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The Boys Across the Street

by Rick Sandford


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  • Rick is a former porn star who lives in Los Angeles. It is not an unlikely place for a former porn star to live, but Rick's apartment sits across the street from an Orthodox Jewish Yeshiva. In The Boys Across the Street (Faber and Faber, 278 pp., $24.00), the smart and funny first novel by the late Rick Sandford, the author's namesake develops a crush on more than a few of the school's young students. Eventually, Rick becomes infatuated with their faith itself.

    Like most crushes, Rick's begins innocently enough, with a few words exchanged with his wary neighbors. Rick has not talked to anyone in his family for five years because "they believe in God," and the encounters between him and the boys are full of a curious mixture of both fascination and dread.

    Throughout, Rick is always surprised at how willing the boys are to discuss religion and sex with him. They are not quite as fascinated with his lifestyle as he is with theirs, but questions do arise: How do you have sex with other men? Why would you rather be passive than active? Why do you like the taste of semen? And inevitably, do you believe in God?

    Drawn to the passion and devotion of the boys, Rick starts writing stories about them. He takes to wearing a yarmulke, and eventually dons complete Chassidic drag. He reads the Tanakh and then the Mishnah and tries to tackle the Torah. As Rick's investigation into the faith escalates, so does the tension between him and the boys. It crescendoes into a mysterious shooting that shatters his window.

    The novel doubles back on itself when Rick lets the young men who inspire his stories read his written accounts of their encounters. This self-reflexive structure is a perfect framework for Rick's journey to understanding the boys and, in turn, himself. Sandford's writing is an expression of a keen intellect, and the arguments in the novel are learned ones. But their scholarly background does not for a moment inhibit the author's flair for storytelling.

    There is a precise and also naive quality to the conversations between Rick and the younger students, but that doesn't detract from the depth of what they are discussing: identity, AIDS, community and isolation, the importance of belief, and the absence of devotion in modern life. This is a smartly rendered novel about a man moving to a place where he can abandon everything he thinks he knows. In The Boys Across the Street, it's a place called love.

    Review by Lawrence Chua


     
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