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Outwardly, suburbia maintains the strait-laced, middle-class look that belies the social ferment behind closed doors. There is the secret sauce of drugs, fed by the marijuana syndrome. There is the river of alcohol flooding from door to door under the euphemism of social drinking. Then, of course, inevitably there is the advent of mate swapping. All in the spirit of good, clean fun… but where does the fun stop and the degradation begin? When the excess leads to another and another — to what? When the children set as the pattern of their own life style what already is set as the norm at home?
This is the story of what outwardly appears a normal, average American family. It is startling as a mirror of a way of life behind closed doors. No facade. No regrets. Indeed, for this family, pleasures of the flesh are the norm.
SWINGING FAMILY — a novel of fiction for entertainment. A page of our restless society as food for serious thought.
It was a warm afternoon in late May and Debbie Wise was strolling along the beach. The young blonde’s mother had passed away when she was quite young, and she and her older brother, Dean, had been raised by their father, a very wealthy and influential land developer in the community.
Not having a mother, and being alone with her older brother so much during her childhood, Debbie had a strong affection for the handsome youth. She had missed him terribly when he went away to college, and now, walking along the beach, she was so happy that he’d be coming home for the summer in a few days.
Thinking about her nineteen-year-old brother, Debbie vividly recalled that day last summer when she caught him jacking off. Instead of him getting angry at her for peeking, he invited her to stroke his hard cock while he explained how boys had to relieve themselves on occasion. By the time he’d left for college the following month, Dean had not only shown her how to jack off his cock, but he’d taught her how to suck him off as well.
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.
Note: This story is the same as catalog number PR-3061 in the original publications (a duplicate).