
Best selling Fiction from Salzgeber & Co.
On this page you'll find a ranking of the best Salzgeber & Co. products in this category. To give you a quick overview, we've already ranked the most important information about the products for you.
1. Salzgeber & Co. Kolbenfresser XXL
When Johannes unexpectedly inherits a car repair shop, all he really wants to do is wind up the run-down business as quickly as possible. The un-outed copywriter really has nothing to do with bolts and hoses! But the brawny master mechanic soon suspects where the new boss's problems really lie. So he first gives the writer an introduction to the world of gas taps, oil changes and piston seizures ...

2. Salzgeber & Co. The erotic comedy garden
Behind the pseudonym Granand is Erwin Ritter von Busse (1895 - 1939), one of the forgotten authors of the 1920s. His "Erotic Comedy Garden" contains five miniatures on the theme of "Love Among Men." The reprint of a 1920 edition illustrated by Rudolf Pütz is supplemented with information about the author and the work by Manfred Herzer and James W. Jones.

3. Salzgeber & Co. Gay Hardcore 06: Schussbereite Kerle
In the notorious club of the savvy millionaire Malte, the tough guys of the city come together. The 18-year-old Jakob also joins in, as he is in love with his attractive teacher, Stefan. In the process, he discovers Stefan's dark secret: intense BDSM games are his secret passion. And he is not alone in this. Whether they are craftsmen or lawyers, students or soldiers – they are all ready for action at any time and share the thrill of domination and submission. In this tight-knit community, pain and humiliation transform into fulfillment – and sometimes into love.

4. Salzgeber & Co. Coming soon to the cinema
"Write the script for the greatest movie of all time!" Mitchell Draper naturally accepts this challenge. The gifted writer - as the young author likes to call himself - has been waiting a long time for his great talent to finally be discovered. "Don't you find the assignment a bit mysterious, Mitchell?" friends point out, trying to bring Mitchell back down to earth from his high-flying ambitions. Their concern seems justified, even though they are still underestimating the extent of the "mysterious" at this point. "What’s wrong here?" the reader soon wonders as well. And it won’t come as a surprise that from now on, pretty much everything in the lives of Mitchell and his friends will be turned upside down.

5. Salzgeber & Co. Heisse Jungs auf steiler Piste
Dominik has just passed his ski instructor exam and is working for the first time in the ski area at the Wilden Kaiser. But it's not just the steep mountains that are wild here; Dominik's fellow instructors and students also prefer to forgo ski suits between the ice and snow, opting instead for physical exercise to warm up.

6. Salzgeber & Co. Der junge König
Through the film adaptation of the graphic novel 'The Moving Man' (1994), Ralf König became the most successful German comic artist. Although he views the world through the eyes of a gay man, his characters with their bulbous noses have found an enthusiastic audience of all sexual orientations. Ralf König has long achieved the status of a modern classic. The young König's journey began with his love for Robert Crumb and publications in comic magazines with tiny print runs. Looking back at these early works, one can trace how the artist finds his style, and you can feel the joy of storytelling on every page. These early years before the big breakthrough are documented in the edition 'The Young König' (2014 – 2016). In 2020, König celebrates both his 60th birthday and his 40th anniversary as an artist; for this reason, we are offering 'The Young König' as a special edition at a significantly reduced price.

7. Salzgeber & Co. Der Puppenjunge
The Doll Boy: The story of a nameless love from Friedrichstrasse.

8. Salzgeber & Co. Der letzte Akt
Boy Morgan, best friend and occasional lover of Mitch Mitchell, is suspected of having driven his employer Frank Bartlett to suicide. To prove Boy's innocence, Mitch embarks on a quest across London to find the real culprit. However, the sought-after clues come at a price, and Mitch must not only use his sharp wit but also his physical charms to extract information from tough policemen, lewd sauna guests, and cunning gigolos from the working-class district. An explosive mix of suspense, eroticism, and a mysterious death - with The Last Act, James Lear brings his Mitch Mitchell trilogy to a spectacular conclusion.

9. Salzgeber & Co. Zaunwerk
Felix Rexhausen, journalist, satirist, lyricist, and novelist (1932 – 1992), was one of the first openly gay authors of the post-war era. He is already represented in the Rosa Winkel Library with the novel 'Lavendelschwert' and the collection of stories 'Berührungen'. 'Zaunwerk' is the unpublished precursor to these two books, rediscovered by literary scholar Benedikt Wolf. Completed as early as 1964, the book unfolds a panorama of the lives of homosexuals in the old Federal Republic, their lives in hiding, their small spaces of freedom, and their great longings. For Benedikt Wolf, 'Zaunwerk' is a "gay pioneer text in the emphatic sense," which more than deserves to "come out of the closet" nearly six decades after its creation.

10. Salzgeber & Co. Roy & Al machen Männchen
After the death of his mistress, Al's world is one big nightmare: he moves from tranquil Fulda to dirty Berlin, and instead of culinary delicacies he gets cheap canned food. To make matters worse, his new master is also gay, and his lover also owns a dog, a fat, uneducated mongrel called Roy. Roy and Al are like nitric acid and glycerine - together a highly explosive combination. While the two masters are enjoying themselves sexually in the woods, Roy eats a dead bird and gets diarrhoea in the car, meanwhile Al dreams of breeding in style. Haunted by depression, he finally wants to put an end to his life when a street killer tells him that there are also Swabians living in Berlin, clean, decent Swabians. Al can no longer be held back and embarks on an odyssey through the Moloch Berlin in search of a better life. But a nasty surprise awaits him there, too. Roy & Al saw the light of day in 2004. Among all his bulbous noses, Ralf König has taken these two crazy mutts especially to his heart, so it was high time to follow up with a second volume with new adventures. These new stories are also recommended to dog owners and dog haters alike, because one thing is as clear as day: If you have Al as a friend, you don't need any more enemies.
