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Hardcover Trust Fund Boys Book

ISBN: 0758205449

ISBN13: 9780758205445

Trust Fund Boys

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Integrating themselves into New York's wealthy gay social circuit in search of Sugar Daddies, Brett and Jamie instead find themselves immersed in a world of devious debutantes, diabolical social... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Chasing Cash

Byrnes, Rob. "Trust Fund Boys", Kensington Books, 2005. Chasing Cash Amos Lassen Rob Byrnes is one of my favorite gay fluff authors and I mean that as a compliment. I always have fun reading his light novels. He requires no stretch of the imagination and his writing is smooth and always an enjoyable read. Our main character is Brett Revere who is a broke almost forty year old actor who can't get a gig. He needs to unload his roommate (because he is a creep) and he has been dropped from his temp agency. He becomes desperate and come up with a scheme, "Operation Hamptons" which is a way to get older men to give him money. He pretends to be a trust fund baby-an idea he stole from a friend, Jamie Brock. Jamie is a manipulative hustler who hangs out at The Penthouse, a bar for the who's who with money. Brett falls for Jamie but when Jamie finds out who he really is, he forgets him. Brett then meets Michael DeVries, a gentleman from the bar but he is still in love with Jamie. Brynes tells us some things about how the rich live and we find none of them to be likeable people. The way everything comes together is wonderful and there is a bit of suspense wondering what will happen next. And what does come next every time is totally unexpected. Brynes is irreverent and cynical and personal. The book shows dislike for petty snobbery or for those that feed off of them. We are not only entertained but we learn something here.

Compulsively Readable

I thoroughly enjoyed this novel from start to finish. The things the protagonist goes through to get a life only to find it isn't the life he wanted at all make for a fun read. It is a quick read because once you start, you can't stop until you see what happens. The author keeps the story moving and even though you know there will be a happy ending, it is fun just getting to it. Others have given a synopsis of the story, so all I will say is to pick up the book and enjoy!

EXCELLENT!!!

What a delight to read! The story started off on a hilarious note which grabbed my attention quick. Then the story changed tunes when the real story began -- falling in and out of love and the greed for money and the things and people it can buy. It was very well written! If you're looking for something good to read, I would recommend this book to you. It even had lessons we all could learn from the way Brett Revere (the main character) conducted his life.

JUST IN TIME FOR SUMMER!

Nothing that Byrnes submits in this book requires a big stretch of the imagination. But the way he ties everything together is sheer genius--and I won't give it away. This book is a delight to read, and addictive. The situations in which Jamie and Brett find themselves leave you sitting on the edge of your seat wondering what in the world could possibly come next. What does come next is not always earth-shattering, but usually unexpected. Isn't that what makes a fun read?Set aside a rainy afternoon and read this book. It will bring sunshine. Sure, it's light, gay fiction. But if you enjoy reading that--as I do--you can't do better. I just hope that the author will soon let us know what happens next to these characters who found a place in my heart. When is the next Rob Byrnes book coming???

The Sun WILL Come Out Tomorrow!

For those of you expecting a screwball, over-the-top repeat of Rob Byrnes' delicious, THE NIGHT WE MET be forewarned. TRUST FUND BOYS maintains Byrnes' wonderfully irreverent and slightly cynical narrative voice, so captivating in the first novel, but the story, this time around, is more "expose" than "madcap adventure." It has its slap-stick moments, but the setting and tone are a great deal more personal, and not always pretty to look at. The end result, however, remains enormously satisfying.Brett Revere, our hero and narrator, is a barely thirty, out-of-work actor, eking out a living as an office temp, and dreaming of that big break that will make him a star of the Broadway stage, but the dream is beginning to wear thin, as is his bank account. As our story begins Brett is auditioning for a back room, non-equity, gay spoof of the musical ANNIE, called ANDY, starring an obnoxious queen named Joey Takashimi. After a single rehearsal Brett walks out on the embarrassingly bad production certain of its quick demise. He accompanies a fellow actor from the show for a drink, and ends up at the Penthouse, a bar frequented by the upwardly mobile, i.e.: gay and filthy rich, and those who want to be carbon copies of them. On his first night at the club, Brett meets Jaime Brock, an attractive, if somewhat weather-worn, charmer and ends up loosing his heart faster than Cher can change costumes.It doesn't take long for our two fellows to discover that they are both wanna-be's not be's, and a plan is hatched to charm their way into this elite circle for the purpose of career enhancement. Unfortunately for Brett, the denizens of this exclusive enclave are not the only ones Jamie is conning, and Brett's puppy-dog crush is making him an easy mark. Will Brett wake up to the insanity of the situation, or will he follow Jaime in this soul snatching buffoonery? Will he ever stop playing Oliver to Jaime's Artful Dodger? Byrnes allows the character of Brett to be uncompromisingly human, with all his greed and selfishness exposed. Brett is a nice guy, deep down, but can he remain one and still gain entrance to the snooty society he sees as his salvation. We don't always like Brett, but we understand him.TRUST FUND BOYS takes-no-prisoners in its disdain for the petty social snobbery of the Hampton's elite, and the bottom feeders that surround them, but the book's near-total lack of sympathy for this world in no way diminishes the reader's fascination by it, kind of like watching the Menendez trial, you now-did those divine brothers really do that? While the majority of the people we meet along this exclusive trip are arrogant bores, the author never lets us forget that real, non-discriminating, worth-knowing people are part of every element of society, if you just look for them. Byrnes has lessons to teach us this time around, and he wears those lessons on his narrative sleeve. I, for one, don't mind calling a spade a spade, and appreciate Byrnes' frank candor. I highl
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