BASED ON A TRUE STORY!
AC Yates' personal transformation through wrestling continues as he tells stories of the wrestlers and the matches that he met in San Diego, New Orleans, Boston, London, Paris, Munich, Krakow, and Key West. Inside, you will meet guys like Shuzo, Ragin' Cajun, UKFightGuy, and Flavio. While describing these events, he also gives the reader thoughts and impressions on the settings that provide the backgrounds for these rough rendezvous. This books represents a combination of childhood wonderment and curiosity with Yates' personal journey in his self acceptance as a gay man. Part biographical, part fiction, and part erotica, Yates takes a common theme for many in the LGBT community and weaves into his own personal tale.
"As a kid I would walk down the red clay roads of rural Georgia. My friends and I worked and played out in the fields, swam in cold water springs, and rode our bicycles up and down the dusty roads in search of adventure. Other than military veterans, I did not know many people who had travelled to other countries. Growing up in my little world, I never really thought that I would visit another country much less cross the ocean to a different continent.
When I watched professional wrestling shows with Gordon Solie, I learned about sleepers, dropkicks, and frog splashes off the top rope. But I also developed an interest in the home countries of the wrestlers themselves. Men like Mr. Saito, the Mongolian Stomper (who was not from Mongolia), the Samoans, and the Iron Sheik were men that I found to be very exotic. I wanted to know everything about them and from where they came. After watching their matches I would run to the encyclopedia and look up their homelands and read about them. Then I would run out to the trampoline and challenge anyone around to a wrestling match inspired by these men and use what I had learned about their origins which became a part of the match."
WARNING: This book is intended for mature audiences only, age 18 and up. It contains sexual content that may offend the easily offended.
AC Yates' personal transformation through wrestling continues as he tells stories of the wrestlers and the matches that he met in San Diego, New Orleans, Boston, London, Paris, Munich, Krakow, and Key West. Inside, you will meet guys like Shuzo, Ragin' Cajun, UKFightGuy, and Flavio. While describing these events, he also gives the reader thoughts and impressions on the settings that provide the backgrounds for these rough rendezvous. This books represents a combination of childhood wonderment and curiosity with Yates' personal journey in his self acceptance as a gay man. Part biographical, part fiction, and part erotica, Yates takes a common theme for many in the LGBT community and weaves into his own personal tale.
"As a kid I would walk down the red clay roads of rural Georgia. My friends and I worked and played out in the fields, swam in cold water springs, and rode our bicycles up and down the dusty roads in search of adventure. Other than military veterans, I did not know many people who had travelled to other countries. Growing up in my little world, I never really thought that I would visit another country much less cross the ocean to a different continent.
When I watched professional wrestling shows with Gordon Solie, I learned about sleepers, dropkicks, and frog splashes off the top rope. But I also developed an interest in the home countries of the wrestlers themselves. Men like Mr. Saito, the Mongolian Stomper (who was not from Mongolia), the Samoans, and the Iron Sheik were men that I found to be very exotic. I wanted to know everything about them and from where they came. After watching their matches I would run to the encyclopedia and look up their homelands and read about them. Then I would run out to the trampoline and challenge anyone around to a wrestling match inspired by these men and use what I had learned about their origins which became a part of the match."
WARNING: This book is intended for mature audiences only, age 18 and up. It contains sexual content that may offend the easily offended.