Stag-nation

Fiction & Literature, Humorous, Literary
Cover of the book Stag-nation by Jan Tailor, Jan Tailor
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Jan Tailor ISBN: 9780988080706
Publisher: Jan Tailor Publication: June 3, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Jan Tailor
ISBN: 9780988080706
Publisher: Jan Tailor
Publication: June 3, 2012
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

Damian Johnson, a full-time security guard, part- time smut aficionado and drunk, tells us in his own 95,000 word opus “STAG-NATION”, or “why you should not date a stripper”.
Aside from Damian’s size, XXLT (or in his mind “tall and fat”), his only exceptional assets are the ability to manipulate people or the “business acumen” his father taught him. He owns a sail boat and house, passed on from father to son. Damian hates his father, especially the less honourable way that his father does business. Damian does his best to avoid using this inherited talent, preferring instead to be a slacker with dreams of taking strippers sailing. The reality is that he spends most of his time getting fucked up while playing video game hockey with his deviant, co-dependant best buddy Trevor.
STAG-NATION follows Damian as he falls in love with Janette, a lap dancer that looks like Betty Page. Damian pays for a lap dance with Neyt (Janette’s stage name) while going sailing and for drinks with Janette, unable to figure out if he is really going out with Janette or just paying for Neyt. During the courtship, Damian struggles to keep up with the false reality constructed by GQ and Maxim - one of having to be Adonis in a hot car to get the girl - when he is a fat man with a Honda and the a 1978 edition of Hustler.
Damian becomes entangled in all the trite but true realities associated with the sex industry as the relationship deepens – addiction, abuse, self hated, co-dependence - baggage Damian already carries from years of his father calling him “tons of fun” and “fatty”. Meanwhile, Damian attempts to maintain his day- to- day life working as a security guard. The closer Damian gets to Janette, the more alcohol and Trevor get in the way. He enters into a downward spiral, catapulting between two conflicting worlds which become increasingly difficult to separate. It ends badly. A “romance noir” as Damian likes to think of it.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Damian Johnson, a full-time security guard, part- time smut aficionado and drunk, tells us in his own 95,000 word opus “STAG-NATION”, or “why you should not date a stripper”.
Aside from Damian’s size, XXLT (or in his mind “tall and fat”), his only exceptional assets are the ability to manipulate people or the “business acumen” his father taught him. He owns a sail boat and house, passed on from father to son. Damian hates his father, especially the less honourable way that his father does business. Damian does his best to avoid using this inherited talent, preferring instead to be a slacker with dreams of taking strippers sailing. The reality is that he spends most of his time getting fucked up while playing video game hockey with his deviant, co-dependant best buddy Trevor.
STAG-NATION follows Damian as he falls in love with Janette, a lap dancer that looks like Betty Page. Damian pays for a lap dance with Neyt (Janette’s stage name) while going sailing and for drinks with Janette, unable to figure out if he is really going out with Janette or just paying for Neyt. During the courtship, Damian struggles to keep up with the false reality constructed by GQ and Maxim - one of having to be Adonis in a hot car to get the girl - when he is a fat man with a Honda and the a 1978 edition of Hustler.
Damian becomes entangled in all the trite but true realities associated with the sex industry as the relationship deepens – addiction, abuse, self hated, co-dependence - baggage Damian already carries from years of his father calling him “tons of fun” and “fatty”. Meanwhile, Damian attempts to maintain his day- to- day life working as a security guard. The closer Damian gets to Janette, the more alcohol and Trevor get in the way. He enters into a downward spiral, catapulting between two conflicting worlds which become increasingly difficult to separate. It ends badly. A “romance noir” as Damian likes to think of it.

More books from Literary

Cover of the book Mysterious Something in the Light by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Historia. Libro VII by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Rejection and Disaffiliation in Twenty-First Century American Immigration Narratives by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Anatole France by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Dearest Isa by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Anglo-American Imperialism and the Pacific by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Humans, Beasts, and Ghosts by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book The Life and Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book The Keepers of the House by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book COLERIDGE: Essays & Lectures on Shakespeare, Old Poets & Dramatists by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book The Measures Between Us by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Biographies Of Working Men by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Le Voleur d'ombres de Marc Levy (Analyse de l'oeuvre) by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Clementine Hunter by Jan Tailor
Cover of the book Brahms and Bruckner as Artistic Antipodes by Jan Tailor
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy