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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 use 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, there is the advent of swinging and illicit sex. All in the spirit of good clean fun… but where does the fun stop and degradation begin? When one excess leads to another — and another — to what? When the children set as a pattern for their own life style what already is the norm at home?
MOM PEEPS ON THE NEIGHBORS is the story of Susan Fox, a young widow, and her teenaged son, Bobby, whose lives are altered by their neighbors. It is startling as a mirror of a way of life behind closed doors. No facade. No regrets. Indeed, for them it is the norm.
A novel of fiction for entertainment. A page of our restless society as food for serious thought.
Susan Fox saw her son looking out the window.
She had come past his room and looked in, and there he was. She had seen him looking out the third-floor apartment window a couple of times before, and she knew what he saw.
After watching his intent face for a moment, she went to her room. From there, she could look almost directly down into the enclosed patio where the girl was.
As before, the girl was lying there naked, her pink nipples standing up on the white mounds of her tits. The dark triangle of her cunt was clearly visible. Although an open magazine rested over the girl’s face, Susan knew it was a beautiful face; she had seen the girl often, spoken to her, greeted her.
Mary, a sweet name, an innocent name, Susan thought. And at the same time, a bit old-fashioned. Not many girls were named Mary any more. And Mary was just about twenty or twenty-one. The name, which suggested sweet innocence, fit the girl, Susan thought. Mary did look sweetly innocent, and yet she always sunbathed naked. Just how innocent could she be?
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.