c.2020, Dutton
$27
387 pages

How is it that thereโ€™s never enough money?

No matter how much comes in, more goes out, even when you work hard, scrimp, and save. You canโ€™t keep doing this, donโ€™t know how long you can keep your nose above water, and in the new book โ€œThe Business of Loversโ€ by Eric Jerome Dickey, youโ€™ll do just about anything to make more money.

Brick never did mind being Pennyโ€™s driver.

He wasnโ€™t working anyhow so when she asked for a ride to meet a โ€œclient,โ€ he said heโ€™d wait to be sure she was OK. She threw a few bucks at him, he made sure she was safe, and it was all good. So when Penny brought two other women back to Brickโ€™s car after one night at a high-end hotel, he suddenly had himself a โ€œpaceโ€ of women, a full-time bodyguard job, and three part-time lovers/sometimes roommates.

He hadnโ€™t meant to sleep with Penny in the beginning; she was in love with a cheater, though, and she needed comfort. Brick was captivated by Mocha Latte, whoโ€™d grown up on a Texas farm and wanted that life again, plus husband and kids. He was attracted to Christiana, the Cuban, who was so bruised by the past that she could only look into the future.

It was Christiana who told Brick about the business; it was she who offered to set him up with rich women who wanted love on a single-night basis.
It was Mocha Latte who actually pulled him in.

Not that he couldnโ€™t use the money.

Some months before, Brick had fought cancer alone. He didnโ€™t want his younger brother, Andrรฉ, to know about his problems; Andrรฉ had a career to manage. He didnโ€™t want to tell his big brother, Dwayne, about his illness; Dwayne lost his job, had a teenage son and a baby-mama who demanded more child support.

It was money that ended Brickโ€™s last relationship. Money that put him in strange womenโ€™s beds. What else would being broke cost him?

These days, there are three things you can count on for sure: The sun will rise tomorrow. Itโ€™ll rain somewhere in the world. And author Eric Jerome Dickey will tell a good story.

This one is a little bit different, though.

You shouldnโ€™t be surprised that thereโ€™s plenty of sleeping around in โ€œThe Business of Loversโ€ or that itโ€™s graphic, so be warned. Itโ€™s filled with grown-up drama but at the risk of spoiling, you can expect a happy ending that you wonโ€™t expect. Itโ€™s got a touch of humor, the sly kind. This bookโ€™s profane, even nasty, but none of it gets out of hand, thatโ€™s the most enjoyable part of it. Youโ€™re leisurely taken through a surprisingly small community of characters on a tight number of mattresses with a mini-arsenal of plot moves, a lack of too much thatโ€™s absolutely refreshing, like a cool drink beneath hot sheets.

Thatโ€™s what you want this summer, right? So whether youโ€™re stuck inside or turnt out, โ€œThe Business of Loversโ€ is on the money.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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