Showing posts with label anniston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anniston. Show all posts

Friday, May 17, 2013

A Masque of Infamy Promotion


The Kindle version of A Masque of Infamy is free until 5/21.

A Masque of Infamy is a horrific and raucous story of teenage rebellion. But instead of "What d'ya got?" fifteen-year-old Louis Baudrey knows exactly what he's fighting against…

After moving from Los Angeles to small town Alabama in 1987 with his father, his younger brother and this guy Rick, a friend of the family, Louis tries to fit in at the local high school, but the Bible-thumpers and the rednecks don't take too kindly to his outlandish wardrobe and burgeoning punk attitude. At home, he defies the sadistic intentions of Rick, who rules the household with an iron fist. As Louis begins to lose all hope, he stumbles upon indisputable proof that will free him and his brother from Rick's tyranny. But just when he thinks his troubles are over, he's locked up in the adolescent ward of a mental hospital, where he must fight the red tape of the system to realize his dream of being a punk rocker.

"A Masque of Infamy captures the screaming, up-from-the-toes intensity and torment of the United States of Adolescence. No one who reads this book will be left unchanged by its savage and unforgiving beauty." – Jerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight

"The overwhelming rawness of Kelly Dessaint's story about children attempting to navigate a world completely fucked up by adults is like a punch to the chest." – Davida Gypsy Breier, Xerography Debt

"Kelly Dessaint twists the horror of growing up in a highly dysfunctional American family into a hilarious tale of survival. Detailing the trauma of being institutionalized as a teenager after having taken revenge against an abusive father figure, A Masque of Infamy is a story about stubbornly overcoming the odds to live long enough to tell the truth about just how shitty it is to be a kid in this country." – Lydia Lunch

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

A Southern Girl - An Excerpt from A Masque of Infamy




A SOUTHERN GIRL by Kelly Dessaint

The day after the revival I could barely walk down the hallway at school without well-wishers congratulating me on getting saved. I was hoping to keep the experience a secret, but since half the school had been there, my rebirth was public knowledge. Everybody wanted to know which church I would be attending now that I had found the Lord. Of course, I hadn’t thought that far ahead. I was more than a little chagrined I had to do anything besides stand up and go along with the masses. 
Just as I was beginning to think I’d made the hugest mistake of my life, a girl walked up to me and said, “Hey, you’re going to church with me this Sunday!”  
Before I could think a reply, she handed me a folded piece of paper and turned heel. As she walked away, switching her hips in acid-washed blue jeans, she smiled over her shoulder. I held the torn sheet of loose leaf and lingered with her perfume until the final bell peeled, wondering if each time a Southern girl talked it sounded like a bird was singing. 
All through class I studied her handwriting. Maybe this getting saved business wasn’t such a bad idea after all, I thought. For the rest of the day, I kept an eye out for her in the hallways. I wanted to find out more about this Missy Walker chick… 
“Missy Walker? Oh, she’s a slut,” Casey told me after school while we hung out in my backyard listening to Dead Milkmen on his boombox. Since he was tapped into the scuttlebutt of Saks High, I figured he could give me the lowdown on Missy before I called her that evening. 
“But she’s only, like, what, fourteen?” I asked. “How could she be a slut already?” 
“Hey, that’s just what they say. She’s easy. Been around the block. Known to go where most girls never dare.”
I looked at him dubiously. 
“I don’t know from personal experience or anything. But this guy Mark Shelby said he did it with her.”
“One guy and she’s a slut?”
“Yeah, but then, the next week she made out with Gary Durham in the parking lot of the skating rink.”
“So she’s been around the block.” I tried to play it off. “Who hasn’t? In LA, this stuff is no big deal.” 
“I don’t know how they do things in LA, but, in Alabama, if a girl gives it up wham-bam-thank-you-ma’am, she’s a slut.” Casey flipped the tape over and hit play. “Still, that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t go for it. Missy’s got great tits.” He flashed a lascivious smile and sang along to the tape: “My girl has a pet duck, and my girl is a heck of a fuuuuuu-riend.” 

I didn’t put much credence behind what Casey told me. After years of bragging about faux-lays, I knew most guys were full of shit. Nobody over ten wanted to be a virgin. I certainly didn’t. That’s why I’d been lying about it for years, claiming three imaginary notches in the proverbial belt. Now that I was in an entirely new state, I upped the number to five. And if Casey or anybody else had asked for specifics, I could have happily obliged. I’d defended my allegations so many times over the years that I’d become quite deft at subterfuge. Back in my old neighborhood, it wasn’t enough to just claim to be experienced. Anything less than actual proof was suspect. 
The key to a convincing tale of conquest was to offer some context for the encounter. 
Explicit descriptions were vital: “One time I met a girl at Legg Lake,” went one of my stories. “This girl was so hot to trot, man, we snuck behind some bushes and did it doggy-style. She was older. Like fifteen. Way more experienced. Moaned so loud I thought we were gonna get busted.” 
Sensory details made the anecdotes more realistic. “Once, in Pasadena, I met this chick whose mother bought Avon from my mother. While they went over the make-up samples, we boned in her bedroom closet. She already had a hairy pussy that smelled like the seafood section at
Alpha Beta.” 
Since I didn’t go to school with the other kids in my neighborhood, I was able to claim one of my classmates as an early feather in my cap, a little game of doctor that went too far. “I wouldn’t say my first time was mistake, but it sure was for her. She had a bald pussy that was so tight, I wasn’t sure if I was even gonna be able to stick it all the way in.” 
But the truth was, I’d only kissed three girls. For a little while I had a girlfriend, this Chinese girl whose sister was friends with my sister. I was thirteen and Kim was twelve. Her parents owned a liquor store. She came over my house every day with a bag of candy and a pack of Marlboros. Even though she was a year younger than me, Kim seemed ready to go further than just kissing, making not-so-subtle suggestions and constant innuendo. At the time, I’d only kissed one girl. I was too confused by what was happening with Kim to try anything besides a little second base action. When we made out, I kept my entire pelvis region as far from her as possible so she couldn’t tell I had a hard-on. I liked Kim, but all my friends made fun of me for going out with an Asian girl, so I broke up with her. After that, I kissed a sixteen-year-old girl who partied with my friends. But she was real drunk. 
Still, if I was going to be the stud I always knew I was destined to be, I needed more practice. And this Missy girl seemed like a perfect candidate. The first of many, I hoped, thinking I’d be collecting phone numbers every day from all the girls who wanted a piece of the action. 
That evening, I studied the keypad of the phone for several hours. A few times, I dialed the first six digits, but I chickened out before I pressed the final number. 
The next day at school, Missy stopped me in the hallway. She was with a friend. 
“Hey, mister, why haven’t you called me yet?” she asked sternly. 
“Oh, sorry,” I stammered as I tried to come up with a viable excuse. 
Missy laughed a throaty chuckle through a wide lipstick smile, like she knew I would come up blank. The day before her lips were pink. This day, they were a deep red. 
“I get it. You’re busy. Sure.” Her expression suddenly turned severe. She looked me straight in the eye. “But you better not leave me hanging tonight, otherwise I’ll find out where you live and kick your butt.” 
Her friend giggled. “I don’t think you’d stand a chance,” she said. “He’s pretty tall.” 
“But I’m a good fighter,” Missy said. “Watch this.” 
She lifted up her leg as if to kick me in the groin but stopped short, leaving a dust mark on the front of my jeans. 
The other girl guffawed. “You soiled him!” 
“Here, let me wipe it off for you,” Missy said coyly. 
My face burned crimson as she brushed the front of my pants. 
“There. All better.”
The bell went off and I walked away like a misguided automaton. 
During my next class, as the teacher went on and on about whatever it was she assumed we were supposed to learn, I kept thinking about Missy… There was something about this girl, the way she looked up at me through that bouffant do, her eyelids dusted with blue shadow, those lipstick lips, the petite but shapely figure… 
Casey was right about her tits. I could tell they were the size of pomegranates. And, I didn’t know it at the time, but I had a thing for pushy girls who wore too much make-up and smelled like exotic flowers. 
As soon as I got home that afternoon, I called her and we talked for hours. 

The next Sunday morning, even though I was grounded, I snuck out my window when Missy’s stepfather pulled up in a beat-up Lincoln. 
Missy and I sat in the backseat. She had on her Sunday finest, a long-sleeved purple dress with puffy shoulders and a high neckline. 
During service at Blue Mountain Baptist Church, my mind was a million miles away. I went through the motions, standing when the rest of the congregation stood and bowing my head when it was time to bow heads. 
Between the morning and evening services, I joined Missy and her family for lunch at their house. After we’d eaten, Missy and I sat on the living room couch and talked. At one point she whispered, “The coast is clear.” 
It was time to make my move. Slowly, I eased my arm over her shoulder. I didn’t want to appear over eager, but she anticipated my gesture and scooted closer, turning her head so we were face to face. Our lips met and I tasted her lipstick, a mixture of bubblegum and wax. She explored my upper palate with her tongue. I put my hand on her thigh and felt the polyester against pantyhose. As she molded her body closer, I moved my fingers across her hips, up her arm, over her shoulder and onto her chest, like a trip through Candyland. I stroked her breasts gingerly at first, almost accidentally, but she moaned at my touch so I kneaded the mounds like handfuls of dough, alternating diplomatically between the two. 
When she placed her palm on my stomach, her touch was electric. 
My pants bulged. 
As we were making out, I began to feel liquid trickle against my inner thigh. 
At first I thought I was leaking, unsure if I was pissing myself or the head of my schlong had ruptured like a blister from all the swelling. I tried not to think about it and concentrated on Missy’s mouth. But then I felt a stream slowly moving down my leg. 
“Can I use your restroom.” I disentangled myself from her arms, figuring a good piss would mitigate the throb. 
In the bathroom, my underwear was soaked. I was relieved it was only cum. Still, I tried to take a leak. But my hard-on wouldn’t subside long enough to point it towards the toilet. So I tried to reason with my prick: C’mon, there’ll be plenty of time for this later. I filled my mind with the least enticing images I could conjure on such short notice: naked old ladies, scenes from Faces of Death… anything to trick my penis into obedience. But the muscle flexed defiantly, demanding satisfaction. I was more than willing to fulfill its needs, but how? For a second I considered lying facedown on the floor of the bathroom and just getting it over with, but there wasn’t enough space. 
Not knowing what else to do, I shoved some toilet paper into my underwear and spent the rest of the day in boner limbo. 
After lunch, we went back to the church. I was grateful I’d worn a long shirt. Throughout the evening service my cock throbbed painfully, bound like a wound in my tight jeans. Every movement was a knife in the gut. 
When Missy’s stepfather dropped me off at home that evening, I stood on the porch and waved as the car pulled out of the driveway. Once the taillights faded down the road, I ran to my room. I locked the door and rubbed my burning hard-on against the mattress. In thirty seconds flat, the sperm that had accumulated in my testicles all day traveled through my aching dick like a burst water main. My pants were soaked. 


Thursday, May 2, 2013

The New Kid In Town - An Excerpt from A Masque of Infamy


The New Kid in Town

by Kelly Dessaint


On my first day of school at Saks High, I spent all morning getting ready. I was sporting my coolest threads: a dark blue button-up over my Iron Maiden shirt. The ankles of my black jeans were pinned and tucked into my Nike hi-tops. I had all my earrings dangling. I’d put mousse in my hair to give it some lift. But the pièce de résistance was a pewter bolo tie in the shape of a cow skull that I’d scored at a Native American gift shop in New Mexico. 

I was rocking it hard. 

Before we left the house, the old man tried to convince me to change my clothes. 

“You shouldn’t draw so much attention to yourself,” he said. “In the South you need to be subtle.” 

But I didn’t want to be subtle. I wanted to make myself known and wave my freak flag as high as possible… let these hicks know I meant business.

After the old man dropped me off in the parking lot, I went to the vice-principal’s office to get my class schedule. On his desk, Mr. Griffin had spread out the transcripts from my two previous high schools. He did not look impressed. During my freshman year, my highest grade was a D, and I got expelled for cutting a kid in shop class. I thought I’d have to repeat ninth grade at the continuation school they sent me to after that, but miraculously, on the first day, they had me down as a tenth grader. 

Mr. Griffin pointed out that schools in Alabama were not as liberal with promoting students, but he’d abide by the school board of LA County and let me remain a sophomore. Then he informed me that semesters in Alabama started earlier than in California and, since I hadn’t completed the first semester yet, I’d have to make up the credits in summer school. 

Before I had a chance to absorb these ramifications, Mr. Griffin appointed a hall monitor to give me a tour of the campus. 

A guy in a letterman jacket looked at my schedule and grudgingly showed me where my classrooms were. As we walked through the deserted hallways, he asked where I was from. 

“Rose– I mean, LA.” 

“Where?” 

“LA. You know, Los Angeles. The city. It’s in California."

“You must be military,” he said with palpable disdain.

After the half-hearted orientation, I went to my first period. The teacher made me stand up and introduce myself to the rest of the class. I examined the whitewashed faces that stared me down. I didn’t see a lot of promise. But I kept an open mind. 

In the crowded hallways between classes, all eyes were on me. I felt like a celebrity. But I played it cool. 

Jeff Spicoli cool. 

During algebra, a girl tapped my shoulder and handed me a note. “You the new guy from LA, right?” she’d written. “I’m Denise.” 

I turned and smiled. She was a rocker-looking chick in faded jeans and a t-shirt with long brown hair parted down the middle. 

“Yeah. My name’s Louis,” I wrote back. “What’s up?” Just as I had expected, word of my arrival had spread like wildfire.

“Awesome. You fry?” 

I was surprised by her response. I’d been smoking pot for a couple years and had tried cocaine, but I’d never done acid before. Still, I was up for anything, so I replied, “Sure.” 

“Cool. Meet me in the parking lot after school.”

The rest of the day, I was nervous about my first acid trip. I’d heard stories about kids tripping out and jumping off buildings, thinking they could fly, having religious experiences and joining cults. I’d just seen Helter Skelter a few months back. Acid was some freaky shit. But I reassured myself that I could handle anything. If acid is what they did in Alabama, then I was willing to go along. The old man said I should try to fit in…

After school I walked to the parking lot and found Denise next to a dark blue Skylark. She introduced me to the chubby guy behind the wheel. “This my brother, Dale.” 

“What’s up, dude?” I climbed into the back.

Denise popped a Foreigner tape into the stereo and pulled out a joint. She got it going with the cigarette lighter from the dash and passed it to me. 

“Say. You ever been in an earthquake?” she asked, her arm on the back of the seat.

“Once, but I slept through it.” I took a small hit and passed the joint to Dale. I didn’t want to get too stoned, figuring they were going to bust out the acid soon. “My sister woke me up after it was over and I was all like, Earthquake? What earthquake?” 

Denise laughed. “I bet you seen lots of movie stars in LA?”

I had not. I’d cruised Hollywood Boulevard, but in the madness of that scene, it didn’t seem likely that Molly Ringwald or Eddie Murphy would be among the freaks and tourists who mobbed the sidewalks. But I figured the truth would only disappoint them. “Oh sure. All the time.” 

“Wow,” Denise said. “And you musta gone to the beach a whole bunch too, right?”

“The beach is cool.” That much was true. Except the ocean was thirty miles from my house and required a car, or a very long bus ride. 

“I just love the beach,” said Denise. “I’ve been to Florida twice. Do you know how to surf?” 

“Yeah, I surf. But I prefer boogie boards.” Only the latter was partially true. 

She held the joint and licked her finger to stop a run. “Say, you want a blowback?”

“What’s that?” Is this when they bust out the acid? I wondered, even more worried as the weed took effect.

“Shoot, you from California and I gotta learn you a blowback? It’s easy. When I blow, you inhale.” She put the joint in her mouth backwards and a stream of smoke came out the other end. 

“Oh, in LA, we call that a shotgun.” Just as I leaned in to take the hit, we approached a stop sign. Dale pressed the brakes and I bumped my lips against Denise’s mouth. Embarrassed, I choked on the smoke. 

Denise didn’t seem to notice. “LA must be so cool,” she said effusively. 

When they dropped me off that afternoon, I walked through the house quietly to avoid a stoned interaction with Rick. As I passed his room, I heard the blip and warbled chimes of Mario Brothers behind the closed door. I thought about how much fun it would be to play video games while high on pot. But the only way I could use his Nintendo or watch videos on his VCR was to participate in an endurance game. And I wasn’t in the mood for that. 

I found a snack in the kitchen and went to my room. I spent the rest of the afternoon on the bed, buzzed and ecstatic, watching the ceiling spin. Black Sabbath pulsated through my head from my headphones. I’d forgotten all about the acid, too preoccupied with the accidental lip bump, wondering if it counted as a kiss, which meant I could add another girl to my list of girls kissed for a grand total of four. I knew it was an accident—it’s not like she kissed me back. But our lips had touched and we weren’t related, so I figured, why not? The more the merrier. 

After that day, each afternoon, I hitched a ride home with Denise and Dale. They helped me grasp the cultural differences of Saks High and taught me how to speak Southern. As it turned out, in Alabama, “getting fried” meant “getting stoned.” They also explained that they weren’t “giving me rides” home, they were “carrying me” home. When they pointed to something in the distance it wasn’t “over there,” is was “over yonder.” And when we were about to take off, we were actually “fixing” to leave. The one that tripped me out the most, though, was that soda, regardless of the flavor or brand, was called Coke. 

I caught on quickly, though I never intended to add these terms to my vocabulary. I was determined to maintain my LA attitude. Besides, if I had, I would’ve been putting on airs. And in a small town, they told me, there was nothing more deplorable than pretending to be something you’re not. 



Tuesday, April 16, 2013

SUCKS, ALABAMA


SUCKS, ALABAMA: 

The Unexpurgated Adventures of 

Louis Baudrey in Small Town Alabama

Part One of A Masque of Infamy

By Kelly Dessaint

Louis Baudrey is a teenage metalhead who moves from LA to small town Alabama in 1987. At Saks High, he tries to fit in, but the rednecks and the Bible-thumpers don't take too kindly to his outlandish wardrobe and burgeoning punk rock attitude. At home, it's even worse, as Rick, his father's "friend," tries to coerce him into conforming to something even more insidious than the social mores of high school. 


Only available as an eBook free from the Apple iBookstore or as a PDF from Scribd.



Before I left California, all I knew about the South was what I’d seen on TV: The Dukes of Hazard,RootsDeliverance… So that’s what I expected: racist, good ole boys, playing banjos and speeding around the countryside in souped-up muscle cars, murdering and sodomizing strangers. Despite the old man’s assurance that I shouldn’t believe everything I saw on TV, my enthusiasm waved from one moment to the next. But the truth was, I was ready for a fresh start. 
I wasn’t leaving much behind in Rosemead. Just bad memories and the rest of my crazy family. I figured I could write my own ticket in a podunk Alabama town. Nobody needed to know that I was born in the crappy part of a crappy suburb on the wrong side of Hollywood. But while Rosemead was nothing like the Los Angeles depicted in movies and television, I looked totally LA. It was 1986. My style was an amalgam of punk and heavy metal. My hair was long and my pants were tight. My ears were pierced three times in my left and once in my right. I wore the same Iron Maiden shirt almost every day and never left the house without at least one bandana tied around my ankle. 
How could I not ride into town and just take over? 
Shit, in my mind, as soon as these bumpkins in Alabama got a look at me, the guys would idolize me, the girls would lust after me and all their parents would fear me.
I would finally become the person the audience in my head had always cheered for.
All the way across the country, as I sat in the backseat of my father’s low-rent Cadillac, alternately picking fights with Joey, talking back to Rick and zoning out to the soothing sounds of heavy metal on my Walkman, I felt it in my gut, a rising excitement that everything was about to change. 
For better or worse, once I fulfilled my destiny, the name Louis Baudrey would be synonymous with infamy. 
– from Sucks, Alabama

a phony lid ePub

Monday, April 8, 2013

A Masque of Infamy


A Masque of Infamy is a horrific and raucous story of teenage rebellion. But instead of “What d’ya got?” fifteen-year-old Louis Baudrey knows exactly what he’s fighting against…

After moving from Los Angeles to small town Alabama in 1987 with his father, his younger brother and Rick, a friend of the family, Louis tries to fit in at the local high school, but the Bible-thumpers and the rednecks don’t take too kindly to his outlandish wardrobe and burgeoning punk attitude. At home, he defies the sadistic intentions of Rick, who rules the household with an iron fist. As Louis begins to lose all hope, he stumbles upon indisputable proof that will free him and his brother from Rick’s tyranny. But just when he thinks his troubles are over, he’s locked up in the adolescent ward of a mental hospital, where he must fight the red tape of the system to realize his dream of being a punk rocker.
“A Masque of Infamy captures the screaming, up-from-the-toes intensity and torment of the United States of Adolescence. No one who reads this book will be left unchanged by its savage and unforgiving beauty.” – Jerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight
“The overwhelming rawness of Kelly Dessaint’s story about children attempting to navigate a world completely fucked up by adults is like a punch to the chest.” – Davida Gypsy Breier, Xerography Debt
“Kelly Dessaint twists the horror of growing up in a highly dysfunctional American family into a hilarious tale of survival. Detailing the trauma of being institutionalized as a teenager after having taken revenge against an abusive father figure, A Masque of Infamy is a story about stubbornly overcoming the odds to live long enough to tell the truth about just how shitty it is to be a kid in this country.” – Lydia Lunch

MORE INFORMATION HERE

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a paperback original