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Beneath the outward serenity of small country towns run the same passions that we find in big cities and sprawling suburbs. Criminal acts are more apparent in the cities, but the same forces, which drive urban man to crime, are at work in our rural areas. Greed, lust, envy these are emotions universal to mankind, and every person has been touched by them to some extent.
THE FARMER’S HOT FAMILY is the story of a family whose members are gradually affected by a passionate nature. As stirring passions sweep through first one person and then another, each member of the family must come to grips with his or her convictions — their decisions make far a shocking account of what often occurs beneath a mask of normalcy.
THE FARMER’S HOT FAMILY — a revealing and shocking story, indeed, but one, which may not be as unbelievable as it first, appears. A story holding a lesson for a large segment of our society.
Kitty Stockdale was sitting in the large kitchen of the old farmhouse sipping her third cup of coffee. It was almost noon and she was still wearing a terry cloth robe with her long blonde hair hanging limply over her shoulders. With the children in school and her husband at the auction buying cows, Kitty was just loafing around the house.
Kitty was a very attractive little blonde of twenty three, and was married to a farmer who was twenty years her senior. The girl had married Hank Stockdale shortly after she met him two years ago. They met at the county fair, and the older man who was a widower with two teenagers was attracted by the beautiful girl’s youthfulness.
Kitty was the daughter of the town drunk, and since her early teens she’d had no supervision and was the town’s easy piece of ass. Hating to spend her evening in their crummy little shack with her drunken father, she spent her time with the young studs of the town, generously taking care of their sexual needs. As time passed, her lovers took the nice girls of the community as their wives. At twenty-one, and with the reputation of being the town’s bad girl, almost all the eligible young men had married, leaving Kitty desperate for a husband. That’s when she’d met the widowed farmer at the fair, and immediately set out to catch him.
Fictional reading for entertainment purposes only.
Note: This story is the same as catalog number AB-5134 in the original publications (a duplicate).