Foreword
Hundreds of Americans are something they wish they weren't. The husband who becomes the polished man of the world because his wife adores the high-society scene, yet would be the first to admit that a can of beer and Monday night football would be more fulfilling. The debutante decorated with elaborate coiffure and expensive evening gown who would rather wear cut-off jeans and sport long hair. The neighbor who belongs to numerous civic clubs and "worthy" organizations, yet is a beast in the kill-or-be-killed world of business.
The roles people play are numerous, maybe because so many have so much to hide-like their insecurities, their income taxes, a blight in the past, or their moral behavior. Hypocrisy-is it a way of life for too many? Is this truly the Age of the Great Pretender?
If it is such an age, then the housewife in this story is the epitome of all pretenders. She hides her carnal desires behind the mask of respectability.
HOT HOUSEWIFE is a novel of today's society-its people, its problems, its pretenses.
-The Publisher
