Behind Sunset by David Gordon

Published by Mysterious Press on July 22, 2024
Elliott Gross is surprised to learn that wealthy and powerful people want, in addition to wealth and power, self-respect. Elliott lacks wealth and power and can’t afford self-respect.
Behind Sunset opens in 1994. Elliott works in the Los Angeles porn industry. He writes inventive copy to accompany photos published in Raunchy, a magazine that seems suspiciously similar to Hustler. Elliott’s wheelchair-bound boss, Victor Klingman, is suspiciously similar to Larry Flynt.
Elliott is “a highly educated, twenty-five-year-old American pissing away his prime for $ 6.9230 an hour after taxes if you figured on a ten-hour day. He understands that the magazine’s models, mostly from Russia and Eastern Europe, are being exploited, but he also understands that they are making the most money they have ever made, “probably for the easiest, least degrading work.” He can live with his modest role in their questionable exploitation because it is the only job Elliott could find that made use of the master’s in English “that he’d ruined his credit struggling to pay for.”
Elliott’s work has made him “a kind of porn magician, glancing at each photo just long enough to improvise a backstory for the inane action, pulling aliases out of a name-your-baby book, and churning out the copy as fast as his fingers could type.” His prose style (“I have always fantasized about feeling two dudes in my butt at one time”) fits perfectly into 1990s porn, not that I would know, ahem.
Back in 1994, visual recordings were still preserved on video tape. Characters occasionally discuss the mysterious internet as the wave of the future (“I’ve got a hunch this web thing is going to be big,” one of them tells Elliot), but VHS is still the go-to choice for recording sex acts.
The plot involves a few videotapes that will either titillate Raunchy’s readers or give Victor the opportunity for blackmail. One involves a celebrity who feigns outrage at being recorded. Another involves a conservative Congressman who is in the company of a much younger man. The video proves that “when he wasn’t excoriating sinners, the congressman gave great head.” Hypocrisy is one of the book’s themes, although the hypocrisies of the 1990s seem quaint compared to those that are dominating the current news cycle.
Another theme is feminism; specifically, whether women, like men, are equally entitled to be proud of their promiscuity. A porn actress tells Elliot “I’m a feminist and I’m doing this for myself, not for anyone else. I’m not sexually fucked up. I have orgasms everyday. I love sex. I love men. I used to be afraid of men, but now I understand them and I have the power.” Good for her.
My favorite theme is the notion that sexual blackmail only succeeds because people feel scandalized by behavior that isn’t terribly significant. “So what if you like to be spanked or wear a tutu?,” Elliot wonders, but he is clearly ahead of his time.
The plot takes off when the next Raunchy covergirl, Crystal Waters, goes missing. Victor assigns Elliot to find her and to recover a video that she took with her. Who is on the video? That reveal treats the reader to one of the story’s surprises.
Victor eventually realizes that he once knew Crystal Waters, although he knew her by her real name, well before she was displaying her body for cash. When Victor tracks her down, she’s engaged to a movie star and is no longer interested in being a nude model.
Meanwhile, Elliot’s childhood friend, Pedro Plotkin, hires him to make duplicates of self-help videos that are recorded by Melody Bright, “a former hippie, failed singer-songwriter, and washed-up party girl until her awakening, when she began channeling the spirit of an otherworldly, thousand-year-old entity known as Zona, who educated Melody about the true nature of reality, the existence of angels, the fate of the spirit after death and so on.” Whether the self-help industry is a step up from the porn industry is debatable, but self-help charlatans, like porn stars, are appropriate fodder for comedy.
The story benefits from a steady supply of raunchy humor, sometimes fueled by boob jobs and vagina tightening (“I’d let you touch it,” Misty said, “but I just got back together with my ex-husband and it was a Father’s Day gift to him.”). The fact that Elliot regularly stumbles upon dead bodies gives the novel the trappings of a crime story that succeeds as an amusing but slightly dark comedy. The reveals (the content of the missing video and the killer’s identity) are fun, but the story depends less on mysteries than on sympathy for Elliot as he stumbles his way through a life he never wears comfortably.
I’ve enjoyed David Gordon’s Joe the Bouncer novels. He brings the same humor (with a ribald edge) to Behind Sunset. This is a good beach read for hot afternoons when a reader will be happier to reflect on scandalous behaviors of the past than to watch news of scandalous behavior in the present.
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