Dee was the blonde-bombshell idol of the teenagers. To retain her youthful bloom, she needed one sex adventure after another.
Mona was more mature, a devotee of the amorous arts. So while her husband was away, she needed companionship—reliable, discreet and vigorous.
Ed was a raw recruit to this virulent video world. So he couldn't resist lovely, impulsive Dee, whose concept of love was lusty but amateurish. Nor could he withstand beautiful Mona, whose tastes were more selective than Dee's—and therefore harder to satisfy . . .
It was a ball for Ed Brewster, except that he kept thinking of the pretty, little wife he had left back home. When the small-town bride suddenly showed up, an explosion followed. Because she meant to beat those bed-happy show gals at their own favorite game!
A NOVEL WHICH AT LAST BRINGS INTO SHARP FOCUS THE AMOROUS BEHIND-THE-SCREEN DOINGS OF THE TV STARS.
This was the first book Robert Turner wrote for Beacon. It's theme of a man separated by business from his wife was one he would use again in his second novel, The Woman Chaser. In both cases, the husband is a bit of a philanderer, away from his wife, in Hollywood in the case of The Cheater and as a professional gambler in The Woman Chaser.
Turner was a bit of a hack, as were most of the Beacon writers—there are, of course, notable exceptions—but an eminently readable hack who tells a good story.