Equinox concerns the sexual and violent encounters, "the search for erogenous gratification of a diverse collection of people", that take place when an unnamed black sea captain docks his 72-foot boat the
Scorpion at a small American seaport. The captain is accompanied by his dog Niger and two teenagers Gunner and Kirsten. In town, he meets Robby, a naive drifter; Catherine, a Countess; Proctor, an artist; Bull, the town sheriff (who is himself an active criminal) and his equally thuggish operative Nazi; and various low-life characters including the black and white twins (self described "rape artists") Nig and Dove. A lost wallet is traced to its owner, the artist Jonathan Proctor. At his studio, Proctor tells the Captain the story of his life in
picaresque episodes, culminating in his first encounter, many years before, with the bewitching Catherine. She is depicted as a kind of baleful
Madonna: depraved, hypocritical, perversely
saintlike. Proctor mobilises the Captain and the other characters in a kind of amorous military assault against her as a
personification of religious double standards. In the novel's closing movement, the perpetrators of a
sex crime are protected by their corrupt friends, while the innocent vagabond Robby is
lynched in their place. The novel contains many long and explicit sexual descriptions. These are polymorphous,
bisexual, often involving
multiple and underage partners, as well as
urophilic and
sadomasochistic elements. As part of a
leitmotif relating to the myth of
Faust, the Captain is either likened to the
Devil or supposed to be
Satan himself. Though sexually rapacious, the Captain's character is sympathetic, and in his conduct and attitudes seen to be one of the least truly evil personages in the narrative. ==References==