Cindy May
A Whore is Born
A Whore is Born
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Connie was happily married to her childhood sweetheart until her drink was spiked at a hen night and the male stripper knocked her up. Confronted with a mixed race child that was not his, her husband divorced her. Interracial sex, brothels, drugged sex, striptease, lezzy sex, gangbangs and an unexpected romance in this searing portrait of the trials facing helpless and abused women. Adult
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Twenty-two year old Connie Williams had been married to her childhood sweetheart, Tommy Devlin for three years. Tommy was in the Royal Navy and spent two months at a time on patrol in a nuclear submarine. Never once had Connie strayed from the ‘straight and narrow’, as she adored Tommy and they were trying for a baby.
The three Ward girls, Liz, Kathy and Mandy had always been a bit wild, and their mother had been ‘on the game’ twenty years back. Liz was getting married and Connie was her best friend, so reluctantly agreed to attend the hen night. Everything would have been all right if a friend had not spiked her drink.
With her mental facilities shot to bits, Connie was soon on stage helping the strippers shed their kit and discarding her own clothing. Before long she was going down on one of the guys and then spreading her legs on stage for them. As she wasn’t on the pill that was risky, but with the drink and drugs she had been plied with, she had no recollections of what had happened.
Tommy was thrilled when he knew that Connie was expecting their baby, but in the delivery room a lovely copper coloured baby emerged from Connie’s womb. Faced with a mixed race child that was not his, and her denial that she had gone with another guy, their idyllic marriage fell apart. Tommy divorced her.
With her marriage at an end and no maintenance for her daughter, as Tommy clearly could not be the father, Connie’s troubles multiplied. The naïve Connie wandered into a nightmare world of drugged sex, gangbangs, interracial sex, brothels, striptease, lezzy sex, with an unexpected romance thrown in.
A reviewer said of one of my novels, “Cindy May continues to surprise readers, and continues to challenge convention. …She uses compelling arguments, which demonstrate how transient social taboos are. Yet another well-written and informed book... I forgot the wonderfully salacious bit, but that's a given with her books. In this particular genre Cindy May is, at least in my opinion, about the best author out there. She's made me think and view some things with different eyes.”
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