Bunkhouse Buddies

Surrounded by bulls and horses, a cowboy gets pretty horny. These men live together in a bunkhouse, a small house designed to keep cowboys clean, clothed and fed. Follow along and ride flank with these enormously hung cowboys as they uncover the secret forbidden pleasures of bachelorhood. 'Bunkhouse Buddies' is an early 60s erotic novel set in the rough and tumble world of cowboys on the Great Plain

Written long before such prose was legal in the United States, this novel boldly exposes gay male carnal desires in an unapologetic pornographic setting. This was among the first novels written by Peter Schutes.

About 'Bunkhouse Buddies', Peter writes in 1961:
It’s no secret that many men became cowboys because they preferred the company and camaraderie of other rough and tumble men to the gentler life with women. These cowboys lived in groups of six to ten in bunkhouses - housing provided by the ranch owner at no cost or at the cost of lower wages. The function of a traditional bunkhouse was to give a young cowboy an opportunity to find his footing and save money before he settled down and married. Not every cowboy had those particular plans. Many just wanted to be around other cowboys like themselves, confirmed bachelors. Buried deep in the Big Hole River Valley of Montana, the Cock Crow Ranch bunkhouse was entirely made up of lifelong bachelors. When a new cowboy came along, it was never certain if he would “fit in” with the bachelor lifestyle or if he was going to have to find a new ranch with morals more in line with his own. A good fit was rare, but when that cowboy came along, he got to share in a brotherhood unlike any other.

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Bunkhouse Buddies

Surrounded by bulls and horses, a cowboy gets pretty horny. These men live together in a bunkhouse, a small house designed to keep cowboys clean, clothed and fed. Follow along and ride flank with these enormously hung cowboys as they uncover the secret forbidden pleasures of bachelorhood. 'Bunkhouse Buddies' is an early 60s erotic novel set in the rough and tumble world of cowboys on the Great Plain

Written long before such prose was legal in the United States, this novel boldly exposes gay male carnal desires in an unapologetic pornographic setting. This was among the first novels written by Peter Schutes.

About 'Bunkhouse Buddies', Peter writes in 1961:
It’s no secret that many men became cowboys because they preferred the company and camaraderie of other rough and tumble men to the gentler life with women. These cowboys lived in groups of six to ten in bunkhouses - housing provided by the ranch owner at no cost or at the cost of lower wages. The function of a traditional bunkhouse was to give a young cowboy an opportunity to find his footing and save money before he settled down and married. Not every cowboy had those particular plans. Many just wanted to be around other cowboys like themselves, confirmed bachelors. Buried deep in the Big Hole River Valley of Montana, the Cock Crow Ranch bunkhouse was entirely made up of lifelong bachelors. When a new cowboy came along, it was never certain if he would “fit in” with the bachelor lifestyle or if he was going to have to find a new ranch with morals more in line with his own. A good fit was rare, but when that cowboy came along, he got to share in a brotherhood unlike any other.

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Bunkhouse Buddies

Bunkhouse Buddies

by Peter Schutes
Bunkhouse Buddies

Bunkhouse Buddies

by Peter Schutes

eBook

$3.99 

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Overview

Surrounded by bulls and horses, a cowboy gets pretty horny. These men live together in a bunkhouse, a small house designed to keep cowboys clean, clothed and fed. Follow along and ride flank with these enormously hung cowboys as they uncover the secret forbidden pleasures of bachelorhood. 'Bunkhouse Buddies' is an early 60s erotic novel set in the rough and tumble world of cowboys on the Great Plain

Written long before such prose was legal in the United States, this novel boldly exposes gay male carnal desires in an unapologetic pornographic setting. This was among the first novels written by Peter Schutes.

About 'Bunkhouse Buddies', Peter writes in 1961:
It’s no secret that many men became cowboys because they preferred the company and camaraderie of other rough and tumble men to the gentler life with women. These cowboys lived in groups of six to ten in bunkhouses - housing provided by the ranch owner at no cost or at the cost of lower wages. The function of a traditional bunkhouse was to give a young cowboy an opportunity to find his footing and save money before he settled down and married. Not every cowboy had those particular plans. Many just wanted to be around other cowboys like themselves, confirmed bachelors. Buried deep in the Big Hole River Valley of Montana, the Cock Crow Ranch bunkhouse was entirely made up of lifelong bachelors. When a new cowboy came along, it was never certain if he would “fit in” with the bachelor lifestyle or if he was going to have to find a new ranch with morals more in line with his own. A good fit was rare, but when that cowboy came along, he got to share in a brotherhood unlike any other.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940154518229
Publisher: Peter Schutes
Publication date: 08/20/2017
Series: Big Hole River , #1
Sold by: Smashwords
Format: eBook
Sales rank: 752,896
File size: 435 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Peter Schutes Publishing is a small imprint of Jim Dandy Publishing. The mission at Peter Schutes is to revive the lost art of gay pulp fiction. Although physical paperbacks are available on Amazon.com, there is no denying that new generations of queer and questioning young adults prefer the eBook format. Our cover art is designed specifically to recall the pulp paperbacks of days gone by.

Peter Schutes is the nom de plume of a prolific and acclaimed novelist. Peter Schutes is the author of Slaves of Rome, Dark as a Dungeon, The Gospel of Priapus, and Panama Heat, among many others. He writes in the style of vintage pulp authors from the 1960s and 1970s. He lives in Los Angeles.

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