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The Perils of Praline

door Marshall Thornton

Reeksen: Perils of Praline (1)

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When he falls in love with a contestant on a reality TV show, Peter "Praline" Palmetier decides to leave his home in rural Georgia and, failing to realize this might be considered stalking, travels to Hollywood to find his soul mate, Dave G. Once in tinsel-town he meets a collection of startling, and often horny, characters in his quest. They include a studly steward, a conservative talk show host, the Godfather of the Gay Mafia, and casting assistant Jason Friedman, who always manages to be there in time to save Praline from total disaster. Will Praline find love with the illusive Dave G., or will he recognize the charms of appealing but untelegenic Jason?… (meer)
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Toon 4 van 4
DNF at 37%

Second attempt. I keep hating it. I give up. ( )
  Marlobo | Dec 24, 2022 |
DNF
  Tam2603 | Apr 18, 2013 |
The Perils of Pauline was a classic in its own way and so should be the “Perils of Praline” as our hero Peter aka Praline “acquires enough adventures for a tell-all autobiography. With sequels.”

First off, it’s important to understand the difference between a romance and a comedy. Comedies can have a romance in them in the same way that thrillers or action books have that element. However, romances revolve around plot and character.

The best comedies revolve around humor and social statement. The plots can be flimsy or unlikely, the characters need to be extreme or at least remarkable, otherwise the humor drags.

Perils of Praline is a great gay comedy.

The social comment is leavened by amusing action. But it’s worth noting a few examples to show how slapstick humor can work so well with pithy barbs.

Praline’s mother comes up with some gems. First off there are her Ten Commandments. Read the book to find out. As someone who lived by her own rules as to what was legal and what wasn’t. She liked “get-tough-on-crime-candidates” as they were the
“small government” types and, as such, were unlikely to give police departments enough money to actually get-tough-on-crime, leaving her business safe.
These barbs can also be comments on people’s foibles like this: “I love people who work hard. They’re great to have around – never forget to take credit for everything they do. It’s one of the ways to get ahead.” Or this classic:
“Praline, I brought you up better than that.” Said his mama. “The man has licked your asshole. The least you can do is say ‘hey.’
Mind you, Praline’s stereotypical Southern politeness gets him into lots of trouble!

The story contains quite a few trueisms: “One of the best ways to get promoted, besides sleeping with the right people, is to fail spectacularly.”

Comedies are also a great way to make a political comment: “He could pretend to be a high school pal in Hollywood before going off to a war zone (Praline decided not to be specific about which war zone because, well, to be honest he could never remember exactly which countries were currently being occupied).”

Through the eyes of our clueless hero who, in times of stress, immersed himself in thoughts about different forms of confectionary and sweets, Thornton has a go at the culture that uses television and media to form their view of the world.
Praline knew from his extensive television viewing that white people shot their spouses, white people devised confusing and illegal accounting scams, white people sent dangerous microbes through the mail, but white people did not drive around in enormous SUVs committing street crimes. They left that to the ethnicities.
Marshall is a playwright by trade, and I could imagine sitting in a theatre and laughing at lines like these. His sardonic wit and a twisted way of saying things may not appeal to readers brought up on a diet of pure m/m romance.
… he’d become a prostitute. Had (Praline) been given the luxury of considering this life-altering decision before it had actually occurred he would have declined the opportunity.
There is an endearing childlike innocence to Praline whose choice of “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” as a “safe word” leads to all sorts of hilarious consequences in a BDSM scene. He may be naive, but Praline has a innate sense of what is right and wrong. Not just as expressed here:
long discussions of politically incorrect perjoratives in the middle of a blowjob weren’t exactly, well, stimulating.
However the characters around him aren’t so smart. One depressive when asked “Have you taken anything for it?” Answers
“Sure, Crack, ecstasy, LSD, methamphetamine, Special K, alcohol and marijuana. Nothing works.”

Good comedy makes statements about life, the Universe and shows like Sex and the City (not mentioned by name but clearly identified by)
By the end of each episode, they’d managed to convince themselves, and the viewers, that it was they, and not the men they slept with and tossed aside, who were the victims.
Like all good stories, Thornton’s main characters do learn from their experiences. In Praline’s case, just as well as
“…there were few times in life when it seemed important to concentrate hard, so Praline had never gotten good at it.

If you like sophisticated writing, coupled with biting humor, then I thoroughly recommend “The Perils of Praline.”

My only quibble. Authors and editors please note. The following three words sound the same, but have quite different meanings. Please get them right. Your spell-checker won’t. To quote Merriam-Webster:
PEEK
1 a : to look furtively
b : to peer through a crack or hole or from a place of concealment —often used with in or out
2: to take a brief look :
PEAK
1: a pointed or projecting part of a garment; especially : the visor of a cap or hat
2: a sharp or pointed end
3a (1) : the top of a hill or mountain ending in a point (2) : a prominent mountain usually having a well-defined summit
b : something resembling a mountain peak
4a : the upper aftermost corner of a fore-and-aft sail
b : the narrow part of a ship's bow or stern or the part of the hold in it
5a : the highest level or greatest degree
b : a high point in a course of development especially as represented on a graph
PIQUE
a transient feeling of wounded vanity: a fit of pique
however, idiomatically, it is: pique someone's curiosity and pique someone's interest ie to arouse interest; to arouse curiosity
it comes from the French verb Piquer - to sting, bite; to give a shot

From an email discussion we had on typos. I gather Marshall is aware of these and they may have slipped in via the proofreader at MLR. ( )
  AB_Gayle | Mar 30, 2013 |
Like in those XVIII century novels (Moll Flanders? The title remembers a little that novel), where a young woman with no means of support if not her beauty and wit, manages to climb the society levels, here Praline arrives from the southern state of Georgia to Hollywood, following the dream to be the same-sex celebrity spouse of Dave G., a wannabe actor who was in a reality. Praline doesn’t really know Dave G., and actually he doesn’t even know if Dave G. is gay, but he has clear in mind the advice of a bestselling book, The Key (a book that Praline has not read but he is sure the advertisement for it is enough to understand the concept): all you had to do to succeed in love was imagine down to the tiniest detail exactly what and exactly who you wanted to love you and it would come true.

That is basically Praline, a mix of sex and naiveté, a young man that is generous until his core, with all he has, body included. For Praline having sex is like sharing happiness, he likes to do it, and he doesn’t see why he hasn’t to enjoy it with someone else. Praline is not a prostitute, even if he is mistaken for one, all right, he has considered the idea to use his body to pay the bills, but indeed, most of the time, Praline is having sex with men since he pretty much likes everyone, old or young, pretty or not so much. True, Praline is a bit vain, he will never admit he is not physically perfect, even if he well knows he has a “huge” fault (well, Praline’s best asset is his… bottom), but he is not discriminate with his possible lovers.

As soon as he arrives in Hollywood, West Hollywood of course, he meets Jason: Jason is young, nice, the perfect boyfriend, but he is not Dave G.; and while everyone seems intent in getting into Praline’s pants, better bikini or thong, Jason stubbornly refuses to have sex with Praline, even when Praline, in a kind and very noble way, suggest it.

I don’t want to ruin the immensely funny experience that will be to read this book, let me only know that Praline will become in less than one week a gay celebrity, always maintaining his true self, being the naïve, but sincere guy he is, and in the end, managing to find his true love. Praline is like many modern boy, brought up with candies and television, they sometime have no idea how the real world works, since they always believe there is the good in everything. Most of the time they are disillusioned by life, but sometime, like for Praline, this attitude leads them to the true happiness that only someone with a pure heart can find, and trust me, maybe nothing else in Praline is pure, but his heart is.

http://www.amazon.com/dp/160820233X/?tag=elimyrevandra-20
  elisa.rolle | Jun 27, 2011 |
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When he falls in love with a contestant on a reality TV show, Peter "Praline" Palmetier decides to leave his home in rural Georgia and, failing to realize this might be considered stalking, travels to Hollywood to find his soul mate, Dave G. Once in tinsel-town he meets a collection of startling, and often horny, characters in his quest. They include a studly steward, a conservative talk show host, the Godfather of the Gay Mafia, and casting assistant Jason Friedman, who always manages to be there in time to save Praline from total disaster. Will Praline find love with the illusive Dave G., or will he recognize the charms of appealing but untelegenic Jason?

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