See You in Casablanca (Trilogy of Dark Love Book 2)
Description
This book describes the entertaining and at times eventful journey of two friends to Morocco in search of sexual adventures. After Tangier they head south: Marrakech, Fez, Rabat. One of them is pragmatic and just expects to have a good time, but the other is somewhat sentimental and has romantic ideas about the country. His confessed objective is to look for the boy of his dreams... Considered a classic of gay literature in Spanish, we are not, therefore, dealing with what could be considered a frivolous tale of erotic adventures, but a story of feelings, of interracial relationships, of human and social problems which coincidentally take place in the exotic Moroccan world.
THE AUTHOR AND HIS WORK
Pedro Menchén is a Spanish writer, born in 1952. Known especially for his Trilogy of Dark Love, comprising the novels A Distant Beach (1999), See you in Casablanca (2001) and Don’t Come Back Here Any More (2005), he has also published two books of short stories: Who Can Listen to a Guy who Comes through Your Window Stark Naked at Midnight? (1988), which gained him the first prize of the city of Alcalá, y Bloody Lips (2002), plus one short novel: So Long, Kid (1989), winning the City of Barbastro Prize, and an autobiography: Written in Water (2011), all of which have confirmed him as one of the most interesting authors of present-day Spanish literature.
THE AUTHOR AND HIS WORK
Pedro Menchén is a Spanish writer, born in 1952. Known especially for his Trilogy of Dark Love, comprising the novels A Distant Beach (1999), See you in Casablanca (2001) and Don’t Come Back Here Any More (2005), he has also published two books of short stories: Who Can Listen to a Guy who Comes through Your Window Stark Naked at Midnight? (1988), which gained him the first prize of the city of Alcalá, y Bloody Lips (2002), plus one short novel: So Long, Kid (1989), winning the City of Barbastro Prize, and an autobiography: Written in Water (2011), all of which have confirmed him as one of the most interesting authors of present-day Spanish literature.
