Foreword
Although today's woman is constantly looking to compete with men, she is often goaded into by the very people she attempts to please. Such a person is Judy Roth, the heroine of our story. Bright-eyed, intelligent, ingenuous, and extremely naive where men are concerned because of a careful and strict upbringing, she enters a world for which she has been improperly prepared, and as a result, runs directly into one sexual disaster after another, or so she believes. Yet it is these disasters that harden her and help to make her a stronger woman in the long run.
The book is in no way attempting to advocate rape as a means by which young ladies should become educated. But it is making the definite statement that more than one young lady might be better prepared to recognize a possibly dangerous situation if she is permitted to see for herself what kind of world she is living in, rather than remain sheltered by her parents.
Life is not a bed of roses and never has been, and in order for young girls to avoid hazardous and potentially hazardous situations the stars have to be taken out of their eyes and the rose-colored glasses have to be removed. They have to understand that there are men who are basically animals and see them as objects to satisfy their masculine lusts. Until such time, young girls will continue to be taken advantage of, clearly the easy prey of some unscrupulous individuals always looking for whatever they can get.
The Publishers
