Book Review

Gold Plated Garbage Truck by T.C. Allen

F

Title: Gold Plated Garbage Truck
Author: T.C. Allen
Publication Info: Chippewa Publishing LLC/Lady Aibell Press August 2006
ISBN: 1-933400-58-7
Genre: Science Fiction/Fantasy

Gold Plated Bonerdeath I paid $5 to read this book on my Blackberry, and took two Tylenol for the headache I got from reading on the tiny screen, and two more this morning for residual agony. I’m thinking that I might need some kind of counseling to recover from the utter badness that is this book, and that’s roughly, what, $80-100 an hour?

This was a very expensive mistake indeed, but when the Bitchery clamors for a review, I try to step up.

Even Hubby said, “You’re seriously reading that?”

I exacted revenge for his doubt by reading portions aloud, prompting the following responses:

“Oh, my God.”

“Please, please stop.”

If I had to describe this book in two words, those words would be: complete bonerdeath. This book will suck the sexy out of any known being, and leave any libido in the tri-state area dry and gasping. This book is the real reasons all those erotica novel vaginas are weeping.

It’s so awful I can’t even finish it. I already need some kind of mental restoration for having introduced the story into my head. If only I could return my brain to ‘last known good’ configuration, because my memory at present contains the following details:

Wilbur and Homer are best friends. Wilbur drives a garbage truck in Humper County, Oklahoma, and dreams of driving a gold-plated garbage truck while wearing a white Stetson and a red bandanna and some clothing of some sort. He prefers to drive said truck while high or drunk or both, and shoot the reflectors off the road signs and pepper the anatomy of billboard models with bulletholes from his handgun. At the start of our story, he runs out of bullets and goes home to find Homer boinking Wilbur’s wife, Emily.

Emily, it should be noted, is referred to repeatedly and I assume ironically as innocent, sweet, delicate and pure by Wilbur, the narrator, despite the numerous times he comes home to find her naked with some dude sneaking out the trailer door.

Homer takes off running because he thinks Wilbur’s gun is loaded and aimed at his ass, leaving Emily naked on the floor to explain what was going on. It certainly was what it looked like so at least she didn’t attempt a lame defense.

Instead, she attacks Wilbur’s manhood, tells him he doesn’t sexually satisfy her, and furthermore, she’s right pissed at him for not shooting Homer when they were both caught bareassed on the floor: “I’ll tell you what the matter is. You come waltzing in here with your truck pistol in your hand and catch me bare ass naked with another man and you don’t shoot him? I mean, even if he is your best friend, you should of shot him, at least once, somewhere.”

You can read more of the first chapter here. Bring painkiller. Or vascodilators. Or both.

Mixed in with the decidedly un-erotic content is a plot that somehow details how Wilbur, Emily, and Homer become country music stars by playing in a bar, which upsets poor Wilbur because he’s neglecting his trash collection duties. Emily gives birth to a baby that looks like neither Homer nor Wilbur, and they start calling themselves co-husbands since both of them like to boink Emily. Connie, Homer’s ex, is in there somewhere, too. And there are other ancillary characters, like some religious nutjobs who want to shut their act down. And here I am, siding with the religious right – these characters should be stopped.

Now, I’m fully willing to take a good number of romance and erotica plots with a great heavy grain of salt, most notably those that mix camp and sex for really off-the-wall erotica. And when reading erotica, I am also fully willing to read through scenes that don’t do it for me personally, but may engage some fantasies of other readers, such as watching a spouse do the carpet burn-and-roll with someone else, or catching someone in the act of poopchute lovin’ in a cop car. Whatever. People get their jollies from all manner of sexual content, and most of the time, I’m not judgmental about varying sexual proclivities.

However, this story isn’t erotic. It’s not even sexy. It’s just bad. Despite being categorized as “erotica,” with warnings that the content of the eBook is meant for mature audiences there’s really no erotic content. It’s just… lame. Lame lame lame. There was plenty of room for mixed-partner sex scenes, but Allen describes the sexual interaction in one sentence. There’s no description. At one point, Wilbur decides that he likes what-what-in-the-butt with Homer’s ex-wife Connie, so he grabs some butter, slaps her on the butt with it, and engages in some back door lovin’ on the hood of a car. This is described in fifteen to twenty words, tops. My description here? Longer than the actual scene. Allen has the same problem Wilbur has: “crawl on, stick it in and shoot it off.” This is the first erotica novel I’ve read that has its own case of sexual dysfunction.

Another example of potential erotic content that suffered total melting of the man cannon: during a brawl, Connie gets hurt on her breast, which she shows to the two arresting officers who report to the scene. Medical attention is needed – from both officers! In the squad car! And Connie decides to engage the car’s radio so the boinka-boink in her badonkadonk is broadcast to every listening officer AND every person tuned into the police scanner. It’s like the cop-car-in-the-woods version of having the pool boy visit the cabana. Imagine the sexual comedic potential of writing a scene like that.

What happens?

Connie goes off to the squad car, comes back a few minutes later, and tells Wilbur she turned the CB radio on before they got busy. That’s it. That’s all the reader gets. There’s no show, no tell, and really, no damn point to the whole thing. How is this erotica? It’s not. It’s merely rot.

In the hands of a writer who could craft a sensual or even a raunchy sex scene, the rural ramblings of Wilbur (the story is told in first person, heavy on the rural vernacular) could have resulted in something spicy and sexy, if not at least entertaining. The story itself could have been an erotic romp between bizarre characters, or a journey toward ignominious stardom, or even a lot of backdoor buttered sex, but the plot deflated every time it got close to being something other than tawdry, lame, and altogether stupid.

In short: this book is instant, complete, and total bonerdeath. Stay far, far away.

Comments are Closed

  1. Wry Hag says:

    The names Wilbur and Homer aren’t nearly as disturbing to me as seeing the name Lillith (or Lilith) used…again…and again…AND YET AGAIN for yet another Ambisextrous Queen of the Fuckin’ Night!  (Original much?  Yeah, Lillith, bite this.)

  2. Yeah, I didn’t find it funny either.  Of course, it’s not meant to REALLY be erotic (at least, that’s my assumption because dear GOD, if I actually had a boner, it would be stone cold dead) but, as someone else said, that could be forgiven if it was the slightest bit funny. 

    I get tired of seeing the same old “small-town Southerners are stupid” stereotypes, too.

  3. Wry Hag says:

    This falls under the “If you’re going to capitalize on stereotypes, at least do it right” category.  My psycho ex, who was raised in the Everglades (and a number of state prisons and local jails), always told me the most favored “cracker” names were Bubba and Junior.

    James Dickey, too, at least had some kind of leg to stand on.

  4. Absolutely Bubba and Junior (which also works for females, btw—I went to junior high with a female Junior and for the life of me I can’t remember her real first name because no one ever called her that), but let’s not forget Billy, Lee, Ray, and Travis.  I swear at least 50% of my little school’s males were named one of those four… and, oddly, to go with the huge kicker population we also had 2 guys in my graduating class of 111 who were named Stacy.  (Well, one was Stacey.  But no matter how you spell it, that’s definitely NOT a cracker name.) 

    Oh, and pretty much anything hyphenated with Joe works for the over-the-top Stupid Hick names—again, male or female.

  5. DS says:

    Well, I’m north of the everglades by several hundred miles but I do remember a couple of Homers but no Wilburs.  There was also at least one Melvin and a couple of Bufords.

    Is this sort of humor supposed to capitalize on fans of My Name Is Earl?  If I had more energy I would get a copy and give it to the biggest fan of this show I know and see how he reacts.

  6. Lurker says:

    You know what part of it that makes my brain explode?

    ““That is part of the problem with you, Wilbur.” She gave me a painful squeeze. “I been married to you since I was fourteen years old. We been married for fifteen years and you count ‘em; I am now twenty-five years old and I only got off with you maybe a half dozen times in that whole fifteen years.”

    First: Married since she was fourteen years old? Yuck?
    And then: If she is now twenty-five and they’ve been married for fifteen years, wouldn’t that mean that they married when she was, like, TEN?
    Blah.

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