
The Ardennian Boy French Kiss Candle was inspired by the erotic poems of Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine as translated in William Maltese and Wayne Gunn's co-effort, Ardennian Boy, the shocking- biographical novel everyone is talking about that encapsulates the infamous and scandalous affair of French poets Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud.
Infused with champagne fragrance (is there anything more “French” than champagne?), the candle’s very thickly whipped and sensuously suggestive creamy white wax is poured to produce an erotic hint of sexual splatter, before being joined by beautiful and thickly whipped purple wax; the waxes coming together and intermingling like two lovers.
Ardennian Boy French Kiss Candle 3X9 - Champagne Scent - $25.00 ea
2007 Lambda Literary Award Nominee
Ardennian Boy by William Maltese and Wayne Gunn

Ardennian Boy, from coauthors William Maltese and Drewey Wayne Gunn, is historical romance and literary erotica blended into one masterful novel. Maltese's sensuous prose retells the tumultuous love affair between poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine, while Gunn's lyrical translations of their bawdy gay poems, woven naturally into the fabric of the story, enlighten even as they arouse. Together, the two authors bring this singular love story brilliantly to life. Arthur Rimbaud is an untamed teenage savage from the French provinces, randy and ready to try any and everything, convinced that a life of unbridled excess is the true pathway to great poetry. Rimbaud's creative outburst is consumed in the decadence of his lifestyle by the time he is barely out of his teens, but not before he has established himself as one of history's greatest poets, hailed today as one of the fathers of the French "symbolist" movement - and not before he has nurtured Paul Verlaine from a passable poet into a great one. Paul Verlaine is a henpecked, closeted and probably bisexual husband who is trapped in an undesirable marriage, and totally unprepared for the whirlwind that engulfs him when Rimbaud appears in his life. In the end, Verlaine too defies the conventions of his day, and though he finds himself ultimately reviled by polite society for his incendiary relationship with the younger poet, Verlaine emerges from it not only a great poet in his own right, but a major figure in French literature. In tracing their gay heritage through some of the most influential men of letters and of politics from his day back to ancient Greece, he becomes one of the proponents of gay historical studies. Often condemned for the frankness of their relationship, these two men stand today alongside Whitman and Wilde as literary pioneers in the struggle for gay rights in the 19th century. Maltese and Gunn have captured that frankness with unprecedented exuberance.
Ardennian Boy can be purchased online from Amazon.com ~ Click Here!
Visit Author William Maltese online: www.williammaltese.com and on myspace: www.myspace.com/williammaltese