PP-8054 EBOOK

PP-8054 EBOOK
PP-8054 EBOOK
Widespread Wife by Norma Egan
Price: $2.99

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One of mankind’s most basic, most important institutions is marriage.

Yet today, at least in the United States, matrimony is crisis-ridden at best, seemingly in a state of near-collapse at worst. The malaise chiefly affects couples in their late twenties and early thirties, products of the post-World War II baby boom, growing up during the Korean War and the dozen years of involvement in Vietnam, their disintegrating relationships a reflection of unstable times.

WIDESPREAD WIFE is the story of one couple, Tom and Judy Baker, who are young, attractive and successful to all outward appearances, yet are unable to communicate at the most basic level. As a result, Judy is driven to seek a false kind of love in the arms of strangers, degrading herself and yet reveling in that very degradation, straining her tenuous marital relationship to the breaking point.

Tom and Judy — products of an uncaring society, and portrayals of an affliction that plagues many American marriages.

Judy Baker was stretched out lazily on the couch with her head in her husband’s lap. Her husband, Tom, was watching television. Judy was watching Tom’s cock. She found it a lot more interesting than TV, especially when the program was an interminable football game in which neither side scored. Along about the beginning of the second quarter, Judy had unzipped Tom’s fly and turned her attention to something far more thrilling than football.

Tom had only grunted when she opened his pants and gently drew out the sleepy white worm of his prick. His attention was riveted to the screen. Judy hoped to be able to change that. She laid his limp warm meat tenderly on her upturned palm and began to pet it, her warm smooth fingers running eagerly back, and forth, back and forth, over the silky soft flesh of his dick. Her breath was hot and moist on his naked skin.

“Honey, will you get me a beer?” Tom said.

Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.

Note: This story is the same as catalog number DN-264 in the original publications (a duplicate).

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