Foreword

Summer has arrived and once again those three swinging couples, the Talbots, the Aliens, and the Barnets, are off to the Hamptons, there to spend two glorious months swimming, sunning themselves and swapping their cares away. Joining them this year are the Kellers, James and Claudine, James hoping that a hot summer with his spouse-switching friends will help unthaw his frigid wife.

Unexpected pleasures await this octet of merrymakers, for no sooner do they arrive at the estate they have rented for the summer than they bump into a herd of thrill-seeking teenagers, twenty boys and girls who have decided to camp out on the beach and lose themselves in one unending love-in.

It's decided that no salacious summer would be complete without at least one grand orgy, a truly memorable sex party that would have thirty or more lust-happy people loving it up under the stars.

But posing a problem is George Hardington, millionaire homosexual who spends his time wrapped up in his own uptightness and also trying to rid the Hamptons of what he calls "its undesirable element." And this summer the aging Hardington and his frail friend, Arthur Treeman, are determined to halt the sex worshippers' annual pilgrimage to the shrine of lust.

And so it's up to Rhonda Talbot, a luscious, titian-tressed doll, the beautiful blonde, Barbara Barnet, the curvaceous Judy Allen, the entrancing Claudine Keller, to convince the hard-nosed homosexual that boy-girl sex is more fun than the unnatural embrace of Arthur.

Meanwhile, their horny husbands are sampling the sexual abilities of four tempting teenagers, beautiful young ladies who quickly forget all about the generation gap when they're being satisfied sexually.

It looks like a long, hot summer for the swappers.