Foreword

Clark Kent proved many years ago that people are not what they always appear to be. Though a person need not be one of spectacular strength or wisdom, one can still be internally different than one might appear on the surface.

Take Susan Kane, the heroine of our story. Outwardly she is a quiet, simple, somewhat religious librarian. Inwardly, she is an incurable romantic. Having read all the classics, and loads of love stories, Susan sincerely believes that true love ends with the caress of a woman's breasts. Sex is something for brutes and women of ill-repute, something decent women have to put up with in order to help reproduce.

Mentally, Susan is very strong, and as a result is able to withstand all the terrible things that start happening to her. Little by little she restructures her beliefs, and in so doing, eventually turns from victim to aggressor, and thereby hangs our tale, for the mild, meek-mannered lady librarian becomes a tigress whose sexual appetites constantly increase rather than diminish with each satisfaction.

At first she feels she is a victim of herself, but after awhile, realizing there is no way she can change what is taking place inside her, she not only accepts what she feels, but attacks with a vengeance, until she finally finds the one man able to totally satisfy her, a man she would never have been able to love had she not gone through her physical trials and tribulations.