
Willing
Scott Spencer
ecco, march 2008, $24.95
In Willing, Scott Spencerโs slyly engaging novel, journalist Avery Kaplan Kearney Blake Jankowsky joins a pricey worldwide sex tourโmerely as a reporter of course. Jankowsky, trying to maintain his decency, is asked, โYouโre offered a chance to have sex with some truly spectacular individuals, whoโs going to say no to that?โ Not Jankowsky, it turns out. At an orgy, he drops all pretense of journalistic and human ethics, proclaiming: โYou canโt always care about right and wrong. You just do the bad thing. It happens. To all of us.โ
Indeed. Averyโs dilemma mirrors readersโ unsettling experience of being thrust into a seductive world where itโs all too easy to be bad, difficult to be good, and nearly impossible to know the difference. We are drawn into the story, becoming voyeuristic participants in this tour that โdares not speak its name,โ buying our way into a sordid netherworld where everything is for sale. Sure, the novel only costs $24.95, a far cry from the $135,000 price tag for the deluxe sex tour, but itโs still a pay-to-play transaction. So we, too, dear readers, may come to recognize our kinship with the wealthy, self-indulgent sex-tourists that Avery describes as โHyde without the Jekyll, Hyde forever. Hyde infinitum.โ On this trip, we willingly enter โa state of double and triple thinking. Being in bed with a whore is like being a press secretary for a president. You believe his story even when you know itโs not true, and you also believe in his right to lie.โ
That sort of stinging analogy is one of the disarming charms of this novel. No matter how discomfiting the content, the intelligence of the writing dispels misgivings. The language itself is an addictive pleasure. A bit character is described as having โeyeglasses with turquoise plastic frames that might be worn by a librarian on a distant galaxy.โ This odd and vivid image is not just a great throwaway line. Later, we see that Jankowsky, too, is like a space traveler, so far has he gone. The mineral baths in Iceland are โlunar,โ otherworldly. Eventually, Avery loses even his humanity, slipping into a โferocious animal nature.โ By the end of the novel, Avery baldly states (to his mother, of all people), โIโm an animalโฆI believe in my body.โ But even Averyโs bodily experiences are questionable. Heโs suffered a severe head injury; he never sleeps; heโs always bleeding. Itโs enough to make anyoneโs head spin.
In a book with so many witty twists, itโs easy to become as ethically dizzied as Avery himself, and as thoroughly seduced. Only when the afterglow fades might we recall that Avery, who told us that he charms potential girlfriends with the sad tale of his motherโs four marriages and his ever-changing last name, starts this sad tale with the line โI was the man who had had four fathers.โ That Avery sells a memoir that begins with โI have had four surnamesโ to Esquire, and plans to sell his tell-all sex tour book for a whopping sum. That Avery is always selling his story. That Avery is one tricky guy.
So is Scott Spencer. The Rhinebeck authorโs previous works include Endless Love, Waking the Dead, and A Ship Made of Paper. This time around, the novelist hailed by Publishers Weekly as โthe contemporary American master of the love storyโ has written a masterful lust story. Most certainly, Spencer knows the difference between love and lust. So does Avery; so do we. But sometimes, lust happens. To all of us.
Scott Spencer will read at Merritt Books in Millbrook April 5 at 4pm.
This article appears in April 2008.








