Foreword

The breakdown of the basic family unit has been a problem cited by sociologist which can lead to so may of today's social problems; divorce, alcoholism, juvenile delinquency, lack of respect for basic institutions.

THREE HOT SISTERS is the revealing novel of a middle-class family that is besieged by similar problems. Harry Barden, the head of the family, is always away on business. Stella Barden his wife, has taken up with another man. The three daughters have become wild young girls who are becoming aware of what pleases their flesh and where they can find pleasures.

The Barden family is on the verge of breaking down, with each member of the family going its own way. The ones who recognize that the family is breaking down are the daughters, and, ironically, it is the adolescent daughters who find a solution to welding the family back together. Though the method by which they plan to stop their home from being split asunder would be considered shocking to some, the daughters are too concerned with achieving happiness for all members of the family to worry about appearances. For them, any means justifies the end.

THREE HOT SISTERS is a shocking story of three young girls who dare to let their sexual impulses decide the fate of their family.