Foreword

Psychologists have long noted that man is a gregarious animal whose need for affection and motions is as real and bat as his need for food and shelter.

This social need is reflected many times over in our everyday lives. Theft is the teenaged boy who frequently smokes marijuana, though he dislikes it, because he fears being branded "straight" by his friends. Theft is the suburban housewife who turns to an illicit affair because her husband, totally dedicated to his business, cannot or will not give her the affection she craves.

DADDY'S HOT DAUGHTER is the story of a young American girl, Paula Condor. A bright teenager living with her loving widowed father, Paula is nonetheless filled with an overwhelming need for emotional security. Thus it is that she turns to her father for the affection she craves -- and for more than mere affection, but sex, also. For Paula, seeking affection and love from her father becomes a way of life, her norm. And for how many other young people like her?

A novel that poses a timely question for our increasingly decentralized American families.

The Publisher