All the Wrong Places
by Kenn DahllPublish: Apr 08, 2020Book Overview
Six scorching short-short stories about hyper sexed young men seeking lust−not love−looking in All the Wrong Places, with no pretense of seeking romance. The titles of the stories depict the stereotypical situations where lust can be satisfied without entanglements:
1.) Locker Room Antics-The star tight end of a college football team injures his ankle and is treated for more than ankle pain by the remarkably handsome Assistant Coach, barely out of college himself. (1136 words)
2.) Riding on the Rails-A young male commuter on a train from Baltimore to Washington, D. C. attracts the attention of another passenger. Subtle signals ensue and soon both youths find themselves naked in a restroom at the back of a nearly deserted railroad car. (1204 words)
3.) My Dessert Wasn’t on the Menu-The chair of the Lesbian and Gay Lawyers Association of a major city in the northeast hosts a dinner on the first evening of the city’s annual bar association conference. Inevitably, the handsome young man serving the table stars in a hot session of man-on-man sex in the host’s hotel room. (2179 words)
4.) On Your Knees-As the choir director, organist, and arranger of seasonal décor, readied the altar for Easter Vigil he instructs a volunteer altar server to assist him bring up another kneeler from the basement where the pair are caught in a compromising sexual position by the handsome thirty-something Assistant Pastor, who takes the opportunity to secure sexual favors from the duo. (1682 words)
5.) Fitness Fun and Games-Locker rooms can be a hot bed of sexual tensions, as an attractive young businessman discovered when he sought out the hotel training site’s pool for a relaxing swim and shower only to encounter a pair of hyper-sexed lovers in the locker room. (1314 words)
6.) Measuring Up-A taunt about the size of a friend’s endowment leads to a challenge to see whose is biggest. The process of measuring the respective tools leads to sexual experimentation for the two Midwestern youths in the early 1970s. (2066 words)