying to guess which one Mann had in mind, but a lot of them do look alike {grin}). This made a nice contrast with the concluding novella "The Quality of Mercy," in which the same idea is taken to extremes. [That one involves some very non-consensual sexual activity, and I found it very disturbing, the more so because Mann's characters are so believable that it's all too easy to empathize with them. The main character himself sometimes sees his own actions from the viewpoint of his captive, to his own shock; his ongoing choices are part of the drama, and I was riveted throughout.]

"Dionysus Redux" features the usual narrator (burly, hairy, longing for someone to either bind and use him or to submit to being bound and used by him), but this time he's in a happy if somewhat tame relationship, even as he daydreams and lusts after another man. The variation here - well, I won't spoil it!

In some of the stories, Mann - er, the narrator - is the master, in some the slave. Sometimes the story's about getting to that point, and sometimes it's about how to fulfil a desire that's already known. And despite the consistent bondage, torments of various kinds (physical and psychological), and hairy, sweaty sex, somehow the poetry's there too; lyrical descriptions of settings as well as of bodies, little details of food or music or light on the trees as well as of bruises and scents and tension.

The story "Captive" opens with a quote from Donne's Holy Sonnet 14, very appropriate; this one almost made me understand why someone might want to be a slave, though it also suggested the psychological warping that can make a prisoner begin to sympathize with and eventually bond with a captor.

If that one had its dark notes, "Daddy Dave" is positively cheerful - even with the same ropes and beatings! This is another tale with a happily-mated man whose partner prefers tamer sex, but the twist here suggests that people may be able to widen their horizons if they want to.

"Raspberry Moonshine" ramps up the tension again. Here the men meet in a college class, and team up to do a research project on moonshine. (They both know how dangerous it is to sneak up on somebody's still, but one of them claims to have an in with a local moonshiner.) Let's just say that things do not go as planned, and in this case the capture and bondage isn't done by a seducer but by a very irate moonshiner. Our heroes wind up bound together, and take some comfort from this while waiting to learn their fates...

"Fireflies" is a ghost story and a love story - or else a tale of madness and obsession, if you prefer to view it that way.

And then there's "Quality of Mercy". With passages like "You're the imbalance... I can't believe someone else hasn't tried to take you before me. How can you look like that and not expect someone somewhere to break every law of God or man to own you? I ought to whip you till you bleed," and with chapter-heading quotes from Bronte and Byron - and Dickinson ("I like a look of Agony/Because I know it's true") - this is a very unusual story. Not an easy read; at first I wasn't sure I was going to finish it, and while I'm glad I did, it's still... well, disturbing. Read at your own risk...

Journal Entry 2 by wingGoryDetailswing at Nashua, New Hampshire USA on Sunday, August 16, 2009

Released 14 yrs ago (8/16/2009 UTC) at Nashua, New Hampshire USA

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I'm putting this book into Scoobs-buddy's GLBT bookbox. It will be on its way Monday to BCer oldbroad in Washington. Enjoy!

Journal Entry 3 by geneli4 from Raleigh, North Carolina USA on Wednesday, September 2, 2009
taking from scoobs-buddy's glbt bookbox. thanks for including it!

Journal Entry 4 by geneli4 at -- Bookbox, -- By post or by hand/ in person -- USA on Monday, August 30, 2010

Released 13 yrs ago (8/30/2010 UTC) at -- Bookbox, -- By post or by hand/ in person -- USA

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i enjoyed many of these stories, though i agree there is a certain sameness. still, it's a perfect book to pick up for fifteen or twenty minutes and set back down to enjoy again another time.

adding to ealasaidmae's GBLTQ bookbox.

Journal Entry 5 by ealasaidmae at St. Albans, West Virginia USA on Saturday, June 25, 2011
in the bookbox - thanks, geneli4!

Journal Entry 6 by ealasaidmae at St. Albans, West Virginia USA on Sunday, October 16, 2011
Not bad. Some of the writing is impressive and a couple of the stories made me laugh, which is always a good thing. I wish there had been a little more variety but after all, he does tell us exactly what the book's about from the start, right? Right. This was the more interesting to me because I've met Jeff Mann. I've attended the LGBT Caucus at Virginia Tech several times and he's been featured there since he teaches at Tech. He's a nice guy and an interesting speaker. I've missed it this year; it was held this weekend, actually. But I'm looking forward to next year.

http://www.vtlgbtcaucus.org/

Journal Entry 7 by ealasaidmae at S Jeff Davis Pkwy in New Orleans, Louisiana USA on Friday, April 6, 2012

Released 12 yrs ago (4/6/2012 UTC) at S Jeff Davis Pkwy in New Orleans, Louisiana USA

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Welcome to Bookcrossing! I've registered this book here so that I can keep up on where it goes, who reads it, and what they thought of it. Please leave a quick journal entry so I know it's safe with you, then read and enjoy! When you're through, pass the book along to someone else who will appreciate it. We can all track this book's journey and the lives it touches forever more!

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