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African Americans - Fiction & Literature, Love & Relationships - Fiction
Guys in Suits by Van Whitfield — book cover

Guys in Suits

by Van Whitfield
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Overview

Bestselling author Van Whitfield is back with another hilarious peek into the romantic lives of today’s everyday Joes.

Readers across the country are discovering the marvelously original voice of Van Whitfield as he champions the romantic trials and tribulations of today’s everyman. In Guys in Suits, a laugh-out-loud expos? of how differently women treat blue-collar guys and white-collar “suitors,” Whitfield shines the spotlight on the desperate bus-driving Simon and his stockbroker best friend Stuart, D.C.’s consummate ladies’ man.

Having just turned thirty, Simon is in search of his soul mate and determined to settle down. Stuart has different plans. He subscribes to the “Quintessential Male Manifesto,” the 60-day rulea theory that suggests men are inherently bound to successfully coexist in relationships for just 60 days!

Weeks 1—2 are the “Glory Days,” when a man actually looks forward to “communicating” with a potential mate. Weeks 2—4 are known as the “Realm of Reality,” the period in which the gloss wears off. The “Prozac Period,” weeks 5—6, is a time of high anxiety because the woman thinks she’s found Mr. RightÉbut the guy knows he’s in too deep. And the “Dawn of Destruction,” the final era of the 60-day rule, is when the guy is ready to bail, but unfortunately, the woman isn’t!

As Simon and Stuart’s annual New Year’s Eve investment group vacation approaches (with their two “happily” married buddies and their wives, no less) they’rein a mad dash to find dates. As the deadline for this fun-in-the-sun extravaganza approaches both Simon and Stuart have met potential Ms. Rights and are confident that for the first time, they’ll take their dream dates on their annual island getaway. Everything looks good, but just before the tickets are booked a staggering discovery threatens to upset Simon and Stuart’s seemingly perfect plan.

With all the laughs and hubris of a sweet old-fashioned comedy, Van Whitfield takes readers on a madcap romp through the rocky terrain of today’s relationships.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Forget studs and the babes who love them in this rare regular-guys romance, two Washington, D.C., African-American men come to terms with their very average romantic prospects. Bus driver Simon and financial planner Stuart, Whitfield's two lovelorn Lotharios, are in their 30s now and ready to commit, but somehow the ladies aren't materializing. To make matters worse, they've got a little more than a month to figure out who to bring along on their annual vacation with their married friends Rod and Trevor. Last year, their disastrous dates arrived sight unseen courtesy of the Internet, so this year they are desperately trying to save face and maybe even land a meaningful relationship. Each one reconnects with an old girlfriend Simon with Eve and Stuart with Lynn. There's just one problem. Eve and Lynn are actually one woman, Evelyn, a beautiful, savvy, intelligent catch for any discerning man and as it happens, aiming several rungs above either Simon or Stuart . How the two men manage to figure this out and still have a good time on their vacation makes for an entertaining read. Although author Whitfield tends toward sexist stereotypes, he also captures the comedy of modern love with all its mixed messages and confusion, and manages to create engaging characters in Simon and Stuart. The two protagonists narrate the book in the first person, which become confusing at times since their voices aren't appreciably different, and Whitfield does tend toward overblown prose ("Her skin appeared to be as soft and smooth as a Boyz II Men ballad"). Still, he orchestrates a number of truly hilarious moments in this arch, self-aware comedy, ranging from a telephone conversation gone horribly awry toSimon and Stuart's attempt to mentor a pair of high-risk teens. (Sept.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Whitfield (Something's Wrong With Your Scale!, 1999, etc.) returns to that trendy urban landscape where would-be cool black guys hang out trying to make the right moves on their women. Whitfield knows his guys and their tastes, their habits and their fears-and, here, the story, told by bus driver Simon Washington, or, as he calls himself, "mass transit operator," and by financial consultant Stuart Worthington, focuses on all of them. Simon, Stuart, Rod, and Trevor all grew up in the same Maryland suburb, work in nearby D.C., and have been friends since childhood. They're snappy dressers, like expensive cars, and enjoy kidding one another. But Trevor and Rod are married, while Simon and Stuart are not. They're not ready for it, but they do need dates for the group's annual vacation somewhere fun and warm. Alternately, Simon and Stuart each describe the women they've met recently-attractive but hard to pin down. Both of them-Simon's Eve and Stuart's Lynn-are always in hurry to go somewhere else, and both are mysteriously vague about the past. Failing to find dates for the upcoming vacation, and tired of being teased by Rod and Trevor for being so hopeless at relationships, both decide that perhaps Lynn and Eve should be the ones to accompany them to Cancun, the year's chosen destination. Stuart cooks a dinner for Simon and Eve, then another for himself and Lynn, planning at each meal to extend their invitations. Clumsy foreshadowing, unfortunately, undercuts the intended surprise element of their, as usual, futile machinations. But these are good guys who deserve something better. True friends, they console Rod when he's diagnosed with prostate cancer, and they mentor two reluctant butsmart juvenile offenders. And, of course, good things eventually do happen to Simon and Stuart, who also learn much about women and life in the process. Entertainment Lite: wisecracking and contrived.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2001
Publisher
New York : Doubleday, c2001.
Pages
272
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780385498463

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