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Formats
Ebook Details
  • 12/2023
  • 979-8-88747-146-4
  • 284 pages
  • $20.95
Paperback Details
  • 12/2023
  • 979-8-88747-162-4
  • 284 pages
  • $20.95
Tobias Maxwell
Author
The Sex and Dope Show Saga, Second Edition 2023
Jed Springs’s high school production of the once controversial play, The Children’s Hour, had been a total success at the end of June in 1997; the talk of the community for all the right reasons. But frustrated with America’s puritanical roots, its skewed take on human sexuality, and goaded by his lover, Matt, to put up or shut up about it, Jed decides to workshop a radical idea, The Sex Show. By day, he teaches AP language courses and rehearses a production of Cabaret with his students. By night, his new play, The Sex Show, begins to take shape with a cast of fifteen eccentric LA actors. When Steve Paliri, a born-again Christian, is hired to helm Jefferson High School at the start of the new academic year, it becomes quite clear that the Christian Right has gained a foothold. Jed and Matt’s dream of growing old together, having children and living happily ever after, begins to crumble. From the improvisational to the absurd, The Sex and Dope Show Saga unwinds like a finely tuned timepiece, calibrated to explode at any minute.
Reviews
“It’s group performance art, moved to the next level,” explains Jed, a theater director, to the cast he has assembled, in an Episcopal church’s meeting hall, to put together The Sex Show, an exploratory theater piece “About hypocrisy and ecstasy, gender and role-playing. About sexuality and fetishes and power” and “The whole hodgepodge that made them human sexual beings.” This sprawling, surprising novel from Maxwell (Rafael Jerome) lives up to that heady promise, as Jed’s cast sheds inhibitions, reveals their sexual selves, and launches into searching improvised scenes together, all while insisting to the public that these rehearsals are a twelve-step program. But outside of rehearsals that Jed comes to think of as “his utopia, artificial though it was,” the real world of 1997 rages on, upending Jed’s life—and demonstrating why committing to such a bold, impassioned project feels so urgent. At the high school where he teaches drama, a new principal crusades against Jed’s production of Cabaret.

Meanwhile, Jed’s mother moves in with Jed and his partner, Matt, and discovers the pleasures of weed, and a series of tragedies and injustices will see Jed on the road with the most unlikely person. While much of the novel concerns Jed’s vividly drawn nightmares and complex close relationships, Maxwell pens strong, extended scenes of The Sex Show cast exploring, with welcome frankness, sexual desires, taboos, and hypocrisies, a liberating contrast to the situation Jed faces at school: an effort to stage a Cabaret without “sexual overtones.” The prose blends incisive observation, earnest outrage, and bright comic sparkle (on a genial round of group sex: “The trio shifted positions like they were accommodating a fourth for a sociable game of bridge.”)

For all the laughs, though, a spirit of anxiety powers the book, as Jed and company continually face forces of repression. This provocative, hilarious, sometimes wrenching story’s second half gains momentum as America’s policing of sex and drugs inspires desperation, with several characters on the run—and discovering themselves.

Takeaway: Bold, funny novel of theater, sex, taboos, and American hypocrisy.

Comparable Titles: Stephen McCauley, Andrew Sean Greer.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Ebook Details
  • 12/2023
  • 979-8-88747-146-4
  • 284 pages
  • $20.95
Paperback Details
  • 12/2023
  • 979-8-88747-162-4
  • 284 pages
  • $20.95
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